For a few years, we’ve known about corporations, hedge funds and other conglomerates buying homes in Las Vegas, then turning them into rentals.
Latest National Headlines
- A biotech company says it has bred three pups with traits of the extinct dire wolf
- Supreme Court lets Trump move forward with firing thousands of federal workers
- 'A Minecraft Movie' is both a box office hit and post-ironic meme
- Trump defends new tariffs. And, Supreme Court backs Trump in deportation case
- 5 buzzy books out this week that look inward
- U.S. stock markets bounce back after Trump tariffs shock -- but nerves abound
- It's sexual assault awareness month and HHS just gutted its rape prevention unit
- Trump's election order could jeopardize 'hundreds of thousands' of future mail ballots
- Bienvenidos! Some colleges are targeting a long-neglected group: Hispanic students
- Why is Trump sending immigrant university scholars to Louisiana and Texas?
The chapel bells are ringing for the second annual love issue! And, lest we forget about life passions as expressions of love, we sat down with four collectors to discuss their most beloved items.
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Israeli strikes on Gaza killed at least 32 people, including over a dozen women and children, local health officials said Sunday, as Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu headed to meet President Trump.
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A second school-aged child in West Texas has died from a measles-related illness, a hospital spokesman confirmed Sunday, as the outbreak continues to swell.
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Vietnam is actively seeking to negotiate a reduction in the high tariff rate imposed by the Trump Administration.
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Suspected U.S. airstrikes killed at least two people in a stronghold of Yemen's Houthi rebels, the group said Sunday.
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One person was killed Sunday as Russian air strikes hit the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, while the death toll from Friday's deadly attack on the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih continued to rise.
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The Trump administration froze funding for a program to upgrade aging low-income housing and make it energy efficient. The move threatens hundreds of projects around the country.
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Sudanese activist Duaa Tariq, who spoke to NPR throughout the war, shares what its like in the "liberated" capital Khartoum, after two years occupied by the Rapid Support Forces