Sunday, July 23, 2017

Evening Edition: White House offers muddled messages on Russia sanctions and pardons

Scaramucci's comment to Sanders about hair and makeup draws fire; Attorney general should testify before Senate Judiciary Committee again, Sen. Franken says; 8 people found dead in sweltering tractor-trailer at a Walmart in Texas; Jordan Spieth wins British Open, marking his third major title before turning 24; He brought Burundi’s first robotics team to the U.S. to inspire his country. Then, the teens disappeared.; A total solar eclipse is happening in the U.S. next month. Here's what you need to know.; He thought he just had blisters from a hike. He had flesh-eating bacteria and nearly died.; Charlie Gard case draws protests, death threats and 'disgraceful tide of hostilities'; Clint Dempsey, the ‘kid from Nacogdoches,’ lifts U.S. soccer team into Gold Cup final; William and Harry open up about losing Diana in HBO documentary; In Detroit, ‘the rage of oppression.’ For five days in 1967, riots consumed a city.;
 
Democracy Dies in Darkness
 
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
White House offers muddled messages on Russia sanctions and pardons
The White House's communications team of Sarah Huckabee Sanders and Anthony Scaramucci made contradictory statements during the morning talk shows on whether President Trump supported new legislation to punish Russia for its meddling in the 2016 presidential election. Various Trump allies also offered competing opinions on Trump and his legal team's effort to undermine the special counsel's Russia investigation.
Scaramucci's comment to Sanders about hair and makeup draws fire
Sanders said Scaramucci was simply complimenting the White House's makeup artist.
 
Attorney general should testify before Senate Judiciary Committee again, Sen. Franken says
The Democratic senator wants Sessions to shed light on reports that he discussed campaign-related matters with Russia's ambassador last year.
 
8 people found dead in sweltering tractor-trailer at a Walmart in Texas
An official said that the people had been transported inside a refrigeration truck with no working refrigeration and that many of the dozens transported to hospitals could have irreversible brain damage.
 
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Jordan Spieth wins British Open, marking his third major title before turning 24
Spieth's first Claret Jug will live on for what he did and did and did at No. 13, and then the blaze of excellence that came afterward.
 
He brought Burundi’s first robotics team to the U.S. to inspire his country. Then, the teens disappeared.
Coach Canesius Bindaba said he saw few signs that the squad of two girls and four boys had hatched a secret bid for possible asylum in the U.S. or Canada. But then he made a deeply unsettling discovery.
 
A total solar eclipse is happening in the U.S. next month. Here's what you need to know.
If you're just finding out now about the eclipse, the first to cross the entire continental United States in almost a century, it's not too late to make plans to experience it.
 
He thought he just had blisters from a hike. He had flesh-eating bacteria and nearly died.
When Wayne Atkins started feeling sicker after returning home from vacation, his doctor told him that his body was being consumed by the infection.
 
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Charlie Gard case draws protests, death threats and 'disgraceful tide of hostilities'
Emotions outside the court, where the fate of the 11-month-old terminally ill infant will be decided, are running just as high as those inside.
 
Clint Dempsey, the ‘kid from Nacogdoches,’ lifts U.S. soccer team into Gold Cup final
Subbed into the Costa Rica game for 16 minutes in the second half, the veteran forward altered the trajectory of the match, assisting on one goal and scoring one of his own for a 2-0 win.
 
TV Review
William and Harry open up about losing Diana in HBO documentary
As the anniversary of her death approaches, HBO's hour-long documentary, "Diana, Our Mother," gets a rare moment with the two princes.
 
Retropolis | The Past, Revisited
In Detroit, ‘the rage of oppression.’ For five days in 1967, riots consumed a city.
The unrest that began 50 years ago today left 43 dead, 1,200 injured and hundreds of buildings burned. Many neighborhoods never recovered.
 
 
     
 
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