Almost 100 people are feared to have been killed after a string of rare winter tornadoes ripped through parts of the South and Midwest late Friday and early Saturday. washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/12…
Thousands of people woke up to power and water outages on Sunday, as officials continue to comb through rubble and work to determine the exact number of deaths. The counts are expected to rise as search and rescue operations continue over the weekend. washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/12…
Police on Sunday identified the six people who were killed after a section of an Amazon distribution warehouse in Edwardsville, Ill., caved in during the tornado. washingtonpost.com/nation/2021/12…
Watch live: Officials give update on tornado damage in Kentucky washingtonpost.com/video/national…

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More from @washingtonpost

8 Dec
TUNE IN: How will the supply chain crisis impact the holidays?

Reporters @abhabhattarai, @lreiley and @JeanneWhalen are sharing insight into the issues now on @TwitterSpaces, moderated by @hcjewell: twitter.com/i/spaces/1ZkKz…
Oh, Christmas tree, not you, too: Supply chain problems come to the fir trade washingtonpost.com/business/2021/…
Fewer boots, more slippers: How a shortage of shipping containers is changing what shows up on shelves washingtonpost.com/business/2021/…
Read 4 tweets
7 Dec
In the middle of the 19th century, hundreds of thousands of new Americans flooded into New York.

They found homes in buildings like this one, on Orchard Street on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. wapo.st/3GhSbOA
Today, it's preserved by the Tenement Museum, a public history organization.

Inside, visitors can see relics and reminders of one of the most consequential migrations in human history, a flood tide of humanity that changed the fabric of America. wapo.st/3GhSbOA
For decades, tenement dwellers had only basic protection from fire but almost none from disease.

As public understanding of contagious disease improved, housing laws in 1879 and 1901 helped spur incremental changes. wapo.st/3GhSbOA
Read 6 tweets
6 Dec
After working a couple of years in an intensive care unit, Alex Stow signed up to be a travel nurse, tripling his pay to about $95 an hour by agreeing to help short-staffed hospitals around the country for 13 weeks at a time. wapo.st/3IsiSSE
Stow, 25, is buying a truck and a camper and preparing to hit the road.

He’ll work where he wants and take time off to see the country between nursing assignments. wapo.st/3IsiSSE "As soon as I found out that was a thing, I thought, &q
If 2020 was the year travel nursing took off, with 35 percent growth over the pre-pandemic year of 2019, this year propelled it to new heights, with an additional 40 percent growth expected, according to an independent analyst of the health-care workforce. wapo.st/3lAaPJR
Read 6 tweets
6 Dec
Matthew Hawn was well aware his liberal views made him an outlier in his overwhelmingly White, mostly conservative community.

But that had never mattered before. wapo.st/3rJMrJw
He had taught in rural Tennessee for 16 years without any trouble. And he had taught the class that got him fired, “Contemporary Issues,” for nearly a decade without a single parent complaint. wapo.st/3rJMrJw
Then at the start of last school year, he made a pronouncement during a discussion about police shootings that would derail his career.

White privilege, he told his nearly all-White class, is “a fact.” wapo.st/3rJMrJw
Read 6 tweets
6 Dec
Lawyer Sidney Powell’s nonprofit raised more than $14 million as she spread false claims about the 2020 election washingtonpost.com/investigations…
Previously unreported records also detail acrimony between Powell and her top lieutenants over how the money — now a focus of inquiries by federal prosecutors and Congress — was being handled. wapo.st/3Is8Jp1
Matt Masterson, a former senior U.S. cybersecurity official, said Powell’s fundraising success demonstrates one reason so many people continue to spread falsehoods about the 2020 election: It can bring in cash. wapo.st/3Is8Jp1
Read 4 tweets
5 Dec
Tonight, the Kennedy Center Honors will celebrate the careers of actress Bette Midler, singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell, opera singer Justino Díaz, Motown producer Berry Gordy and “Saturday Night Live” creator Lorne Michaels. Here's a look at the honorees: washingtonpost.com/entertainment/…
Lorne Michaels built "Saturday Night Live" into pop-culture juggernaut that has endured for nearly half a century. washingtonpost.com/arts-entertain…
From Dolores De Lago to “Dolly!” to “Beaches,” the stellar career of Kennedy Center honoree Bette Midler spans decades and genres. washingtonpost.com/arts-entertain…
Read 6 tweets

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