A trip to Uttar Pradesh in 2014 yields encounters with people making sense—and stories—from memories of violence.
Daley and LaHood’s group, Fair Maps Illinois, is beginning the process of gathering the signatures necessary to put a ...
The memorial service for Charlie Kirk on Sunday is expected to draw tens of thousands of people, as supporters of the slain conservative activist flock to Glendale, Ariz. to pay tribute to him.
Editor’s note: The video above aired in a previous newscast. NEW YORK (PIX11) — New York City Mayor Eric Adams took jabs at Mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani in a political cartoon posted on his X ...
PENDER COUNTY N.C. (WECT) - Pender County Commissioner Jerry Groves said a recent political cartoon in The Pender-Topsail Post & Voice has him feeling a little more than on edge. “Regardless of what ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio — Cleveland Fire Chief Anthony Luke is on paid leave pending an investigation after he reposted a political cartoon that criticized Charlie Kirk and Republicans, just two days after ...
A former Akron Beacon Journal cartoonist is defending a political cartoon about the death of Charlie Kirk that he posted online, which was subsequently picked up by some newspapers. The cartoon found ...
Newsday, a daily newspaper serving Long Island, New York, apologized for an "insensitive and offensive" editorial cartoon referencing the tragic assassination of Charlie Kirk after sparking calls for ...
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Strong nor’easter ‘increasingly likely’ to impact East Coast, Lehigh Valley this weekend. Here’s ...
Newsday has issued a full apology after publishing a political cartoon referencing the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk sparking condemnation from Republican leaders and calls for a ...
A Long Island newspaper was forced to apologize Sunday for a political cartoon on the assassination of Charlie Kirk after it ignited a firestorm for the “vile” and “insensitive” piece. Newsday ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — The same scene played out at campuses across the country. Charlie Kirk would grab a microphone, take a seat under a canopy — often in busy campus hubs — and invite debate from anyone ...
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