When Agnes Darvas was deported from Hungary to Auschwitz in 1944, she escaped being sent straight to the gas chambers with other children largely because her coat had been stolen in the ghetto and her mother had cut off her braids for fear of lice.
I will always be appreciative of America that welcomed me with open arms when I escaped an evil world in Europe. Although the world today is very different from 70 years ago, hatred must
Before the wildfires tore through the Altadena community of Los Angeles County, there were 12 houses on Winrock Avenue.
Survivor receives a new patch for January 2025, which should improve the gameplay experience for some players.
Anthonie Marte, 23, was sitting in the front passenger seat as 19-year-old driver Jaden Dsouza weaved in and out of traffic on the eastbound Southern State Parkway in North Massapequa around 11
Democratic New York Sen. Chuck Schumer honored 100-year-old Holocaust survivor living on Long Island with Senate recognition, he announced Monday.
Survivor has today been released on PS5 to fix ongoing problems associated with the game on PS5 Pro consoles. Not long after the PS5 Pro was released at the end of this past year, an upgrade patch for Jedi: Survivor went live to improve the action-adventure title on
Kim Figueroa, CEO of Beyond Global Enterprises, joined Gayle Guyardo on the globally syndicated health and wellness show Bloom to share her remarkable journey from survivor
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WDRB) — The United States is once again ranked as one of the top three worst countries in the world for human trafficking, and for survivors like Marie-Ange Mbumba, the issue hits close to home. Mbumba, a human trafficking survivor, endured unimaginable trauma but has turned her experiences into a platform of advocacy and hope.
Adelaide's journey began when she was 6 years old. What seemed like simple growing pains escalated into a diagnosis of acute lymphoblastic leukemia.
Multiple women delivered powerful impact statements, calling Ali Ghaffar a "monster" who shattered their lives in Springfield.
Los Angeles Times sports columnist Bill Plaschke has lived in Altadena, California, for decades. When the fires hit last week, he evacuated and didn’t know whether his house would make it. Upon returning and seeing it standing, he reflects on a mix of emotions: joy, guilt, confusion, anger.