WASHINGTON (AP) — A top Labor Department official who took the blame for budgeting mistakes and cost overruns at the federal Job Corps program has
LONDON (AP) — A woman desperate for another child forced her 14-year-old daughter to get pregnant using syringes of donor sperm, a British judge
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Labor Department said Monday it has ended its freeze on new enrollments in the nation's federal Job Corps program, but
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — California's novel law seeking to ban licensed counselors from trying to turn gay teens straight is boiling down to a
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A federal appeals court is to hear arguments Wednesday on whether a first-of-its-kind law that prohibits licensed mental
WASHINGTON (AP) — African-Americans have achieved tremendous gains in education over the past 50 years, but that has yet to translate into major
Excerpts from recent editorials in newspapers in the United States and abroad: April 2 New York Times on brain research:
NEW YORK (AP) — Subway riders, after being cautioned about smoking, sugar and teen pregnancy, are getting a new message: Pass on the salt.
SEATTLE (AP) — Washington high school students who participated in a statewide survey say they are twice as likely to smoke marijuana as
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Wine spritzers are a summer favorite at Rovali's near Salt Lake City.
NEW YORK (AP) — With the Boy Scouts of America entangled in a furor over its ban on gays, lesser-known youth organizations across the ideological s
WASHINGTON (AP) — House and Senate lawmakers are investigating a nearly $100 million shortfall at the federal Job Corps program that has prompted t
WASHINGTON (AP) — House and Senate lawmakers are investigating a nearly $100 million shortfall at the federal Job Corps program that has prompted t
LOS ANGELES (AP) — When Maria Barrales' children got sick, she would drive two hours south from her East Los Angeles home to the Mexican border
WASHINGTON (AP) — Teenagers' perception of the dangers of marijuana has fallen to the lowest level in more than 20 years, a new study says,
CHICAGO (AP) — Shots that protect against cervical cancer do not make girls promiscuous, according to the first study to compare medical records




















