U.S. District Judge James Boasberg Thursday pushed, once again, the Justice Department to explain its use of the Alien ...
R.E.M. played its first concert there in 1980 and still draws fans to its hometown. A visit to Athens can be like a ...
Idaho House sends newest 'medical freedom' bill to Senate, WA House transportation bill includes North-South Freeway money, ...
Cooper Flagg and Paige Bueckers, the presumptive top picks in this year's NBA and WNBA drafts, are on deck this weekend with ...
Jason Isbell sings about his split from musician Amanda Shires on his latest album Foxes in the Snow. "What I was attempting ...
Traditional allies, including the European Union, South Korea and Japan, face tariffs as high as 20%, while China confronts a ...
Some of the first people fired by the Trump administration are fighting back, including those targeted for work they'd done promoting diversity, equity and inclusion under the Biden administration.
For decades, Trump has been arguing that trade deficits are bad. BUT - should we be eliminating trade deficits at all? Economist and Harvard professor Jason Furman says no.
The department sent a letter to state leaders threatening the loss of funds for K-12 schools that don't follow its interpretation of civil rights laws.
President Trump's sweeping tariff announcement triggered a sharp drop in U.S. stock markets, a flashing-red warning sign of the economic fallout that's expected to result from the widening trade war.
NPR's Michel Martin asks Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) about the impact of the new round of tariffs imposed by the Trump administration.
BORUNDA: That's Jenni Vanos. She's a heat expert at Arizona State University who did a similar analysis last year. And Vanos says scientists also know that people die from heat well below these ...