Headlines
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Judge to decide if Penn must produce records in probe of antisemitism at Ivy League school
A federal judge is weighing whether the government can force the University of Pennsylvania to hand over detailed employee information in an antisemitism investigation
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Russia and Ukraine both claim front-line progress with US-brokered talks on hold
Russia and Ukraine have made competing claims about who is gaining ground, as Russian strikes keep hitting Ukrainian cities and U.S.-backed talks in Turkey were postponed
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Justice Department official Ed Martin accused of ethics violations for letter to Georgetown dean
The office that enforces the ethics code for attorneys in the nation’s capital has accused Justice Department official Ed Martin of professional misconduct for a threatening letter that he sent to Georgetown Law School’s dean last year
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Baltimore police officer wounded, gunman killed during midday burglary call
A police officer was shot and a gunman was killed during a confrontation Tuesday in Baltimore
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No new trial for man convicted of killing Georgia nursing student Laken Riley
A judge has rejected a request for a new trial for a Venezuelan man convicted of killing Georgia nursing student Laken Riley
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US homes sales rose in February as homebuyers seized on easing mortgage rates
Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes rose in February from the previous month as home shoppers benefited from easing mortgage rates and a modest increase in properties on the market heading into the spring homebuying season
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What Americans think about the war in Iran, according to recent polls
Americans are divided along party lines on U.S. military action against Iran, according to polls conducted since the war began, with most polls showing opposition is higher than support
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Best cat? Funniest prop? Ahead of the Oscars, the AP hands out its own awards
Awards season has a way of diminishing the movie year into a handful of films that are talked about ad nauseam for months
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State Department allows up to $40M to be used for evacuation flights for Americans in Mideast
The State Department has authorized the use of up to $40 million in emergency funds to pay for evacuation charter flights for Americans to leave the Middle East due to disruptions in transportation caused by the Iran war
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Jihadis intensify attacks against Nigeria's military, killing officers and carting away weapons
Jihadi extremist groups including Boko Haram have targeted Nigerian military camps in intensifying attacks in the last week
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