News

All but two Senate Republicans voted to cut $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which funds NPR and ...
Virginia is a data hot spot. It has the world's highest concentration of data centers — nearly 600 facilities of varying ...
Bove's nomination to the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals now moves to the full Senate. Scores of former DOJ lawyers and retired ...
Residents of the agricultural town of Pescadero in San Mateo County have long dealt with the issue of flooding. But what ...
Connie Francis has died. The first female singer to chart a number-one single on the Billboard Hot 100, she sold over 40 ...
For more than a decade, photographer Pablo Unzueta has used his camera to capture the rich cultural and political tapestry of ...
A small, hairy, toxic version of the cucumbers found in the produce aisle does have an advantage over its more palatable ...
Alameda County held the first of these job fairs in July of 2024. Employers from non-profits to national corporations showed ...
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.
The Trump administration's handling of what are known as the Epstein files has been creating a firestorm within the president's MAGA base. NPR recaps a timeline of the controversy.
A stampede in Gaza left around 20 people dead as they were rushing to collect food at a U.S.- and Israeli-backed food distribution site.