Fashanu will play for four years, earning $20,510,710 with a fifth-year option.
A trio of local athletes earned state titles during Friday's second day of the state track and field championships at Jefferson County Stadium in Lakewood. Others either came close to topping the podium or positioned themselves to contend for titles during an action-packed final day Saturday.
Numerous local athletes won state titles during Thursday's first day of the state track and field championships, while others positioned themselves for potential titles in the coming days at Jefferson County Stadium in Lakewood.
The Bills got a sixth-round sleeper in Penn State cornerback Daequan Hardy, who could help redefine Buffalo’s rebuilding secondary.
President Joe Biden announced on Wednesday his intent to nominate U.S.
President Joe Biden announced on Wednesday his intent to nominate U.S.
When Golloria George woke up to an influx of Instagram comments urging her to try Youthforia’s Date Night Skin Tint Serum foundation in its darkest shade, she initially planned to ignore it. The 23-year-old Sudanese-American content creator built her platform by testing makeup brands’ darkest shades. It’s both a fun resource for dark-skinned makeup lovers who’ve felt neglected by popular brands and a reminder that the beauty industry’s colorism problem runs deep even in 2024. So, when beauty...
A rundown of the rookie contracts for the first-round picks of the 2024 class
There was no shortage of local state champions during the third and final day of the Class 1A-5A track and field championships Saturday at Jefferson County Stadium in Lakewood.
Jennifer Siebel Newsom accused major firms of failing to address social media addiction and mental health problems.
In a front-page story for Tuesday’s print edition and published Monday online, The Washington Times’s intrepid reporter Stephen Dinan shared the findings of a new Center for Immigration Studies report that said only 46 percent of recent immigrant arrivals — both illegal and legal — are holding down jobs and contributing to the American economy. “The Center for Immigration Studies, using Census Bureau numbers, calculates that 46% of immigrants who arrived over the past two years are employed....
In a front-page story for Tuesday’s print edition and published Monday online, The Washington Times’s intrepid reporter Stephen Dinan shared the findings of a new Center for Immigration Studies report that said only 46 percent of recent immigrant arrivals — both illegal and legal — are holding down jobs and contributing to the American economy. “The Center for Immigration Studies, using Census Bureau numbers, calculates that 46% of immigrants who arrived over the past two years are employed....