• Hernández: Walker Buehler's return was encouraging. Can he can build on it?

    Inside the interview room at Dodger Stadium, Walker Buehler sounded conflicted. “I wish it could’ve gone better,” Buehler said. In the hallway outside, the surgeon who twice repaired his elbow was beaming. From a medical perspective, team physician Neal ElAttrache said, Buehler’s return to the mound on Monday night was a resounding triumph. So what if Buehler labored through the first two innings of the Dodgers’ 6-3 victory over the Miami Marlins? So what if the former All-Star was charged with...

  • 3 Ways AI Can Make Humans Better (and How it Can Hurt Us)

    Business leaders should know the potential drawbacks of AI before diving in head first.

  • Jim Banks sails through US Senate primary unopposed: 'Indiana deserves unwavering conservative leadership in the Senate'

    Republican Rep. Jim Banks of Indiana, who sailed through a Republican U.S. Senate primary in which he did not face any competition, has said that the Hoosier State "deserves unwavering conservative leadership in the Senate.""Last January, we announced my bid to represent Indiana in the United States Senate. Today, I was honored to officially become the Republican nominee," Banks said in a statement to Blaze News."I got into this race because Indiana is a conservative state and deserves...

  • The future of the US-Israeli relationship

    Fifty-seven years ago this May, Israel was in grave danger. The charismatic Egyptian leader Gamal Abdel Nasser announced that the Straits of Tiran would be closed to Israeli shipping. Nasser was preparing for war and assembling a coalition that would eventually include Syria, Jordan, Iraq, and Lebanon. “Our goal is clear,” Iraqi President Abdel Rahman […]

  • Honoring small businesses building a stronger economy

    For more than 60 years, National Small Business Week — April 28-May 4 — has served as America’s annual tribute to our small businesses and innovative startups.

  • Honoring small businesses building a stronger economy

    For more than 60 years, National Small Business Week — April 28-May 4 — has served as America’s annual tribute to our small businesses and innovative startups.

  • Can We Build a Shared Homeland for Israelis And Palestinians?

    Jon Wiener In this conversation, Jon Wiener and May Pundak of A Land For All discuss a road map for a better two-state solution.

  • How can cities build a future with fewer gas pipelines?

    As some communities question the logic of continued investment in the gas system, a new RMI and National Grid paper looks at efforts to find alternatives.

  • US company awarded ship lift build contract

    A United States company has been awarded the contract to build the ship lift set to be a major money maker in the Northern Territory. The Northern Territory government announced on Tuesday the ship lift infrastructure will be built by US company Pearlson Shiplift Corporation under a $48 million contract. The tender is part of […]

  • Bernie Sanders to run for fourth term in US Senate

    Independent senator, 82, stresses need to improve healthcare and protect abortion rights – and condemns ‘extremist’ NetanyahuBernie Sanders, the Vermont independent senator and former candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, announced on Monday that he will run for a fourth six-year term – at the age of 82.In a video statement, Sanders thanked the people of Vermont “for giving me the opportunity to serve in the United States Senate”, which he said had been “the honor of my life....

  • Letter: What Little League can teach us about politics

    I remember when I was young, playing Little League baseball, and our team would lose the game. Our coach told us, “Don’t worry guys, we’ll get ‘em next time. Some games you win, some games you lose.” But there was one kid who couldn’t handle losing. He would cry and claim that we had been cheated out of a victory, that the umpire favored the other team. But then, when we won the next game, he celebrated along with the rest of us. This game we won fair and square.

    • WLNS

    US Senate GOP primary: Do voters recognize their names?

    Fifty-four percent of voters are undecided on this race--which is another way of saying the candidates have a tough assignment to build some name ID.