The Supreme Court said Tuesday a survivor and relatives of victims of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting can pursue their lawsuit against the maker of the rifle used to kill 26 people.
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The Supreme Court on Tuesday heard arguments in a case that could end a program that allows people brought to the United States illegally as children to obtain temporary protected status. A decision is expected by June.
New South Wales state is under a weeklong state of emergency, a declaration that gives the Rural Fire Service powers to control resources and direct other agencies in its efforts to battle fires.
Gaza’s Health Ministry said a man and a woman were killed in an airstrike at a house and two other people were wounded.
President Carter is resting comfortably, and his wife, Rosalynn, is with him.
A swath of federal land in southeastern Nevada will not be auctioned off as planned after warnings that fracking there could threaten Mesquite’s water supply.
The New York Police Department said the woman had received 10 summonses over the past six months for “unlicensed vending.”
As a motorcade carried Trump from his long-time home at Trump Tower to Madison Square Park, signs saying “IMPEACH” and “CONVICT” hung from high-rise windows.
Mulvaney faced opposition from lawyers for both Kupperman and House lawmakers in his bid to join the lawsuit.
A two-day court hearing on a controversial and embattled proposal to pump groundwater from rural eastern Nevada to the Las Vegas Valley gets underway Tuesday in Ely.
The hearings are only the fourth time in history that Congress has launched a public investigation into the president’s activities with the possibility of removing him from office.
Stargazers used solar-filtered binoculars and telescopes to spot Mercury — a tiny black dot — as it passed directly between Earth and the sun on Monday.
Faculty members at the College of Southern Nevada are entering their fourth year without a contract, and there’s no end to the impasse in sight.
Thousands of spectators lined Fourth Street, applauding as roughly 5,000 participants in nearly 100 parade groups made their way down the street in the two-hour parade.
Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg unveils his plan for veterans and service members in an interview with the Review-Journal.