Having conversations with people who have different perspectives can be a great opportunity to learn and grow, especially in college when you’re developing your own opinions. By listening and ...
College football bowl season kicks off on Saturday with the 2025 Celebration Bowl featuring the Prairie View A&M Panthers and South Carolina State Bulldogs. This is the lone bowl game featuring FCS ...
WASHINGTON — Erika Kirk has been named CEO of Turning Point USA, the conservative youth organization founded and led by her husband, Charlie Kirk, until his assassination last week. In addition to ...
Everyone can agree that we all want to reduce violent crime and gun violence. But that common agreement immediately dissolves if the solution doesn't come from our particular political party. It's ...
NEW YORK -- The new season of "The View" kicked off on Monday, reuniting hosts Joy Behar, Whoopi Goldberg, Sunny Hostin, Sara Haines, Ana Navarro, and Alyssa Farah Griffin for hot topics and plenty of ...
The Pentagon is putting back up a portrait of Gen. Robert E. Lee at the military academy, as the Trump administration seeks to restore honors for American figures who fought to preserve slavery. By ...
“The View” will return on ABC for Season 29 on Sept. 8, the network announced. The top-rated daytime talk show features hosts Whoopi Goldberg, Joy Behar, Sunny Hostin, Sara Haines, Ana Navarro and ...
Before you step outside, you may want to know how humid, or "sticky" it feels. That comes down to knowing the dew point. Dew point is more commonly discussed in the summertime and is a good measure of ...
A young British-Japanese writer probes her mother's shadowed Nagasaki past in Kei Ishikawa's period drama, which suggests there may have been a reason why Ishiguro's haunting, tricky 1982 debut went ...
A woman recounts her life in post-war Nagasaki to her youngest daughter in Kei Ishikawa's take on the Nobel prize-winning writer's 1982 debut. By Lovia Gyarkye Arts & Culture Critic In a modest home ...
Cannes: Japanese director Kei Ishikawa's adaptation is steeped in the English culture it seeks to reflect — to a fault. It begins as many great films do: with a character peering through a window, ...
Ishikawa's subtle adaptation of the Nobel Prize winner's first novel finds resonance and haunting ambiguity in Japan's fading postwar memories. By Patrick Brzeski Asia Bureau Chief Japanese director ...