Lawmakers on Capitol Hill got close to getting their first salary bump in 15 years in a pre-Christmas bill to keep the ...
Wellpath, a health care provider for hospitals, prisons and jails, has been dogged by wrongful death and medical negligence ...
From the election results to the the charges against President-elect Donald Trump, here are the numbers that defined 2024 in ...
SEOUL, South Korea — South Korea's opposition-controlled National Assembly voted Friday to impeach acting President Han ...
Specially trained therapy dogs are helping doctors, nurses and patients at a Denver hospital reduce stress and burnout.
When his parents were killed in the Hamas-led on Israel October 7th, 2023, Moaz Inon put aside a successful tourism business career to focus on something else: peaceful co-existence with Palestinians.
If you want to spend less time on your phone in the new year, we have tips from Stanford psychiatrist Brad Zicherman.
At the end of 1999, there was anxiety about a potential computer glitch known as Y2K. Some thought the world would crumble, including some who waited out the apocalypse in an old house in the woods.
On the eastern edge of the Black Sea, the Georgian president is refusing to step down, as demonstrations have gone on for weeks in support of Georgia joining the European Union.
Amid concerns about the complexity and stress of college admissions, some schools are flipping the script by offering to admit students who haven't even applied. It's called direct admissions.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau said some credit card companies may be devaluing points and airline miles illegally. NPR's Sarah McCammon talks to Nick Ewen of The Points Guy.
From music producer Quincy Jones, to critic and archivist Dan Morgenstern, jazz historian Kevin Whitehead remembers just a few of the influential musicians and personalities we lost this year.