Cincinnati quarterback Joe Burrow kept his comments short Wednesday when addressing the media about having his home broken ...
More than 100 people including children have been killed by security forces in post-election protests in Mozambique that have ...
There has been a slight drop in the production of opium in Myanmar, the world’s biggest source of the illicit drug from which ...
Meat from fin whales caught for the first time in nearly 50 years off Japan’s northern coast fetched up to more than $1,300 ...
She’s an Iraq War combat veteran and sexual assault survivor who has advocated for years to improve how the military handles ...
As several of President-elect Donald Trump’s choices for high-level positions in his incoming administration face scrutiny on ...
President Joe Biden is commuting the sentences of roughly 1,500 people who were released from prison and placed on home ...
A Hong Kong judge on Thursday convicted seven people, including a pro-democracy former lawmaker, of rioting during mob ...
TONIGHT Mostly cloudy near the lakeshore with clearer skies inland. Lows in the teens with some wind chills dipping below ...
Drivers heading out on the roads Thursday morning will run into hazardous driving conditions due to heavy snowfall, gusty ...
In a fiery televised statement, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol defended his short-lived martial law decree as a ...
LONDON (AP) — Soccer fans visiting Saudi Arabia for the 2034 World Cup will live in a “bubble” during the tournament that does not reflect real life there, a Saudi rights activist warned on Thursday.