Toyota scales back Japan production over chips, parts crunch
Japan’s top automaker Toyota will scale back domestic production over the next three months because of a supply crunch in chips and other parts that have slammed the global auto industry
Japan’s top automaker Toyota will scale back domestic production over the next three months because of a supply crunch in chips and other parts that have slammed the global auto industry
Michael Gove to set out on Monday details of new ‘sponsored’ humanitarian route to UK
Russian forces are continuing their offensive toward Kyiv on Friday from the northwest and east
As the musician and artist’s cult TV series ‘Painting With John’ returns, he tells Kevin E G Perry about going viral in Russia, New York in the Eighties and how he hopes to inspire his viewers with his unorthodox art show
The film’s voice stars – Sandra Oh and Rosalie Chiang – and its creators talk to Clarisse Loughrey about smashing taboos around puberty, finding your voice, and working with Billie Eilish on the soundtrack
‘A zero-pollution, non-toxic environment must be more than a slick slogan’
The U_N_ Security Council will meet Friday at Russia’s request to discuss what Moscow claims are “the military biological activities of the U_S_ on the territory of Ukraine.”
Animal rights activists praised an annual rattlesnake roundup in south Georgia that recently changed the format of this month’s event to celebrate living snakes without skinning and butchering them
With wins in four out of five states, Narendra Modi’s BJP tightens hold on India ahead of national polls in 2024
Bombardment of Ukrainian cities could increase risk of disease spread if public health labs are damaged
Eleven years after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was ravaged by a meltdown following a massive earthquake and tsunami, most of the radioactive debris blasted by hydrogen explosions has been cleared and torn buildings fixed
Couple’s daughter was born via a surrogate
Author also offered updates on further books and shows set in the world of Westeros
The giant American Rescue Plan that provides $1.9 trillion in pandemic relief turns one year old on Friday
As Western leaders congratulate themselves for their speedy and severe responses to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, they’re also scratching their heads with uncertainty about what their actions will accomplish
The mayor of Portland, Oregon, recently banned camping on the sides of certain roadways, and officials are exploring other aggressive options to combat homelessness
At least two million people — around half its population — have fled Kyiv, says mayor Vitali Klitschko
Smollett has been sentenced to 150 days in prison
Majorities of Americans in both major parties think voting rules in their states are appropriate and support a voter identification law, but Democrats are increasingly worried about progress in voting rights for Black Americans
On the two-year anniversary of the start of the pandemic, people are shedding their masks and getting back to normal as COVID-19 deaths and cases plummet
Shares have fallen in Asia as uncertainty over the war in Ukraine and persistently high inflation keep their sway over markets
‘The stuff which you are hearing about chemical weapons is straight out of the Russian playbook’
Japan’s Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and South Korea’s president-elect Yoon Suk Yeol talked on the phone Friday, agreeing to cooperate toward improving their countries’ ties, signaling a thaw in their icy relations strained by wartime history disputes
A Texas judge is holding a hearing on whether to prevent state officials from investigating reports of transgender youth receiving gender confirming care as child abuse
A judge is set to consider a request to move the trial of a Milwaukee man accused of driving his SUV into a Wisconsin Christmas parade, killing six people and injuring scores more