Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Evening Edition: Sanders scores important symbolic victory in Michigan

Party elites almost out of time to deny Trump the GOP nomination; Poll: Clinton leads Trump, aided by Obama coalition; How a change in GOP primary rules is helping Trump even more (for now); Marco Rubio’s campaign is basically over; Washington Post-Univision presidential debate; First U.S. uterus transplant removed after complication; Martian manifesto is a window into an unraveling mind; Norovirus outbreak forces closing of Boston-area Chipotle restaurant; Activists push Obama to nominate a black woman to the Supreme Court; Cosby's wife refuses to answer questions nearly 100 times in deposition; Why unprocessed, vegetarian food was actually bad for our ancestors; 'My 4-year-old gets jacked up to target shoot,' mom brags hours before he shoots her; White teacher: I thought I could reach my black and Latino students. Then one told me why I couldn’t.; A chef once came at me with a knife. I broke his arm and still managed to serve dinner.;
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
Sanders scores important symbolic victory in Michigan
Bernie Sanders's win in Michigan makes it that much harder for Hillary Clinton's people to dismiss him as someone who can win only small, not very Democratic states that hold caucuses.
Party elites almost out of time to deny Trump the GOP nomination
Donald Trump's easy victories in Michigan and Mississippi demonstrated appeal from the Deep South to the industrial Midwest that continued his impressive winning string and added to his lead in delegates.
 
Poll: Clinton leads Trump, aided by Obama coalition
Clinton is viewed more favorably than Trump on a series of attributes, although both rate poorly on the question of honesty, according to a Post-ABC News poll.
 
How a change in GOP primary rules is helping Trump even more (for now)
After a bruising 2012 primary season, Republicans leaders sought to tip the system even more in favor of the front-runner.
 
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Marco Rubio’s campaign is basically over
It's hard to exaggerate what a debacle last night was for Rubio. It was fine to come in third in Iowa's caucuses, when he saw a late surge and was running against 11 other people. It is not fine to come in third in Idaho in a field of four candidates.
 
Washington Post-Univision presidential debate
How to watch the Democratic debate in Miami
 
First U.S. uterus transplant removed after complication
The 26-year-old woman, who received the donor uterus on Feb. 24, suffered a sudden unknown problem just two days after she was introduced to the public, the Cleveland Clinic said.
 
Martian manifesto is a window into an unraveling mind
"It's time someone took a stand to end this nonsense," Kyle Odom said in his rambling commentary about aliens and mind control before his arrest at the White House fence.
 
Norovirus outbreak forces closing of Boston-area Chipotle restaurant
The incident is the latest in a string of bad health-safety news for the Mexican chain, including one in December when more than 100 Boston College students became sick.
 
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Activists push Obama to nominate a black woman to the Supreme Court
Some see this as the last chance for the first black president to seat an African American justice.
 
Cosby's wife refuses to answer questions nearly 100 times in deposition
A transcript of Camille Cosby's testimony in February shows her as a reticent witness, which drew a lecture from a plaintiff's attorney.
 
Why unprocessed, vegetarian food was actually bad for our ancestors
A new study concludes that the invention of processed foods — and the cutting tools to make them — may have been a turning point in human evolution.
 
'My 4-year-old gets jacked up to target shoot,' mom brags hours before he shoots her
Gun-rights advocate Jamie Gilt was in stable condition after being shot through the back of her truck seat.
 
White teacher: I thought I could reach my black and Latino students. Then one told me why I couldn’t.
His students told him they liked him but didn't respect him because his background was so different from theirs.
 
A chef once came at me with a knife. I broke his arm and still managed to serve dinner.
Washington Post food critic Tom Sietsema entertains your dining questions, rants and raves.
 
 
     
 
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