Big business rallied behind the gay marriage cause as the U.S. Supreme Court scheduled oral arguments for April 28 on the contentious social issue that promises to yield one of the justices' most important rulings of 2015.
The border crossing between Gaza and Egypt at Rafah will reopen, once Egyptian authorities hand over control of the crossing to the Palestinian Authority.
Three members of al Qaeda affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra also were reportedly killed in Syria on Thursday.
Reports said the Njaba attack killed anywhere from 45 to 64 or more villagers.
The Michigan Republican was elected to Congress in 2002.
Cardinal Edward Egan, the former Archbishop of New York, died on Thursday in Manhattan.
The FBI said on Thursday it will open a field office in Williston, North Dakota, capital of the state's oil patch and an area grappling with a rise in drug use and sex trafficking
A victim who lost a leg said he came to court to face the Boston Marathon bombing suspect: "I want to see him, and I want him to see me."
Mexico captured two major drug kingpins in a week, but nobody has illusions this will reduce violent crime or the drug trade.
One of them, a former British soldier, this week became the second to die in the conflict.
If the subsidies are ruled illegal, up to 8 million people could lose their health insurance.
Both civil-rights and wrongful-death cases would be difficult to win, legal experts say.
Film crew workers for Sharknado 3 want health and pension benefits.
Tribal leaders, municipal councils and warring militias all need to be included in the process, and many of them are not at the table.
Reports from border-crossing points between Ukraine and Russia say more are returning than leaving since February's ceasefire.
The Ass'n of American Medical Colleges is lobbying Congress for a $10 billion boost to its members based on a report citing a looming doctor shortage.
Whatever led Clinton to use clintonemail.com instead of State Dept. servers, security experts say it was a terrible decision.
Saudi Arabia has worried that a nuclear deal would give Iran more opportunity to flex its muscles in the Middle East.
Family's announcement comes after a federal investigation revealed new details about the events that led to the fatal shooting.
As much as 21 inches of snow had fallen in a band from Texas to New England by midday Thursday.
The attacker previously has thrown concrete blocks at a Japanese ambassador and has tried to set himself on fire during a protest.
County attorneys and sheriffs in three states have filed a lawsuit in an attempt to again criminalize marijuana sales in Colorado.
Russian tourists reportedly produced the film near Egypt's most important tourist attraction, allegedly with the connivance of local police.
Parliament has voted to expand the nation's troop level to 250,000, as heavy weapons withdraw on the front lines.
Jodi Arias had previously been found guilty of killing her ex-boyfriend Travis Alexander.
Initial results of the Federal Reserve's annual bank examinations come out Thursday. Here's what you need to know.
Europe wants to decrease its dependency on Russian energy. Turkey says it has a solution.
The justices heard arguments in the case, known as King v. Burwell, on Wednesday, but gave little indication on which way they leaned.
The Republican National Committee also offered lines of inquiry to the State Department's inspector general.
A massive fire in Cairo's convention center Wednesday was apparently deemed the latest sign of Mohamed Ibrahim's failures.