Renée Fleming Won’t Perform at Kennedy Center Concerts
The soprano, who previously resigned as an artistic adviser, was scheduled to sing with the National Symphony Orchestra in May.
The soprano, who previously resigned as an artistic adviser, was scheduled to sing with the National Symphony Orchestra in May.
The U.S. Southern Command said it had asked the Coast Guard to search for one survivor.
Even a little ice can be far more dangerous than snow in some places.
The police in Brookfield, Ill., filed a battery charge against a federal agent, who was off duty when he scuffled with an immigrant rights activist.
The agency says that victims of an investment offering involving Gemini Trust got their money back, though after a regulatory action brought by the New York attorney general.
Also, demonstrators flooded Minneapolis streets to protest ICE. Here’s the latest at the end of Friday.
Top military leaders from 34 countries plan to discuss improving efforts in the Western Hemisphere to fight drug trafficking and transnational criminal organizations.
The resignation of the agent, Tracee Mergen, was only the latest shock wave to have emerged from the Justice Department’s handling of the shooting of Renee Good.
Polls, careful remarks from JD Vance and chats with voters all point to some wariness.
The columnist Jamelle Bouie argues that the Trump administration’s immigration policy has more in common with ethnic cleansing than actual immigration enforcement.
It’s the biggest snowfall the Kamchatka Peninsula has experienced in nearly 60 years.
At the March for Life, Vice President JD Vance acknowledged “a fear that some of you have that not enough progress has been made.”
The trip by Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen to the Danish territory came amid pressure from President Trump and appeared to have been meant as reassurance to Greenlanders.
After a monthslong review, investigators have concluded that “all speculative theories could not be substantiated.”
We want to hear about your priorities to get through the next few days.
President Trump’s faith in his ability to wring concessions by taking maximalist positions was on full display this week. So were the costs, as he splintered NATO and then undercut his credibility by climbing down from his threats.
The changes came after the app’s Chinese parent company spun out an American entity to run TikTok in the United States.
The University of Colorado, Boulder, denied liability in the civil rights lawsuit, which the couple filed after a comment about a dish that one of them was heating in an office microwave.
House leaders were forced to rush Representative Wesley Hunt, Republican of Texas, to the Capitol with a police escort to avoid an embarrassing defeat on the floor.
A picture of a 5-year-old detained by federal authorities near Minneapolis rocketed around the internet and has become an avatar of outrage.
If the United States under President Trump starts acting as if it’s Russia, where does that leave President Vladimir V. Putin?
In her first week as governor of New Jersey, Mikie Sherrill is playing hardball to get her choice approved for a key role in Port Authority leadership.
Airlines are canceling hundreds of flights over the weekend in anticipation of frigid weather and ice and now across much of the country.
The U.S. once maintained more than a dozen. Now it has one. President Trump wants more.
The designer Valentino Garavani, who died on Monday at 93, was celebrated in Rome, a city that he “embodied,” according to its mayor.
Anonymous Content, a production company whose top investor is Laurene Powell Jobs’s Emerson Collective, has named Darren Walker as president and chief executive.
With tight business restrictions still in place, companies may find it challenging to even assess what opportunities exist for them in the South American nation.
Bookings to the island increased last year, and there are plans for two new airports. Threats from President Trump may change that.
Dr. Kirk Milhoan, a pediatric cardiologist who leads the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, said a person’s right to refuse a vaccine outweighed concerns about illness or death from infectious diseases.
Just outside Minneapolis, the Whipple Building houses offices, a detention center and a courthouse — and has become the home base for immigration agents and protesters alike.