The puppet of the 10-year-old girl will visit the U.S. Capitol, Joshua Tree National Park and the Edmund Pettus Bridge among other sites during a trek which starts in Boston on Sept. 7 and ends Nov. 5 along the U.S.-Mexico border
Virginia’s Glenn Youngkin announced Wednesday he’s deploying 100 National Guard soldiers. At least eight Republican-led states have made similar deployments in the weeks since Texas Gov. Greg Abbott appealed for help at the border
The former vice president’s team sees early-voting Iowa as critical to his potential path to victory and advisers say he plans to campaign aggressively for the state’s conservative, Evangelical Christian voters
The new aid provides munitions to boost Ukraine’s air defense capabilities to fend off Russia’s air assaults on Kyiv, which have escalated in the past few days
The court took up affirmative action in response to challenges at Harvard University and the University of North Carolina. Lower courts upheld admission systems at both schools, rejecting claims that the schools discriminated against white and Asian-American applicants
The country’s warning underscores the tension between Xi Jinping’s determination to seize global leadership in cutting-edge technology and concerns about the possible social and political harms of such technologies
Thousands of IMDb users have rated the 39 episodes of the HBO show. Along with each installment’s score, we highlight recurring themes: water as a liberating element, asocial social gatherings, betrayal, Shakespeare and an excellent script that validates the current screenwriters’ strike
‘The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom’ has transcended the world of gamers to become a social phenomenon with sales in the millions, among other things because it attracts its most important player: the one who was already here 40 years ago
The protest on Wednesday follows widespread cost-cutting at Amazon, where layoffs have affected workers in numerous sectors. The company has cut 27,000 jobs since November
Layoffs fell in April, but the number of people quitting their jobs — a sign of confidence that they can find better pay or working conditions elsewhere — slid
The announcement by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration represents its latest move toward regulating electronic systems that take on certain tasks that drivers themselves have normally done
The recently deceased British artist’s exhibit at the Chillida-Leku Museum in Spain features large-scale pieces to walk around, made with perishable materials that reflect the passage of time
Christie, who also ran in 2016, is expected to make the announcement at a town hall Tuesday evening at Saint Anselm College’s New Hampshire Institute of Politics
The National Archaeological Museum of Naples begins the restoration of the Alexander the Great mural from Pompeii, while inaugurating an exhibition about the Hellenic king in the East
Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston says the damage from the fires is ‘extensive’ and ‘heartbreaking.’ He announced a provincial ban on travel and activity in wooded areas to reduce the risk of more fires
Since fighting broke out between the army and RSF paramilitaries in April, some 200 disappearances have been registered in the capital alone amid reports of targeted arrests and torture in detention centers
The administrator of the U.S. space agency traveled to Madrid to sign the ‘Artemis’ agreements with Spain’s Minister of Science Diana Morant and meet with Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez
Museums such as the National Gallery and the Metropolitan have agreed to retitle works described in their catalogs as Russian amid an offensive against the Russification of Ukrainian history
The teacher and author recently published ‘Boys Do Cry,’ where he contemplates the problems of teenagers and gives advice to teachers and parents to help them improve their mental health
The main problem is ensuring that the small Serb population that has not gone into exile, can live in safety and with dignity, which is currently not the case
Three journalists from Nicaragua, El Salvador and Guatemala provide a first-person account of what it’s like to continue reporting on reality despite the authoritarian onslaught in the region and the criminalization of their work