NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with Alexei Navalny's widow Yulia Navalnya about her husband's posthumous memoir Patriot and how her role has changed since his death.
Changes in the rental market mean some landlords are slow to fix problems and tenants are reluctant to complain about issues because they fear losing their housing in a tight market.
The contingent included members of environmental groups, along with associations representing fishermen, charter captains, ...
Hurricane Helene left destruction in its wake in western North Carolina. But elections officials are also moving heaven and ...
The species wasn't considered to exist in Vermont waters until scientists found genetic material from the species this summer ...
Israel’s prime minister says forming Jewish settlements in Gaza is not a realistic goal, but his allies are making the case for it. His opponents say the military’s latest moves may make it possible.
A harrowing and unprecedented trial in France is exposing how pornography, chatrooms and men’s disdain for or hazy ...
Around the world, companies and governments are competing over who can build the most computing power -- quickly -- as the computing demands of generative artificial intelligence expand.
Nick Harkaway grew up hearing his dad read drafts of his George Smiley novels. He picks up le Carré's beloved spymaster ...
What triggers geysers to go off is still not well understood. A new paper shows that one small earthquake likely triggered an ...
In a new legal filing, Supreme Court Justice Anna Barbara Hantz Marconi alleges that the state’s top judge advised her in ...
A preliminary investigation by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration suggests fresh onions that are served raw on McDonald's ...