News

Colorado River states appear to be coalescing around the early makings of a new plan to share water in a way that accounts ...
"I'm a die-hard Bond fan," Denis Villeneuve says. The Quebecois filmmaker's hiring comes as a relief to British 007 fans who ...
How did a little known assemblyman become the presumptive Democratic nominee for mayor of New York City? NPR's A Martinez ...
From Pride Month celebrations to 90-year-old athletes, this week’s stories spotlight LGBTQ history, outdoor adventure, and ...
Salvadoran journalist Mario Guevara is currently in Immigration and Customs Enforcement custody. The Committee to Protect ...
Erika Mahoney's father, Kevin, was one of 10 murdered in the King Soopers shooting in Boulder in 2021. She has produced a new ...
The former leader of FAIR, the Federation for American Immigration Reform, Dan Stein, retired this year after more than 40 at ...
With a billboard in Times Square and a night on Broadway, the year's top high school performers are ready for their big ...
After 104 days in a Louisiana immigration detention center, Columbia graduate student Mahmoud Khalil has been released on bail.
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Farzan Sabet, of the Geneva Graduate Institute, about the impact U.S. military strikes had on Iran's nuclear capabilities.
In the U.S., reaction from Iranian-Americans to Saturday's bombings in Iran is a mix of fear and concern. We speak with people in Los Angeles, which has a large population of Iranian-Americans.
NPR's Andrew Limbong speaks with journalist Robin Wright, who's written extensively on Iranian politics, about what the U.S. strike on Iran could mean for both countries.