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According to a study by American researchers, drivers of expensive cars do not stop at pedestrian crossings. The probability of the driver stopping at pedestrian crossings decreases by 3% for every $1,000 increase in the price of the car.
The turtleneck has long been a symbol of subversion and appropriated power for women. From a turtleneck-clad Jo Stockton jumping into a beatnik dance in a smoky bar in Funny Face, to Shiv Roy's "I will destroy you" turtlenecks on Succession, this garment, which was originally sported primarily by men, has allowed women to inhabit male-coded traits of self-sufficiency and swaggering authority.
Four Caesars Entertainment Corp. hotel properties will raise their resorts fees by $2 next week, the company confirmed Thursday.
Drivers with nice cars pose a bigger risk to pedestrians than people who drive clunkers, according to a study.
In some probably not terribly surprising news, it turns out expensive car owners may not always be the kindest, most empathetic of drivers.
Drivers who don’t want to be considered a jerk on the road may want to think twice before purchasing an expensive car, according to new research.
There was a time in U.S. history when prosperity was more or less equitably shared across all economic classes. During the period that started just after World War II until 1978, increases in the minimum wage and the income of the median household reliably matched up with increases in productivity of the overall economy.
As people around the United States were checking who won the Nevada caucus this weekend, many were faced with a different question: How exactly do you pronounce Nevada?
Three hours after Precinct 7632 began its Democratic presidential caucus in a corner of the basketball court at Bob Miller Middle School in Henderson, Nevada, the precinct chair reached the right person on the phone from the party's operations center to resolve the vote-counting problem that bedeviled six precincts at the site — including hers.