-
The woman and her baby died after Wednesday's strike, one of dozens of recent attacks on Ukraine's health system. U.N. groups warn it is running "dangerously low" on oxygen and medical supplies.
-
Russia's growing isolation in the cultural world is poignant for those who remember optimistic outreach of the 80s and 90s.
-
As Ukrainians flee the war at home, a makeshift system of supplies and aid has sprung up in the Przemyśl train station.
-
The British news group brought back shortwave broadcasts after Russia invaded Ukraine.
-
Hundreds of thousands of pets are estimated to have crossed into countries neighboring Ukraine since the war began.
-
Russia unleashes a heavy bombing campaign. Cities are reduced to rubble. Thousands of civilians are killed. Russia did that twice in Chechnya in the 1990s. Is a repeat likely in Ukraine today?
-
The Texas General Land Office discriminated against minority residents when it denied flood mitigation aid to areas hardest hit by Hurricane Harvey. And Texas attorney Sidney Powell is dealing with her own kraken. The high profile advocate of the big lie of the election is facing disciplinary action.
-
Mira Hnatyshyn, a Ukrainian American artist, brings awareness to socio-cultural and political issues encasing today's current events with Ukraine in her creations.
-
Though gas prices will rise after the U.S. banned Russian oil imports, Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff said the slight increase is a small price to pay considering what Ukraine is going through.
-
The world-famous cellist made a personal stand with Ukraine on Monday, setting up his instrument on the sidewalk in Washington, D.C., next to an improvised street sign reading, "Zelensky Way."