News

Immigrant and labor rights groups joined members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors at City Hall today to reaffirm the ...
The City of Oakland’s deal to sell its share of the Coliseum property to a local development group has been delayed again.
Sudan's catastrophic civil war is grinding into a third year. A conflict that continues to shatter a country that much of the ...
San Jose is breaking ground on its first sanctioned homeless encampment. San Jose Spotlight reports the navigation center ...
Surprises nevertheless abound in the top 10, as a vinyl reissue lands cult singer-songwriter Ethel Cain on the Billboard 200 ...
In Zuckerberg's second day of testifying in the federal antitrust trial, he defended Meta's acquisitions of Instagram and ...
The memo could result in immigration judges deciding someone is not eligible for asylum without a hearing, and based solely ...
The SAVE Act would require proof of citizenship to be able to register to vote. NPR's Michel Martin asks Sean Morales-Doyle ...
For the first time since Robert F. Kennedy Jr. became health secretary, vaccine advisers to the CDC are meeting to discuss ...
These books confront readers with the recent past and distant future, bring them to southeastern Africa and an alternative Japan, and bedeck their pages with subversive cartoons and lush landscapes.
When former leader Bashar al-Assad fell, new Syria war crimes investigations began. But U.S. budget cuts have halted some work. For families of the disappeared, it means justice delayed or denied.
The National Center for Environmental Health was hollowed out in the cuts of 10,000 federal health workers on April 1. That's the same day an assessment of people hurt in floods was set to begin.