News

A bright moon will make it hard to see the Perseid meteor shower in mid-August, but one night this week offers a decent ...
"What is it like to be a teen right now?" Young artists explored that question for two different exhibitions of their work ...
Steve Inskeep speaks with former US Secretary for Transportation Pete Buttigieg about distrust in government and the status ...
Ceasefire talks have started between Thai and Cambodian leaders in Malaysia in an urgent effort to resolve deadly border ...
A landlord sentenced to decades in prison after he killed a Palestinian American boy and wounded his mother has died.
NPR looks at how President Trump's actions have created a tension in Washington over who is responsible for the various aspects of the government.
In the mid-'70s, Jack McAuliffe co-founded the first microbrewery in the U.S. since Prohibition. He died earlier this month at the age of 80.
A growing movement of events — called Repair Fairs — want to help people learn to fix their broken things and, in turn, keep them out of landfills. NPR visits an event in northern New York.
After days of global outrage at Israel's restrictions on aid to Gaza, the Israeli military said it would revive aid airdrops. Israel said it is also pausing fighting for 10 hours a day in some areas.
NPR's A Martinez speaks with Mayor Alyia Gaskins of Alexandria, Va., about President Trump's executive order that makes it easier for cities to remove homeless people from the streets.
NPR speaks with investigative journalist Vicky Ward about the life of the late financier Jeffrey Epstein, as well as her impressions of him. Ward profiled Epstein for "Vanity Fair" in 2003.
NPR's Michel Martin talks with Amjad Al Shawa, veteran humanitarian worker confined to northern Gaza, about what starvation looks like there and how his own family is struggling.