News

VIRGINIA BEACH — A long, eventful deployment reached the finish line Friday as the F/A-18s from the carrier Harry S. Truman ...
An acre of land owned by the city of Richmond contains potentially hundreds of unmarked graves, some of which could belong to ...
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) — A day after her emotional speech at Harvard University’s commencement, Yurong “Luanna” Jiang kept ...
MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. (AP) — Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer says President Donald Trump would be going back on his word to ...
On the girls’ side, No. 1 seed Mikayla Hogue and No. 2 Scarlett Gamez made it an all-Jamestown final. Hogue defeated ...
Energy Secretary Chris Wright said Friday he canceled nearly $4 billion in project grants, in another massive blow to clean ...
Look, there’s no middle ground in Fayetteville. They’re extremely either right or left,” Ralph Rodriguez said. “If you tilt ...
As the White House moves to revoke Harvard University’s certification to enroll foreign students — escalating a battle ...
NEW YORK (AP) — A second man charged in the kidnapping and torture of an Italian man for his Bitcoin has been indicted. A ...
Hall beat Brent Crews to the line by seven-thousandths of a second, with Carson Kvapil 0.064 of a second behind in third.
Inflation and immigration, not President Biden’s health, more likely doomed the Democrats in last year’s election, longtime journalist Carl P. Leubsdorf writes in an opinion column.
President Biden’s declining health wasn’t so much a cover-up as it was something much more banal: collective inertia, Matt K. Lewis writes in a Los Angeles Times column.