Dictionaries are deceptively simple, and incredibly ambitious. NPR's Don Gonyea talks to Stefan Fatsis about his book, "Unabridged: The Thrill of (and Threat to) The Modern Dictionary." ...
Organizers said some 2,600 protests were planned in the U.S. on Saturday. The protests were largely peaceful, as ...
PeaceHealth will soon transition a south Eugene clinic from a “walk-in” medical service to a primary care site.
Wednesday’s Lincoln County commission meeting turned chaotic and tearful after a routine bi-monthly meeting was followed by ...
As part of 2,600 other “No Kings” events held across the U.S., thousands of people gathered at the federal courthouse in ...
DALLAS — A newly released police report offers personal details of the person responsible for last month's shooting at a ...
Thousands in Eugene and across the Pacific Northwest are expected to take part in the national “No Kings 2.0” protests ...
A Corvallis wildlife center and animal hospital is struggling to keep its doors open. The facility is relying on community ...
Democrats are on the defensive in Virginia after the revelation of violence-themed text messages from the Democratic nominee for attorney general turned what would have normally been a low-profile ...
We unpack the shocking revelation that the rat-shaped hole in a Chicago sidewalk was made not by a rat but by a squirrel. Michael Granatosky, an evolutionary biomechanist and one of the researchers ...
Regina Barber and Emily Kwong of NPR's Short Wave talk about the brain benefits of quitting cigarettes, language development in premature babies, and a mysterious imprint in a Chicago sidewalk.
On Friday’s politics roundtable, Politico’s Dasha Burns and NBC News’ Sahil Kapur join hosts Scott Tong and Peter O’Dowd to discuss the week in politics, capped off by the federal indictment of ...