British police said 10 people have been hospitalized, nine with life-threatening injuries, following a mass stabbing attack ...
The U.S. military has now killed at least 64 people in the strikes.
Visitors to the Colosseum in Rome can now walk through a tunnel that even in Roman times was exclusively reserved for emperors ...
A halt in SNAP payments has millions worried about their next meal, raising new questions about how a program born in the Great Depression still defines America's fight against hunger.
A highly-anticipated meeting between president Trump and Xi Jinping leads to a pause - but not an end - to trade and tech competition issues.
President Samia Suluhu Hassan won the country's disputed election with more than 97% of the vote, according to official ...
Many economists and business leaders are raising alarms about falling birthrates. But advocates for lower human populations ...
A ballroom at the White House could seat nearly a 1,000 guests for state dinners, but what to do while it's being built?
The U.S. and China agreed to a trade "truce" last week. NPR's Scott Simon speaks to Julian Gewirtz, a senior China policy official during the Biden administration, about what's at stake.
Hospital chaplains often meet people at the lowest point in their lives. We hear from one chaplain who encourages patients to discuss their tattoos as a way of creating an emotional bond.
Snap Recipients are already looking to stock up at food pantries, but USDA cuts earlier this year are exposing gaps in the food safety network.
AI email assistants are crafting perfect, tailor-made messages with minimal human input. But some people are now worried their emails sound too perfect -- including people who work in tech.