Starbucks plans to cut about 30% of food and drink options from its menu by late 2025, as part of th
Last week’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report on climate impacts, vulnerabilities and
The highest court in one of India’s 28 states ruled last month that “Mother Nature” has the same leg
SCIENCEMigration Surveys Show Monarchs Making ComebackLast December, in the wintering grounds of the
To celebrate the "most Whopper-ful time of the year," Burger King will be bringing back a couple of
First in a series with the Seattle Times on the future of nuclear power in the United States in the
A Japanese company lost contact with its spacecraft moments before touchdown on the moon Wednesday,
In Nevada’s extremely tight U.S. Senate race between incumbent Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto and G
General Motors swung to a loss in the fourth quarter on huge charges related to China, but still top
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Harvey Dong about the closing of the Berkeley shop Eastwind Books, and
CAMERON, La.—In a marsh near the Gulf of Mexico shoreline, under a blue sky with white pelicans and
For the first time in 27 years of United Nations-led negotiations on climate change, the world’s lar
It's been a season full of twists and turns, but the part one for "Survivor" Season 47 finale proved
The U.S. has more than 4,000 banks — more banks than any other country. The huge number of banks has
BALTIMORE, Md.—An estimated 85,087 occupied homes in Baltimore have “dangerous lead hazards,” accord