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More American children and teens die from firearms than any other cause, but there are more deaths — and wider racial disparities — in states with more permissive gun policies, according to a new ...
U.S. District Judge William Young, who previously blocked the administration's termination of NIH grants, presided over the ...
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India Today on MSNScott Bessent urges Fed self-audit, questions $100 billion losses, expanding roleWhite House and administration officials have accused Powell of mismanaging a $2.5 billion renovation project at the Fed, ...
More than 20 Democratic attorneys general on Monday sued to block a Trump administration policy that bars migrants living in ...
The United States will require international visitors to pay a new “visa integrity fee” of at least $250, added to existing visa application costs, according to a provision in the Trump administration ...
The U.S. State Department said on Monday that the Chinese government had blocked a U.S. Patent and Trademark Office employee ...
AstraZeneca plans to spend $50 billion to expand manufacturing and research capabilities in the U.S. by 2030, it said on ...
The court’s warning to the president is not to start on this path.
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Straight Arrow News on MSNHere's when Southwest Airlines will officially end its open seating policySay goodbye to the seat scramble. Starting Jan. 27, Southwest Airlines will retire its decades-old open seating policy and begin assigning seats in advance. The familiar A, B and C boarding groups ...
As a candidate, President Trump promised to change America's foreign policy. Six months into his second administration, NPR examines where things stand.
A United States that abruptly changes its strategy every four years is not one other countries will trust or respect.
The most dramatic example of unfulfilled expectations has come in Ukraine, the bloody conflict Trump promised to end even ...
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