The former rescue feline joined the British diplomatic service in 2016 and gained a large following online for fulfilling his ...
An e-mail seen by NPR says the move is to comply with a presidential order to "restore biological truth" to the government.
A judge ordered the naming rights of the extremist group the Proud Boys be given to the Metropolitan African Methodist ...
Experts say a fifth of U.K. meat consumption is by pets, not people. If Fido eats lab-grown meat, they say, it could cut the ...
In a wide-ranging interview with NPR, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates expressed concern about the new administration's recent ...
In a wide-ranging interview with NPR, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates expressed concern about the new administration's recent ...
It's Black History Month and the Up First newsletter wants to highlight local history makers. Do you know anyone who has made ...
After publishing her first novel when she was 21, Brittany Newell started working as a dominatrix. The job gave her time to ...
Kay Sohini's graphic memoir, This Beautiful, Ridiculous City, tells a story of migration and redefinition. Gay Talese gathers ...
Staff at the key cybersecurity agency were initially excluded from government efforts to leave their jobs, but then on ...
Secretary of State Marco Rubio approved less than 300 essential personnel as USAID staff in the U.S. and overseas rush to rapidly close missions and leave jobs by midnight Friday.
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Emily Kwong and Regina Barber of Short Wave about the fluid dynamics of crowds, an early fossil of a modern bird and new data on how people's moods change through the day.
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