News, sport and opinion from the Guardian's US edition
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Ukraine invasion
Sunday
1 May 2022
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Officials reach factory to evacuated civilians, says United Nations; Nancy Pelosi says US will continue to help Ukraine after Kyiv visit
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Reports come as Nancy Pelosi met Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Kyiv to pledge ‘enduring support’
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Headlines
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White House Correspondents’ Association dinner is first attended by a sitting president in six years after Donald Trump’s snubs, then pandemic
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For Paul Whelan and Brittney Griner, the ex-marine’s release brings mixed emotions: it shows that deals are possible, but also the regret that they were excluded
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A million acres have already burned across the country already, with La Niña bringing more severe dry climate
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The incident has precedents, with celebrities served at concerts and parties – though it’s a last resort, say legal professionals
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News extra
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Dan O’Dowd has bankrolled his own campaign to take a swing at what he calls Elon Musk’s ‘amazingly terrible’ technology
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Chemical companies hid their knowledge of the damage caused by PFAS for decades. With a new class-action lawsuit, Bilott intends to hold them accountable
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The Washington DC shooting was the most recent to spawn out of the extremist culture of unregulated ‘chan’ message boards
Spotlight
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Jonathan Martin and Alexander Burns have made waves with tapes of Kevin McCarthy and other Republicans – but the president’s party has more to fear from what they reveal
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Gorey’s ‘sinister whimsy’ has influenced other oddball creatives including Lemony Snicket and Tim Burton
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By many measures, Nato is already at war with Russia. The allies must now act decisively or stop stoking the fire
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The urge to win at everything never left him, long after his sporting career was over
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Minute-by-minute report: Can Arsenal boost their top four hopes with victory in the London derby? Join John Ashdown to find out
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Comments by leading IOC official made in 2008 interview about payments were permitted under Olympic rules at the time
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Mining companies are planning to profit from the new industry, but environmental campaigners warn of disastrous consequences
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Pacific Elders Voice group says military tension ‘created by China and the US and its allies’ are secondary to rising seas and catastrophic cyclones
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New research warns pressures of rising heat and loss of oxygen are reminiscent of ‘great dying’ that occurred about 250m years ago
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With no Moneypenny and no M, a previously unpublished script reveals the author’s original ideas for Moonraker
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Maggie O’Farrell will place rosemary at Stratford grave to honour the lost boy who inspired her novel Hamnet
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‘I was more interested in his acting,’ says Reinaldo Marcus Green in his decision to choose a rising star of British film and theatre to play the king of reggae
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The self-taught singer and sculptor from Alabama exists in a state of constant, spontaneous creativity. He talks about his roots and his new project with Artangel, inspired by Orford Ness
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Casablanca Beats review Morocco’s vibrant school of hip-hop
4 out of 5 stars.
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Andrew Rea’s ‘try, fail and try again’ YouTube cookery show – in which he often cooks food from films and cartoons – gets more viewers than Nigella, Jamie Oliver and Tom Kerridge combined. But its massive, viral success nearly cost the self-taught chef his mental health
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Losing someone you love dearly is devastating, but the bond couples shared in life is vital to those who live on, says Juliet Rosenfeld
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From Kath and Kim to Coogi, noisy knitwear has long polarised pop culture. Now a new generation of designers is putting a political spin on 80s Australiana
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Hearings with homeland security secretary about the US-Mexico border also revealed rifts within Democrat ranks
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Kentucky senator who has clashed publicly with Dr Anthony Fauci champions lab leak theory in remarks at rally
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Only 5% of reported sexual assaults in the US result in arrest, according to Rainn, and just 2.8% result in felony convictions
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Argument made in federal court filing in Washington, where Trump’s chief of staff sued to invalidate subpoenas
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Paul Rusesabagina’s family are suing the Rwandan government in the US, accusing it of a plot to abduct, torture and jail him
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Exhibit to display stories of six men who left their marks on the walls of Audley End House during the second world war
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Labour leader says ‘fish rots from the head’ after resignation of Neil Parish for watching porn in parliament
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The 76-year-old former leader, jailed on corruption charges, is ready to run again, and is ahead of incumbent Jair Bolsonaro in the polls
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Explore
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The Guardian’s picture editors select photo highlights from around the world
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The best original photographs from the Observer
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Lucas Foglia’s image of a child at a religious ceremony in Georgia reflects his vision of prayer in nature
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