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Ichiro Suzuki, the first Japanese Hall of Famer in baseball history, had one of the most humorous speeches since the late Bob Uecker.
The outgoing mayor has pulled the city back from the brink—but whether its resurgence can continue without him remains to be seen.
A Polish lawmaker warned on Tuesday that hate speech and online harassment can lead to real-world tragedy, amid a growing backlash over the removal of Ukrainian flags from a town hall in the southern ...
Andrew Cuomo made his way across New York City’s five boroughs over the weekend stopping into public housing cookouts in Harlem, pouring rum behind a bar in Brooklyn and walking in the Colombian ...
Alcoa crews work to repair a water main break affecting homes on Hall Road. City urges caution amid road lane closure. Updates to follow.
Who knew that Ichiro Suzuki's Hall of Fame acceptance speech was going to turn into a roast? Certainly not the Miami Marlins and David Samson.
Ichiro Suzuki, the first Japanese Hall of Famer in baseball history, had one of the most humorous speeches since the late Bob Uecker.
It was no surprise that Ichiro’s Hall of Fame moment would be brilliant, writes columnist Larry Stone. In his speech, he showed a playful, witty and charming side that many in America rarely got ...
Seattle Mariners' legend Ichiro Suzuki will take his rightful place in the National Baseball Hall of Fame on Sunday afternoon, as he's inducted alongside Billy Wagner, C.C.
City animal shelters, bursting at the seams following an unprecedented influx of animals, have gotten an additional $1 million from the city to tackle their critical capacity issues.
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