Olympics opening ceremonies tend to get more love than their closing counterparts. But a pair of NPR reporters who watched ...
The U.S. Secret Service says the man carried a gas can and shotgun before agents shot and killed him early Sunday morning.
New Jersey through Massachusetts could see 2 feet of snow. New York City's mayor said the city had not "seen a storm like ...
The Mexican army killed the leader of the powerful Jalisco New Generation Cartel, Nemesio Rubén Oseguera Cervantes, "El ...
An inmate who was imprisoned for 21 years in Syria's notorious Sadnaya prison shows NPR's Jane Arraf the concrete cells where he was held.
The TSA said Sunday that its PreCheck program would remain operational despite an earlier announcement the airport security ...
This week's challenge comes from Greg VanMechelen, of Berkeley, California. Name something you don't want to have at night ...
The "Pledge America Campaign" urges broadcasters to focus on programming that highlights "the historic accomplishments of ...
NPR's Emily Kwong speaks with Sadeqa Johnson about her new novel THE KEEPER OF LOST CHILDREN and discovering the story of mixed-race children who were left in German orphanages following World War II.
Some U.S. Olympians at the Winter Games spend most of their lives overseas, training and putting down roots in the countries they compete against.
Tariffs, DHS funding and international tensions are expected to be at the heart of the president's State of the Union speech to Congress this week.
Father Andriy Zelinskyy, a chaplain in wartime Ukraine, talks about what he sees in the trenches and what he's learned about the fragility of humanity, years into the war with Russia.