News

As policy counsel for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, it's Jensen Jose's job to track food policy law. But this year it's been very hard to keep up. Lawmakers of all political stripes ...
Three months after militants killed 26 tourists at a scenic meadow in the Himalayas, India said on Tuesday that its security ...
The word "dude" is often associated with the '80s and '90s. But its origin is rooted much, much farther back in American ...
The DOJ has fired hundreds of employees this year, transforming a federal workforce that enjoys vast powers and ...
The Federal Reserve is expected to leave its benchmark interest rate unchanged, but a rate cut is possible in September.
New research confirms what election experts have said all along: Noncitizen voting occasionally happens but in minuscule ...
A new report of an annual federal survey shows that depression episodes and suicidality among teens went down between 2021 and 2024. But one in ten teens still thought seriously about suicide in the ...
A new study from Oxford University finds that a common European songbird sometimes divorces its partner between breeding ...
The gunman accused of walking into a Park Avenue skyscraper in Manhattan and killing four people suspected he had chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE — a degenerative brain disease often ...
Team USA's entry in the International Jump Rope Union World Championships, held in Japan this week, includes two pairs of sisters.
The U.K. says it plans to recognize a Palestinian state, as global pressure builds on Israel to let more aid into Gaza, where a UN-backed panel warns famine is already unfolding.
Cellist Maya Beiser explores women's resilience through the centuries in her new album, "Salt," starting with the unnamed biblical figure of Lot's wife.