15 Energetic Dog Breeds for People With an Active Lifestyle
These bundles of energy will keep you on the move all day long.
Justice calls ruling ‘an abrupt break from precedent’
The Scottish singer, famous for Bye Bye Baby, died suddenly at home aged 65 his family confirm.
‘Do. Not. Come. For. Stacey. Abrams.’
Lisa Christensen says that she “’teared up’ watching the nine-and-a-half minute video of George Floyd losing his life
Here are key elements of a trial that gripped the US.
‘Symbolic power of destroying house of horrors cannot be overstated,’ says attorney representing around 50 alleged victims of convicted sex offender
Mother of boy who testified at hearing forced to ‘file a police report’
‘Let’s just hope, in your life, you never need a police officer,’ Brian Kilmeade says
Nestled between Big Bear Lake and Lake Arrowhead in the mountains outside Los Angeles, this cozy A-frame has all the brightness of California with all the action of the wilderness. An expansive deck and a projector above a wide fireplace are welcome respites after daytime hikes, swimming, and climbing excursions a short trip away. Set on 13 private acres with panoramic views of towering trees, this light-filled carriage house in upstate New York epitomizes getting away from it all.
An 86-year-old woman enters to receive her first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at a clinic targeting minority community members at St. Patrick's Catholic Church on April 9, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. A new survey released by the Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI) and the Interfaith Youth Core found that COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy remains prevalent in some American communities—but a faith-based approach could prove crucial in the fight to combat it. It found that among Americans who attend some type of religious service at least a few times a year, 44% of people “hesitant” about COVID-19 vaccines said that a faith-based approach—or approaches—could impact their eventual decision to get vaccinated, and 14% of people “resistant” to the vaccine said the same.
Unreleased Apple product blueprints claimed to be among hackers' haul.
House votes for second time to make DC nation’s 51st state, setting up historic Senate debate
PARIS (Reuters) -France will lift domestic travel restrictions from May 3 but a 7 p.m. curfew will remain in place until the COVID-19 epidemic is under control, the prime minister said. In a first step towards ending a third nation-wide lockdown, which has been in place since early April, Jean Castex said schools would reopen on Monday and people would be able to travel all over the country after being confined to their own region and within 10 km of their residence. "The third wave of the disease is behind us," Castex told a news conference.
The country has been far slower than others including the UK and the US to immunise its population.
Mosquito Creek Lake is the park lawmakers are looking to rename in honour of the former president
Here’s what they had to say about Derek Chauvin’s guilty verdict.
An overnight attack at a luxury hotel in Pakistan has been confirmed as a suicide car bombing and the death toll has risen to five, the country's interior minister and police said Thursday. In a statement, the counter-terrorism department said five people were killed and about a dozen wounded in Wednesday’s attack in the parking lot of the Serena hotel, in the southwestern city of Quetta. The bombing took place as Chinese Ambassador Nong Rong visited Quetta city.
Kentucky Republican reacts to the NIAID director calling for vaccinated people to wear masks on 'The Story'
New associate attorney general is first civil rights attorney in role overseeing US law enforcement
A powerful bomb exploded in the parking area of a luxury hotel in the southwestern Pakistani city of Quetta on Wednesday, killing at least four people and wounding at least nine others, police said. Footage on Pakistan news channels showed burning cars. Hours after the attack, the Pakistani Taliban in a statement claimed responsibility, saying it was a suicide attack.