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Today in History
The Ponca City News· 3 days agoTODAY’S HISTORY: In 1844, Samuel Morse sent the first electrical telegraph message, “What hath God wrought,” from the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., to an assistant in Baltimore. Premium Content is available to subscribers only.
Author Joe Gould | Navy Times
Navy Times· 14 hours agoJoe Gould was the senior Pentagon reporter for Defense News, covering the intersection of national security policy, politics and the defense industry....
Author Seth J. Frantzman | Navy Times
Navy Times· 5 days agoSeth J. Frantzman is the Israel correspondent for Defense News. He has covered conflict in the Mideast since 2010 for different publications. He has...
Things to do this weekend: Foodie fairs, big festivals, and dinosaurs galore
NBC Los Angeles· 3 days agoLos Angeles Fleet Week: Ship tours, brassy concerts, stirring speeches, and lots to do around town...
Fall River area state lawmakers bringing home the bacon in earmarks
Gannett via AOL· 6 days agoSen. Michael Rodrigues has earmarked a little more than $1 million that will benefit the communities...
Sony shows off what its next-gen PlayStation controller would look like and fans are divided
UNILAD· 2 days agoThings have come a long way since the first iconic design for the original Playstation. The...
Biden is downsizing, politicizing our military
The Washington Times· 2 days agoAfter World War I, another global conflict was unthinkable, the leaders of the democracies declared. The United States embraced isolationism, relying on...
Author | Army Times
Army Times· 3 days agoAn AI program designed to prevent suicide among U.S. veterans prioritizes white men and ignores survivors of sexual violence, an investigation found. More than 5,000 paratroopers with the 82nd ...
NASA spots 16 'Death Star' black holes blasting powerful beams at multiple targets
Live Science via Yahoo News· 2 days agoResearchers using NASA's Chandra X-ray telescope have found that a group of "Death Star black holes...
‘The Liberation Line’ Review: Engines of Victory
The Wall Street Journal· 2 days agoTons of fuel, ammunition and supplies had to be moved across Europe in the assault on Nazi Germany. Railroad workers risked their lives to meet the need.