The statue of President Jefferson Davis has been on display for decades at the foot of the Texas Tower at the UT Austin campus.
The Central Commission for Discipline Inspection previously relied on information provided by Chinese banks as a way to cut off money sources.
The riot at Lebanon's Roumieh Prison occurred just days after leaked videos showed guards violently beating restrained inmates.
Leopoldo López suspended his 30-day hunger strike after Venezuela announced a date for legislative elections -- one of his demands.
Oil and gas companies say new rules to limit fracking pollution on federal and tribal lands are redundant and unnecessarily burdensome.
Spain accused Rwanda's intelligence chief of partaking in reprisal mass murders following the Rwandan genocide.
Russian warplanes were escorted by Norwegian and Italian jets based in Lithuania as part of NATO's Baltic Air Policing mission.
The summit, dominated by male leaders, largely ignored discussions on ensuring gender parity in the security, economic, political and health sectors.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell praises the vote as a bipartisan accomplishment.
The police officers were not wearing body cameras, and there was no dashboard camera in their squad car, officials said.
Public support for President Nicolás Maduro has fallen dramatically since he entered office in 2013 and now hovers near 25 percent.
The beer-drinking competition followed a request that none of Xinjiang's civil servants, teachers or students fast during Ramadan.
“Extension of sanctions by our Western partners is only positive for us so far,” a top Russian official said.
Three in 10 Americans report having no emergency savings, the highest level in five years.
The survey of Polish citizens found that 68 percent of respondents support the extension of sanctions; just 11 percent do not.
South Carolina is not the only state that flies symbols of the Confederacy on state grounds.
Some immigrants say the $456 application fee has been a barrier to access, forcing some families with multiple eligible applicants to choose who will apply first.
"We work together, but then after 9-5, we go our own ways," a local pastor said.
Anonymous said it would infiltrate the WBC's website as well as disrupt any physical protests in Charleston.
“What’s wrong with supporting them?” Yanukovych said. “That I supported the ostriches? What’s wrong with that?”
Jeb Bush attacks D.C. lobbyists on the stump, but Florida lobbyists had open access to his administration when he was governor.
Ohio would be the sixth state to repeal a tax on tampons and pads.
Some European Union countries are resorting to walls to keep migrants out. Experts say it will not work.
Human rights groups have condemned the last election cycle and consider the ruling party one of the most repressive regimes in Africa.
China is the world's largest manufacturer of Confederate flags — but not everyone in the country has heard about the U.S. debate.
In 2008, she fended off accusations of being racist. This time, she's embracing the plight of minorities as a key campaign message.
A WSJ/NBC poll shows Hillary Clinton not only has a firm lead in the race for the Democratic nomination, but also leads her three GOP rivals.
Homes were destroyed by the storm in the small town of Coal City, about 60 miles south of Chicago.
NSA and the British intelligence agency, GCHQ, reportedly tried to reverse-engineer the anti-virus products of several companies to get deeper network access and track users.
Major Charles Guess of New York State Police, however, said he was only concerned about capturing the fugitives, and not the costs.