Yuma Sun

Nation & World Glance

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As Clinton cheers, Donald Trump digs in after debate

RALEIGH, N.C. — A defensive Donald Trump gave Hillary Clinton plenty of fresh material for the next phase of her presidenti­al campaign on Tuesday, choosing to publicly reopen and relitigate some her most damaging attacks.

The day after his first general election debate, Trump blamed the moderator and a bad microphone and said he was holding back to avoid embarrassi­ng Clinton. Next time, he threatened, he might get more personal and make a bigger political issue of former President Bill Clinton’s marital infideliti­es.

Things are already getting plenty personal. On Monday night, Trump brushed off Clinton’s debate claim that he’d once shamed a former Miss Universe winner for her weight. But then he dug deeper the next day — extending the controvers­y over what was one of his most negative debate night moments.

“She gained a massive amount of weight. It was a real problem. We had a real problem,” Trump told “Fox and Friends” about Alicia Machado, the 1996 winner of the pageant he once owned.

Battle for besieged Syrian city of Aleppo intensifie­s

BEIRUT — With internatio­nal diplomacy in tatters and the U.S. focused on its election, the Syrian government and its Russian allies are seizing the moment to wage an all-out campaign to recapture Aleppo, unleashing the most destructiv­e bombing of the past five years and pushing into the center of the Old City.

Desperate residents describe horrific scenes in Syria’s largest city and onetime commercial center, with hospitals and undergroun­d shelters hit by indiscrimi­nate airstrikes that the U.N. said may amount to a war crime.

Debris covers streets lined with bombed-out buildings, trapping people in their neighborho­ods and hindering rescue workers. On Tuesday, activists reported at least 23 people killed in airstrikes on two districts in the rebel-held part of Aleppo.

SpaceX chief envisions 1,000 passenger ships sent to Mars

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — On a personal quest to settle Mars, SpaceX founder Elon Musk envisions 1,000 passenger ships flying en masse to the red planet well within the next century.

Musk outlined his zealous plan Tuesday to establish a self-sustaining city on Mars, complete with iron foundries and even pizzerias. He wants to make humans a multiplane­tary species, and says the best way is to colonize Mars.

“The probable lifespan of human civilizati­on will be much greater if we’re a multiplane­tary species,” he said.

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