Monday, September 12, 2016

Evening Edition: Under scrutiny, Clinton to release more medical details this week

What Clinton's pneumonia diagnosis means, medically speaking; What we know about 5 phantom Trump Foundation donations; Above the Arctic Circle, climate change threatens an Alaska town; Nearly immediate violation of Syrian cease-fire hurts hopes for peace; Obama expected to veto 9/11 victims bill, White House says; ‘Our hearts are ripped in two': Nine dead, including six children, in devastating Memphis fire; Trump supporters don't neatly fit into just 2 baskets; Fed Chair Yellen 'should be ashamed of herself,' Trump says; Donald Trump Jr. shares an image linking his father to the alt-right; Trump's new Washington monument is a luxury hotel his blue-collar supporters can't afford; France's president says the United States' response to 9/11 made the world less safe; North Korea defied the world with a nuclear test. Now it seeks aid for a flood disaster.; 'I'm not taking my treehouse down,' vows 'hippie' who has lived in it for 10 years; Browns’ Robert Griffin III to miss at least eight games with shoulder injury;
 
Evening Edition
The day's most important stories
 
 
Under scrutiny, Clinton to release more medical details this week
To answer growing criticism about how the news of her pneumonia diagnosis was handled, additional disclosures will be made. Aides acknowledged that the news of the Democratic nominee's illness should have been treated differently before she nearly collapsed Sunday at a 9/11 memorial service.
What Clinton's pneumonia diagnosis means, medically speaking
The CDC estimates that 2 million people a year fall sick with milder forms of pneumonia.
 
What we know about 5 phantom Trump Foundation donations
Tax filings described giving a specific amount of money to a specific charity. But when The Post called, the charities listed said the tax filings appeared wrong. They had never received anything from Donald Trump or his foundation.
 
Above the Arctic Circle, climate change threatens an Alaska town
States of emergency are common in Barrow, population 4,000. Given rising seas and coastal erosion, every year brings the threat of a storm that could wipe the town off the map. And experts predict the entire area could be underwater by the middle of the century.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Nearly immediate violation of Syrian cease-fire hurts hopes for peace
Residents and activists of the besieged rebel portion of Aleppo said Syrian government helicopters dropped barrel bombs. Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad were said to be shelling a route intended for the delivery of humanitarian aid. 
 
Obama expected to veto 9/11 victims bill, White House says
The president said the bill that would allow families to sue the Saudi Arabia government over the terrorist attacks could be used by foreigners to sue the United States.
 
‘Our hearts are ripped in two': Nine dead, including six children, in devastating Memphis fire
Investigators believe the family was trapped by security bars on the windows and a living-room fire that blocked the home's only escape routes.
 
Trump supporters don't neatly fit into just 2 baskets
A Post-ABC News poll found that people who supported Donald Trump in the primaries could be divided into four groups of roughly equal size based on their economic and racial anxieties.
 
Fed Chair Yellen 'should be ashamed of herself,' Trump says
In the latest of the GOP nominee's often contradictory critiques about the nation's central bank, he accused the Federal Reserve of keeping interest rates low for political reasons.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Donald Trump Jr. shares an image linking his father to the alt-right
The "Deplorables" image included fringe radio host Alex Jones and a cartoon icon associated with the white nationalist faction.
 
Trump's new Washington monument is a luxury hotel his blue-collar supporters can't afford
With Monday's soft opening, the transformation of a century-old post office building into one of Washington's most expensive new hotels nears completion.
 
France's president says the United States' response to 9/11 made the world less safe
François Hollande wrote of his grief for the victims of the attacks but said that even though France refused to join the intervention in Iraq, it has "been a victim of the consequences of the chaos it caused."
 
North Korea defied the world with a nuclear test. Now it seeks aid for a flood disaster.
After a typhoon struck last month, more than 130 people were killed and 395 more are still missing. At least 100,000 people were left homeless.
 
'I'm not taking my treehouse down,' vows 'hippie' who has lived in it for 10 years
Shawnee Chasser has been given an ultimatum by Miami-Dade County: Bring her treehouse up to code or demolish it. She plans to do neither.
 
Browns’ Robert Griffin III to miss at least eight games with shoulder injury
The former Redskins quarterback was placed on injured reserve after he fractured a bone in his left shoulder during Cleveland's season opener Sunday against Philadelphia.
 
 
     
 
©2016 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment