Donald Trump may have insulted Muslims this week, but a total of 83 self-identified Muslims on Facebook still think he's their guy.
The city ordinance, subject to mayoral approval, would take effect in 2017.
South Carolina Sen. Lindsey Graham is one of several candidates in the 2016 field denouncing Trump's Muslim comments.
Rick Kriseman's tongue-in-cheek tweet garners more than 3,500 retweets and more than 4,000 likes on social media.
Russia imports 20 percent of its vegetables from Turkey, and the move raises fears of price increases and market instability. Other countries hope to step in and fill the void.
Muslim women wearing burqas that cover their entire bodies could be fined as much as $9,835 in the Swiss canton, or state, of Ticino.
Russian helicopters are still searching for the pilots.
The proposed ban is aimed at reducing the harm of secondhand smoke and the costs stemming from fires.
Advocates hope the U.S. will follow France and other countries, which declared their laws discriminatory because they presumed homosexual men had HIV.
The graphic from the African nation's army includes Abubakar Shekau, the alleged leader of the militant group.
"The rescued persons, which comprised eight males, 138 females and 192 children, have since been evacuated," Nigeria’s military spokesman said Wednesday.
U.S. Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid says he hopes other states would follow Nevada's lead in banning fantasy sports.
Federal prisons have been phasing out pork products on menus for about two years, but one of the remaining items was roast pork.
The U.S. military reportedly will carry out surveillance and intelligence missions against Boko Haram inside Nigeria as part of its deployment to West Africa.
California Gov. Jerry Brown's move will affect four high schools in the nation's largest state.
The Nigerian army said Tuesday it had arrested a "suspected Boko Haram financier and stimulants dealer" in the Bama Local Government area of Borno state.
In addition, 19,000 teachers in Nigeria's northeast have been displaced by militants in the past six years, according to the Nigeria Union of Teachers.
The deadly suicide bombings killed at least 18 people and wounded 41 others Friday night in the suburbs of Nigeria's capital city, Abuja.
"They will be exposed in due course," Maj. Gen. Yushau Abubakar reportedly said of the suspected sponsors of Boko Haram.
At least 10 people were killed and 39 others wounded in the attack. Witnesses and security sources said the suicide bombers were girls, some as young as 9.
“As I am speaking to you, all the terrorists’ camps have completely been wiped out," Nigerian Defense spokesman Col. Rabe Abubakar said Wednesday.
The International Organization For Migration attributed the increased number of displaced people to the recent spike in Boko Haram attacks.