News

In a new book, writer Suleika Jaouad explains why journaling is a form of alchemy — and offers tips on how to reignite your ...
The Trump administration's overhaul of the U.S. asylum and refugee systems has taken a toll on people fleeing religious ...
More than 200 people have been fired at the Department of Justice this year. Sometimes, for reasons they don't even know. That's transforming the workforce a the DOJ.
NPR's A Martinez speaks with school social worker Kia Baker and educator Melvin Bond about how parents in Baltimore struggle to keep up with the rising cost of school supplies.
The threat of 50% tariffs on all goods coming from Brazil has growers and producers in the South American country on edge.
The Supreme Court majority is advancing a long-term goal of conservatives to strengthen presidential power. NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with John Yoo, a proponent of "unitary executive theory." ...
The National Transportation Safety Board began an investigative hearing with new details into last January's midair collision between an Army helicopter and an American Airlines regional jet.
Steve Witkoff, United States Special Envoy to the Middle East, is making his first trip to Israel in six months, at a moment when the U.N. warns Gaza is on the verge of all out famine.
Both countries said they would make the formal announcement at the UN General Assembly in New York in September.
Brown University will pay $50 million to Rhode Island workforce development organizations in a deal with the Trump administration that restores lost federal research funding, officials said Wednesday.
Several factors help determine whether a given earthquake will generate a dangerous tsunami, but the process is not yet fully ...
Labor leader Jimmy Hoffa vanished 50 years ago. What happened remains a mystery as Hoffa's legend has grown. There have been ...