Monday, 26 September 2016

Monday's Headlines: First debate a pivotal moment for Clinton and Trump

Democrats' hopes of winning Senate fade as Trump proves less toxic for GOP; Kellyanne Conway criticizes Obama's response to Trump claims about African Americans; Arnold Palmer, golf's first name-brand superstar, left an indelible mark; A tiny Indiana town sees its legacy preserved in the African American Museum;
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
First debate a pivotal moment for Clinton and Trump
Much of the nation is expected to tune in amid great uncertainty about what they'll see — including which version of Donald Trump will be on stage. With polls showing the candidates in a virtual tie six weeks out from Election Day, the stakes in Monday's debate could hardly be higher.
Democrats' hopes of winning Senate fade as Trump proves less toxic for GOP
Voters appear to be separating Donald Trump from down-ballot Republicans, pushing the fight for the Senate into a knuckle-to-knuckle brawl that will likely result in the chamber closely divided or potentially even tied.
 
Kellyanne Conway criticizes Obama's response to Trump claims about African Americans
Donald Trump's campaign manager chided the president for his response to the GOP nominee's assertion that life has never "ever" been worse for African Americans than it is today.
 
Arnold Palmer, golf's first name-brand superstar, left an indelible mark
Credited with inventing golf as a televised sport and being the first to earn $1 million in purses, he won seven major titles, brought zest to the staid game and turned his everyman image into a worldwide franchise. Palmer, 87, died Sunday in Pittsburgh.
 
A tiny Indiana town sees its legacy preserved in the African American Museum
Lyles Station, Ind., was a haven of free blacks who were able to buy land and build their own farms before the Civil War. A century and a half later, some of those who still live and farm there traveled to Washington to see their ancestors' stories introduced to the world.
 
ADVERTISEMENT
 
Opinions
 
Dear debate moderators: Please do not duck
 
Beyond debate?
 
The wrong immigration debate
 
A soliloquy on Syria
 
Obama's failed legacy on child soldiers
 
GOP voters declare fealty to Trump as partisanship intensifies
ADVERTISEMENT
 
More News
 
U.S. accuses Russia of 'barbarism' and war crimes in Syria
As a war of words unfolded at the United Nations in New York, Aleppo's rebel-held eastern neighborhoods were being shaken by the most ferocious aerial attacks there in recent memory.
Vin Scully's last game at Dodger Stadium provides another storybook ending
The 88-year-old broadcaster called a division-clinching walk-off home run, a final big moment in a career full of them.
Loss of exuberant Jose Fernandez shakes the baseball community
The untimely death of the 24-year-old Marlins star, who combined extraordinary pitching with a harrowing story of defecting from Cuba, leaves a void in the sport and in the city of Miami.
Trump's reference to Bill Clinton affair underscores his own history of infidelity
Some say suggesting Hillary Clinton is somehow to blame for her husband's extramarital affair will hurt Trump with women.
Trump, Clinton meet separately with Israeli prime minister in New York
The press was not granted access to either meeting.
Sullivan: Why you should watch the debate — even if you've made up your mind
Under fire from candidates and pundits, these confrontations matter more than any speech or ad.
What they said, what they meant
Sign up to have The Fix's Aaron Blake text you the highlights of each debate as it unfolds.
It's been two years since Ferguson, but police reform remains slow to roll out across the U.S.
In Charlotte and elsewhere, there have been pushes to step up officer training, but the pace of deadly shootings has not changed. The toll illustrates the challenges of reforming a police force and the fatigue of the communities demanding new accountability.
As kindergarten ratchets up academics, parents feel the stress
Many new parents say they have been shocked to find their children in a pressure cooker of rigorous academics, standardized tests, homework and what seem like outrageous expectations.
Afghan refugees have settled in Pakistan for decades. Now they're being ordered to get out.
Pakistan, long a safety valve for Afghans fleeing successive periods of conflict and repression, has given 1.5 million long-settled and registered refugees six months to leave.
Identical twin confesses to 2003 murder that put his brother behind bars
The shocking admission brought both men to tears in a Chicago courtroom.
 
     
 
©2016 The Washington Post, 1301 K St NW, Washington DC 20071
 
 
 

No comments:

Post a Comment