Live from NPR News, I'm Dale Willman.
Four people were killed Saturday night and 10 others wounded when gunfire broke out at a family gathering in Stockton,
California.
San Joaquin County Sheriff's spokesperson Heather Brandt says detectives are still trying to identify a suspect and a motive for the shooting.
The victims have been transported to local hospitals throughout the area.
This is a very active and ongoing investigation.
Information remains very limited at this time.
Early indications suggest that this may be a targeted incident.
Brent says some children are among the victims.
Northwestern University has agreed to pay tens of millions of dollars to the federal government.
It's an agreement that restores hundreds of millions in research funding withheld by the Trump administration.
The initial loss of that money contributed to the resignation of the school's president in September.
MPR's Alyssa Nadwarny reports.
Part of the deal would require Northwestern University, an elite school outside Chicago,
to pay the government $75 million over the next three years.
In exchange, the government will unfreeze $790 million in research funding.
That was canceled last spring over accusations of racial discrimination and anti-Semitism.
The agreement allows the college to retain full academic freedom and says the Trump administration will end all open investigations into the school.
This deal follows similar deals the Trump administration has made with Cornell University,
Brown University, and Columbia University.