News

North Carolina has a tradition of divided government, and the competition between the two parties over things like DEI, gun laws, and transgender care heated up this week.
U.S. aid cuts have stoked the existing malnutrition crisis in northern Nigeria as treatment centers are forced to shut with the loss of U.S. support.
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Kit Miyamoto, an engineer specializing in disaster recovery, about U.S. readiness following the major earthquake off the Pacific coast of Russia.
An NPR reporter goes searching for the perfect swimming hole in New York's Adirondack Mountains.
A new study from Oxford University finds that a common European songbird sometimes divorces its partner between breeding ...
Gaza faces a severe risk of famine, with food consumption and nutrition indicators at their worst levels since the conflict began, according to a Integrated Food Security Phase Classification Alert.
A growing number of American Jews whose parents and grandparents fled Germany during World War II are now getting German citizenship, in part because of political concerns in the United States.
Wildlife officials hope genetic tests will help reveal how invasive crayfish got to a state fish hatchery in Mattawan.
President Trump's critics accuse him of breaking or ignoring norms. But, others say he may just be treating them differently than past presidents.
A dating app, Tea, that was created to privately share information has been breached -- twice. We learn more about the user information that was hacked.
Before departing Scotland, President Trump inaugurated a new golf course he owns, named after his Scottish-born mother. NPR spoke to some of Trump's new neighbors.
Compounding pharmacies are crimping sales of Novo Nordisk's obesity drug Wegovy by making what are essentially copies of the ...