Thursday, November 3, 2016

Thursday's Headlines: British court delivers blow to E.U. exit plan, insists Parliament has a say

In a tightened race, Clinton and Trump make urgent push to get out the vote; Top FBI officials knew about emails potentially related to Clinton server inquiry for weeks; Finally, Cubs win World Series — but not without drama; Do you hear that sound? That is the sound of victory.; The game that went beyond the baseball surreal;
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
British court delivers blow to E.U. exit plan, insists Parliament has a say
The court's decision greatly complicates Prime Minister Theresa May's stated plan to trigger Article 50, the never-before-used mechanism for a country to leave the European Union, by the end of next March at the latest.
In a tightened race, Clinton and Trump make urgent push to get out the vote
The presidential campaign has erupted into a final, frantic sprint as Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton and their allies fanned across the country, warning supporters against complacency and pressing their case to ambivalent voters.
 
Top FBI officials knew about emails potentially related to Clinton server inquiry for weeks
The precise timing is unclear, but FBI Director James Comey did not notify Congress as soon as he learned about the emails because FBI officials wanted more information before proceeding, people familiar with the case said.
 
Finally, Cubs win World Series — but not without drama
The Chicago Cubs won their first title since 1908 with a riveting, 8-7, 10-inning victory over the Cleveland Indians in the seventh and final game at Progressive Field, one that tore out the lining of Chicago's roiling stomach before stitching it back together again. 
 
Do you hear that sound? That is the sound of victory.
The great noise that sports always had in it but never could seem to unleash finally loosed itself with the Cubs' World Series victory, ringing with untold joy, unmistakable traces of disbelief and unquestionable bouts of inebriation.
 
The game that went beyond the baseball surreal
After the Indians tied the game in the eighth, the Cubs pitched a scoreless ninth to send the game into extra innings. And then it rained. Honest.
 
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More News
 
Islamic State leader, confident about holding Mosul, calls for invasion of Turkey
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi's audio message comes amid a U.S.-backed offensive to retake the Iraqi city.
The good, the bad and the ugly in new state polls for Clinton
The race has been following a broad pattern: A big lead for Clinton that narrows to a tie, and then balloons back out. Where will we be in that cycle on Nov. 8?
Gary Johnson still sees 2016 as a game changer. Others call it a missed chance for Libertarians.
For months, he'd argued that the American public's disgust with the two major parties would blaze his path to the White House — but the race veered far from him.
Trump to spend election night at Hilton hotel in Manhattan
Trump is "superstitious" and doesn't want to jinx things by planning a big victory celebration, a person familiar with the plans says.
Suspect in Iowa had confrontations in weeks before shooting of officers
Before he was taken into custody Wednesday as the lone suspect in the ambush killings of two police officers in the Des Moines area, Scott Michael Greene had clashed with police, strangers and his own family.
Humanitarian crisis looms with displaced Afghans
Before the current problem, more than a million people had already been uprooted. Now at least another million Afghans are "on the move," in what the U.N. warns is an alarming new wave of displaced people.
The strangest coincidences of your life probably aren’t that strange at all
Mathematician Joseph Mazur argues that most of the coincidences we experience -- like stumbling into a close friend halfway around the world or meeting someone with the same birthday -- can be explained by simple mathematics.
Here's what's keeping college graduates on the lower rungs of the wealth ladder
A confluence of stagnant wages, appreciation in home prices, conservative lending and rising student loan balances is making it difficult for millennials to create wealth through home ownership.
Neiman Marcus sells collard greens for $66, and the Internet mockery explodes
To cooks who know collards as a cheap, homey staple, the news is particularly ludicrous. And collards weren't the only high-priced dish offered by the store that raised eyebrows.
 
     
 
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