Search continues for tornado victims in Oklahoma
The death toll remained at 24, revised downward from an earlier number, and authorities said they don't expect to find many more victims, if any. At least 237 people were injured.
The death toll remained at 24, revised downward from an earlier number, and authorities said they don't expect to find many more victims, if any. At least 237 people were injured.
The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is pressing the city of St. Louis to change how it divides Community Development Block Grant money. The federal agency's directive seems to be spurring an end to the longtime practice of splitting block grant funds by wards.
On opposite sides of Capitol Hill on a busy Wednesday, two witnesses — one an IRS official and another subpoenaed by a panel chaired by U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill — ruffled some feathers when they invoked their Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination.
Professors described session as civil, but left at least one faculty member with unanswered concerns. The closed, hour-long meeting with president Lawrence Biondi and board president J. Joe Adorjan included presentation of results from a climate survey.
St. Louis County Executive Charlie Dooley last week gave his full support to using Sylvan Springs Park to expand Jefferson Barracks National Cemetery. But the county's Historic Buildings Commission opposes the move.
An extraordinary exhibition at the Bruno David Gallery is comprised of photographs, prints and a large installation piece. With art to direct our attentions, we see how easy it is to become complacent and to assume that what we take for granted is permanent rather than subject to radical and destructive change.
Isley, a world-class guitarist as well as a gifted songwriter, communicates and connects swith an audience on an intimate level at "An Evening of Music and Discussion." He is hosting the event on Thursday in O'Fallon, Mo.
The festival will feature various styles, including ballet, tap, contemporary, a Spanish ensemble and classical dance from India.
Like many artists, Alvin Ailey dancer Antonio Douthit hears a different drummer. But the drumbeat that changed his life at 16 wasn’t in his head. It wafted from a window on Washington Avenue. Douthit returns to St. Louis for a May 25 performance in "Spring to Dance" at the Touhill.
Last week, Grandmaster Hikaru Nakamura sacrificed his crown as the King of America. He faced an individual decision to play against the best in the nation or the best on the planet. Find out what happened at that world-level tournament.
John Oldani’s new book, “St. Lou-isms: Lingo, Lore, and the Lighter side of Life in the Gateway City,” uncovers all the weird vocabulary, phrases and old tales that almost St. Louis native knows. He will be at three branches of the St. Louis County libraries through June signing his new book.
The annual Bluesweek Festival takes over Soldier's Memorial from Friday through Sunday, while the Luminary's Post Performance Series plays a few blocks away. Also, the Drive-By Truckers play the Pageant and the Art Museum hosts Art After 5.
Justin Leszcz started getting into the world of farming by foraging and tending a very small urban farm. He now sells miscellaneous product to various restaurants in town and can be seen at farmers' markets selling his popcorn and corn meal.
Our world sees rapid change in many ways -- how we view women, races, sexual minorities and other populations, for instance. While a daily delivery of new and different can be exhausting, it can force us to reflect and consider how to move forward, often incrementally, toward what is good and what bring value to our lives.
Paying professors less, increasing online courses and raising class size might make the bill cheaper, but the value of the degree will be less, as well. It's not that there are no solutions, but the easy ones create their own problems.