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Saint Joseph's University student Mark Dombroski, 19, was last seen leaving a bar early Sunday.
It's believed to be the first pedestrian fatality attributed to a self-driving vehicle.
To Clinton allies, the event was evidence that Sanders and his supporters are obsessed with tearing her down.
To Clinton allies, the event was evidence that Sanders and his supporters are obsessed with tearing her down.
Company claimed it had no rent-regulated tenants when in fact it had hundreds in dozens of properties, the Associated Press reports.
Company claimed it had no rent-regulated tenants when in fact it had hundreds in dozens of properties, the Associated Press reports.
After Hurricane Maria, volunteers from Remote Area Medical set up free pop-up clinics in Puerto Rico.
Drake: 'Tariffs to Protect U.S. National and Economic Security Are Overdue'
Celeste Drake, trade policy specialist at the AFL-CIO, participated in a discussion last week about trade and tariffs at The Dialogue. The following question was submitted to Drake and other experts:
U.S. President Donald Trump on March 8 signed into law new tariffs on imported steel and aluminum despite anxious warnings from leading members of his own party, global trading partners and liberal economists. At the same time, he announced that Canada and Mexico would be exempt from the tariffs, pending the outcome of the re-negotiations of the North American Free Trade Agreement. The tariffs have support from a diverse coalition of interests, ranging from the largest labor union in the United States to right-wing advocates of Trump’s 'America First' political ideology. What would the tariffs mean for Latin American and Caribbean countries? Which players stand to gain or lose the most? How will concerns about a global trade war come to bear on the current talks to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement?
Drake responded:
For years, firms and workers in...
Lawyers for an Arizona man who killed two people argued the state's capital punishment law was too broad
Lawyers for an Arizona man who killed two people argued the state's capital punishment law was too broad