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The battle for records between the Sheriff Civilian Oversight Commission and L.A. County could have implications for future ...
Recording artist R. Kelly is serving a 30-year sentence for his racketeering and sex trafficking conviction. In the last days ...
If a food festival, vintage market, and Boston Calling’s Orange Stage had a baby ... it would look A LOT like B-Side’s Best Day Ever Festival.
The ‘Sex Education’ star gives a standout performance in a slippery, subversive coming-of-age tale that – to its credit – is ...
Those who accept the invitation will be joining a pretty massive fraternity of filmmakers, in many different disciplines: The Academy doesn’t publicize its actual membership rolls, but it’s believed ...
Danny Perez has redefined governance in Florida, restoring legislative independence and ensuring checks on executive power in Tallahassee.
Before Tuesday's game, Detroit Tigers infielder-turned-outfielder Wenceel Pérez had recorded just one assist in 1,020⅔ innings as an outfielder.
The Marlins couldn’t capitalize despite getting at least one runner on base in five of the first six innings. They finished 1 for 9 with runners in scoring position and left nine runners on base.
Victor Perez didn’t just sink a hole-in-one at the U.S. Open—he delivered a celebration that lit up the course and the internet.
Victor Perez aced the sixth hole in the U.S. Open at Oakmont Country Club on Friday, becoming just the second golfer in 10 U.S. Opens at the famed course to pull off the feat.
In that span, Perez’s ace was just the second, with the other one coming from Scott Simpson in 1983 on the 16th hole. In 125 years of the U.S. Open, there have now been 54 hole-in-ones.
Perez joined rare air with just the second hole-in-one in a U.S. Open at Oakmont, the first since Scott Simpson on the par-3 16th hole during the first round in 1983.
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