Sunday, 23 October 2016

Sunday's Headlines: Buoyed by rising polls, Clinton shifts to a new target: The House and Senate

Trump tries to look to the future but gets mired in present troubles; Has Trump transformed America or just revealed it?; Cubs capture first pennant since 1945, and the angst is put at bay — for now; In Flint, a water crisis with no end in sight;
 
Today's Headlines
The morning's most important stories, selected by Post editors
 
 
Top Stories
Buoyed by rising polls, Clinton shifts to a new target: The House and Senate
Emboldened by Donald Trump's troubles and polls predicting an electoral-college landslide in the presidential race, Hillary Clinton is shifting her strategy to lift other Democrats. Her campaign is spending big, too: More than $100 million has been funneled to other Democrats from coast to coast.
Trump tries to look to the future but gets mired in present troubles
In a speech outlining his vision for his first 100 days in office, the GOP nominee initially used the talk to accuse the media of biased reporting and vowed to sue the nearly-dozen women who have accused him of sexual assault.
 
Has Trump transformed America or just revealed it?
The GOP presidential nominee's ability to embrace — or manipulate — average Americans' anxieties is inspiring more raw and rough rhetoric in politics, darker and more somber popular music, and in TV, movies and other arts, an edgier, more nervous set of characters and themes.
 
Cubs capture first pennant since 1945, and the angst is put at bay — for now
COLUMN | After hard-to-believe losses in the team's last two trips to the National League Championship Series, Chicago fans everywhere felt relief with their team's victory in a crisp and slightly lopsided game against the Los Angeles Dodgers.
 
In Flint, a water crisis with no end in sight
More than a year after officials finally acknowledged that the city's water system was contaminated by lead, many residents still rely on bottled water because promised aid has yet to arrive. In ways large and small, the crisis continues to shape daily life.
 
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Opinions
 
We live in Aleppo. Here’s how we survive.
 
It's our job to explain what 'bad hombres' means
 
How fascist is Donald Trump? There's a formula for that.
 
How to get that winter body in time for parka season
 
The time Donald Trump got groped
 
How can you tell if someone is kind? Ask how rich they are.
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More News
 
In seismic shift for media, AT&T to buy Time Warner for $85.4 billion
The blockbuster deal between telecom titan AT&T and media conglomerate Time Warner casts a spotlight on tech giants' accelerating conquest of media in an increasingly unbundled world.
Once the 'most popular politician on Earth,' Brazil's Lula now faces prosecutors
As ex-president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva confronts corruption charges, candidates he has backed have done poorly. But Lula himself remains one of the more beloved figures in Brazil.
Hundreds sickened as Islamic State militants set sulfur mine ablaze to slow troops' advance on Mosul
The noxious fumes menaced civilians and forced Iraqi and U.S. troops to wear protective masks, but officials gave no indication that the tactic has interrupted the offensive.
As Trump delivers his Gettysburg address, GOP prepares for a civil war
Antipathy between the nominee and GOP leaders makes a solution to the party's growing demographic disadvantage seem even more remote.
Trump and Clinton took to the debate stage and made sweet, sweet music
The songs are as different as their politics.
'Maybe I shouldn't be saying that': Trump jokes that it's okay for his supporters to commit voter fraud
His tone was joking -- but the comments follow several days of serious allegations that the system is "rigged" against him.
Look at all the college football teams coming back from the dead
From Penn State to Auburn to West Virginia to Nebraska to Colorado to LSU and back up to SMU, once-forgotten teams made an impression with signature wins over the weekend.
A musician's calculated creativity
Instead of waiting for bursts of inspiration, Grammy winner Hilary Hahn became one of the most illuminating violinists of our time by taking a methodical, inquisitive approach.
'She didn't have credibility anymore': The moment Rolling Stone's U-Va. rape story unraveled
Former magazine writer Sabrina Rubin Erdely described to a federal jury the phone call that made her realize the alleged victim had been lying to her.
Two years ago, 43 Mexican students disappeared. Now, an ex-police chief's arrest may help crack the case.
Officials believe the ex-police chief from the town of Iguala, arrested while on the run, followed orders to get rid of the students — and then tried to cover up the police's role in their disappearance.
News quiz: Were you paying attention this week?
We've got questions about the presidential debate, sure, but those weren't the only headlines. Answer quickly for a time bonus.
How new overtime rules apply to you
The Labor Department offers resources to you get up to speed.
Is your airline telling you everything?
Transportation Dept. investigators went to a dozen U.S. airports to test companies on follow-through. Many failed.
 
     
 
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