By Credit search: Associated Press
By JILL LAWLESS
LONDON — Musician Greg Lake co-founded both King Crimson and Emerson, Lake and Palmer — bands that helped define the sprawling, influential but often-maligned genre known as progressive rock.Lake, who died of cancer at 69, was instrumental in bringing...
By MIKE STOBBE
NEW YORK — A decades-long trend of rising life expectancy in the U.S. could be ending: It declined last year and it is no better than it was four years ago.In most of the years since World War II, life expectancy in the U.S. has inched up, thanks to...
By DAVID CRARY
NEW YORK — The largest-ever survey of transgender Americans paints a grim picture of pervasive discrimination and harassment, to the point that many of them attempt suicide at some point.Released on Thursday by the National Center for Transgender...
By MICHAEL CASEY and PATRICK WHITTLE
PETERSHAM — In a towering forest of centuries-old eastern hemlocks, it’s easy to miss one of the tree’s nemeses. No larger than a speck of pepper, the Hemlock woolly adelgid spends its life on the underside of needles sucking sap, eventually killing...
By GEOFF MULVIHILL and MICHAEL R. BLOOD
LOS ANGELES — As Donald Trump makes his thank-you tour of states that voted for him, other parts of the country are gearing up to do battle with his administration.Three of the most populous, urban and ethnically diverse states — California, New York...
By BOB SALSBERG
BOSTON — Democratic legislative leaders pushed back Wednesday against Gov. Charlie Baker’s decision to chop nearly $100 million from the state budget, suggesting they might move next month to restore some of the spending.House Speaker Robert DeLeo...
By JOSHUA GOODMAN
BOGOTA, Colombia — After five decades of war, more than four years of negotiations and two signing ceremonies, Colombia’s congress late Wednesday formally ratified a peace agreement allowing leftist rebels to enter politics.The 310-page revised accord...
By FERNANDO VERGARA and JOSHUA GOODMAN
MEDELLIN, Colombia — The pilot of the chartered plane carrying a Brazilian soccer team told air traffic controllers he had run out of fuel and desperately pleaded for permission to land before crashing into the Andes, according to a leaked recording...
By JAY REEVES
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — Tornadoes that dropped out of the night sky killed five people in two states and injured at least a dozen more early Wednesday, adding to a seemingly biblical onslaught of drought, flood and fire plaguing the South.The storms tore...
By JULIE PACE and LAURIE KELLMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump said Wednesday that he’s leaving his business empire to focus on being the nation’s 45th president, bowing to pressure to avoid potential conflicts of interest between governing and profiting in the...
By BOB SALSBERG
BOSTON — Hundreds of people rallied and nearly three dozen were arrested on Tuesday during a protest held for a $15-per-hour minimum wage.State Sen. Jamie Eldridge, an Acton Democrat, was among those taken into custody after a group of minimum wage...
By COLLIN BINKLEY
BOSTON — After nearing collapse under the Obama administration, the for-profit college industry is celebrating Donald Trump’s election as a chance for a rebound.As stock prices for some of the nation’s largest college chains have surged, industry...
By BLAKE NICHOLSON
BISMARCK, N.D. — The hundreds of arrests during the months of protests against the Dakota Access oil pipeline in North Dakota have created an unprecedented burden for the state’s court system, which faces huge cost overruns and doesn’t have enough...
By RONALD BLUM
NEW YORK — Negotiators for baseball players and owners are meeting this week in Irving, Texas, in an attempt to reach agreement on a collective bargaining agreement to replace the five-year contract that expires Thursday. After eight work stoppages...
By BERNARD CONDON
US stocks rise to fresh records in shortened sessionNEW YORK — Stocks hit fresh records in a shortened trading session Friday as investors continued to bet on a pickup in economic growth and rising corporate profits.The gains were modest but broad,...
By ANNE D’INNOCENZIO
NEW YORK — Shoppers were on the hunt for deals and were at the stores for entertainment Friday as malls opened for what is still one of the busiest days of the year, even as the start of the holiday season edges ever earlier.Julie Singewald’s Black...
By JANIE McCAULEY
SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Not even in grade school, Tom Brady cried from his seat at The Stick when Dwight Clark made “The Catch.” The New England quarterback had so counted on playing at Candlestick Park in 2008, his first NFL game back home in the Bay...
By DAVE COLLINS and LISA MARIE PANE
HARTFORD, Conn. — Police departments are relaxing age-old standards for accepting recruits, from lowering educational requirements to forgiving some prior drug use, to try to attract more people to their ranks.The changes are designed to deal with...
By KYLE HIGHTOWER
FOXBOROUGH — Pete Carroll knows he can’t go back in time to 1997 when he arrived in New England as the Patriots’ giddy 46-year-old new head coach.But if he could, he says he certainly would have done things a lot differently.It’s been 17 years since...
By MICHAEL WEISSENSTEIN
HAVANA — For a while Saul Berenthal and Horace Clemmons were the seventy-something poster boys of U.S.-Cuba detente.The retired software entrepreneurs made worldwide headlines by winning Obama administration permission to build the first U.S. factory...
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