News
President Trump said the Washington Commanders should change their name back to their former name, which many Indigenous ...
The agency is closing the Office of Research and Development, which analyzes dangers posed by hazards including toxic ...
Jane Austen fans are celebrating 250 years since the writer's birth with a series of celebrations – including Georgian ...
Dozens of Palestinians were killed across Gaza on Sunday as they tried to get food aid, according to local health authorities ...
Fauja retired from marathons in 2013, and moved back to India around 2022. Locals often invited him to sporting events. "He'd ...
The government of the tiny African kingdom of Lesotho has declared a two-year state of disaster, as its once-thriving garment ...
Congress voted to claw back federal funding to public media. Some of those hit hardest include community radio stations in ...
A new report from the group Common Sense Media shows teens are experimenting with AI "companions" designed to provide deep ...
Officials in a Texas hill country community pummeled by deadly flooding July 4 said Saturday that just three people remain ...
If it feels like there is an influx of political ads right now, it's because there are. We look at why the ads are everywhere and who is paying for them.
NPR's Adrian Ma talks to Adam Aleksic about his new book, "Algospeak," which looks at how algorithms and online creators are affecting the way people speak offline.
NPR's Adrian Ma talks to former top defense official Jim Townsend about the significance of President Trump's new agreement to send weapons to Ukraine.
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results