Federal land managers have signed off on a controversial road project in southwest Utah in a move celebrated by local leaders and lambasted by conservation groups that have protested the project.
The National Park Service has removed exhibits depicting slavery and George Washington's treatment of enslaved people at the President's House in Philadelphia.
The dealerships are expected to continue operating under their existing names and brands and at their existing locations.
National Park Service removes slavery exhibits from Philadelphia’s President’s House memorial, sparking outrage and a legal challenge.
1. George Washington: The Architect of Executive Power Washington walked on untrodden ground, shaping the presidency with no ...
Five major policy victories in year one show why Washington's expert class keeps underestimating the president's ...
The exhibit at Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia explored George Washington's involvement in slavery ...
Even during his lifetime, Washington faced criticism for holding slaves. In 1775, British essayist Samuel Johnson criticized ...
George Washington kept slaves as president, but a federal display commemorating them has now been dismantled in Philadelphia.
The sprawling ballroom project has an estimated size of approximately 89,000 square feet, according to lead architect Shalom ...
We can and must take action to rein in a presidential privilege that has fundamentally transcended its original bounds.
The world would look dramatically different without NATO’s and the U.N.’s keeping the world relatively peaceful.