News

The Justice Department says it has reached an agreement in principle with Boeing to drop criminal charges over two fatal ...
Remains of the "Scattered Man John Doe" began washing ashore in New Jersey in 1995 and went unidentified for the next three ...
A Republican representative from the Mountain West led an effort Wednesday to remove a controversial provision to sell ...
A new assessment says there’s about 27 trillion cubic feet of natural gas — close to what the U.S. consumes in a year — and ...
Climate change has many effects on our world, from extreme heat to drought to floods, which in turn affect people and their ...
Though hospitals work to solve people's health problems, the waste they produce can lead to making patients sicker, which is ...
Each year our society produces an overwhelming amount of plastic waste, contributing to a pollution crisis that not only ...
A series of executive orders aims to promote new kinds of nuclear reactors while restructuring the body in charge of nuclear ...
Young people in Montana won a lawsuit against the state for promoting fossil fuels, saying it violated the right to "a clean and healthful environment." This year, lawmakers tried to change that.
During World War II, thousands of Jews evaded the Nazis in Berlin, moving from place to place and taking refuge wherever they could. One of them, Walter Frankenstein, died in April at age 100.
Steroids have been around for a long time, but the drug is still fueling discussions about body image online.
The Trump administration has said it's considering suspending habeas corpus. UC Berkeley law professor Amanda Tyler explains the concept, what rights it guarantees and whether a suspension is legal.