News

Character actor George Wendt was known to a generation as Norm, the beleaguered, lovable everyman on the sit-com "Cheers." He ...
Hundreds of public safety grants cut, worth $500 million, funded initiatives like drug treatment and gun violence prevention ...
Memorial Day, observed on the last Monday in May, is a day to honor and mourn fallen military service members. NPR readers ...
In 2005, two Chicago titans made a generational classic and then sprinted in opposite directions, each daring the rest of hip ...
Khalil's lawyers are trying to convince an immigration judge that if he's deported, Israel could target him over his advocacy ...
The NSC has traditionally played a pivotal role in advising the president for his biggest diplomatic and security decisions.
A new study details the evolutionary change of Anna's Hummingbirds, finding their beaks have grown longer and more tapered to ...
Young people in Montana won a lawsuit against the state for promoting fossil fuels, saying it violated the right to "a clean and healthful environment." This year, lawmakers tried to change that.
During World War II, thousands of Jews evaded the Nazis in Berlin, moving from place to place and taking refuge wherever they could. One of them, Walter Frankenstein, died in April at age 100.
Less than 24 hours after the Trump administration revoked Harvard's ability to admit international students, the university filed a lawsuit.
The Trump administration has said it's considering suspending habeas corpus. UC Berkeley law professor Amanda Tyler explains the concept, what rights it guarantees and whether a suspension is legal.
Cassie Ventura was the highest profile witness to testify in the first two weeks of the criminal trial of Sean Combs, but the prosecution's case is dependent on much more than her testimony.