Oakland's new fleet of electric school buses hit the road Oakland is the first major school district in the country to go fully electric with its buses.
These Alaska moms couldn’t find a Yup’ik children’s book. So they made one themselves Yup’ik is the most spoken Native language in Alaska, but finding Yup’ik books for young children can be almost impossible. These moms created their own – and now they’re fielding nearly 1,000 orders. Julie Depenbrock
Legal experts want Judge Cannon removed from Trump's Mar-a-Lago documents case Former federal judge Nancy Gertner and two legal scholars say rulings by Judge Aileen Cannon have raised “well-founded concerns that she may be biased against the Government’s case.” Greg Allen
U.S. accuses Russia of sophisticated influence campaigns against U.S. voters The U.S. government accused Russia of trying to interfere with this year's elections and announced new steps to counter those actions. Jude Joffe-Block
Whatever happened to ... the doctors who stand by their patients in gang-ridden Haiti? How do you get a cancer patient to a center that provides treatment when the roads are not safe? That's one of the challenges facing health-care providers in gang-eidden. Haiti. How are they doing? Ari Daniel
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson shares the poem she's kept in every one of her offices The first Black woman appointed to the Supreme Court says Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem, "The Ladder of Saint Augustine," has been a guiding principle. Jackson's new memoir is Lovely One. Tonya Mosley
4 people are killed, 9 injured in a shooting at a Georgia high school Police rushed to Apalachee High School in Barrow County, Ga., on Wednesday after a shooting was reported. A suspect was taken into custody, officials said. Bill Chappell
Second gentleman Doug Emhoff says he is 'gutted' at a vigil for Israeli hostages Emhoff, who frequently uses his platform to talk about his Jewish faith and antisemitism, addressed Adas Israel Congregation this week in the wake of the death of Hersh Goldberg-Polin and others. Ximena Bustillo
Navy commander relieved of duty after photo showed him firing rifle with scope backward Cameron Yaste, the commander of a Navy destroyer in the Middle East, has been relieved of duty about four months after he was seen in a photo firing a rifle with a scope mounted backward. The Associated Press
Decades of failures turned Grenfell Tower into a 'death trap,' report says The report on the deadly London high-rise fire blames government, regulators and the industry for the deaths of 72 people. The Associated Press