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Chronic absences are 'astronomical.' What are Maryland lawmakers doing about it?
BALTIMORE — April will mark nine years of state lawmakers pushing to transform education through an overhaul known as the Blueprint for Maryland’s Future. The reform plan includes a wide variety of initiatives, from publicly funding pre-K to attracting high-quality teachers to providing poverty grants for schools with a high share of low-...Read more
Next Missouri governor predicts 'tougher times' for spending. Will Kansas City see cuts?
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Earlier this year, Missouri Gov. Mike Parson cut roughly $1 billion from the state budget, including millions for Kansas City-area highway work, health care and civic groups, frustrating local leaders and lawmakers.
Gov-elect Mike Kehoe will soon confront similar choices.
BoysGrow, which operates a Kansas City-area farm ...Read more
There was no red wave among Georgia's Latino voters. Here's why
ATLANTA — Donald Trump’s dramatic gains with Latino voters, particularly among Latino men, have emerged as a huge talking point since his election win earlier this month.
But the surge in Latino support for Trump didn’t manifest equally across the electoral map.
Case in point: Latinos in Georgia appeared to have backed the Democratic ...Read more
Trump wants to deport millions; Maryland counties are sharply split on whether to help
BALTIMORE — Maryland counties are sharply divided over whether to assist President-elect Donald Trump with what he says will be the largest deportation program in American history.
A Baltimore Sun survey found widely divergent responses to Trump’s proposal — from Harford County’s pledge to “fully support” his efforts to Anne Arundel...Read more
Reputed Mexican Mafia member wounded, another man killed in LA County shooting
LOS ANGELES — A reputed member of the Mexican Mafia was wounded in a shooting Saturday that left a second man dead in Los Angeles County, authorities said.
At 11 p.m., Los Angeles County sheriff's deputies responded to a Veterans of Foreign Wars hall on Valley View Avenue in La Mirada, where they found two men with gunshot wounds in the ...Read more
Activism on foot: When Indigenous activists walk the land to honor their past and reshape their future
More than a decade ago, I spent a week working in Gatineau, a city on the southern edge of Québec, with the Cree Board of Health and Social Services. I was helping train researchers to interview Iiyiyiu elders about traditional birthing knowledge, so they could develop resources for soon-to-be parents and health care workers.
...Read more
Graduate students explore America’s polarized landscape via train in this course
Uncommon Courses is an occasional series from The Conversation U.S. highlighting unconventional approaches to teaching.
Crossing the Divide
I developed the idea for this course in 2016 during an Amtrak writing residency program. I spent over two weeks crisscrossing the United States via train while working on my 2021 book ...Read more
Americans agree politics is broken − here are 5 ideas for fixing key problems
Now that the elections are over, you might be left feeling exhausted, despondent and disillusioned – whether your preferred candidate won or not. You are not alone.
Survey after survey has found that Americans agree that the political system is not serving them.
Americans say they are angry at the political dysfunction, ...Read more
Vulnerability to financial scams in aging adults could be an early indicator of Alzheimer’s disease, new research shows
A brain region affected very early in Alzheimer’s disease may explain why some aging people are at greater risk of financial exploitation. That is the key finding of our new study, published in the journal Cerebral Cortex.
We are a clinical psychology doctoral student and a clinical neuropsychologist, and we are interested in ...Read more
Denmark’s uprooting of settled residents from ‘ghettos’ forms part of aggressive plan to assimilate nonwhite inhabitants
History is full of examples of governments using forced segregation against ethnic minorities.
From settler colonialists coercing Indigenous peoples into reservations, Nazis forcing Jews into ghettos or the United States segregating Black Americans through redlining and zoning policies, displacement and housing have long been at the ...Read more
Presidents often claim mandates − especially when they want to expand their power or are on the defensive
Shortly after the 2024 election was called in Donald Trump’s favor, he declared that voters had given him “an unprecedented and powerful mandate.”
As the popular vote margin shrinks, however, this claim seems less plausible. But it puts Trump squarely within the historical tradition of how presidents – and those around them �...Read more
Wartime medical innovations slash Israel's troop mortality rate
Custom-designed helmets that stave off major brain injuries. Mobile blood banks and preliminary surgery on the battlefield. Dog tags that broadcast medical data. Evacuation by helicopter to hospitals, measured in minutes. Fentanyl lollipops to ease the pain.
As Israel plows into the second year of open-ended war on several fronts, its military ...Read more
Netanyahu says Israel won't back down after ICC arrest warrants
Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu severely criticized the International Criminal Court for issuing arrest warrants against him and a former minister, and said his government won’t be deterred from continuing its war against Hamas in Gaza.
The Hague-based court’s announcement on Thursday was “anti-Semitic” and Israel will keep...Read more
Highly contagious whooping cough rises in California to highest levels in years
LOS ANGELES — Whooping cough — a highly contagious and potentially dangerous illness — has surged in California this year, staging a comeback to levels not seen since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Across California, there were fewer than 300 reported cases of whooping cough, also known as pertussis, all of last year. This year, ...Read more
Mayor Bass said she'd save LA's shelter animals. More dogs and cats are dying
LOS ANGELES — Jake, a tawny 2-year-old mutt in L.A.’s West Valley shelter, wasn’t doing well.
After six months at the shelter, he was running back and forth and jumping in his kennel.
So shelter workers put him on the euthanasia list in September.
“With the current staff we are unable to fulfill his enrichment needs and it is inhumane...Read more
Ukraine's parliament cancels session amid new attack threat
Ukraine’s parliament canceled Friday’s plenary session due to the threat of a possible air attack on Kyiv’s government district, according to lawmakers.
The country is on high alert after Russia launched a “new” kind of ballistic missile at the city of Dnipro on Thursday, the latest escalation of hostilities in the long-running war. ...Read more
Modified version of NYC Mayor Eric Adams' 'City of Yes' zoning plan passes key Council committee vote
NEW YORK — A modified version of the mayor’s City of Yes housing proposal passed key City Council committees on Thursday, a major milestone for the plan.
Several aspects of the mayor’s plan were scaled back in the last hours of negotiations with the City Council’s speaker’s office and Department of City Planning, including the number ...Read more
Hundreds of death row inmates sit in California prisons. Why must they wait?
Charles E. Case was sentenced to death by a Sacramento County jury nearly 30 years ago and immediately became eligible for an attorney skilled at state-level habeas corpus appeals, a key part of the process to determine whether capital punishment should be carried out.
Now 84 years old, he still hasn’t been assigned one.
Even older is the ...Read more
ICE battling alleged rapists and Massachusetts sanctuary city roadblocks
ICE agents stymied by sanctuary city loopholes keep tracking down drug dealers and accused rapists living illegally in Massachusetts despite the roadblocks from Boston to the Berkshires.
Two new arrests include a 21-year-old Guatemalan national charged with rape of child by force (two related counts) and indecent assault and battery against a ...Read more
'A different way of doing law': For four decades, he drafted bills in the House
WASHINGTON — Wade Ballou pointed at a scarred wooden table in his office.
“Let me give you a warning about this table. Supposedly, the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 was written on this. I’ve had the legs raised a bit, but it continues to be a bit low. Watch your knees and all of that.”
His tenure doesn’t stretch back quite so far, ...Read more
Popular Stories
- Hundreds of death row inmates sit in California prisons. Why must they wait?
- ICE battling alleged rapists and Massachusetts sanctuary city roadblocks
- Matt Gaetz withdraws consideration for Trump's AG; Pam Bondi announced as new pick
- Newsom promotes his economic plans in conservative parts of California
- 'A different way of doing law': For four decades, he drafted bills in the House