California Cities Planned to Shut off Gas in New Buildings, but a Lawsuit Turned it Back On. Now What?

WASHINGTON (AP) — What was once a bipartisan effort to expand by 66 the number of federal district j

NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with professor of medicine at Harvard Lisa Iezzoni about a new study i

Rough Weather Curtails Some Gulf Cleanup Work (AP) Cleanup crews across the Gulf of Mexico surveyed

Dominion Virginia Power agreed this week to adopt stricter standards than Virginia requires for trea

Our writers and editors independently determine what we cover and recommend. When you buy through ou

The findings of a big European study published in the New England Journal of Medicine this week seem

Park Hotels & Resorts, one of the nation's largest hotel real estate investment trusts, is pulli

Images of devastating storm damage and droughts around the world this year have been drawing attenti

Whether you're closing in on retirement age or have decades left in your career, the end of the year

You can run, you can hide, but ultimately there's no escaping Enrique Iglesias and Anna Kournikova's

As dense smoke from wildfires burning in Canada continued to blanket parts of the U.S. on Thursday f

Some lawmakers, human rights activists and members of a group supporting 9/11 families are blasting

Federal authorities announced hackers in China have stolen "customer call records data" of an unknow

The world of brain research had two incredible developments last week. Researchers have taught a dis

Jan Egeland speaks in a calm manner than befits his four decades of humanitarian work, but he become

A $2.5 million prize gives this humanitarian group more power to halt human suffering