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Serena Williams forced to retire from first-round Wimbledon match due to injury

by Seamus Fagan Seven-time Wimbledon champion Serena Williams was forced to retire from her first-round match at the All England Club against Aliaksandra Sasnovich on Tuesday due to an injury suffered in the first set. With Williams leading 3-1 in the first set,

June 30, 2021
National News

Randy Moore to become US Forest Service’s first African American chief

By Devan Cole Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack will appoint Randy Moore as the new chief of the US Forest Service, making him the first African American to lead the agency once sworn in, Vilsack announced Monday. Moore, a longtime employee of the

June 30, 2021
National News

US lawmakers launch investigation into FDA approval and price of new Alzheimer’s drug

By Jacqueline Howard Two House committees have launched an investigation into the approval and pricing of the Alzheimer’s disease drug aducanumab, made by the company Biogen and sold under the brand name Aduhelm. The US Food and Drug Administration approved the drug earlier this

June 30, 2021
Sports

US stars Sloane Stephens and Frances Tiafoe cause upsets at Wimbledon

By Ben Church It was a good day to be an American at Wimbledon on Monday, with both Sloane Stephens and Frances Tiafoe causing upsets as the grass-court grand slam began. Stephens stunned two-time champion Petra Kvitova in straight sets, 6-3 6-4, while

June 29, 2021June 29, 2021
Entertainment

The author of ‘White Fragility’ takes on ‘nice racism’

By John Blake One evening, Robin DiAngelo became a nice racist. DiAngelo, author of “White Fragility,” remembers the precise moment it happened. A friend invited her to join a few friends of hers for dinner. When DiAngelo arrived at the restaurant, she was excited

June 29, 2021
National News

UN rights chief urges US to ‘stop denying and start dismantling racism’

By Leah Asmelash The United Nations’ human rights chief is calling on the US to reform its criminal justice system, reimagine policing nationwide and provide reparations for descendants of enslaved Africans. In a report published on Monday, the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights

June 29, 2021
National News

This Iowa county used to be named for a slave-holding former vice president. Now, it’s named after a Black academic

By Leah Asmelash A county in Iowa was named after a slave-holding vice president. Now, it’s named after the first Black woman to earn a PhD from the University of Iowa. The Board of Supervisors of Johnson County in Iowa, home to

June 29, 2021
Business/National News

More people looking for — but not taking — jobs after their unemployment benefits end early

By Tami Luhby Jason Smith thought he’d have an easier time filling jobs at his three auto repair shops after Indiana’s governor announced that pandemic unemployment benefits would end in mid-June. But it hasn’t worked out that way so far. While he is

June 29, 2021
Business

America’s biggest banks detail 30 things they can do to combat racial inequality

By Matt Egan America’s biggest banks insist they can and will do more to combat the nation’s racial inequality crisis. The trade group behind JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America and dozens of other big banks is detailing 30 best practices

June 29, 2021
Politics

House to vote to remove Confederate statues and replace Roger B. Taney bust

By Alex Rogers The House will vote Tuesday on a resolution to expel Confederate statues and replace the Capitol’s bust of Roger B. Taney, the chief justice who wrote the Dred Scott decision, with one honoring Thurgood Marshall, the first African American Supreme

June 29, 2021
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