No students have been charged in the sweeping college admissions scandal, which involved bribery, test doctoring and fraud. What becomes of them?
Author: Gregory Korte, USA TODAY
For a million U.S. men, failing to register for the draft has serious, long-term consequences
Last year, Selective Service referred 112,051 names and addresses of suspected violators to the Justice Department for possible prosecution.
Q&A: A judge has ruled the male-only military draft unconstitutional. What happens now?
As a practical matter, the ruling won’t change the draft registration system overnight. But it could result in major changes to Selective Service.
With women in combat roles, a federal court rules the male-only draft unconstitutional
A federal judge in Texas has declared that the all-male military draft is unconstitutional.
How congressional Democrats could fight a Trump wall national emergency declaration
Congress hasn’t voted to overturn a presidential emergency in 44 years. But in 2005, one congressman threatened to – and the president blinked.
Planes strike birds more than 40 times a day, FAA data show
Collisions between planes and wildlife tied an all-time high of more than 40 per day in 2018, a USA TODAY analysis of FAA data shows.
In Northam controversy, Virginia remains haunted by its Confederate past
If slavery is the original sin of American life, Virginia is its Garden of Eden.
IRS to waive penalties for under-withholding after Trump tax changes
The Internal Revenue Service will waive penaltiesagainsttaxpayers who withheld too little of their payfortaxes last year.
Just 0.5 percent of public service worker applicants are getting their student loans forgiven. Here’s how you can be one of them
Four things you should check now if you want to qualify for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program.
Indonesia’s tsunami on Saturday, which killed at least 373 people, never triggered the alert system
A devastating tsunami took Indonesians by surprise because an early warning system hasn’t worked since 2012.