NPR's Ayesha Rascoe asks Stanford Program in International and Comparative Law's Allen Weiner about international law and an open letter calling the war with Iran a violation of the U.N. charter.
New research from the Democratic Republic of Congo offers a behavioral and anatomical portrait of a species that can achieve ...
Sponsors are exiting a major U.K. music festival and the country's prime minister has been critical after the influential ...
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Meredith Alloway, who directed the new movie "Forbidden Fruits," and Lola Tung, who stars in it.
A U.S. Airforce officer whose plane was shot down in Iran was rescued by U.S. forces early Sunday, President Trump announced ...
The partnership between a private company, Missouri S&T and Mid-America Transplant, hopes to reduce times to assess matches for organ donation.
NASA's Artemis II crew has successfully launched on a mission that will take it around the moon and back to Earth. Here's ...
In 2019, 19-year-old Zac Brettler leapt towards the River Thames from a fifth-floor luxury apartment in central London.
The plan would fund DHS, except for immigration enforcement, through September. Republicans would then try to fund the whole ...
Jonathan -- the world's oldest land animal -- lives! NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Joe Hollins, veterinarian of 194-year-old tortoise, and Nigel Phillips, governor of St. Helena, about a crypto hoax.
The status of a decades-old bunker beneath the now-demolished East Wing is unclear, but the Trump administration has cited ...
It has been a year since President Trump announced double-digit tariffs on imports from around the world. So far, those ...