Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In the news

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Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., the 49-yearold veteran who lost her legs in the Iraq War, is pregnant with her second child, she said in a news release, meaning she will become the first U.S. senator to give birth while in office.

Jovanna Calzadilla­s of Arizona, a day before her scheduled discharge from a Phoenix hospital, said Wednesday that part of her changed when she was shot in the head during the Las Vegas mass shooting but that she will come back stronger.

John McGrory, with the Police Department in Clovis, Calif., is featured in a video on the department’s Facebook page of him giving a nut to a squirrel that scampered over to him on Squirrel Appreciati­on Day.

Sheriff Leon Lott of Richland County, S.C., said Marvin Toatley, 28, who faces charges after attacking comedian Steve Brown because Brown was picking on him during a performanc­e, shouldn’t have sat in the front row of a Columbia comedy club if he didn’t want to be teased.

Giraud Dickson, a 34-year-old of Bridgeport, Conn., who worked for a courier service used by the internatio­nal charity Save the Children, pleaded guilty to having 3 pounds of PCP, a hallucinog­enic drug, sent to the charity’s Fairfield offices, where he frequently stopped by the mailroom.

Jarrett Johnson of the Oklahoma Highway Patrol said a truck hauling four elephants stalled in eastern Oklahoma, blocking a lane of a busy highway near Eufaula for about two hours while the elephants were transferre­d to another trailer.

Elad Dvash-Banks and his husband, Andrew, of Los Angeles allege in a lawsuit that the U.S. State Department is discrimina­ting against same-sex binational couples because it denied citizenshi­p at birth to one of their twin boys, who have the same surrogate mother but different fathers, one being Elad, an Israeli citizen.

Michael Carey Clemans, 57, of Sacramento, Calif., was sentenced to life in federal prison for buying Filipino children for sex by working with people in the Philippine­s to obtain temporary custody of the girls, many of whom were orphans or victims of natural disasters.

Margaret LoCicero jokingly said she wanted a marching band to celebrate her 100th birthday — and got exactly that, as dozens of Boardman High School band members played for her in the hallways of her Youngstown, Ohio, assisted-living center.

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