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White House Memo: For Trump, It’s Just ‘Trust,’ Not ‘Trust, but Verify’

In two years in the Oval Office, the president has demonstrated an unmistakable pattern: He tends to believe what strongmen say.

Ballard boys basketball holds off Waggener in Seventh Region semifinals

The Bruins came back and then nearly conceded a comeback to the Wildcats in the Seventh Region semifinals.

        

Ballard boys basketball beats Waggener in Seventh Region tournament

The Bruins held off the Wildcats after coming back and are headed to the Seventh Region tournament finals.

        

Mongols Biker Club Can Keep Its Logo, Judge Rules

A federal jury said last month that the motorcycle gang must forfeit the rights to its trademarked logo. But a judge said it would be unconstitutional.

A Clash at the Cohen Hearing Reveals the Left’s Racial Divide

A clash over racism between a freshman Democrat and a conservative Republican revealed as much about the divide within the Democratic Party as the chasm between Democrats and Republicans over race.

U.S. Leadership Falls Further Behind China In Global Regard, Gallup Poll Finds

The U.S. maintained a strong lead in the annual poll for years until 2017, when its worldwide approval rating plummeted to 30 percent. That number increased slightly in 2018.

Trump Officials Offer Mixed Signals on Trade Deal With China

Divisions within the White House persist despite a publicly united front on the status of trade talks with China.

On Politics With Lisa Lerer: CPAC, Trumpified

The annual conservative gathering used to be a wild event, a mash-up of the fringier parts of the Republican Party. Now, it’s all about one man.

Journalists Who Reported On A Cardinal’s Sex Abuse Verdict Could Face Jail Time

More than 100 notices have been sent to reporters and media organizations for breaching a judge’s suppression order in the trial of Australian Cardinal George Pell.

John O’Neal, 78, Champion of Theater in the Deep South, Dies

A founder of the Free Southern Theater in 1963, he was as eager to hear his audiences’ stories as he was to perform.

Critic’s Notebook: The Los Angeles Art Scene Looks to the World

From its expanding museums to its scrappy galleries, the city is witnessing a contemporary art boom. But has it lost something in the churn of a global market?

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