Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go

SEOUL, Dec 12 - South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol's switch from contrition to defiance on Thursda

Five dogs were killed in an RV fire the day before a dog show was set to begin in Florida, officials

Don't call it a comeback when it's a takeover. Following a three-year hiatus from The Challenge, Jor

Who says three wishes has to be the limit? NPR asked luminaries like Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala

GAZA and LONDON -- Emotional scenes continued to play out in the Gaza Strip on Tuesday as families a

Dr. Lisa Fitzpatrick has spent her entire adult life answering people's questions about health care

In a strong signal of its retreat from climate change action, the Trump administration on Thursday h

There are still hundreds of thousands of COVID cases reported in the U.S. each week, along with a fe

Victorious in the last two Super Bowls, the Kansas City Chiefs have a chance to win three in a row w

Neudy Rojop, 29, stands on a bumpy, cobbled lane in Guatemala in the small rural village of San Rafa

After three years of sidelining climate change research and thinning its roster of scientists, the U

ExxonMobil announced Wednesday that it had wiped off its books all 3.5 billion barrels of tar sands

SEOUL — South Korea's acting president, Han Duck-soo, moved on Sunday (Dec 15) to reassure the count

When soot from fossil fuel combustion and wildfires drifts onto the Arctic ice and snow, it helps fe

When Tom's epileptic seizures could no longer be controlled with drugs, he started considering surge

Lasers, robots, and tiny electrodes are transforming treatment of severe epilepsy