- Showing:
- All Topics
News | News
News | News
Markets are heading for a 'cataclysmic year' in 2016, warns RBS
The Royal Bank of Scotland is warning clients of a 'cataclysmic year' ahead for financial markets.
News | News
California Governor Declares Gas Leak a State of Emergency
California Gov. Jerry Brown declared a state of emergency Wednesday over a massive natural-gas leak that has been spewing methane and other gases into a Los Angeles neighborhood for months, sickening residents and forcing thousands to evacuate. In a state
News | News
CA Lawmakers Propose $2 Billion Plan to Aid Homeless
California would spend more than $2 billion on permanent housing to help the nation's largest homeless population, under a proposal outlined by state senators on Monday.
News | News
A dozen top changes in state law for 2016
Vaccines, minimum wage, equal pay are among issues addressed by new California laws.
News | News
The 5 most inspiring personal finance stories of 2015
Take notes. It's Yahoo Finance's annual list of the most inspiring personal finance stories!
News | News
Jailed for Miscarriage, Women Reveal the Cost of Criminalizing Abortion
Maria Teresa Rivera didn’t know she was pregnant until the November morning four years ago when she suffered a miscarriage. “I hardly ever get visitors because of my mother-in-law’s economic situation,
News | News
How Belgium Became Home to Recent Terror Plots
Several recent terrorism cases in Europe have had some connection to Belgium.
News | News
9th Circuit addresses senility among federal judges head on
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Now 84, federal appellate court Judge William Canby made the difficult decision a few years ago to mostly stop hearing cases after a 30-year career. He was sharp and healthy, but didn't want to risk mental decline that would lea
News | News
If you sensed something off about the story of the woman who sued her nephew, you were right
Connell's lawsuit makes perfect sense from a legal standpoint.
News | News
The Strange Case of Anna Stubblefield
She told the family of a severely disabled man that she could help him to communicate with the outside world. The relationship that followed would lead to a criminal trial.
News | News
Childcare for Two Is More Expensive Than Rent Now
The findings are based on data from 618 communities, urban and rural, released by the Economic Policy Institute, a worker advocacy organization (PDF). The biggest disparity between childcare and housing costs is in Binghamton, a small city near the southe
News | News
Mass shootings since Sandy Hook, in one map
This interactive shows the locations and stories of these tragic events.
News | News
Dallas Is Building Cottages For The Homeless, And Saving $1.3 Million In The Process!
More Posts Comments:
News | News
How the Los Angeles' homeless crisis got so bad
So how did L.A.'s homeless problem get so bad?
News | News
L.A. to declare 'state of emergency' on homelessness, commit $100 million
Acknowledging their failure to stem a surge in homelessness, Los Angeles’ elected leaders on Tuesday said they would declare a “state of emergency” and devote up to $100 million to the problem. But they offered few details ab
News | News
George Takei Just Wrote A Brilliant Letter To Ahmed On Facebook That You Need To See
The internet's no.1 man swoops in with a killer comment
News | News
Rate rises help banks first
When the Federal Reserve ultimately raises interest rates, banks will get more out of it than savers will. In periods of rate increases by the Fed over the last two decades, the average interest paid on deposits rose by only about 0.25 percentage point ov
News | News
Are you white, married, or college educated? We've got bad news for you.
A new Census Bureau report paints a bleak picture of the so-called recovery.
News | News
No Charges for Ahmed Mohamed As He's Invited to Facebook HQ and the White House
Today is turning around nicely for Ahmed Mohamed, the ninth grader in Irving, Texas arrested for bringing a homemade clock to school. President Obama and Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, among other people, would like to hang out with him. Also, in a move th
News | News
USC helps students graduate on time by pinpointing what's holding them back
When Sharon Sin enrolled at USC three years ago, she didn't sign up for a foreign language course because it wasn't a requirement for her engineering major.
News | News
Nicholas Winton, Rescuer of 669 Children From Holocaust, Dies at 106
A London stockbroker in 1938, he rescued the youngsters from Czechoslovakia but then said nothing about his deeds for 50 years.
News | News
The Fully Immersive Mind of Oliver Sacks
He transformed modern medicine's understanding of the brain. And he rethought neurology---and his memory---from the inside out.
News | News
Millions facing a hefty increase in Medicare premiums in 2016
Nearly a third of the roughly 50 million elderly Americans who depend on Medicare for their physician care and other health services could see their premiums jump by 52 percent or more next year. While Congress is largely focused on addressing looming sho
News | News
The Fed Is on Thinner Ice Than It Realizes, and It May Be Setting Us Up for Recession
The soft landing already happened, and raising rates could make things worse
News | News
How 1 Student Can Be Accused of Rape at 2 Colleges — and Receive a Scholarship to a 3rd
The academic path of Brandon Austin is riddled with recruitment, scholarships ... and sexual assault allegations. This is how colleges can, and do, unknowingly recruit students who could pose a danger to female students.
News | News
How a white supremacist tapped into a Jewish fortune
Earl P. Holt III, president of the Council of Conservative Citizens, started giving money to GOP pols after marrying the widow of a wealthy Jewish businessman.
News | News
Job market's new normal: Smaller workforce, sluggish pay
WASHINGTON (AP) — Even after another month of strong hiring in June and a sinking unemployment rate, the U.S. job market just isn't what it used to be.
News | News
Has the Supreme Court opened the door to more affordable housing?
The California Supreme Court gave cities and counties a powerful tool to help address the state's affordable-housing crisis this week when it unanimously upheld a San Jose law requiring developers of large, for-sale residential projects to offer some of t
News | News
Three stories of hardship put a face on L.A.'s exorbitant housing costs
In Reseda, an elderly couple fret about where they will go at the end of the month, when they are forced out of the one-room apartment they have lived in for 29 years.
News | News
Mystery Solved: Woman With Amnesia and Battling Cancer Has Been Identified
The woman, who called herself
News | News
Savior Of Hundreds Of Children During Holocaust Dead At 106
Sir Nicholas Winton, recognized as the
News | News
Dying Woman With Amnesia Found in Carlsbad Reaches Out on Facebook to Find Family
A woman who was reportedly diagnosed with cancer and amnesia has turned to social media in hopes of reconnecting with her loved ones after being found barely conscious in Carlsbad earlier this year...
News | News
Renting: Awful for just about everyone right now
Basic wisdom (which was largely established by rules governing public housing eligibility) warns a healthy bank account means that one’s housing costs shouldn’t exceed about one-third of a person’s take home pay. A recent report from the Joint Cente
News | News
California Legislature passes mandatory vaccination bill
Gov. Jerry Brown must now decide whether to sign into law a bill that would require mandatory vaccinations for nearly all California schoolchildren.
News | News
This Startup Gives Poor People A Year's Income, No Strings Attached
They've given away $15 million and counting, and the results have been extraordinary.
News | News
In Search Of The Red Cross' $500 Million In Haiti Relief
An investigation by NPR and ProPublica finds a string of poorly managed projects, questionable spending and dubious claims of success, according to a review of the charity's internal documents.
News | News
More older Americans are being buried by housing debt
Al and Saundra Karp have found an unconventional way to raise money and help save their Miami-area home from foreclosure: They're lining up gigs for their family jazz band. They enjoy performing. But it ...
News | News
How Some Men Fake an 80-Hour Workweek, and Why It Matters
A look at how the professional world differs for men and women, and an implicit critique of a corporate culture that values long hours above all.
News | News
Why Some Men Pretend to Work 80-Hour Weeks
One study found that “passing” was the only way to get ahead.
News | News
How economic inequality harms societies
We feel instinctively that societies with huge income gaps are somehow going wrong. Richard Wilkinson charts the hard data on economic inequality, and shows what gets worse when rich and poor are too far apart: real effects on health, lifespan, even such
News | News
VA’s Peter to Paul plan riles Congress
Renovation of scores of Veterans Affairs Department projects would be put on hold to free up funds for over-budget Denver hospital construction, according to internal documents.
News | News
Economist: America Could (And Should) Tackle Inequality Now
Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz in a HuffPost Live conversation Wednesday said that young Americans face a lack of opportunity -- unless they come from a privileged background, that is....
News | News
Cost of housing soars: How high can it go?
The median price of a single-family home sold in March was up 8.7 percent, twice the gains housing was seeing a year ago. What's behind rising prices?
News | News
Vivian Nicholson, Rags-to-Riches-to-Rags Icon, Dies at 79
Mrs. Nicholson was just 25 when she won a sports bet that paid more than £150,000, the equivalent today of about $4.5 million, and her life inspired a musical and a BBC television film.
News | News
Azucar Bakery did not discriminate by refusing to make anti-gay cake: Colorado
Marjorie Silva, owner of Azucar Bakery in Denver, says she got the news on Friday but knows that Bill Jack, a Christian from Castle Rock, Colo., will likely appeal the decision. “Hopefully this will lead to a better world where we are friendly to each o
News | News
The Real Reason College Tuition Costs So Much
It’s not because states have cut funding for higher education.
News | News
Stanford just made tuition free for families earning less than $125,000 per year
Most universities can't do that. But they can all learn something from Stanford's policy.
News | News
California governor orders mandatory water restrictions
ECHO LAKE, Calif. (AP) — California Gov. Jerry Brown ordered state officials Wednesday to impose mandatory water restrictions for the first time in history as the state grapples with a serious drought.
News | News
How Giving Homes To The Homeless Reduces Homelessness
WASHINGTON -- For roughly 20 years, Mark Thompson lived alone in the woods, drifting between Maryland and Washington, D.C. He scraped by through odd jobs painting or landscaping, and also stealing. He drank and did drugs, and cycled in and out of jai...
News | News
As Oil Prices Fall, Airfares Still Stay High
Far from “hypercompetitive,” the airline industry nowadays is increasingly looking like an uncompetitive oligopoly.
News | News
Every Renter's Worst Nightmare Just Came True For This Woman
Find out why one landlord raised a San Franciscans rent to a ridiculous amount.
News | News
Why bees are disappearing
Honeybees have thrived for 50 million years, each colony 40 to 50,000 individuals coordinated in amazing harmony. So why, seven years ago, did colonies start dying en masse? Marla Spivak reveals four reasons which are interacting with tragic consequences.
News | News
Etsy’s Success Gives Rise to Problems of Credibility and Scale
The online marketplace and those who buy and sell on it say that imitation handmade goods, and rules restricting how popular vendors can grow to meet demand, are complicating the site’s drive for authenticity.
News | News
Renters Struggle To Find Affordable Homes Across The Country • SJS
A new report shows that the lowest income households in the U.S. are struggling to find affordable rental housing in every state across the country, as well as in the 50 most populous metropolitan areas. This situation is not likely to improve in the comi
News | News
Jewish cemetery in Los Angeles sued for throwing out remains
LOS ANGELES (AP) — One of the nation's largest Jewish cemeteries and the resting place of notables including Groucho Marx has been sued for allegedly breaking vaults to make room for more graves and throwing out human bones in a pile.
News | News
Germany Sets Gender Quota in Boardrooms
Germany passed a law Friday that requires some of Europe’s biggest companies to give 30 percent of supervisory seats to women beginning next year.
News | News
9 surprising industries getting filthy rich from mass incarceration
Private prison companies aren't the only ones benefiting from America's prison-industrial complex
News | News
LAPD Caught On Tape Shooting Homeless Man To Death
Los Angeles police fatally shot a homeless man on Sunday in a disturbing encounter that was caught on video. According to the Los Angeles Times, the man, whom witnesses called
News | News
Ruth Bader Ginsburg Has Perfect Response When Asked About Women On The Supreme Court
Ruth Bader Ginsburg dropped a truth bomb during a discussion at Georgetown University earlier this week. The 81-year-old Supreme Court justice, who has attained somewhat of a cult following for her stance on gender equality, told a gathering of la...
News | News
Elderly care home residents auctioned off by councils on 'eBay-style' website - Telegraph
Local authorities say the online-based system has helped cut costs by up to a fifth
News | News
Syrian Jihadists Are Using a Texas Plumber’s Truck to Shoot Down Aircraft. Here’s How They Got Their Hands on the Vehicle.
It's free advertising, but quite possibly the worst kind of free advertising. Mark Oberholtzer is a plumber from Texas City, Texas, who runs his own business. As the Daily Mail reported, Oberholtzer is not a jihadist fighting in Syria — he's n
News | News
Martin Place cafe siege
A HOSTAGE siege in central Sydney is continuing with as many as 50 people being held by a gunman at a popular cafe.
News | News
This is why girls are better than boys at school
As the new school year ramps up, teachers and parents need to be reminded of a well-kept secret: Across all grade levels and academic subjects, girls earn higher grades than boys. Not just in the United States, but across the globe, in countries as far af
News | News
Uber and Lyft Are Crushing the Taxi Companies the Disabled Rely On
After a night of partying, many responsible adults prefer to whip out their smartphone and order an Uber or a Lyft for a safe ride home instead of standing on a street corner and attempting to hail a taxi. But these popular car services aren’t an option
News | News
UC San Diego Named Among
They're not only happy at UC San Diego, they're apparently cool, too.
News | News
17 Things To Read If You're Trying To See All Sides Of The Israel-Gaza Conflict
You can be against the violence without being
News | News
Wall Street Analysts Predict The Slow Demise Of Walmart And Target
The end of the big-box store era may soon be upon us. That’s the message of a research note published by Goldman Sachs analysts on Tuesday cutting their investment rating on shares of Walmart. Shoppers are increasingly turning to the web or...
News | News
State Attorney General Investigating San Diego Opera
Letters were sent last week to the San Diego Opera's board asking for documents and data, including information about the
News | News
Intense El Niño May Be Developing (Photo)
El Niño conditions seem to be developing in the equatorial Pacific Ocean, data from satellites and ocean sensors indicate. A natural climate cycle that brings abnormally toasty temperatures to the Pacific Ocean, El Niño occurs when winds pile up warm wa
News | News
Medicare trying to help reduce overpayment to hospices for drugs not related to end-of-life care
New guidance is being enacted to help sort out who pays for drugs not related to terminal illnesses.
News | News
Medical Price Gouging and Waste Are Skyrocketing
14 hospitals in the United States are charging more than ten times their costs for treatment. Specifically, for every $100 one of these hospitals spends, the charge on the corresponding bill is nearly $1,200.
News | News
Online Education Degrees and Programs | US News Online Education
Some school districts require their teachers to have a master’s degree within five years of entering the profession, so earning an education degree online can be an important step toward career growth for both current and future educators.
News | News
Most Underreported Stories of 2013 | What Matters Today, What We're Reading | BillMoyers.com
As 2013 comes to an end, we asked editors, journalists and friends of BillMoyers.com: What story deserved more attention this year?
News | News
Women pilots of WWII will get grand recognition in Rose Parade
For so many years, their service was largely forgotten.
News | News
60- and 40-Watt Bulbs Banned for 2014: What You Need to Know
In order to comply with efficiency standards outlined in the Energy and Security Act, which was signed into law by President George Bush in 2007, it will be illegal to manufacture or import them after December 31. More on Yahoo: Three Ways to Save Money o
News | News
Hold On; Mandala Was Just An Ordinary Guy • Social Justice Solutions
…who chose to do extraordinary things. With the passing of Nelson Mandela I’m afraid that like so many great people before him, his message will be remembered intellectually but will fail to move enough of us to actually DO and … Conti
News | News
Lapchick: Remembering, missing Mandela
This is a day Richard Lapchick hoped would never come. The loss of Nelson Mandela is impossible to measure.
News | News
Voices: Mandela's impact on the world
We owe Nelson Mandela an inexpressible debt. In partial payment, some thoughts from writers and activists about his impact on the world, including the world of sports.
News | News
Prominent Judge Files Complaint Against UCLA Police
After a series of instances of racial discrimination including retailers profiling African-American customers and police misconduct, the latest incident involves a complaint against the University of California, Los Angeles police.
News | News
Men in kilts want to clean your windows
Some guys in kilts want to help with the household chores—and they do windows. Yes, such a business is being built, and it hopes its kilt-clad lads will “stick out”—though of course not literally.
News | News
Etsy: Putting America to Work One Knitted Potholder at a Time
Etsy may be known as a hipster shopping mecca but a new venture with the city of Rockford, IL has the company moving into philanthropy too.
News | News
A Bewitching Look at Migration Patterns Among American States
Who would've thought that the state New Yorkers move to the most is Florida?
News | News
Google Street View Team Traumatized By Florida's Nude Beaches
It sounds like a dream assignment, but the team hired by Google to hike all 825 miles of Florida's coastline says it was a more trying task than they expected. Especially the nude beaches.
News | News
These are the 50 smartest colleges in the U.S. (and #1 will surprise you)
Forget the Ivy League and Stanford -- the smartest college in America is not what you might think.
News | News
Batkid wows San Francisco
View the Batkid wows San Francisco photo gallery on Yahoo News. Find more news related pictures in our photo galleries.