
Civil rights icon Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Sr., 84, is stable at Northwestern Memorial Hospital as he manages progressive supranuclear palsy — and his family insists...

A week after Hurricane Melissa devastated western Jamaica, over 4.8 million tonnes of debris are blocking access to 27 isolated communities, stalling relief efforts across the...

With the federal government refusing to release contingency funds for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), 42 million Americans face the brutal reality of benefit cuts...

Parents, teachers, and even pediatricians have tried everything to manage kids’ screen time — banning phones from bedrooms, requiring outdoor play, encouraging reading, even prescribing medications....

Young Black professionals are relocating to cities like Washington, D.C., Atlanta, Houston, and Raleigh in search of economic opportunity, community, and autonomy, reflecting a modern Great...

By Stacy M. Brown Senior National Correspondent Black Press USA The U.S. Department of Education has announced the cancellation of $350 million in federal grants that...

Authorities say Charlie Kirk’s killer was not from the “radical left” but a 22-year-old white man, Tyler Robinson, raising fresh concerns about political violence, campus security,...

Two decades after Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans, the city reflects on loss, survival, and resilience while confronting the lessons of government failure and the strength...

Virginia State University professor and author Dr. Latorial Faison has been nominated for the 2026 Pulitzer Prize for her book Nursery Rhymes in Black, a powerful...

Howard University President Ben Vinson III will unexpectedly step down on August 31, just two years into his tenure, with former President Wayne Frederick appointed as...