The regional crossfire raised the risks that an interim agreement to halt fighting in the war could break down, putting the Middle East again at risk of a wider conflict.
A free market think tank found Kentucky awarded $1.3 billion of single-bid road contracts from 2023 to 2025, calling for ...
The Argentinians looked beaten. But they fought and fought and fought. Scoring one goal, then another to equalize. And, ...
The International Olympic Committee advised sports bodies to end a three-year program vetting Russians for neutral status ...
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Democratic strategist Joel Payne about prominent Democrats on the national and state level ...
A lawsuit alleges the Trump administration is divulging details of Iranian asylum seekers to the government of Iran.
The New York Times tells the story of a prom in Kyiv where a boy danced alone after his date was killed in a Russian attack.
The strain of the virus that's responsible for the current outbreak has no specific treatments or preventive measures. Three ...
Despite adapting its tactics, Ukraine is struggling to defend itself against a barrage of Russian airstrikes on major ...
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Robinne Lee about her new novel, Crash Into Me. It's a multigenerational, multiracial story of a marriage at a crossroads and the complexity of life in the U.S.
A growing number of AI labs have been hiring from a surprising pool of candidates: philosophers. NPR's Scott Detrow talks with Benjamin Sutherland, who recently wrote about this for The Economist.
Descendants of Dred Scott and Chief Justice Roger Taney spoke about reconciliation at a church in the shadow of the Supreme ...
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