
Tropical Storm Arthur, the first of the Atlantic season, targets Gulf Coast with heavy rain
MIAMI (AP) — The first tropical storm of the Atlantic hurricane season formed Wednesday near the Gulf Coast, bringing intense rain and the threat of dangerous flash floods to states including Texas and Louisiana, meteorologists said. Tropical Storm Arthur was a disorganized cluster of storms that brought rain for days over parts of eastern Mexico and the Gulf. The National Hurricane Center in Miami said conditions were conducive for a short-lived tropical storm to form. Arthur was forecast...
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- Tropical Storm Arthur, the first of the Atlantic season, targets Gulf Coast with heavy rain
- Trump delays Claytons nomination for intelligence director, but committee chairman promises hearing
- Victims relatives condemn New Yorks Gilgo Beach serial killer at sentencing
- Luigi Mangione will assert psychiatric defense in murder case in UnitedHealthcare CEOs killing
- 1 killed when small plane crashes on Texas highway. People leave vehicles to try to help
Trump delays Claytons nomination for intelligence director, but committee chairman promises hearing
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he was delaying federal prosecutor Jay Clayton’s nomination to lead the U. S. intelligence community in a bid to force Congress to act on a voter ID bill that currently lacks enough support for passage, but a key senator said he’d push forward with a hearing. The chairman of the Senate intelligence committee, Tom Cotton of Arkansas, said he planned to proceed with Wednesday's confirmation hearing unless Trump orders Clayton to...
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- Trump delays Claytons nomination for intelligence director, but committee chairman promises hearing
- Trumps pick to lead FEMA pledges to be fair and reasonable in assessing disaster aid requests
- A look at presidential libraries as the Obama Presidential Center opens to the public this week
- DC voters face a new political era without Eleanor Holmes Norton, after her 18 terms in Congress
- A New York House primary has become an AI industry family feud with millions in corporate spending
Ancient teeth from Siberia rewrite the plagues timeline, dating back to over 5,500 years ago
NEW YORK (AP) — Scientists have found the oldest known evidence of the plague, which sparked deadly outbreaks dating back about 5,500 years ago — some 200 years earlier than previously thought. The disease has sickened humans for thousands of years and wiped out a significant chunk of Europe's population in the 14th century during what's known as the Black Death. Though rare, the plague is still around today and is treated with antibiotics. “To understand our own history, we believe that...
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- Ancient teeth from Siberia rewrite the plagues timeline, dating back to over 5,500 years ago
- African and Commonwealth nations in Kenya urge quick execution of a key treaty protecting oceans
- A shrinking strip of New Orleans marsh helps protect 1.5 million people. Louisiana wants to save it
- Dan David Prize awards 9 scholars $300,000 each for research on the human past
- 5.5 magnitude earthquake rattles Tokyo region but no danger of a tsunami, meteorological agency says

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