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Kyiv Is Relying On Free Market To Add Weapons
When Andriy Bondarenko, a tech entrepreneur, began making drones, he had no experience with weapons. Working with a friend, it took him one month to develop a prototype, which they paid for with their own money.
GOP's High Hopes Collide With Reality
Musk's influence and Trump's impulsive style throw party into familiar form of chaos
What the Science Says About Fluoride in Our Water
How much do we need to protect our teeth without risking possible cognitive harm?
Potent Form Of Cannabis Ravages Teens
Health officials warn of heated extracts that are ruining lives and gaining popularity
Rickey Henderson: Hail to the Thief
Remembering baseball's base-stealing, run-scoring, myth-making Hall of Famer, who died Friday at age 65
Emphasis on Italy
Many of the standout shows focused on artists from-or inspired by-this sunny strip of Europe
Fliers Seek Better Ways To Get Sleep On a Plane
It's the holy grail of long-distance economy travel: a pillow that can actually help you get some sleep.
Spain's Christmas 'El Gordo' Lottery Spreads Around $2.8 Billion in Riches
For weeks, Spaniards had anticipated the arrival of \"El Gordo\" or \"The Fat One.\"
Kid Safety On Apple's App Store Is Too Lax, Study Says
Stacy Ann Sipes thought she had her daughter's phone locked down.
Paramount's Heiress Bows Out
An $8 billion sale of media empire caps Shari Redstone's eventful leadership
H&M Is Banking on Pop-Star Chic To Make Its Brand Cool Once More
H&M has a unique problem for a mass retailer: It has gone too mainstream.
Struggling Nissan Counts On A Honda Lifeline
Nissan, once a symbol of Japan's carmaking prowess, spent the past five years trying to regain its footing after the arrest of longtime leader Carlos Ghosn, only to find itself in a precarious spot again.
Climate Change Keeps Some Crops Pricey
Extreme weather boosted prices of cocoa, coffee and orange juice in 2024
Liberty Media's MotoGP Bid Faces In-Depth EU Probe
Formula One owner Liberty Media's planned bid for Dorna Sports faces an in-depth investigation by the European Commission over concerns the $3.6 billion deal could hurt competition in broadcasting and streaming markets.
Ballmer Is the 'Noninvesting,' Undiversified Guru of Investing
The ultrawealthy tend to follow a time-honored model of investing: diversifying.
North Korea Boosts Arms Flow to Russia
North Korea and Russia are deepening their military cooperation, as Pyongyang ramps up the supply of arms to Moscow for the war in Ukraine and receives much-needed cash and oil from the Kremlin in return.
Baby Boomers Flock To CD-Like Annuities
The highest interest rate on your cash right now might be coming from an insurance company, not a bank.
Flat Start for 12-Team Playoff
Ever since college football introduced a four-team playoff a decade ago, analysts and armchair quarterbacks had salivated over the prospect of adding more teams to the mix.
How to 'Manifest' Your Own Success
The practice of visualizing desired outcomes, through listing goals and vision boards, has become popular this year
Chinese Cabinet Makers Skirt Tariffs
U.S. agents had to climb over piles of boxes to see inside the warehouse. They had learned about the secret building after finishing their tour of cabinet-production facilities in Penang, Malaysia.
New Threats Plague Herders in Tanzania
Government to evict tens of thousands to facilitate safaris and carbon-credit projects
FDA Clears Lilly's Zepbound For Some Sleep Apnea Cases
Company said the prescription drug is only one for treating condition in adults
Private Prisons Foresee A Border Bonanza
Firms line up to aid Trump deportations, and some consider family detentions
Psychosis Patients Find New Hope
A classroom-style treatment teaches patients to live with the voices
The Grandsons Didn't Get Along
Charlemagne is known as \"the father of Europe,\" and little wonder. The Frankish king and conqueror was crowned emperor by the pope on Christmas Day in 800, and thus the Holy Roman Empire came into being. It would persist, in various forms, for a millennium, an institution critical to the continent's political and religious self-definition.
Trump and the Fake Debt Limit
President-elect Trump was right last week when he raised a red flag over the debt limit. The outgoing government is leaving a tailor-made debt crisis for Mr. Trump that complicates his work to implement his mandate, cut taxes quickly and rebuild U.S. strength.
Raimondo: U.S. Needs to Invest to Win Chip Race
Four years after the Biden administration made the race for chip manufacturing a top priority, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo says efforts to restrict China's access to technology haven't held back the country's progress, and federal funding for domestic innovation is what will keep the U.S. ahead of Beijing.
Friends Struggle With Executive's Loss
Friends and colleagues say they are reeling from both the sudden loss of slain United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson and the lionization of the man accused of killing him.
Bitcoin Faces Threat From Quantum Hacks
Bitcoin's rally faces a risk that isn't on the radar of most crypto investors: quantum computing.
The Wildest Stock-Market Prices Ever
Why pay $1 when you can pay $2 or $12 for the same thing? Here is a tour through the most entertaining anomalies in history