A mother was told to cover up while breastfeeding at a Texas Roadhouse in Kentucky, a state where it is legal to breastfeed in public.
Nation
ShowBiz Minute: Scorsese, Rolling Stones, Snoop Dogg
Martin Scorsese feted at MoMA by friends De Niro, DiCaprio, Hill; The Rolling Stones plan 13 US live dates next year; At Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony, Snoop Dogg thanks himself for success. (Nov. 20)
My First Performance: Olivia Williams
British actress Olivia Williams’ stage debut is a thing of myth. A Greek myth. (Nov. 20)
Kudlow: market corrections ‘come and go’
Larry Kudlow, President Trump’s National Economic Council Director, is downplaying the volatility of global markets, which were skidding Tuesday morning, putting the market back into the red for the year. He said “corrections come and go.” (Nov. 20)
My First Performance: Sara Bareilles
The bug bit early for Sara Bareilles. She says nerves quickly turned into a love of the spotlight, especially enjoying the applause. (Nov. 20)
‘Creed II’ actor on quitting MIT and engineering career
Actor Dolph Lundgren says he recently realized why he gave up a career in engineering to take up acting and talks about the chance to flesh out his “Rocky IV” role in new movie, “Creed II.” (Nov. 20)
Recreational pot shops open in Massachusetts
People lined up in the rain in Massachusetts Tuesday morning to be among the first customers at the state’s first two legal pot shops, more than two years after voters approved of recreational marijuana for adults. (Nov. 20)
Satellite imagery shows drastic before and after Camp Fire
Satellite images show how the Camp Fire destroyed nearly 12,000 homes in Paradise, California.
One dead, 4 injured after downtown Denver shooting
One person was killed and four others were wounded in a shooting on a downtown Denver street Monday, but it was unclear what caused the violence and no one had been arrested, authorities said. (Nov. 20)
For 76 years, the Santa Train has delivered Christmas to Appalachia
Santa clause, perched on the back of a train, brings gifts to the needy in coal towns and at crossroads. “It’s just a way of life here,” one woman said.