The former home of one of the world's most famous western novelists, Zane Grey, was a Mediterranean Revival house designed ...
A French court found Marine Le Pen guilty on Monday in an embezzlement case but didn't immediately say what her sentence ...
Hyundai just opened a high-tech auto plant in Georgia. Originally meant to just build EVs, it's expanding towards plug-in ...
The Tesla brand is in trouble, according to branding consultant Allen Adamson, who says the car company is facing headwinds ...
A chapter of Catholic Charities in Wisconsin contends it should be exempted from the state's unemployment compensation system ...
The last day of March commemorates labor activist and civil rights icon Cesar Chavez, whose fight to better the lives of the ...
Asian shares were sharply lower on Monday as worries are building over a potentially toxic mix of worsening inflation and a U ...
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with James Grossman, executive director of the American Historical Association, about the Trump administration's executive order to overhaul the Smithsonian Institution.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth visited Japan over the weekend, attempting to ease concerns that the Trump administration's "America First" policy might result in the U.S. abandoning its key ally.
President Trump signed an executive order last week aimed at "restoring truth and sanity to American history" through an overhaul of the Smithsonian Institution and historical sites around the U.S.
Ukrainians are marking the third anniversary of the liberation of Bucha with calls for justice. They want Russian actions there to be investigated as a crime against humanity, which Russia denies.