Russian Strike’s Toll Rises to 12 as Zelensky Blames Air Defense Delay
President Volodymyr Zelensky did not refer to the United States, but his words appeared to reflect frustration over a stalled American aid package.
President Volodymyr Zelensky did not refer to the United States, but his words appeared to reflect frustration over a stalled American aid package.
The penalty is part of a settlement of 27 cases involving safety concerns revealed during inspections of nearly two dozen stores, officials said.
UNRWA, the aid agency for Palestinians, is preparing to publish an investigation based on testimony from more than 100 detainees that accuses Israeli troops of abuse.
It’s a showstopping kaleidoscope of bulgogi, shiitakes, bean sprouts, spinach, carrots and cucumbers, all drizzled with a spicy gochujang sauce.
With readership collapsing for right-wing outlets, X is all the movement has left.
Parole reform has been languishing in the New York State Legislature.
An intriguing breed of enterprising Democratic governors have had success where it’s by no means guaranteed. This is how they did it.
D.E.I. efforts have their flaws, but for Black faculty members and students on campus, they can ease a sense of not belonging.
Parliament’s election of Shehbaz Sharif for a second term follows a month of political turmoil. The new government faces economic troubles and questions of legitimacy.
The Russian authorities vilified the opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny with a viciousness that suggested he was more influential than Moscow would admit. Little has changed since he died.
A New York Times/Siena College poll revealed how much even his supporters worry about his age, intensifying what has become a grave threat to his re-election bid.
Ken Corbin is fixing the phone lines — but those foreboding letters are staying the same.
An Alabama decision on I.V.F. has put an uncompromising principle on a collision course with political reality.
While the state is solidly in the Democrats’ column for the presidential election, the winners in key districts could determine who runs Congress.
Attorney General Ken Paxton is out for revenge. Gov. Greg Abbott wants private school vouchers. Both want to bring down incumbent Republicans in Tuesday’s primary and shift the state further to the right.
Calling themselves investigators, activists are using new data tools and disputed legal theories to urge officials to drop voters from the rolls.
Skyscrapers in the heart of Los Angeles were a financial failure that many people had ignored — until graffiti artists tagged their windows.
A Buffalo lawyer yelled at a police officer and received a noise citation. He argues he was punished for what he said, not how loudly he said it.
Israel has no clear plan for governing Gaza. That is a particular problem in the north, where the fighting has ebbed, and where a deadly stampede occurred on Thursday around an aid convoy.
After a national incident was declared in January, officials have been scrambling to address problematically low levels of immunization.
Dozens of other displaced Palestinians who had been sheltering nearby were also injured, the officials said.
Meet the 1990 and 1991 babies, a massive microgeneration in lifelong competition for America’s economic resources, reshaping the world around them.