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Democrats have struggled to counter GOP efforts to frame itself as the party of "law and order." Some see it as a problem of ...
Some 2 in 5 of all the local officials who administered the 2020 election left their jobs before the 2024 cycle, new research ...
An Israeli official said that the military will be operating in parts of Gaza City where the Israeli military has not yet ...
The risk from the recalled shrimp is "quite low," said Donald Schaffner, a food safety expert at Rutgers University.
A growing number of 20-somethings are trying to stop wrinkles from forming on their face with a preventative treatment known as "baby Botox," which freezes facial muscles to limit movement.
No one wants rats scurrying about their neighborhood. But they're a cunning and evasive foe. Now, a community near Boston is trying their luck with a different approach: rat birth control.
Mexico City is not known for its tropical fruits. But climate change is causing some garden surprises. Eyder Peralta is NPR's East Africa correspondent based in Nairobi, Kenya.
The International Association of Chiefs of Police has issued two resolutions focused on ICE agents' use of face masks and heated comments around policing coming from influential leaders. Ari Shapiro ...
The Maurice Bathhouse served visitors seeking to benefit from the city’s healing waters from its inception in 1912 until it ...
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks to poet Raymond Antrobus about his new memoir, The Quiet Ear, and how he has navigated between the worlds of hearing and hearing loss.
The politics of air conditioning in France, as the country basks in yet another heatwave.
Samuel Kangethe has lived in the U.S. for nearly two decades, but an unresolved immigration case has made him deportable.
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