News
The formal announcement is expected ahead of a Tuesday night rally in Michigan marking the president's 100 days in office. It ...
Columbus Day is still a federal holiday — though some no longer want to celebrate the Italian explorer, and many ...
Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez said a nationwide blackout of this scale had never happened before in Spain. He added ...
As questions swirl around the fate of the secretary of defense, former colleagues paint a troubling picture of Hegseth's ...
The historic Clayborn Temple was destroyed in a Monday morning fire in Memphis. It was a landmark of the Civil Rights movement and was a gathering place of striking sanitation workers in 1968.
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Jill Escher, president of the National Council on Severe Autism, about Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy's remarks this month on autism.
Print artist Ana Inciardi is making vending machines fun again. Instead of snacks, Inciardi's devices produce prints you can collect for the low price of four quarters.
Deaf students are less likely to find jobs in the sciences, health care or teaching. For years, the U.S. government tried to change that. But the grant program to help was just ended by the Trump ...
Fifty years after the end of the Vietnam War, one Seattle man embarks on a journey to a remote mountain in Laos where his father was last seen during a secret mission in the war.
Power is slowly coming back on in large swaths of Spain and Portugal after a power outage caused Monday afternoon chaos.
NPR's Juana Summers talks with USA Today reporter Tyler Dragon about quarterback Shedeur Sanders, who was projected to be drafted by the NFL in the 2nd or 3rd round — and wasn't picked until the 5th.
In his first interview since being detained, pro-Palestinian advocate Mohsen Mahdawi tells NPR he was arrested after arriving for what he thought was a citizenship test.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results