The archive of all headlines from September 09, 2015, organized by time of publication.
U.S. news
The Rough fire has burned 97,844 acres, or nearly 153 square miles and was 31% contained Tuesday morning, according to the U.S. Forest Service.
Walter Scott Shooting
Boeing 777 seen on fire with smoke and flames coming from fuselage
Two people injured as Boeing 777 catches fire, with smoke and flames coming from fuselage
Two people injured as Boeing 777 catches fire, with smoke and flames seen coming from fuselage
Two people injured as Boeing 777 catches fire, with smoke and flames seen coming from fuselage
Seven people injured as London-bound Boeing 777 has ‘catastrophic engine failure’ before takeoff, prompting emergency evacuation
Eight campuses had data from a contractor's course on sexual harassment exposed. Information includes relationship status and sexual identity. Cal State Northridge
Clinton is embracing one of the few effective tactics for loosening the grip on big money in politics: forcing publicly traded companies to disclose all political giving. Hillary Rodham Clinton
As President Xi Jinping prepared to visit the United States, Washington warned of possible sanctions over digital attacks. Beijing pushed back by organizing a technology forum of industry leaders.
Fourteen injured as London-bound Boeing 777 has ‘catastrophic engine failure’ before takeoff, prompting emergency evacuation
Fourteen injured as London-bound Boeing 777 has ‘catastrophic engine failure’ before takeoff and is evacuated
That's because the study finds that after two decades of linear growth, the prevalence of diabetes in the United States has finally started to plateau. Diabetes
That's because the study finds that after two decades of linear growth, the prevalence of diabetes in the United States has finally started to plateau. National Politics
Acknowledging that “there’s a lack of union in the European Union,” Jean-Claude Juncker, the president of the European Commission, proposed that the migrants be distributed as part of a quota system.
Passionately defending the right of asylum for those fleeing war and persecution, European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker urges EU member states to speedily agree to divide 160,000 refugees among themselves and to enact broad reforms governing mass entry to the continent. Science
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker urges EU member states to speedily agree to divide 160,000 refugees among themselves and to enact broad reforms governing mass entry to the continent. Science
Pilot identified by the Guardian as Chris Henkey delivered ‘textbook response’ after ‘catastrophic failure of engine’, experts say
European commission president calls for common asylum and immigration policy and says EU should accept 160,000 migrants and refugees
Jean-Claude Juncker, the European Commission president, urged Europeans to remember ancestors who sought refuge from religious persecution, war and famine, and he called for a plan to take in 160,000 migrants.
The incident comes amid a rise in crime in Los Angeles, particularly in the southern section of the city, where an ongoing feud among gangs has claimed several lives over the last two months. Three dead in South LA
The incident comes amid a rise in crime in Los Angeles, particularly in the southern section of the city, where an ongoing feud among gangs has claimed several lives over the last two months.The Homicide Report: A story for every victim
Across the state, 44% of students scored at grade level or better in English, while 35% did so in math. In L.A. Unified, the figures were 33% in English and 25% in math.How did your school score?
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s statements underscore his distrust of the US as Congress prepares to vote on the landmark nuclear agreement reached in July
Jean-Claude Juncker, the European Commission president, urged Europeans to remember ancestors who sought refuge, and he called for a plan to take in 160,000 migrants.
Charleston Church Shooting
Microsoft counsel addresses question of US search warrant for Hotmail emails stored in Ireland: ‘We would go crazy if China did this to us’
The pair is suspected of orchestrating up to 70 fraudulent immigration applications over the course of nearly a decade. Chinese nationals paid them up to $50,000 in the hopes of obtaining a green card. L.A. Now