Palestinian medical officials say they obtained video footage that refutes Israel's claims about the killing of 15 rescue and ...
Theodore McCarrick, a once-powerful Catholic cardinal who was defrocked by Pope Francis in 2019 after a Vatican investigation ...
The vote brings Republicans a step closer to finalizing a sweeping plan to address defense, energy, immigration and tax ...
Organizers of Oakland's First Fridays art festival made a flyer promoting the event using AI, and are facing backlash for not ...
All over Ukraine, war has made nighttime darker. Satellite imagery shows a significant dimming of lights since 2022. Darkness ...
Health agency staffers describe a week of chaos and continued uncertainty about who still has a job and how the work will get ...
Speech pathologists offer parents real-world advice on how to incorporate a second language with their kids at home — and ...
The Yankees 20-9 win against the Brewers last weekend put the spotlight on torpedo bats. But in baseball, as in life, ...
NPR's Scott Simon talks to Dan Billheimer, owner of the Lighthouse Café in Sanibel, Florida, about reuniting with an artifact from his restaurant that had disappeared after Hurricane Ian in 2022.
Just a couple months ago, the Middle East seemed to be calming down, at least a bit. But now the region is heating up again, and the U.S. is very deeply involved. NPR's Greg Myre connects the dots.
President Trump's announcement of sweeping tariffs on nearly every country sent the stock market plunging this week and ignited anxiety about the future of the economy.
The so-called de minimus exemption allowed Chinese and Hong Kong retailers to ship millions of packages worth $800 or less directly to U.S. consumers. That loophole will close May 2.
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