Joshua Miller
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Hiker. Runner. Writer. Tweeter of old photos. Assistant Metro Editor at The Boston Globe.
Articles by Joshua Miller
Elena Katherine Moore update: Search enters 6th day
Joshua Rhett Miller Wed, June 17, 2026 at 4:02 PM UTC 3 min read Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The search for a fitness trainer who disappeared after leaving a gym in South Carolina last week is ongoing Wednesday, police said. Elena Katherine Moore, 39, was last seen late on June 11 at a Planet Fitness in Lexington, where she frequently worked out. Moore's husband, Brannon Slice, reported her missing the following day, police said.
Epstein Files update: Personal assistant gives Congress "a lot of names"
A former assistant for Jeffrey Epstein arranged phone calls between the convicted sex offender and President Donald Trump before he took office, lawmakers told reporters Tuesday. Representative Robert Garcia, ranking member and lead Democrat on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, said Lesley Groff, who worked for Epstein for roughly two decades started in 2001, provided valuable testimony during Tuesday's closed-door session on Capitol Hill.
Teacher Fired After Video Shows Black Doll With Cord Around Neck in Class
A teacher in Florida has been terminated after video surfaced showing a Black doll hanging from a cord in a classroom, district officials said. The footage, taken Monday at Barrington Middle School in Lithia, shows art teacher Karen Savage wrapping a charger cord around the doll’s neck and hanging it over a classroom television, according to Nina Williams, whose 14-year-old son captured the incident now being probed by district officials.
Surgical Directions Launches COO Guide to Perioperative Operational Improvements That Boost Financial Performance
Authored by Joshua S. Miller, MD, Chair of the Board and Physician Managing Director, Barbara McClenathan, RN, BSN, MBA-HCM, CNOR, Vice President of Nursing, and Leslie Basham, President and CEO. The guide provides a structured, evidence-based framework for improving surgical operations in ways that directly strengthen hospital financial performance. Surgical services often represent up to 70 percent of hospital revenue while also consuming significant labor and capital resources.
Was Bill Clinton in seiner Aussage über Donald Trumps Verbindungen zu Epstein sagte
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The Groups, Messaging, and Politics
Apparently context is scarce. Here’s some: “Democratic party politics is urban machine politics, scaled up” from Noah Smith A variety of activists and special interests — collectively known as “The Groups” — can basically persuade Democratic staffers and politicians of their ideas in the proverbial smoke-filled rooms, well out of the public eye.
Diddy Sentencing: Rapper Books Speech for Next Week Ahead of Judge's Decision-Live Updates
Sean Combs returned to federal court in Manhattan on Friday for sentencing after his conviction on prostitution-related charges. The hearing follows a high-profile trial that ended with a split verdict and could result in a prison term of between 6 and 7 years, according to the judge's presentencing guidelines.
Trapper Schoepp Finds Healing on His Emotional New Album
From time to time during his decade-plus career, Trapper Schoepp has found himself struck by inspiration, filled with songs that need to be written. But never as intensely as last year. “The songs came like falling rain,” says Schoepp, who has garnered fans locally and abroad, opened for the likes of The Wallflowers, and gained a co-writing credit with Bob Dylan on his song “On, Wisconsin.” “It comes more naturally when you have something that you’ve needed to say for so long.
Conservationist Jane Goodall dead at 91 while on U.S. speaking tour: latest updates
Jane Goodall, the pioneering primatologist and global conservation icon, has died at 91 while on a speaking tour in California, according to the Jane Goodall Institute. Her death marks the loss of one of the most influential voices in environmental science and animal behavior, whose work has reshaped the world's understanding of primates and inspired generations of scientists. What to Know: Goodall died during a scheduled speaking engagement in California, the institute confirmed.
Moose Have Lived in Colorado for Centuries: Unpacking the Evidence
Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies. In July, a young wandering bull was captured roaming a city park in Greeley. A spate of similar urban sightings alongside some aggressive moose encounters has elevated moose management and conservation into a matter of public debate, especially across metro Denver and along the Front Range.
Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries – unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions - Katy Times
Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies. In July 2025, a young wandering bull was captured roaming a city park in Greeley, Colorado. A spate of similar urban sightings alongside some aggressive moose encounters has elevated moose management and conservation into a matter of public debate, especially across metro Denver and the Colorado Front Range.
Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries – unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions - The Mexico Ledger
Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies. In July 2025, a young wandering bull was captured roaming a city park in Greeley, Colorado. A spate of similar urban sightings alongside some aggressive moose encounters has elevated moose management and conservation into a matter of public debate, especially across metro Denver and the Colorado Front Range.
Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries – unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions
Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies. In July 2025, a young wandering bull was captured roaming a city park in Greeley, Colorado. A spate of similar urban sightings alongside some aggressive moose encounters has elevated moose management and conservation into a matter of public debate, especially across metro Denver and the Colorado Front Range.
Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries – unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions - The Mexico Ledger
Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies. In July 2025, a young wandering bull was captured roaming a city park in Greeley, Colorado. A spate of similar urban sightings alongside some aggressive moose encounters has elevated moose management and conservation into a matter of public debate, especially across metro Denver and the Colorado Front Range.
Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries – unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions
Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies. In July 2025, a young wandering bull was captured roaming a city park in Greeley, Colorado. A spate of similar urban sightings alongside some aggressive moose encounters has elevated moose management and conservation into a matter of public debate, especially across metro Denver and the Colorado Front Range.
Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries – unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions - Katy Times
Posted Tuesday, August 12, 2025 11:22 am Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies. In July 2025, a young wandering bull was captured roaming a city park in Greeley, Colorado. A spate of similar urban sightings alongside some aggressive moose encounters has elevated moose management and conservation into a matter of public debate, especially across metro Denver and the Colorado Front Range.
Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries – unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions - The Morning Sun
Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies. In July 2025, a young wandering bull was captured roaming a city park in Greeley, Colorado. A spate of similar urban sightings alongside some aggressive moose encounters has elevated moose management and conservation into a matter of public debate, especially across metro Denver and the Colorado Front Range.
Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries - unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions
Moose are on the loose in the southern Rockies. In July 2025, a young wandering bull was captured roaming a city park in Greeley, Colorado. A spate of similar urban sightings alongside some aggressive moose encounters has elevated moose management and conservation into a matter of public debate, especially across metro Denver and the Colorado Front Range.
Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries - unpacking the evidence from history, archaeology and oral traditions
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Strangers to Ourselves
There are a bunch of different ways to teach undergraduates about moral psychology in a philosophy department: Emphasize free will issues: weakness of will, nature of addiction (& mental illness), causal role of environment and genetics, reactive attitudes and the nature of blame and praise, etc. Is akrasia even possible? Is Kant’s moral psychology plausible? Emphasize the profession of psychology and the bifurcation of research and practice. How does therapy work?
Beyond Sociology 101
The University of Toronto’s Sociology Department posts the reading lists for its PhD comprehensive exams. This is the list of books and articles that the faculty think are required for serious scholarship in these subfields, and it’s a great place to look for syllabus ideas for courses in related fields.
Widzieli zamach na Trumpa, wciąż zadają sobie pytania. "Nikt nie zapytał, dlaczego tu stoimy"
Był 13 lipca 2024 r., Wczesny wieczór. Zaledwie sześć minut po tym, jak Donald Trump zaczął przemówienie do 15 tys. zagorzałych fanów na terenie Butler Farm Show, Thomas Matthew Crooks otworzył ogień. Oddał osiem strzałów z karabinu szturmowego z pozycji na dachu American Glass Research, położonej ok. 150 metrów dalej. Snajper Secret Service wyeliminował zagrożenie jednym strzałem zaledwie 15 sekund później. Ale pociski Crooksa trafiła cztery osoby, w tym Trumpa.
Widzieli zamach na Trumpa, wciąż zadają sobie pytania. "Nikt nie zapytał, dlaczego tu stoimy"
Więcej ciekawych historii przeczytasz na stronie głównej "Newsweeka" Dużo czytania, a mało czasu? Sprawdź skrót artykułu Dziękujemy, że jesteś z nami! Był 13 lipca 2024 r., Wczesny wieczór. Zaledwie sześć minut po tym, jak Donald Trump zaczął przemówienie do 15 tys. zagorzałych fanów na terenie Butler Farm Show, Thomas Matthew Crooks otworzył ogień. Oddał osiem strzałów z karabinu szturmowego z pozycji na dachu American Glass Research, położonej ok. 150 metrów dalej.
Revealed: Brutally violent Venezuelan ‘Tren de Aragua’ gang is using migrant wave to launch NYC phone robbery spree
It’s a crime wave that has raised fears across the city: robbers on mopeds snatching people’s phones from their hands and speeding off. In one especially brazen attack, moped-riding bandits dragged a 62-year-old woman down a Brooklyn street in December. After the phones are stolen, the victims’ bank accounts are drained of cash, with fraudulent transactions in both the US and South America, and the phones themselves are sent to Colombia to be wiped, reprogrammed and sold.
Oh, the places they go
Oh, the places they go A loophole the size of the Ritz in state ethics rules allows legislators to take privately financed junkets all over the US and the world and decide for themselves if the ‘work’ outweighed the fun. A Globe review found hundreds of such trips — nearly 50 by one senator. Marc R. Pacheco, the state’s longest-serving senator, has spent at least 240 days traveling since January 2013, at a cost to others of at least $68,000. Senate President Karen E.
Is There Any Way to Come Back From Being the Office Leper?
Have you ever felt like Milton from Office Space? Completely isolated from your peers, degraded by your bosses and reduced to nothing more than a mumbling, squirrel-watching, stapler-hoarding office leper? Well, the good news is that you aren’t alone. Actually, sorry, you are alone — that’s why you’re the office leper.
Violent Femmes' 'Viva Wisconsin' tour brings them back home
For the past eleven years, Violent Femmes bassist Brian Ritchie has called Australia home. But Madison and his home state of Wisconsin remain an important part of his identity.
Strand of Oaks brings sonic intensity to Live on King Street
Timothy Showalter is no stranger to performing in Madison. Over the years, the Philadelphia-based singer/songwriter has played here numerous times with his longtime performing name and band Strand of Oaks.“I’ve had a lot of really memorable shows in Madison,” says Showalter during a recent phone interview. “I love places like Madison or Milwaukee or Chicago, places that I’ve played a lot before, and see people that have been coming out to my shows for 10 years or more.
Dave Rawlings unplugs from the Machine on solo album
When the Dave Rawlings Machine make their long-awaited return to Madison at the Capitol Theater on Thursday, fans can expect to hear many of their favorite songs from the band’s first two records, 2009’s “A Friend of a Friend” and 2015’s “Nashville Obsolete.” In addition, they’ll hear songs from Rawlings’ new solo album, “Poor Richard’s Almanack.”“Almanack” offers a different side of Rawlings, as his first album written and recorded without the Machine.
Preservation Hall Jazz Band builds bridge between New Orleans and Cuba
When members of the New Orleans-based Preservation Hall Jazz Band set foot in Madison on Friday to perform at Live at King Street, they won’t have to worry about the walls or ceiling of a music venue containing their lively sound.That also applies to the band’s tenacious ability to grow and expand their musical horizons since forming in the early ‘60s.
#AidRefugees: Heeding the President’s Call to Take Action
In the summer of 1885, hundreds of thousands of Americans – from street cleaners and politicians, to young children and businessmen – united to donate small sums of money to a common cause. Collectively, they raised $2.5 million (in today's dollars) to build a base for the Statue of Liberty, which had arrived in New York in pieces. To this day, the Statue of Liberty still stands on the sum of these small contributions. These efforts taught us that if we join together our impact can be large.
Lucinda Williams merges the past with the present
Throughout her long and illustrious career, singer-songwriter Lucinda Williams has remained deeply indebted to her southern roots and heritage.
Alt-country legends Son Volt shakes things up with the blues
Any discussion of the alt-country movement almost invariably includes Jay Farrar's name.As a member of Uncle Tupelo, Farrar helped pushed the boundaries of country music in the late ‘80s and early ‘90s, creating what’s known as alternative country. For the last twenty-plus years, Farrar has continued that tradition with his band Son Volt.What hasn't been quite as well known is the songwriter’s love of blues music.
We Banjo 3 pick from Irish and American influences
Like many other Wisconsin cities, the city of Madison has had a long history of celebrating Irish music and heritage. That includes the Mad Gael festival held in August. It’s little surprise than that a band from Ireland – like Galway-based We Banjo 3 – would feel quite at home. The band, which mixes traditional Irish folk music with Americana and bluegrass, features two sets of brothers - Enda and Fergal Scahill, and Martin and David Howley.
Canadian punk rockers Japandroids celebrate 'Wild Heart of Life'
Canadian rockers Japandroids are no strangers to playing Madison.
On his own from J Geils Band, Peter Wolf finds 'Cure for Loneliness' in music
Peter Wolf has performed in Madison numerous times over his unconventional music career. Many times, he did so as the singer for the J Geils Band. Other times it’s been as a solo artist.
Dr. Dog goes back to the beginning for 'Psychedelic Swamp'
It’s been about 20 or so years since schoolyard friends Scott McMicken and Toby Leaman discovered there was a special musical synergy when they performed music together.
Chicago rockers Twin Peaks coming back to town for Orton Park Festival
Chicago rockers Twin Peaks are no strangers to heading up Interstate 94 to play in Madison. The band was just here in July playing a free show at the High Noon Saloon for Pitchfork Radio.During a recent phone interview, the band’s bass player, Jack Dolan, recalled a wild basement show they played with Madison’s The Hussy.“Everyone started smashing glass bottles,” he said. “I guess it was a tradition at this house at the end of the party that everyone smashed bottles.
Nathaniel Rateliff enjoying his ride on high-octane soul
If you managed to snag one of the tickets to the sold-out Nathaniel Rateliff and the Night Sweats and Lord Huron co-headlining bill at the Orpheum Theater Wednesday, consider yourself lucky and smart.While both bands have fairly sizable fan bases, the Denver-based Rateliff and his soul and R&B-infused band have been selling out venues across the globe not even a year after its self-titled debut was released.“It’s always exciting to have people come and want to hear us play,” Rateliff said...
The Jayhawks fly again with 'Paging Mr. Proust'
The Jayhawks don't play Madison as often as one might think, given that for over 20 years they've been based in Minneapolis. But in some ways it's a small miracle they're playing at all at the Barrymore Theatre this Friday.About three and a half years ago frontman Gary Louris reached a crossroads in his life when he received treatment for his drug and alcohol addictions.
Bob Mould's back in Madison, and he couldn't be happier
To say that Bob Mould is excited to play the Majestic Theater on Wednesday would be an understatement.The former Husker Dü frontman estimated that it’s been close to a decade since his last performance in the city; a striking fact since at one point it was one of his frequent stomping grounds. When it came to booking his upcoming tour to support his latest album “Patch the Sky,” his desire to return to Madison was so great that he made the show his tour opener.
Country-punk band The Waco Brothers return to town with a spring in their step
Chicago's The Waco Brothers are no strangers to Madison's many venues."The Frequency, to me, is the quintessential dingy little punk rock room," says bass player Alan Doughty. "It's also conveniently located next door to the greatest Old Fashioned in the world at The Tornado Room."Singer-songwriter Jon Langford has also played the Madison area many times with his other band The Mekons.
Genre-defying bluegrass band Yonder Mountain aren't black sheep anymore
Since Yonder Mountain String Band first formed in 1998, the Colorado-based band has been pushing the definition of bluegrass music, incorporating other genres to create a potent mix.Even with the departure of founding member Jeff Austin almost two years ago, the band hasn't stopped their upward momentum. The band regrouped with two new members, Allie Kral and Jake Jolliff, and have used this new chapter and challenge to keep refining and pushing its sonic limits.
Before the Bundys and the Hammonds, the BLM put these Shoshones through a living hell " Bureau Of Land Management " reagangirl.com
Long before Cliven Bundy faced down federal agents in his dispute with the Bureau of Land Management over grazing rights, fellow Nevada rancher Raymond Yowell, an 84-year-old former Shoshone chief, watched as the BLM seized his herd. Adding to that, since 2008 they’ve taken his money as well — in the form of a piece of his Social Security checks.
Defense Secretary: Libya Did Not Pose Threat to U.S., Was Not 'Vital National Interest' to Intervene
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said that Libya did not pose a threat to the United States before the U.S. began its military campaign against the North African country. On "This Week," ABC News' Senior White House Correspondent Jake Tapper asked Gates, "Do you think Libya posed an actual or imminent threat to the United States?" "No, no," Gates said in a joint appearance with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, their first since the Libya operation began.
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