The state’s Republican lawmakers said Monday they planned to stop the order to allow more than 200,000 convicted felons the right to vote.
If the Texan loses to Donald Trump in Indiana, it will be a fitting coda to a campaign in which he’s failed to win over the Christian voters expected to form his base of support.
Alpinists preparing an ascent of Shishapangma found the bodies of Alex Lowe and David Bridges who were killed in an avalanche in 1999.
A CSX freight train carrying 15,500 gallons of dangerous chemicals derailed Sunday just miles from the White House.
ISIS claimed responsibility for an attack in Baghdad Monday that killed 18 Shia pilgrims.
Craig Wright told the BBC and others that he is Satoshi Nakamoto, the mysterious creator of the virtual currency Bitcoin.
Most public schools will be closed Monday after the teachers union raised concerns over the finances of Michigan’s largest school district.
The Carnival vessel, carrying 700 passengers, left Miami for Havana on Sunday.
One of the circus company’s iconic acts performs for the last time Sunday.
The photographer Renaud Philippe returned to the epicenter of last year’s 7.8-magnitude earthquake to document what progress has been made in some of the hardest-to-reach villages.
Baghdad declared a state of emergency Saturday after hundreds of demonstrators breached the heavily fortified Green Zone.
Papua New Guinea’s planned closure of a detention center for those bound for its larger neighbor is putting the focus on how Canberra deals with arrivals by sea.
Dee Gordon of the Miami Marlins was suspended for 80 games for using performance-enhancing drugs.
After a decade of battles, Republicans hope to call a referendum to amend the state constitution to require photo identification to cast a ballot.
Sixteen U.S. military personnel have been faulted for errors that led to the bombing of an MSF hospital last October in Afghanistan.
Kim Dong-chul of Fairfax, Virginia, was arrested last October.