1 year after Freddie Gray, police work to heal city’s wounds
BALTIMORE (AP) — In the year since Freddie Gray died, the Baltimore police department has worked on its relationship with the community and tried to heal wounds opened during protests and rioting last spring. Part of the department's efforts have been putting more officers on foot patrol in poor, mostly black neighborhoods and encouraging beat…
Read MoreMilitary leaders struggle to navigate 2016’s political swirl
WASHINGTON (AP) — Senior military leaders take their political neutrality seriously. But this year's presidential election — with forays into national security issues that have included proposals for carpet-bombing Syrian cities or waterboarding extremists — has the top brass navigating a political minefield. Senior officers, from the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on…
Read MoreExperts tell NHTSA to slow down on self-driving cars
WASHINGTON (AP) — Engineers, safety advocates and even automakers have a message for federal regulators eager to get self-driving cars on the road: slow down. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is being told that fully self-driving cars may be the future of the industry, but that such vehicles aren't yet up to the demands…
Read MoreTwo dead in apparent murder-suicide at Texas base
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - A sheriff's spokesman says two people are dead in an apparent murder-suicide at a U.S. Air Force base in San Antonio. Bexar County sheriff's spokesman James Keith said two bodies were found Friday morning inside a room of a building at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland. Keith says it's believed the shooter…
Read MoreSanders says no plans yet to meet the pope
WASHINGTON (AP) - Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders says he would "very much like to" meet Pope Francis when he travels to the Vatican next week but he has not received an official invitation from the Catholic leader. It's "not yet clear," Sanders told journalists in New York Friday, saying this pope is someone he…
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