NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with Sister Mary Scullion, the co-founder, executive director and president of Project H.O.M.E. about stepping down after 35 years at the organization she co-founded.
Batavia's Healthy Living facility is part of Rochester Regional’s efforts to expand health care access in the rural areas.
More than 7,000 people had taken shelter in the Rukban camp, near the border with Jordan, many of whom fled the regime and ...
According to psychologists at Durham University in the UK, songs with danceable tempos and predictable melodic shapes can ...
Because so much of HOP's chart success is derived from sales rather than streaming — with an emphasis on CD sales, curiously ...
Starbucks' union says workers are walking off the job at some 300 — out of over 10,000 — stores across the U.S. as contract ...
American Airlines passengers across the U.S. endured a sudden disruption of service on Christmas Eve as a "technical issue" ...
For the second year, Sibley Square is celebrating the season by bringing out a collection of animatronic elves and other ...
Foreign-born scientists may face challenges working in the U.S. during President-elect Donald Trump's second term. And, ...
All We Imagine as Light explores the lives of working-class women in Mumbai and won the Grand Prix at Cannes. But it was ...
NPR visits a secret drone command center near the front lines in eastern Ukraine, where crews are using remote-controlled ...
But mashed potatoes can be tricky to prepare. It's easy to make them too dry or a little too runny. To offer a little holiday ...