President Juan Manuel Santos and Timoleon Jimenez, the head of the left-wing rebel group, announced a historic cease-fire in Havana.
A judge has ruled that a 3.3-mile zone around the convention, to be held in July, infringes on demonstrators’ rights.
A pipeline near the beach in Ventura County has leaked about 700 barrels.
Doctors Without Borders was allowed into the camp in Bama for the first time and found 1,233 recently dug graves.
A tornado and hailstorm has killed 51 people in a province north of Shanghai.
The motive of the gunman, who was shot dead by police in Viernheim, near Frankfurt, is not known.
The justices split 4-4 on the Obama administration’s 2014 immigration plan, effectively blocking it.
The U.S. Supreme Court turned back a conservative challenge to the University of Texas at Austin’s plan to increase student diversity.
Solar Impulse, which took off from New York on Monday, landed in Seville, Spain.
The Marine Corps has acknowledged it wrongly identified one of the six men in the iconic World War II image, USA Today reports.
Voters from both parties in North Carolina, a newly minted swing state, are grappling with the weaknesses of the presumptive Republican nominee.
Britons are voting Thursday in a nationwide referendum on EU membership. Here is a brief guide to the issues, personalities, and policies involved in the sometimes-heated, often-entertaining debate.
How the British press reported on a historic referendum day
Democrats aren’t happy with the $1.1 billion deal, which includes millions in offsets.
The NHL approved Las Vegas for a new team starting in the 2017-18 season.
The lawmakers staging a sit-in on Wednesday took a page from GOP members who protested inaction by then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi on the House floor eight years ago.
The historic Supreme Court ruling led to a surge in same-sex marriages in all 50 states, polls show.
The U.S. Justice Department charged 301 people for $900 million in false billings.
The IMF’s chief said while the U.S. economy was “overall, in good shape,” it needed to overcome declining labor-force participation, lower productivity growth, income inequality, and “very high levels” of poverty.
If the economy crashes, “I’m going to give you back half,” the presumptive Republican nominee tells the nation’s creditors.