Gov. Scott Walker's state budget proposal would threaten tenure protection at the University of Wisconsin, worrying professors, who are now asking, "why now?"
Many of the foreigners still living in the Chatsworth displacement camp were unwilling or unable to return to their home countries or to their South African communities.
A few years ago, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie was a rising star in the GOP, but nobody had shut down the George Washington Bridge at that point.
Some analysts believe the jump was linked to government intervention and warned authorities are playing a dangerous game by interfering in the markets.
Death row inmates in Oklahoma had objected to the use of midazolam after botched executions in several states.
New attack choppers, including Mi-28Ns, Mi-26Ts and Mi-8MTV5s, will be deployed in Russia’s westernmost regions.
Opposition parties in Greece called on Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to cancel a bailout referendum that could see Greece leaving the eurozone.
According to the latest documents released by WikiLeaks, two French finance ministers and several French companies were spied on by the NSA.
David Sweat felt that his companion, Richard Matt, was slowing him down and decided to go separate ways days before the massive manhunt ended.
Officials say they are enforcing laws more strictly, but some companies and local governments still try to flout the law. Over 8,000 people were arrested last year.
Two Syrian women, and their husbands, were beheaded by the Islamic State group for practicing "witchcraft and sorcery."
The Russian government’s move is significant in light of the ongoing rift between Moscow and Kiev.
The passengers will stay in local hotels for the night and will be put on flights to Toronto Tuesday morning.
According to an assessment by Unesco, at least 34 million children in conflict-hit nations are currently out of school.
A Justice Department summary report said that police crowd-control tactics only served to "exacerbate tensions between protesters and the police."
The person behind the latest attack has reportedly targeted many Canadian municipal and police websites before.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe launched a task force to investigate the incident and carry out relief operations.
The U.S. State Department said that Bahrain had made major progress in improving its human rights record, but rights groups refuted the claim.
A corpse reportedly tested positive for the virus, weeks after Liberia was declared free of Ebola, which killed over 4,000 people in the West African country.
At least 28 people were killed by a car bomb targeting Shiite Houthi rebels in Yemen's capital city of Sanaa late on Monday.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is noticeably slimmer, and he may have some presidential reasons to lose the pounds.
Madrid prosecutors have asked a court to charge 27 people with money laundering, fraud and other crimes.
President Obama on Monday announced a proposal that would make nearly 5 million more workers eligible for overtime pay, a move that would touch nearly every sector of the U.S. economy and could face legal challenges.
Puerto Rico Gov. Alejandro García Padilla said it's imperative that San Juan restructure its debt to stave off default.
"NBC is so weak and so foolish to not understand the serious illegal immigration problem in the United States."
The Supreme Court voted 5-4 to grant an appeal from Texas abortion clinics to remain open while they decide whether to hear their appeal.
The hacking group traditionally holds its Million Mask March in November and in major cities. Not this time.
In the wake of the recent massacre in Charleston, intense public backlash against Confederate symbols has ensued — and the debate is roaring in small rural communities.
A border operation would not only make Turkish troops "susceptible to attacks by ISIS, but would endanger a huge population living in the border region," an expert on Syria says.
China's government has enlisted the country's biggest Internet companies to help crackdown on online drug transactions.