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Israel's President Isaac Herzog spoke with NPR in his official residence in Jerusalem on Wednesday, as President Trump was ...
Omaha just elected its first Black mayor, giving this year's Juneteenth celebrations new energy. The city wants to mark the occasion by being a model for unity during a time of divisiveness.
On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court upheld laws in roughly half the states that ban transgender medical care for minors. The vote was 6-to-3, along ideological lines.
There's renewed interest in using nuclear energy to supply electricity after years of stagnation. Now, Michigan wants to restart a shut down plant. Analysts say in most cases, that won't be possible.
The 988 Suicide and Crisis Prevention Lifeline included a service that provided specialized suicide prevention support by ...
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Kate Johnson from the University of Virginia women's volleyball team about how the NCAA's plan to backpay college athletes could lead to pay inequity.
Read was accused of hitting her boyfriend with her car and leaving him to die in a snowstorm, but alleged she was the victim ...
Republicans in the U.S. Senate have proposed a major sell-off of public lands throughout the West as part of their budget ...
Congress banned the app in the U.S., citing national security concerns and demanding it spin off from its Chinese owner, ByteDance. Trump said he'll once again pause enforcement of the ban.
Trustees of the Social Security trust fund predict the fund will be exhausted in eight years. Unless Congress acts, Social ...
The leaders of Iran are warning that any American intervention in Israeli missile strikes on its nuclear sites would lead to all out war.
Once allies, the United States and Iran have had a tense relationship for more than 40 years. Host Asma Khalid looks at that history as Israel and Iran strike one another and President Trump weighs ...
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