John Ross, left, and Major Ridge teamed up to protect Cherokee holdings in what is now Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina and Tennessee. National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; Library of ...
During a roundtable at the White House on Friday, March 6, President Donald Trump returned to what has become a familiar refrain in the weeks since the Supreme Court struck […] The post When ...
As the circle of Martin Luther King Jr.’s closest allies grows smaller, the former mayor nears a milestone birthday still traveling, speaking and remembering.
A tourist trail that focuses on historical connections between Ireland and America – and which treats, say, Andrew Jackson as ...
General manager Adam Peters is bringing back veterans Deatrich Wise Jr., Drake Jackson, and Shy Tuttle to build a physical foundation for Daronte Jones’s new scheme.
Successful coaches often have a “coaching tree.” Think Mike Krzyzewski or Pat Summitt. Former players become coaches and spawn another set of players and future coaches. That must be the case in law ...
Epstein survivor calls the arrest of ex-Prince Andrew a 'small victory'; calls for accountability in the U.S. • King Charles III has expressed his “deepest concern” about the case and stressed that ...
Andrew Mountbatten‑Windsor, formerly Prince Andrew, was released Thursday after being arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office, police said. Mountbatten‑Windsor was arrested earlier ...
King Charles was heckled Thursday morning during his first public engagement, shortly following the arrest of his brother, the former Prince Andrew, on suspicion of misconduct in public office.
The Rev. Jesse Jackson's decades of activism included a record of profound eloquence. The civil rights icon, who died on Feb. 17 at 84, delivered numerous powerful speeches and memorable quotes ...
“The law must take its course,” the King said in a statement. He added that he “learned with the deepest concern the news about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and suspicion of misconduct in public office.
In Britain, the offense carries a maximum sentence of life in prison. No case has ever tested whether a member of Britain’s royal family could be considered a public officer. By Lizzie Dearden ...