By JIM VERTUNO Plastic barriers are placed between Bruce McCall, 5, left, and Capri Bishop, 6, as they sit at a table during martial arts daycare summer camp
DALLAS — Undeterred by a crises that led her to homelessness, Angelina Solis will finish in the top 15 of her graduating class at Bryan Adams High School and attend
By TOM HAYS and RYAN KRYSKA This image made from Monday, May 25, 2020, video provided by Christian Cooper shows Amy Cooper with her dog calling police at
Jeffrey L. Boney Shares His Personal Journey of Surviving the Coronavirus and Dealing with the Emotional and Mental Anguish Required to Overcome COVID-19 By Jeffrey L. Boney, NNPA
By KIMBERLEE KRUESI NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — More than 11 million people have been tested in the U.S. for COVID-19, all with the assurance that their private medical
Parkland offers COVID-19 testing by appointment only for current Parkland patients who meet the medically necessary criteria with a Parkland physician’s order. Parkland patients can contact the COVID-19
DALLAS–State Sen. Royce West, candidate for United States Senate in the July 14 Democratic Primary runoff, responded to an attack ad released by Sen. John Cornyn Tuesday, calling
By RUSSELL CONTRERAS Courtesy of Smoke Sessions Records via AP Jimmy Cobb, a percussionist and the last surviving member of Miles Davis’ 1959 “Kind of Blue” groundbreaking jazz
By Steve Noviello/Fox 4 News DALLAS – Instead of direct deposit or even a paper check, four million people will find their stimulus payment arrive in the form of a prepaid