Search results

Showing 241 - 252 of 568 results for "p36"

Filter By:

Sort By:

Order:

FILE - Rescue workers and people gather on the rubble of a house hit in an Israeli airstrike in Baalchmay village east of Beirut, Lebanon, on Nov. 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File)
FILE - Rescue workers and people gather on the rubble of a house hit in an Israeli airstrike in Baalchmay village east of Beirut, Lebanon, on Nov. 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Hassan Ammar, File)
Spotlights

Lebanon’s Shiite Muslims pay high price in war between Israel and Hezbollah

BEIRUT (AP) — The Lebanese civilians most devastated by the Israel- Hezbollah war are Shiite Muslims, and many of them believe they are being unfairly punished because they share a religious identity with Hezbollah militants and often live in the same areas. “This is clear,” said Wael Murtada, a young Shiite man who anxiously watched […]

NOV. 25, 2024

US-Be Well-Working Well-Retiree Gig Work
(AP Illustration / Peter Hamlin)
Spotlights

Why ‘unretired’ seniors are picking up gig work to pay the bills

Before Stu Goldberg begins his night shift driving for Uber, he pulls out a notebook to read a handwritten list of reminders. “No tickets. Full stops,” he’d scrawled in the book. “Careful backing up. Watch for pedestrians and bikes.” With a Ph.D in neuropsychology and decades of experience running his own business, Goldberg, 74, didn’t picture […]

APRIL 2, 2026

Education Harvard Funding Cuts
Harvard University professor Alberto Ascherio opens a liquid nitrogen freezer used to store blood samples used for research at the university's T.H. Chan School of Public Health on Tuesday, Aug. 5, 2025 in Boston. (AP Photo/Leah Willingham)
Spotlights

Harvard scientists say research could be set back years after funding freeze

Harvard University professor Alberto Ascherio’s research is literally frozen. Collected from millions of U.S. soldiers over two decades using millions of dollars from taxpayers, the epidemiology and nutrition scientist has blood samples stored in liquid nitrogen freezers within the university’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The samples are key to his award-winning research, which […]

AUG. 7, 2025

Immigration Detention Conditions
Owen Ramsingh, who spent months in Camp East Montana before his deportation to The Netherlands, poses for a portrait in his father's home in Utrecht, Netherlands, Sunday, March 1, 2026. (AP Photo/Bram Janssen)
Best of the AP — First Winner

AP uses 911 calls to offer one of the most detailed accounts of life inside largest ICE detention camp

Through a Texas public records request, Ryan Foley obtained audio recordings of 130 emergency calls placed from the largest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center to the city of El Paso. The calls, spanning from the camp’s opening in August through Jan. 20, revealed repeated medical crises and at least six instances in which […]

MARCH 13, 2026

Dwayne Lewis
Dwayne Lewis reads a local newspaper covering the death of Gregg Allman, Saturday, June 3, 2017, in Macon, Ga. Legions of fans are expected to line the streets of Macon, Georgia, as the music legend is carried to his final resting place in the same cemetery where he and his band members used to hang out and write songs amid the tombstones. (AP Photo/Branden Camp)

Survey offers revealing look at news subscribers

A new study by the Media Insight Project, a joint effort by the American Press Institute and The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, reveals what motivates readers to pay for news, offering publishers insight into the new media landscape.

AP_19151725540829

Data illuminates marijuana legalization impact

In a memo to staff, Managing Editor Brian Carovillano recounts how members of AP’s marijuana beat team created a first-of-its-kind national database of medical marijuana trends and revealed how the legalization of pot has often hurt medical marijuana users:

Pig Kidney Transplant
In this photo provided by Mass General Brigham, doctors perform a xenotransplant, June 14, 2025 at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. (Sarah Evans/Mass General Brigham via AP)
Spotlights

Another New Hampshire man gets a pig kidney as transplant trials are poised to start

A self-described science nerd is the latest American to get an experimental pig kidney transplant, at a crucial point in the quest to prove if animals organs really might save human lives. The 54-year-old New Hampshire man is faring well after his June 14 operation, doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital announced Monday. “I really wanted to contribute […]

SEPT. 8, 2025

carroll_kathleen-june-2009_12sc
Press Releases

AP Executive Editor Kathleen Carroll to step down at years end

The Associated Press announced today that Senior Vice President and Executive Editor Kathleen Carroll has decided to leave AP at the end of the year.

JULY 20, 2016

Urban Meyer,  Eva Parziale
Ohio State coach Urban Meyer, right, and The Associated Press' east regional director Eva Parziale hold up The Associated Press college football national championship trophy during a celebration of the Buckeye's 2014 College Football Playoff national champion at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio, Saturday, Jan. 24, 2015. (AP Photo/Paul Vernon)
Press Releases

AP Top 25 college football poll to be released Aug 23

The AP Top 25, the longest-running college football poll of its kind, will release its much-awaited, preseason edition on Sunday, Aug. 23.

AUG. 13, 2015

ap-placeholder
Press Releases

Gary Pruitt, of McClatchy, to become new president and CEO of The Associated Press

NEW YORK -- The Associated Press today named Gary Pruitt as its new president and CEO. Pruitt, currently chairman, president and CEO of The McClatchy Co., will join AP in July.

MARCH 21, 2012

ap-placeholder
AP in the News

Ferguson demands high fees to turn over city files

WASHINGTON (AP) – Officials in Ferguson, Missouri, are charging nearly 10 times the cost of some of their own employees’ salaries before they will agree to turn over files under public records laws about the fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown. The move discourages journalists and civil rights groups from investigating the shooting and its […]

SEPT. 29, 2014

ap-placeholder
Press Releases

AP Top 25 football poll to kick off 84th year with Regions Bank sponsorship

For the first time, The Associated Press’ stack of marquee college football honors — including the AP Top 25 poll, the longest-running college football poll of its kind — will be sponsored by Regions Bank.

AUG. 15, 2019

Contact us
FOLLOW AP

You are now entering the English version

This page is not available in your selected language. You are now viewing the English version.

Continue