News

The agency's annual human rights reports are being purged of references to prison conditions, political corruption and other ...
The Trump administration's dramatic staffing cuts at federal lands agencies like the Forest Service are causing anxiety in ...
DHS said it was conducting wellness checks on students who arrived unaccompanied to the border. The head of the Los Angeles ...
Trump issued an executive order on day one of his administration that sought to limit birthright citizenship, an idea widely ...
Michael Roth, Wesleyan University's first Jewish president, says the Trump administration is using antisemitism as a "cloak" ...
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Steven Dunn founder and CEO of Munchkin a U.S.-based company selling lifestyle products ...
President Trump lashed out at Powell for not acting sooner to lower interest rates. The president's own tariffs make that ...
According to Dr. Larue, the human voice is crucial to excellent, effective poetry. Since AI lacks this quality, it’s easy to ...
NPR science podcast Short Wave brings us the stories of how Fiddler crabs drum their mating songs into the sand, growing chicken nuggets in the lab, and a drug like LSD -- without the trip.
Texas Senate Bill 762 stipulates that students, teachers, and others on public school campuses could be fined $500 for each day an unapproved flag [Pride, Black Lives Matter] is displayed after ...
A study in JAMA says young women, age 18 to 25, are binge drinking slightly more than men the same age. The good news: Drinking is down for both young men and women compared to earlier generations.
NPR's Michel Martin asks Elliot Williams, former DOJ assistant attorney general, about the strategies and tactics used by Trump administration attorneys in their response to recent court orders.