The FDA is expected to announce details of a proposed ban on use of formaldehyde in hair products amid ongoing lawsuits and studies that allege the chemicals have been linked to cancer.
Latest Headlines
- These dreamy photos of historical Cairo will transport you to another time
- Gaza protestors picket White House correspondents dinner, as Biden ribs Trump
- What abortion politics has to do with new rights for pregnant workers
- Despite a fortified border, migrants will keep coming, analysts agree. Here's why.
- Helping women get better sleep by calming the relentless 'to-do lists' in their heads
Editors' Picks
Efforts are underway at the local level to help communities take small steps towards achieving zero waste sustainability and addressing existing challenges.
-
The U.S. will reinstate Obama-era regulations for internet service providers that promise fast, reliable and fair internet speeds for all consumers. What happened when those rules were taken away?
-
The Federal Trade Commission's ban on noncompetes would impact the health care industry when and if it goes into effect. Some in the industry are applauding the rule, while others are voicing their dismay and vowing to sue.
-
Entrepreneurial Swifties are selling crafty products inspired by Taylor Swift's music and style. Swift herself has been known to send notes and even homemade gifts to creative super-fans.
-
Lorain Police Chief Jim McCann played the video for members of the media during a press conference Thursday narrating what it showed.
-
The owners of the Detroit Avenue auction house consider it an "adoption agency for heirlooms."
-
Trees communicate. They migrate. They protect. They heal. We climbed into the NPR archives to find some of our favorite arboreal fiction, nonfiction, and kids' lit — get ready to branch out.
-
Five of the six conservatives spent much of their lives in the Beltway, working in the White House and Justice Department, seeing their administrations as targets of unfair harassment by Democrats.
-
New rules from the US Environmental Protection Agency require them to reduce 90% of climate-change causing emissions by 2039, which will affect the four coal burning power plants in Ohio.
-
Ohioans will likely be able to buy recreational marijuana as soon as mid-June, earlier than the timeline outlined by the initiated statute they voted to pass last fall.
Test your knowledge on the week's local news headlines.
JazzNEO features the depth and breadth of this unique American art form by showcasing jazz from all eras.