Hamas says it’s given ‘positive’ response to latest ceasefire proposal
Hamas says it has given a “positive” response to the latest proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza but said further talks were needed on implementation.
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Hamas says it has given a “positive” response to the latest proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza but said further talks were needed on implementation.
As a major American holiday, the Fourth of July regularly attracts internet rumors.
Search teams used boats to conduct rescues Friday as fast-moving water threatened riverfront communities near wildlife habitats and campgrounds.
The high-stakes deal that came together this week resulted from months of back-and-forth among a constellation of power players with competing interests, including the president
At least 20 girls are missing from an all-girls Christian summer camp in South Texas after catastrophic floods struck the area.
The 6-year-old and his family, whose arrest prompted a public outcry, were released Wednesday from the Dilley Immigration Processing Center in Texas.
When it comes to President Tweety McTreason, the “worst is yet to come,” according to an independent political strategist who worked on former President George
Judge Randolph Moss has issued an emergency ruling deciding to transfer the case involving the deportation of eight men to war-torn South Sudan. The U.S.
The Synaptic Physiology laboratory, led by Juan Lerma at the Institute for Neurosciences (IN), a joint center of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and
A new way to grow stem cells may help them release more of the signaling proteins they use to repair tissue, potentially improving future treatments.
Can research into a rare, accelerated aging disease and “zombie cells” teach us something about the normal aging process?
The CYMEDSEC project is proud to announce a new Perspective article, recently published in npj Digital Medicine.
New drugs that target ‘zombie’ tuberculosis (TB) cells are now a step closer, thanks to a new study led by the University of Surrey, published
About 40 million people rely on the Colorado River for drinking water. It also irrigates agricultural fields. It’s also shrinking. Now, states might agree on