News

Connie Francis has died. The first female singer to chart a number-one single on the Billboard Hot 100, she sold over 40 ...
The Senate voted to approve a rescission package that claws back funds allocated for public media and foreign aid. And, ...
Virginia is a data hot spot. It has the world's highest concentration of data centers — nearly 600 facilities of varying ...
The weather system moving across the Florida Panhandle on Wednesday was showing a greater chance of becoming a tropical ...
Israel said it struck military targets in Syria's capital to intervene after Syrian and Bedouin fighting against the Druze in ...
Police found Robin Kaye and her husband, Thomas Deluca, shot to death in their Encino home Monday. They arrested a ...
NPR's Steve Inskeep and Michel Martin speak with David Isay, founder and president of StoryCorps, about the Senate vote to cut funding for public broadcasting.
Israel launched airstrikes Wednesday on Syria's capital of Damascus, saying it targeted the Syrian military headquarters and near the presidential palace in response to attacks on the Druze minority.
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Loretta Mester, former president of the Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank, on President Trump's pressure on Fed Chair Jerome Powell.
Marc Maron is proud of his run as host of his podcast, WTF. And because of that, he's bringing it to a close. He wants to avoid it becoming just another show "feeding the garbage bin of content." ...
The Senate Judiciary Committee is set to vote on a controversial judicial nominee who's courted controversy at the Justice Department this year.
NPR's Steve Inskeep asks John Dinkelman, new president of the American Foreign Service Association, about how layoffs will affect the State Department and American diplomacy.