World
South Korea, US Repatriate War Casualties 70 Years Later
South Korean President Moon Jaein visited Hawaii this week as the remains of 68 Korean and six presumed U.S. service members were repatriated during a ceremony at Pearl Harbor.
South Korea, US Repatriate War Casualties 70 Years Later
South Korean President Moon Jaein visited Hawaii this week as the remains of 68 Korean and six presumed U.S. service members were repatriated during a ceremony at Pearl Harbor.
Father Pleads No Contest To 2016 Church Drowning Of Daughter
A Northern California man has pleaded no contest to voluntary manslaughter charges in the 2016 drowning of his 4yearold daughter in the baptismal pool of a Catholic church, authorities said.
Fears of Hole in EU Heart as Germany Heads for Election to Choose Angela Merkel's Successor
Tributes have been growing for Angela Merkel ahead of elections this weekend to choose a successor.
Melbourne Faces More Anti-lockdown Protests As Daily Cases Hit Pandemic High
Police in Australia's secondlargest city of Melbourne prepared for a fourth day of antilockdown protests on Thursday after more than 200 arrests a day earlier, while COVID19 cases across the state of Victoria hit a daily record.
District: Missouri Students Posted Slavery Petition Online
Officials in a suburban Kansas City school district are investigating after a small group of students posted a petition online calling for the return of slavery.
Researchers Detect Malaria Resistant To Key Drug In Africa
Scientists have found evidence of a resistant form of malaria in Uganda, a worrying sign that the top drug used against the parasitic disease could ultimately be rendered useless without more action to stop its spread.
Bill Would Change Maritime Liability Rules After Boat Fire
Federal lawmakers introduced legislation Wednesday that would change 19th century maritime liability rules in response to the 2019 boat fire off the coast of Southern California that killed 34 people.
Swiatek, Kvitova Advance To Quarterfinals Of Ostrava Open
Topseeded Iga Swiatek of Poland advanced to the quarterfinals of the Ostrava Open on Wednesday with a 64, 64 victory over unseeded Yulia Putintseva of Kazakhstan.
Overseas Uyghurs Struggle To Locate Relatives In Xinjiang Prisons
When Ziba Murat last saw her mother, retired Uyghur doctor Gulshan Abbas, at Ronald Reagan Washington National airport in 2016, she begged her not to return to Xinjiang, where reports were emerging about the detention of ethnic minorities.
GLIMPSES: Britain's Johnson Rides Rails To Meet Amtrak Joe
Oh, the conversations that happen when powerful people meet.
Brazil And Argentina Tapped To Make MRNA Vaccines In Latin America
The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) has selected two biomedical centers in Argentina and Brazil as regional hubs to develop and produce mRNAbased vaccines to fight COVID19 in Latin America, the regional health agency said on Tuesday.
Deported Haitians Try To Rush Back Into Plane Amid Anger
Dozens of migrants upset about being deported to Haiti from the U.S. clashed with authorities while trying to rush back into a plane that landed Tuesday afternoon in PortauPrince.
Oklahoma Court Lifts Stays In 2 McGirt-related Decisions
The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals on Tuesday lifted stays in two cases it overturned based on a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that the state has no jurisdiction over crimes committed on tribal lands by nonAmerican Indians against Native Americans.
Investigators: Colorado Man Chose To 'Hunt And Control' Wife
Investigators allege that a Colorado man charged with killing his missing wife decided to hunt and control her like an animal after she insisted on leaving him and later changed his statements as evidence in the case developed, according to a court docume...
Israel's Former PM Netanyahu Suggests on Facebook That Joe Biden Fell Asleep Meeting New PM
Netanyahu's reference to the Biden meeting was a brief segment in a nearly 26-minute video that touched on a variety of political issues