Betty Heuser recalls collecting gasoline ration cards during WWII and waiting in long lines in the ’70s. Today, Americans face a gas crisis once again.
Author: Grace Hauck, USA TODAY
‘We don’t want to be casualties’: Hundreds of Indian, Nigerian students stranded in Sumy, Ukraine plead for help
University students in Sumy, Ukraine, are pleading for help as they run out of food and water.
Black and brown refugees are once again being turned away in Europe amid Ukraine migrant crisis
The growing Ukraine refugee crisis highlights a double standard in the way European nations treat refugees, experts tell USA TODAY.
A new Cold War, or the start of World War III? How historians see the invasion of Ukraine
Images emerging from Ukraine evoke memories of 20th-century conflicts in Europe, leaving many asking: Is this a new Cold War? Or the start of WWIII?
After Canada, US truckers decided to start their own ‘convoys’. What are they protesting?
First it was Canada’s “Freedom Convoy.” Now the “People’s Convoy” is bringing a trucker-led protest movement to the U.S.
What the hate crime verdicts in Ahmaud Arbery’s death say about justice and race in America
The hate crimes convictions of three white men finally acknowledge their racist motivations in the murder of Ahmaud Arbery, experts say.
Why the Obama Presidential Center won’t be naming spaces after donors
Construction on former President Barack Obama’s presidential center is underway, and the South Side Chicago site is set to open in 2025.
Former Minnesota police officer Kim Potter sentenced to 2 years in Daunte Wright’s manslaughter
Former Minnesota police officer Kim Potter, who fatally shot Black motorist Daunte Wright while yelling “Taser,” was sentenced Friday to two years.
Asian woman continue to face ‘terrifying’ attacks in the US. What advocates say needs to change.
Advocates say bringing an end to attacks on women of Asian descent requires an understanding of the multiple factors contributing to the violence.
Four years after Parkland, gunfire on school grounds reaches troubling new peaks
Four years after the deadliest high school shooting in U.S. history, the number of shootings on school grounds is reaching new peaks.