The real tug in “Circus 1903” is what Willy Whipsnade calls “the root of the circus.”
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Arizona Sen. John McCain, the 2008 Republican presidential nominee with a well-known maverick streak that often vexes his GOP colleagues, has been diagnosed with a brain tumor, his office said in a statement Wednesday.
Review-Journal sports reporter Adam Hill and videographer Heidi Fang returned Tuesday, July 19, 2017, for their weekly UFC and MMA update on the Covering the Cage Facebook page.
Here are your Tuesday afternoon headlines.
A 16-year-old boy who went missing more than 40 years ago from his home in Minnesota was identified by Chicago authorities on Wednesday as a victim of the serial killer John Wayne Gacy.
At a lunch with Republican senators Wednesday, President Donald Trump delivered an impassioned argument in favor of repealing and replacing Obamacare, and scolded Republicans who have failed to produce the votes needed to pass a health-care bill.
Five women hanged during the Salem witch trials in Massachusetts are being remembered on the 325th anniversary of their deaths.
An underwater robot entered a badly damaged reactor at Japan’s crippled Fukushima nuclear plant Wednesday, capturing images of the harsh impact of its meltdown, including key structures that were torn and knocked out of place.
Here are your Wednesday morning headlines.
Two years after a white Ohio police officer fatally shot an unarmed black motorist in the head, the case is in the hands of federal authorities.
Flight delays, minor damage also reported as unsettled weather continues to unleash torrents of rain, high winds in parts of the valley.
“Despacito” has become the most streamed track of all time with more than 4.6 billion plays across streaming platforms.
Shortly before she was fatally shot by a Minneapolis police officer, Justine Damond made two 911 calls to help a nearby woman she thought was possibly being sexually assaulted.
Education spending in Nevada keeps going up, but the Clark County School District keeps complaining it doesn’t get enough.
A pot dealer who confessed to killing four men on his family’s farm in Bucks County also claimed to have killed two people in neighboring Philadelphia, but the city’s police commissioner called the information “sketchy.”