The former first lady was notably eager to learn about people she didn’t understand—and recognize she might have been wrong about them.
Faulty airbag inflators by the Japanese manufacturer Takata have caused 10 deaths and more than 100 injuries.
Three U.S. service personnel have been killed in Iraq since October 2015.
The American president will visit the Michigan city affected by high levels of lead in drinking water.
The state's governor has vetoed legislation that would have allowed weapons at public colleges.
The longtime New York Assembly speaker was convicted last November on seven corruption charges.
For the third time, the FBI is searching the home of Robert Gentile for artwork stolen 25 years ago from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.
More than 70 years after the iconic World War II photo, the Marine Corps is investigating the identities of the men who raised the flag.
Most public schools are closed again on Tuesday.
The Supreme Court has declined to hear an appeal from prisoners who argue the state prison system’s grooming policies violate their religious liberty.
The Los Angeles Times published crude comments emailed or forwarded by Tom Angel, the department’s chief of staff, in his previous position.
The state’s Republican lawmakers said Monday they planned to stop the order to allow more than 200,000 convicted felons the right to vote.