The annual federal count finds more than 770,000 people living in shelters or outside. It cites rising rents and the recent ...
Assad's ouster, there are questions about the fate of the Syrian Democratic Forces, the U.S.-backed Kurdish coalition that ...
The FDA has classified its recall of eggs sold under Costco's Kirkland brand as a Class I recall, a designation reserved for ...
President-elect Donald Trump asked the Supreme Court on Friday to pause the potential TikTok ban from going into effect until ...
The Embraer 190 with 67 passengers and crew was flying from the Azerbaijani capital of Baku to Grozny in Chechnya, Russia, ...
Another eight people remain unaccounted for. Several cars and trucks plunged into the Tocantins River after a section of the ...
The incident marks the second time in less than a month that an unticketed passenger was discovered on a Delta Air Lines ...
A letter from former Abercrombie & Fitch CEO Mike Jeffries' legal team, filed this week, claims that he may not be fit to ...
"Our problem is not with Israel. We don't want to meddle in anything that will threaten Israel's security," Damascus Governor ...
After weeks of military activity, Israeli troops ordered people off the grounds of a hospital they say Hamas is using as cover. Officials say Israel is targeting civilians in an inhuman assault.
A visit to the souk in the old city in the Syrian capital of Damascus tell us a lot about the state of the country's current economy.
Zachary Loeb, Purdue University assistant professor, tells NPR's Juana Summers that the real story of Y2k wasn't about computers run amok. It was about experts sounding an alarm, and fixing problems.