Turner Van Slyke ’28 spearheaded an initiative at Stanford to protect student free speech and and civic engagement on campus. The movement, called Education and Democracy United, is now on its way to ...
Plans have been put forward to open a new restaurant and takeaway in Blackpool which will offer both Polish and English cuisine. Polish-born couple Maciej Wejdelek and Zyta Bukowska-Wejdelek hope to ...
Omaha Public Library is making noise during Banned Books Week this October. In partnership with The Write Stuff, metro libraries are spotlighting the books some people would rather keep out ...
British and English flags have been appearing in public spaces across the UK. Is this an expression of harmless patriotism or of underlying xenophobia? And what do people from the UK's different ...
Israel’s military has issued new evacuation orders for neighborhoods of Gaza City as Israeli ground forces pushed deeper into the Gaza Strip’s largest urban area. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians ...
The outrage around Kannemeyer is not only about one man’s words; it is about the fault line running through South Africa’s democracy.
Katrin Bennhold is the host of The World, a New York Times newsletter for readers around the globe. It launches this week.
Geoffrey Kabaservice on political violence and assassinations in the 1960s. Plus: Is Trump making a massive political miscalculation?
A Flathead Valley mother and daughter from Honduras who were arrested by U.S. Border Patrol last weekend arrived Wednesday at a facility in Texas, the Daily Montanan confirmed. Luisa Torres and her ...
In 1633, Galileo Galilei was brought before the Inquisition for supporting the Copernican model of the solar system. That’s the one where the Earth orbits around the sun, not the ...