After Secretary of State Marco Rubio approved less than 300 essential personnel to continue in jobs past Friday, unions ...
Two letters from different groups of senators call for answers from the Trump administration about pauses in scientific ...
Experts say a fifth of U.K. meat consumption is by pets, not people. If Fido eats lab-grown meat, they say, it could cut the ...
In a wide-ranging interview with NPR, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates expressed concern about the new administration's recent ...
Italian politicians want action against a hunting party that included the president's son, who they accuse of allegedly ...
In a wide-ranging interview with NPR, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates expressed concern about the new administration's recent ...
Marko Elez had recently been given special access by a federal judge to highly sensitive payment systems in the Department of ...
Senate Bill 3 passed the House Committee on State Agencies and Governmental Affairs on Wednesday, Feb. 5, after almost three ...
It's Black History Month and the Up First newsletter wants to highlight local history makers. Do you know anyone who has made ...
Kay Sohini's graphic memoir, This Beautiful, Ridiculous City, tells a story of migration and redefinition. Gay Talese gathers ...
Gaza's police were hit hard by Israel in the war against Hamas, but the force is back providing law and order after months of looting and chaos.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio approved less than 300 essential personnel as USAID staff in the U.S. and overseas rush to rapidly close missions and leave jobs by midnight Friday.