Monday, March 7, 2016

Evening Edition: Obama's shortlist for the Supreme Court nomination

Inside the Rubio meltdown: Frustration, perceived blunders; What Sanders still doesn't get about interrupting Clinton; 5 reasons Bernie Sanders lost last night's Democratic debate; The roots of Apple CEO Tim Cook's activism lie in rural Alabama; The roots of Apple CEO Tim Cook's activism lie in rural Alabama; Robert Griffin III leaves the Redskins knocked down, but has a shot at redemption; U.S. airstrike kills more than 150 at terrorist camp in Somalia, military says; Maria Sharapova provisionally suspended after admitting to failing drug test; Idaho pastor shot after praying with Ted Cruz; In drills, U.S., South Korea practice striking North's nuclear plants, leaders; Zika has pregnant women in the U.S. worried, and doctors have few answers; A neighborhood feud over a basement highlights a problem for London's super rich; What it’s like to live on a cruise ship for 8 years; The moving story behind this photo of Biden and a sexual assault survivor at the Oscars;
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
Obama’s shortlist for the Supreme Court nomination
The White House is looking at nearly a half-dozen relatively new federal judges for the nomination, focusing on jurists with scant dis­cern­ible ideology and limited judicial records as part of a strategy to surmount fierce Republican opposition.
Inside the Rubio meltdown: Frustration, perceived blunders
Party leaders, donors and other supporters of the Republican presidential candidate portray a political operation that continues to falter in its message, in its attention to the fundamentals of campaigning and in its use of a promising politician.
 
What Sanders still doesn't get about interrupting Clinton
Why has Sen. Bernie Sanders made demonstrably little to no effort to alter the way he interacts with the woman he's running against?
 
5 reasons Bernie Sanders lost last night's Democratic debate
He seemed angry, and he came across as someone who is running to make a point — not to win.
 
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The roots of Apple CEO Tim Cook's activism lie in rural Alabama
Cook's experiences growing up as a gay youth in a tiny town between Mobile, Ala., and Pensacola, Fla., are key to understanding how a once-quiet tech executive became one of the world's most outspoken corporate leaders.
 
The roots of Apple CEO Tim Cook's activism lie in rural Alabama
Cook's experiences growing up as a gay youth in a tiny town between Mobile, Ala., and Pensacola, Fla., are key to understanding how a once-quiet tech executive became one of the world's most outspoken corporate leaders.
 
Robert Griffin III leaves the Redskins knocked down, but has a shot at redemption
The quarterback took the league by storm, then struggled and spent his final year on the bench.
 
U.S. airstrike kills more than 150 at terrorist camp in Somalia, military says
The al-Shabab camp had been under surveillance for weeks, and defense officials say they believe there were no civilian casualties.
 
Maria Sharapova provisionally suspended after admitting to failing drug test
The tennis star tested positive for Meldonium, which was added to the list of banned substances this year. She said she has been legally taking the drug since 2006 for magnesium deficiency and irregular EKG results.
 
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Idaho pastor shot after praying with Ted Cruz
A manhunt was underway for the former Marine, and no evidence had surfaced on the shooter's motive or whether the attack was related in any way to the candidate's appearance.
 
In drills, U.S., South Korea practice striking North's nuclear plants, leaders
The massive joint military exercises started Monday and drew a ferocious response from Pyongyang, which sees them as a pre-text for an invasion.
 
Zika has pregnant women in the U.S. worried, and doctors have few answers
In Florida, where the warm, humid climate is ideal for the mosquitoes that transmit the virus, the state has declared a public health emergency in 11 counties because of Zika.
 
A neighborhood feud over a basement highlights a problem for London's super rich
Extravagant home expansions threaten the notion that an Englishman's home is his castle.
 
What it’s like to live on a cruise ship for 8 years
COLUMN | After her husband died, the author sold her home and a lifetime's accumulation of furnishings and collectibles and became a permanent resident on an ocean liner.
 
The moving story behind this photo of Biden and a sexual assault survivor at the Oscars
Sofie Karasek was among the survivors on stage with Lady Gaga during her haunting performance.
 
 
     
 
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