Baylor and head coach Scott Drew are the new villains of college basketball. Fair or not. The Bears added 7-foot big man James Nnaji to their roster on Christmas Eve. The rub? Nnaji was drafted No. 31 ...
No region does more to fuel the U.S. economy than the Midwest, yet rural communities are so often shortchanged and unrecognized. However, with the July 4 passage of the “One Big Beautiful Bill,” ...
The reasons both parties support nuclear power are straightforward. Republicans often point to its unmatched reliability. Nuclear plants generate electricity around the clock, regardless of weather.
The Chicago White Sox concluded a busy week by signing Japanese slugger Munetaka Murakami to a two-year, $34 million deal, marking a major addition to their roster. The press conference introducing ...
We’ve long-admired internal combustion engines for their power density pursuits. Extremely high horsepower-to-liter ratios for naturally aspirated cars like the Honda S2000, Ferrari 458 Speciale, or, ...
Tucson's season of plenty, the winter and spring months, are looking pretty barren. Job opportunities are scarce, people aren't spending much, and it doesn't look like the Canadians, Europeans and ...
Our editors' top picks to read today. The CEO of a Florida-based bank makes the case for tackling climate change. Anyone can view a sampling of recent comments, but you must be a Times subscriber to ...
Georgia Power seeks approval for a $16B plan to add 10 gigawatts to the grid, driven largely by data center demand. The utility says rates could drop by 2029, but customers and advocacy groups are ...
Major Questions is a recurring series by Adam White, which analyzes the court’s approach to administrative law, agencies, and the lower courts. Please note that the views of outside contributors do ...
It was May 1961, barely 16 years after World War II left Europe in ashes. Seven hundred American high school juniors embarked on the American Field Service summer student exchange program, guided by ...
The antifederalist opponents of the Constitution worried that the office of the presidency was too powerful. “To be the fountain of all honors in the United States,” An Old Whig wrote in December 1787 ...