The biggest iceberg on Earth is heading toward a remote island, creating a potential threat to penguins and seals inhabiting the area.
President Donald Trump today will sign the first bill of his new administration – the Laken Riley Act, named for an AU student who was slain in Athens.
President Donald Trump today will sign the first bill of his new administration – the Laken Riley Act, named for an AU student who was slain in Athens.
William E. Leuchtenburg, a prize-winning historian widely admired for his authoritative writings on the U.S. presidency and as the reigning scholar on Franklin Roosevelt and the
The Holland America cruise will visit 21 ports and is modeled on an itinerary from more than 100 years earlier.
The 13 states listed by the Center for Immigration Studies are California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, Oregon, Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont and Washington. In addition, the center lists 220 cities and counties across the nation as having sanctuary status, which are displayed on the map below.
In her debut graphic memoir, “This Beautiful, Ridiculous City,” Kay Sohini examines the lasting appeal of the Big Apple.
Slated for Wednesday, President Trump is expected to sign he Laken Riley act into law. The law allows the Department of Homeland Security to detain "certain non-U.S. nationals who have been arrested for burglary, theft, larceny or shoplifting.
Lawmakers concerned with health care spending are heading into state budget negotiations with a cloud over their heads as federal cuts to Medicaid and other health funding streams loom under the Republican governing trifecta in Washington.
No NFL team in the Super Bowl era has managed a three-peat. But these teams — from MLB, the NBA, NHL and WNBA — have.
President Donald Trump on Wednesday will sign the Laken Riley Act into law as his administration's first piece of legislation. It mandates the detention and potential deportation of people in the U.S.
An attempted funding freeze caused confusion and panic among organizations that rely on Washington for their financial lifeline, and that’s what has Sen. Jon Ossoff worried.