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The Toledo Blade
Февраль
2017

Новости за 26.02.2017

Jordan Peele's 'Get Out' scares up big debut

The Toledo Blade 

LOS ANGELES — Great reviews and buzz propelled comedian Jordan Peele’s directorial debut, the micro-budget thriller “Get Out,” to a chart-topping opening weekend with $30.5 million according to studio estimates today.

Judge Joseph Wapner dead at 97

The Toledo Blade 

LOS ANGELES — Joseph A. Wapner, a retired California judge whose flinty-folksy style of resolving disputes on the show “The People’s Court” helped spawn an entire genre of courtroom-based reality television with no-nonsense jurists and often clueless litigants, died Feb. 26 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 97.

Transgender teenage wrestler wins Texas state championship

The Toledo Blade 

High school athlete Mack Beggs, a teenager who is transitioning from female to male, won his 110-pound weight class in the Texas girl's state championship on Saturday, according to media reports.

Ohio police must collect data on suspect race under plan

The Toledo Blade 

COLUMBUS, Ohio — A state certification process will require that all Ohio police departments for the first time collect data on the race and gender of people they pull over in traffic stops or take aside for questioning, in an effort to reduce potential police bias against suspects.



Actor Bill Paxton dead at 61

The Toledo Blade 

Actor Bill Paxton, whose extensive career included films such as "The Terminator," "Aliens" and "Titanic," has died, a representative for his family said in a statement. He was 61.

Report warns of state money fallout from health law repeal

The Toledo Blade 

WASHINGTON — A sobering report to governors about the potential consequences of repealing the Obama-era health care law warns that federal spending cuts probably would create funding gaps for states and threaten many people with the loss of insurance coverage.

S. Carolina law makes it tough to lower Confederate flags

The Toledo Blade 

WALHALLA, S.C. — In the aftermath of the racially motivated Charleston church slayings in 2015, the Confederate flag was removed from the South Carolina Statehouse during an elaborate nationally televised ceremony.

Sessions' tough on crime talk could lead to fuller prisons

The Toledo Blade 

WASHINGTON — The federal prison population is on the decline, but a new attorney general who talks tough on drugs and crime and already has indicated a looming need for private prison cells seems poised to usher in a reversal of that trend.

Pentagon seeks to expand fight against extremists in Somalia

The Toledo Blade 

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon wants to expand the military’s ability to battle al-Qaida-linked militants in Somalia, potentially putting U.S. forces closer to the fight against a stubborn extremist group that has plotted attacks against America, senior U.S. officials said.

Kim Jong Nam died within 20 minutes, autopsy shows

The Toledo Blade 

Kim Jong Nam, the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, likely died within 20 minutes of being exposed to a nerve agent at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Malaysia.

Asian carp: Invaders at the gates

The Toledo Blade 

ROMEOVILLE, Ill. — The now two-decades-old battle to keep invasive Asian carp out of the Great Lakes, being waged at numerous sites around the Midwest, has evolved into an uneasy standoff of sorts here on the Chicago waterway that is universally considered the front line in this biological conflict.

Новости России
Москва

Алекс Анохин: возможность вместе пройти через страницы нашей истории


Yearly seed exchange draws hundreds in Toledo

The Toledo Blade 

Robyn Marrufo thumbed through hundreds of seed packets Saturday, searching for just the right fruits and vegetables to grow in her garden this spring.

Trump pretty good at being the great disrupter

The Toledo Blade 

If the early controversies of the Reagan Administration are any indication — the contretemps over whether the Agriculture Department should count ketchup as a vegetable in school lunches and whether Interior Secretary James Watt’s view that Americans should “occupy the land until Jesus returns” was national policy — the current furors swirling around the Trump Administration are mere distractions.

What is politics for?

The Toledo Blade 

Most of us, when we think of politicians, think of a clash of interests, values, and egos.

A legislative oops

The Toledo Blade 

The Ohio General Assembly passed a law last year that would let drivers go through red lights in some cases. It may have been an accident. Now lawmakers are trying to fix it.


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