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Author and illustrator Ian Woodward Falconer, known for his “Olivia” book series for children, has died. Falconer's lawyer and agent Conrad M. Rippy said Falconer died Tuesday of natural causes while with his family in Norwalk, Connecticut.
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A pair of basketball players from Brown allege in a federal lawsuit that the Ivy League’s policy of not offering athletic scholarships amounts to a price-fixing agreement that denies athletes proper financial aid and payment for their services.
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Australia will purchase U.S.-manufactured, nuclear-powered attack submarines to modernize its fleet. The submarines, which cost $3 billion each, are built at shipbuilding plants in Virginia and Connecticut.
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Alex Jones’ company has proposed a plan in its bankruptcy case to pay the conspiracy theorist $520,000 a year, while leaving $7 million to $10 million annually to pay creditors, including relatives of the Sandy Hook school shooting victims.
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Aaliyah Edwards had 19 points and 15 rebounds to lead No. 7 UConn to a 67-56 win over 10th-ranked Villanova in the Big East Tournament title game.
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When the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered Foxwoods Resort Casino in Connecticut for three months in 2020, its owners, the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, had to reckon with decades of relying heavily on gambling as the tribe's main source of revenue.
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Connecticut is poised to pay $12 million to settle a case involving a neglected 14-month-old boy who was placed by the state’s child welfare agency in 2015 with a relative and ended up severely malnourished and physically abused.
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Connecticut environmental officials were monitoring reports of sooty matter being found on parked cars throughout the state.
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A federal appeals court has reinstated a challenge to Connecticut’s policy of allowing transgender girls to compete in girls high school sports, two months after a three-judge panel upheld the rules.
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In a statement posted on its website, Connecticut-based Subway said there is no timetable for a possible sale or even assurance that it will go through.