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Richard Fausset

Articles written by the author

Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Hurricane Dorian was pounding much of the Carolina coast with heavy rain and strong winds Thursday, spawning small tornadoes and causing widespread power losses and flooding.
Category 2 Hurricane Dorian Pounds Carolinas
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
Much of the Carolina coast was being pounded by heavy rain and strong winds from the outer bands of Hurricane Dorian on Thursday, as the storm continued to creep on its parallel path north along the Eastern Seaboard of the United States.
Hurricane Dorian Prompts Warnings of 8-Foot Storm Surge in Carolinas
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Aug 2024
MORTON, Miss. — From a distance Friday morning, the parking lot of PH Food could have been hosting a flea market. Scores of vehicles were haphazardly parked, and a throng of people milled around. A woman sold tacos al pastor and tacos de asada from the back of a food truck.
After ICE Raids, the Parking Lot Was Crowded, but No One Was There to Work
Kenya The New York Times world
17 Aug 2024
DURHAM, N.C. — Political leaders in one of the most progressive parts of the South have dreamed for two decades about an ambitious plan for a transit line connecting Durham, the home of Duke University, with nearby Chapel Hill. Funds were pledged and renderings were drawn.
Durham Dreamed of a Transit Line. Duke University All but Killed It.
Kenya The New York Times world
17 Aug 2024
An Alabama police officer will not be criminally charged for killing a young black man whom he had mistaken for the gunman in a shopping mall shooting Thanksgiving night, the state attorney general’s office said Tuesday.
Kenya The New York Times world
12 May 2021
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Though the Charleston Rifle Club was founded in 1855 to promote good marksmanship, it is better known today for a more prosaic pastime, bowling. And though the sign out front, with its lion-flanked escutcheon and Gothic lettering, gives off a whiff of high society, the club’s membership spans classes, embracing socialites and police officers, lawyers and factory workers.
At Place for a Friendly Beer, a 'Despicable' Divide
Kenya The New York Times world
12 May 2021
In early 2018, officials at North Carolina’s elections board were worried about the integrity of the coming midterm elections in rural Bladen County — particularly because of the possibility that a political operative named L. McCrae Dowless Jr. might run a worrisome absentee-ballot program similar to one they had seen him run there two years earlier.
North Carolina Election Contractor Was Investigated for Possible Fraud in 2016 Race
Kenya The New York Times world
8 Jul 2019
He was the kind of politician who punched back when he felt punched. He was well known for blocking reporters on Twitter, and his office regularly criticized journalists by name and issued news releases that vigorously pushed back against negative coverage.
Atlanta ex-official faces rare criminal charges under open records law
Kenya The New York Times world
14 Jun 2019
The jazz funeral dates to the late 1800s and the birth of jazz itself. Like Chase’s Creole cuisine, the ritual has survived by embracing both tradition and change.
How New Orleans Celebrates Its Dead
Kenya The New York Times world
23 May 2019
The last voyage of the Clotilda, from Benin to Mobile Bay “represented one of the darkest eras of modern history,” Lisa Demetropoulos Jones, the commission’s executive director, said in a statement.
Historians: The last known slave ship has been found
Kenya The New York Times world
6 Apr 2019
ATLANTA — Three historically black churches have burned in less than two weeks in one south Louisiana parish, where officials said they had found “suspicious elements” in each case. The officials have not ruled out the possibility of arson, or the possibility that the fires are related.
3 black churches have burned in 10 days in a single Louisiana parish
Kenya The New York Times world
19 Mar 2019
DURHAM, N.C. — Political leaders in one of the most progressive parts of the South have dreamed for two decades about an ambitious plan for a transit line connecting Durham, the home of Duke University, with nearby Chapel Hill. Funds were pledged and renderings were drawn.
Durham Dreamed of a Transit Line. Duke University All but Killed It.
Kenya The New York Times world
18 Mar 2019
DURHAM, N.C. — Political leaders in one of the most progressive parts of the South have dreamed for two decades about an ambitious plan for a transit line connecting Durham, the home of Duke University, with nearby Chapel Hill. Funds were pledged and renderings were drawn.
Durham dreamed of a transit line, Duke University all but killed it