Former vice president Mike Pence speaks at an event in Chicago last week. (Anthony Vazquez/Chicago Sun-Times/AP)
By Jacqueline Alemany and Josh Dawsey
- Watch our live coverage beginning at 12:30 p.m. ET
States have gotten millions of dollars in federal aid for child care, the first major infusion in decades. But only a handful are using it to address issues in the day-care industry.
By Casey Parks
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The attack on the mall in Kremenchuk is part of a recent escalation that has seen Russian missiles pounding Ukrainian cities.
- 8:38 p.m.Updates from key battlefields: More than a dozen killed in airstrikes on shopping mall, residential areas
- 7:30 p.m.At summit, Biden and other leaders cast about for ways to help Ukraine
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(Video: Rob Nightingale via Storyful; photo: AP)
The train was traveling from Los Angeles to Chicago when it struck a construction vehicle at a crossing in Mendon, Mo., Amtrak said.
The U.S. surgeon general, who has lost 10 family members to covid-19, wants to make his mark on our epidemic of loneliness.
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The ailment in older adults has received little attention, even though research suggests seniors are more likely to develop it than younger or middle-aged adults.
By Judith Graham
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Digital World Acquisition Corp., the shell company that plans to acquire Donald Trump’s “Truth Social” social media company and take it public, has warned investors that the subpoenas could impede the deal.
By Aaron Gregg
Podcaster Joe Oltmann. (Olivia Sun/Colorado Sun via Report for America)
Joe Oltmann has built a sprawling political network in Colorado marked by false 2020 claims and suggestions that opponents be hanged.
Transforming the quick-response force is just one way the alliance led by NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg is responding to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
By Emily Rauhala and Annabelle Timsit
The John E. Amos coal-fired power plant. (Stacy Kranitz for The Post)
Kayrros, a firm that analyzes satellite data, says emissions of the potent greenhouse gas “appear to be going in the wrong direction.”
By Ryan Lenora Brown and Jennifer Hassan
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In at least 178 cases over three years, law enforcement killed the individuals they were called to assist.
By Jon Gerberg and Alice Li
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The recipients are Spec. 5th Class Dwight D. Birdwell, Maj. John J. Duffy, Spec. 5th Class Dennis M. Fujii and Staff Sgt. Edward N. Kaneshiro.
By Dan Lamothe
Michael Derry is the superintendent of the Utopia Independent School District, where some school personnel are armed. (Joshua Lott/The Post)
The loan default comes at a perilous moment for cryptocurrencies, as investors brace for the “crypto winter.”
By Hamza Shaban
An NFT featuring a screen shot of the Roe critic was sold in an auction — with the money going to Planned Parenthood and other groups.
By Steven Zeitchik1 hour ago
Homicides have reached 104 in the city this year, a 21 percent increase over this time in 2021.
Jeremy Kalfus, 14, with the suitcase he packed for the trip. (Mason Kalfus)
At the last minute, the university’s prestigious Center for Talented Youth informed hundreds of students that their summer programs were canceled.
The pandemic nixed 2020 and forced 50 percent capacity for the opening of 2021. (Glyn Kirk/AFP/Getty Images)
The All England Club had a first day unlike any since 2019.
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Throughout the weekend, moms and daughters marked the historic moment together — some were angry, some elated, all of them emotional.
By Anna Tingley
Robert Adams, “Tract House, Longmont, Colorado,” 1973. (Collection of Frish Brandt and August Fischer/Courtesy of Fraenkel Gallery)
“American Silence: The Photographs of Robert Adams” is a must-see exhibition at the National Gallery of Art through Oct. 2.
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