Having a job – whether it's working for someone else or being their own boss – gives older Americans more than just a way to earn money or get health insurance, a new poll finds.
Learn why seniors who are still employed report stronger benefits to their health and well-being than their younger counterparts.
Kenosha kicked off its 175th year with a celebration recalling its unique history, trivia, quirks, resilience and renaissance ...
Los Angeles’ KABC7 is losing Ellen Leyva, as the news anchor is retiring from the ABC affiliate after 29 years. The on-air ...
There has been an unbroken string of wins in court against the Trump administration and Musk’s DOGE operation; on birthright ...
Over the past six years the number of checks written has declined at a rate of 7.2% per year. At the peak in 1995, 49.5 ...
A back room at the East End pub was allegedly used by a ruthless gang planning one of Britain’s biggest armed robberies — the ...
One month after the devastation, the public and California’s government are facing tough questions about their approach to ...
Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, listens at the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee confirmation hearing for ...
In April 2024, as his first hens tested positive for the highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 virus, Herbruck turned to the ...
Adam Thielen has not played his last down in the NFL quite yet. After mulling retirement, the Carolina Panthers receiver ...
Trump fired Linda Fagan, the first female Coast Guard commandant, on his second day in office. A Trump official told her she had three hours to leave her house on Tuesday.