-
Bill Gates: This Book ‘Was So Compelling, I Couldn't Turn Away'—and 4 Other Gift-Worthy Recommendations
Don’t know what to get friends and family this year? In addition to being highly recommended by Bill Gates, these books are also on Amazon’s most-gifted list.
-
Booker, in History-Making Testimony, Challenges Colleague Sessions
New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, in a sharp break with tradition, testified against his colleague Sen. Jeff Sessions on Wednesday during Sessions’ confirmation hearings to be Attorney General.
-
Cowboys' Bennett Visiting Pats After Brief Stint With Them
Dallas defensive lineman Michael Bennett started the season in New England and now gets to face the Patriots exactly a month after leaving them in a trade.
-
Over 100,000 Greet Japan's Emperor at Enthronement Parade
Japan’s Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako waved and smiled from an open car in a parade Sunday marking Naruhito’s enthronement as more than 100,000 delighted well-wishers cheered, waved small flags and took photos from packed sidewalks. Security was extremely tight, with police setting up 40 checkpoints leading to the parade area. Selfie sticks, bottles and banners — and even shouting...
-
Spanish Village Gears Up for Dictator Franco's Remains
For visitors wondering why a tranquil cemetery outside Madrid suddenly needs around-the-clock police security, the answer is simple: an empty burial space awaits the remains of Gen. Francisco Franco, who is being reunited with his wife 44 years after he died. Weather permitting, the Spanish dictator’s preserved body will be flown Thursday by helicopter to the Franco family’s private chapel...
-
Sorrow Remains 30 Years After Deadly Texas School Bus Crash
Pain and sorrow remain 30 years after a deadly school bus crash in South Texas.
-
Hurricane Dorian Wouldn't Be South Florida's First Labor Day Hurricane – A Look at Hurricanes Past
Hurricane Dorian isn’t the first hurricane expected to aim at South Florida over Labor Day. Some of the state’s biggest storms have hit Florida around this time, causing destruction and changing the way the area looks today. The holiday falls in the middle of peak hurricane season.
-
Jimmy Carter Says He Believes Trump Is ‘Illegitimate President' Because of Russian Election Interference
Former President Jimmy Carter said Friday he believes President Donald Trump actually lost the 2016 election and is president only because of Russian interference. Carter made the comments during a discussion on human rights at a resort in Leesburg, Virginia, without offering any evidence for his statements. “There is no doubt that the Russians did interfere in the election,” Carter...
-
Stonewall: How a Raid and Rebellion Became a Rights Movement
Michael Olenick was 19 and living a secret social life, letting loose with friends at a speakeasy-like bar with blacked-out windows and one of the few floors in town where men danced with other men. Then the lights came on and the police strode into the Stonewall Inn.
-
Alan Peppard, Who Wrote for ‘The Dallas Morning News' for 30 Years, Dead at 56
Alan Peppard, the Dallas native who worked his way from society columnist to Texas historian, who could turn forgotten footnotes into multi-part series during his 30 years at The Dallas Morning News, died Saturday night. He was 56.
-
Last Slave Ship From Africa ID'd on Alabama Coast: Officials
Researchers working in the murky waters of the northern Gulf Coast have located the wreck of the last ship known to bring enslaved people from Africa to the United States, historical officials said Wednesday. Remains of the Gulf schooner Clotilda were identified and verified near Mobile after months of assessment, a statement by the Alabama Historical Commission said.
-
‘Weapons of the Alamo' Tour Opens in San Antonio
Caretakers at the Alamo, a sacred Texas memorial to those who died during the state’s struggle for independence, are launching a new tour.
-
Here's What You Get If You Buy a $1,000 Mint Julep at the Kentucky Derby
The mint julep is a Kentucky Derby staple. Each year, nearly 120,000 of them are served during the two-day event at the Churchill Downs Racetrack. The beverages will go for about $10 a pop at the track but, for the 14th year in a row, Kentucky bourbon distillery Woodford Reserve is offering a limited number of $1,000 mint juleps for...
-
Retired Pope Benedict Wades Into Clergy Sex Abuse Debate
Retired Pope Benedict XVI has published an analysis on the Catholic Church’s clergy sex abuse scandal, blaming it on the sexual revolution of the 1960s and church laws that protected priests. The essay immediately raised eyebrows, seeming to interfere with or even contradict Pope Francis’ own efforts to confront one of the most critical issues facing the church. One church...
-
Texans Share History of Convict Leasing, Unearthed Remains
Negotiations are underway between the Fort Bend Independent School District and Fort Bend County to determine who will ultimately own land near Sugar Land where last year the remains of 95 former state of Texas convict laborers were unearthed.
-
Family Who Owns Krispy Kreme, Panera, Peet's Coffee Acknowledges Nazi Past
One of Germany’s richest families, whose company owns a controlling interest in Krispy Kreme Doughnuts, Panera Bread, Pret a Manger and other well-known businesses, plans to donate millions to charity after learning about their ancestors’ enthusiastic support of Adolf Hitler and use of forced laborers under the Nazis, according to a report Sunday. In a four-page report, the Bild newspaper...
-
Fact Check: A Look at Trump's CPAC Speech
In a two-hour address to the Conservative Political Action Conference on March 2, President Donald Trump made questionable and false claims about the fight against ISIS, tariffs and African American income. He also repeated a bevy of claims we’ve debunked before.
-
‘Green Book' for Black Travelers Was Powerful Tool for Women Entrepreneurs
The “Green Book” was more than a revolutionary way for African Americans to travel in this country; it was an economic engine for burgeoning entrepreneurs, particularly black women.
-
New Park to be Named for Late Black Educator in South Texas
Decades after Hatchett Elementary School was torn down in Bloomington, a new space for kids to learn and grow is coming in its place, one that will also recognize E.E. Hatchett, a longtime black educator who died in 1979.
-
Historians Challenge Virginia Governor's ‘Indentured Servants' Remark
Historians say they were “shocked” and “mystified” when Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam wrongly used the term “indentured servants” Sunday in reference to the first Africans to arrive in English North America 400 years ago.
Most historians abandoned use of the term in the 1990s after historical records left little room for doubt that the Africans were enslaved, the scholars said.