Overcoming imposter syndrome: How the pandemic increased …
2020 was a rough year for a lot of people. The pandemic, working from home, and not seeing loved ones.
2020 was a rough year for a lot of people. The pandemic, working from home, and not seeing loved ones.
2020 was a rough year for a lot of people. The pandemic, working from home, and not seeing loved ones.
The Chester Police Department is moving into a former bank building.
Crews will close the two left lanes on U.S. 74 West and the exit ramp from U.S. 74 East to Wendover Road.
The U.S. Marines is reporting the death of a fellow Marine that occurred on Thursday night at Camp Lejeune in Jacksonville.
A car crashed into a Belmont nail salon just before the prom rush.
Effective August 1st schools or educational programs that receive federal funding must abide by a new set of news rules designed to protect LGBTQ students from discrimination in class or during activities. Raquel Martin reports while the Department of Education new Title IX regulations provides new avenues for parents and students to file complaints and hold schools accountable, it side steps the glaring hot button issue: sports. The Administration says right now it is "carefully considering" a separate rule tackling sports eligibility.
The Supreme Court is set to hear arguments Monday in a case that could determine how cities handle homelessness. The case deals with whether Grants Pass, Oregon can fine or arrest people for sleeping outside. The Ninth Circuit has said that's "cruel and unusual punishment" if they don't have somewhere else to go. Homeless advocates and Democratic lawmakers spoke outside SCOTUS this week, urging justices not to "criminalize" homelessness, while Grants Pass and those supporting the city say the encampments are a public safety crisis.
Jury selection is now complete in the high-profile trial of former president Donald Trump.
Efforts to ban TikTok in the U.S. have been revived and could get a vote in Congress as early as Saturday but those opposed say that’s a violation of Americans’ free speech rights.
A person lit themself on fire outside a New York City courthouse where jury selection was concluding in the hush money trial against former President Donald Trump.
It’s not clear what led to the incident. NewsNation’s Laura Ingle reported hearing a scream before witnessing the person in flames. She later described seeing a bystander try and help put the flames out with a coat before another showed up with a fire extinguisher.
Updates: https://www.newsnationnow.com/us-news/northeast/person-sets-self-fire-trump-trial/
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