News

Nine states will share in a total of $720 million in a deal with eight drug-makers. Illinois has collected about $1.4 billion ...
South Africa's President Cyril Ramaphosa has suspended the police minister and launched a sweeping inquiry into alleged ...
While serving a life sentence for a murder he was eventually exonerated of committing, Calvin Duncan studied law and helped ...
Jeff Lemire explores his career arc, the road to successfully delivering Essex County and other comics to the public, in a new graphic memoir.
President Trump threatened to punish Russia with heavy tariffs on countries that trade with Moscow if the Kremlin fails to ...
A Macomb-based organization has received another grant to help pay for assessing brownfield sites. Prairie Hills Resource ...
Lawyers for former Reditus Labs CEO Aaron Rossi are pointing to his traumatic childhood and a desire to “prove his worth to ...
PEORIA – With major future cuts to social service programs now written into law, Democrats seeking Illinois’ open U.S. Senate ...
The EU is America's biggest business partner and the world's largest trading bloc. The U.S. decision will have repercussions ...
The Justice Department's Office of the Inspector General found widespread abuse of shackles in federal prisons. One prisoner was held in restraints so tight that he had to have a limb amputated.
Of the more than two dozen tariff threat letters President Trump has recently sent, the one to Brazil stood out, not only for proposing the highest import tax, but also for its personal tone.
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks with Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman about what he says is the "unprecedented" use of tariffs by President Trump to send political messages.