Tupperware's reliance on people selling its storage containers at home-and-garden parties or through social media was once ...
Rep. Donatavius Jarrells (D-Columbus) says the health impacts of replacing lead pipes in Ohio's drinking water systems would ...
There were thousands of causalities when pagers carried by members of Hezbollah exploded in crowded stores and streets. The method of attack was highly unusual -- if not unprecedented.
Another former officer, who pleaded guilty to federal charges, testified that the assault occurred after a traffic stop and afterwards the officers lied about using excessive force.
A baby pygmy hippopotamus in a Thailand zoo has become a worldwide internet sensation, leading to crowds at the zoo. Zoo ...
After decades of devastating increases driven by fentanyl and other toxic street drugs, overdose deaths are dropping sharply ...
Georgia election officials have said they are “gravely concerned that dramatic changes” approved by the State Election Board ...
New research from Gallup and Workhuman finds that employees who receive recognition on the job are 45% less likely to leave ...
Gold Apollo denied all involvement with the explosive pagers, telling NPR outside its offices in Taiwan that it was a ...
Meta introduces rules for how teens use Instagram as the company faces scrutiny over child safety on its platforms. The company is rolling out teen accounts, which it says will be guided by parents.
In Part 2 of David Rennie's exit interview with NPR's Steve Inskeep, the former Beijing Bureau chief for "The Economist" talks about living under the strict scrutiny of the Chinese Communist Party.
An attack on pagers used by members of Lebanon's militant group Hezbollah led to thousands of casualties. NPR's Leila Fadel talks to Beirut-based journalist Kim Ghattas about the unusual attack.