The rock star, dead at 57, lived such a blazingly distinctive life as preparation for the day that has now arrived.
The legendary singer was 57.
Researchers estimate 2.17 billion people live in areas where the mosquito-borne virus could thrive.
The Republican candidate’s defense of transgender bathroom accommodations shows how his approach to the culture war differs from the standard social-conservative line.
The United Kingdom will take 3,000 children from camps in the Middle East and North Africa.
ESPN fired the former pitcher after his Facebook post appeared to support North Carolina’s controversial transgender bill.
The Colorado city wanted to formalize relations with the Palestinian city of Nabus. Opponents weren’t happy.
The country’s highest appeals court set aside the verdicts against 275 people accused of plotting a coup against Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
It appears to be, NATO’s chief says. His comments came a day after the UN said as many as 500 people were feared dead as they tried to cross the Mediterranean to Europe.
Thursday marks the monarch’s birthday, another milestone in her record-breaking reign
The timing of an exposé in a Hong Kong newspaper and an editor’s firing has angered some journalists.
Is the judicial system the right place to hold people to account for the lead-poisoning scandal?
In Bank Markazi v. Peterson, the justices decided that Congress can change the rules while a case is still being litigated.
Four former New Orleans police officers plead guilty a decade after killing unarmed civilians in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
The Treasury Department is expected to announce that the African American woman who helped slaves escape to free states will replace Andrew Jackson on the front of the new note.
Government officials in Ecuador are now reporting 525 deaths were caused by Saturday’s earthquake—but they fear the tally could climb much higher.
The alliance suspended formal cooperation with Moscow after its 2014 intervention in Ukraine.