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As Ryan Malone sat at his locker stall Friday removing his hockey equipment inside the visitor's locker room at Madison Square Garden, he tried to catch his breath before answering questions about his playing status.
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The former sites of Olin Mott Tire and a used car dealer are being cleared to fulfill academic or housing space needs of the university.
The new rules will allow women to serve at the battalion level, but they are still barred from duty in combat jobs like infantry, armor and special operations forces.
Gov. Rick Scott announced that a $45 million upgrade to the Port of Tampa will help Florida be more competitive in a global economy and create jobs.
Starting the day with an impromptu square dance and a crack of a bullwhip, Gov. Rick Scott celebrated the opening day of the Florida State Fair and held a cabinet meeting at the fairgrounds Thursday morning.
House-Senate negotiations on extending jobless benefits and a two percentage point cut in the payroll tax remained stalled today, despite a proposal in which Democrats urged a modest six-week cut in the maximum time unemployed workers can receive jobless benefits.
The Marine Corps confirmed today that one of its scout sniper teams in Afghanistan posed for a photograph in front of a flag with a logo resembling that of the notorious Nazi SS.
A Pasco jury found Jackie Lee Braden Jr. guilty of first-degree murder today in the shooting deaths of his mother and stepfather, Sherrill and David Wright, both 54, who were found dead in their Shady Hills home in 2008.
State Rep. Steve Holland wants to rename the Gulf of Mexico as the Gulf of America for "official purposes within the state of Mississippi."
Richard Gonzmart, of the family that founded the Columbia Restaurant, was named Tampa Metro Civitan Club Citizen of the Year today at the Governor's Day Luncheon at the Florida State Fair.
Lee Grace Dougherty, one of three Pasco County siblings held in a multistate crime spree, today pleaded guilty to one count of attempted first-degree assault and two counts of felony menacing.
WASHINGTON — The nation's first new nuclear power plant in a generation won approval Thursday as federal regulators voted to grant a license for two new reactors in Georgia.
No Child Left Behind requires students to be proficient in reading and math by 2014. President Obama's action strips away that fundamental requirement for states approved for flexibility, provided they offer another viable plan.
A circuit judge will privately review evidence in the case of a security system salesman accused of breaking into the home of a potential customer and raping her.
When investigators arrested Cynthia Cuervo at her Town 'N Country home Wednesday, they saw a familiar scene.
OZARK, Mo. — A British security van driver suspected making off with 1 million pounds in a brazen 1993 heist was arrested in rural Missouri, where he had apparently been working for a cable company under a different name.
While recognizing the football and girls cross country teams at his cabinet meeting, the governor poked a little fun at both squads.
Florida A&M University has gathered a panel of outside experts to investigate and recommend ways to end hazing on campus.
U.S. states have reached a $25 billion deal with the nation's biggest mortgage lenders over foreclosure abuses that occurred after the housing bubble burst.
Can't decide what to do? Don't worry, we figured it out for you. Here are our editors' picks for the upcoming week.
The House has passed a bill to ban members of Congress and executive branch officials from insider trading. But critics from both parties accuse House Republican leaders of caving in to investment firms by eliminating a proposal to regulate people who try to pry financial information from Congress.
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio — Police say an Ohio man who stuck his 3-year-old son in a clothes dryer as punishment and then turned it on is facing child endangerment charges.
The number of people seeking unemployment aid fell to nearly a four-year low last week, an encouraging sign of continued improvement in the job market.
Newt Gingrich, suddenly in danger of losing his perch as Mitt Romney's strongest GOP challenger, is fine-tuning his presidential campaign to place more emphasis on raising money, guarding his home turf and trying to avoid nasty quarrels with the front-runner.
Eastman Kodak Co. said today that it will stop making digital cameras, pocket video cameras and digital picture frames, marking the end of an era for the company that brought photography to the masses more than a century ago.
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