News

At least 19 Kentuckians died and dozens more were injured after a tornado struck the southeast part of the state last week.
The U.S. has officially accepted a luxury jetliner from Qatar as a gift, and slated it to become a new Air Force One. Experts ...
Nina Badzin, host of a friendship podcast, explains why staying friends with people from our past matters — and how to ...
Everyone has a list of so-called "red flags" when they're dating. And for some, especially younger Americans, different ...
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Daniel Shapiro, former U.S. ambassador to Israel and distinguished fellow at the Atlantic ...
The judge says the administration "unquestionably" violated his earlier order, which stated migrants cannot be deported to a ...
The suit claims that efforts to get sensitive information about food aid recipients from states violates federal privacy laws ...
DOGE attempted to assign a team to the Government Accountability Office, an influential congressional watchdog agency. It ...
Advisers to the Food and Drug Administration met Thursday to help decide which variant of the virus that causes COVID should ...
In 2020, Jerome Richardson co-founded the Minnesota Teen Activists, a student group in the Twin Cities. We first spoke with him in 2021, just after Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was found ...
The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday granted the Trump administration's emergency request to fire the heads of two independent agencies. But the decision is technically a temporary one.
Michel Martin asks civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump about changes in the legal landscape in the years since a former Minneapolis police officer was convicted of murder in George Floyd's death.