A 5-year-old boy in Michigan tried to satisfy his McDonald’s craving by dialing the only number he could on a deactivated cell phone: 911.
Author: Kristin Lam, USA TODAY
US appeals court rejects Trump administration lawsuit, upholds most of California’s sanctuary laws
A federal appeals court upheld California’ssanctuary state law, ruling itdoes not interfere with the enforcement of federal immigration laws.
Naval Academy to ban transgender students beginning in 2020
The U.S. Naval Academy will ban transgender people from attending the school starting with the 2020 school year.
Who’s afraid of who? Great white sharks fear killer whales, study shows
Scientists found great white sharksnot onlyfledfrom orcas when the top predator arrived at amarine sanctuary, but cleared out ofthe hunting area.
San Francisco officials propose per-vehicle fee, online reservations for city’s ‘crookedest street’
Thousands of tourists looking to drive down the “crookedest street in the world” may have to pay a toll if a San Francisco proposal passes.
North Carolina police shot armed man who didn’t point weapon at them, bodycam footage shows
Police released video Monday showing an officer in North Carolina fatally shooting Danquirs Franklin, an armed man who didn’t point his gun at police.
North Dakota becomes third state to ban abortion procedure known as dilation and evacuation
North Dakota’s governor on Wednesday signed a bill outlawing asecond-trimester abortion procedure, joining two others states banning the practice.
A 3-year-old disabled his family’s iPad for 25 million minutes. His dad went to Twitter for help
A 3-year-old boy disabled his family’s iPad for 25 million minutes this weekend after repeatedly trying to unlock the tablet.
A Kansas woman bought 204 pairs of shoes at Payless. She’s donating all of them to flood victims
A Kansas woman donated 204 pairs of shoes to Nebraska flood victims after clearing out a closing Payless store.
A 2-year-old Minnesota boy’s family couldn’t afford a costly power wheelchair. These students built it for him
When a2-year-oldMinnesota boy needed a costly power wheelchair, a high school robotics team put its skills to work.