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 NEWS: NPR HEADLINE NEWS
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   NEWS: NPR HEADLINE NEWS
NPR Headline News
Jun 14, 2025

Military parade marches on DC streets Saturday evening


NPR Headline News
Jun 14, 2025

U.S. Senator Tina Smith reacts to Minnesota shootings


NPR Headline News
Jun 14, 2025

Gunman dressed as police officer kills prominent Minnesota lawmaker
In a shocking, apparent assassination, authorities say a gunman dressed as a police officer kill a prominent Minnesota lawmaker and her husband in her home, wounded another politician and his wife in another home and had other political targets in mind

NPR Headline News
Jun 14, 2025

No Kings protests take place across the country


NPR Headline News
Jun 14, 2025

Archbishop of Chicago discusses tonight's Mass at Rate Field
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich

NPR Headline News
Jun 14, 2025

Podcast series explores how LGBT people were treated during the Nazi era
NPR's Scott Detrow

NPR Headline News
Jun 14, 2025

Reporting on Medicaid in Kentucky
NPR's Scott Detrow

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Early voting for NYC's mayoral primary election begins this weekend
Eleven Democrats are running to replace New York City Mayor Eric Adams, who is running as an independent and bypassing the primary. Early voting for the primary election begins this weekend.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Here's what to expect for tomorrow's military parade
Saturday is the day of the big military parade in Washington. Amid the spectacle will be a jump by the Army's Golden Knights parachute team.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

DHS missed alert on Boulder attacker
Mohammed Soliman tried to buy a gun to attack people in Boulder, Colo., who support Israeli hostages. His application was denied, and DHS was notified but did not follow up on that information.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Why the Catholic bishop of Nashville told Catholics they don't have to attend Mass
The Diocese of Nashville has told Catholics that they do not have to attend Mass if they fear for their safety. That's in response immigration actions taken by the Trump administration in the city.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

A look ahead at the Club World Cup
The Club World Cup men's soccer tournament is set to kick off across the U.S. on Saturday, with some of the top teams around the world competing for a brand new trophy — and a whole lot of cash.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

5 years in, is the NBA's Basketball Africa League catching on with African fans?
The Basketball Africa League crowns a new champion this weekend, marking the venture's fifth anniversary. But can the NBA-backed league turn courtside glam and pan-African buzz into lasting success?

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

'Death at the White Hart': When the publican is found dead, everyone's a suspect
NPR's Mary Louise talks with Chris Chibnall, author of Death at the White Hart.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

What if being Mr 305 was a state of mind?
Imagine a room full of people in bald caps dancing joyfully.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

What if being Mr. 305 was a state of mind?
Pitbull fans are honoring him the only way they know how: partying till dawn in bald caps and fake goatees.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Appliances face steel tariffs
Listen up if you're hoping to upgrade your kitchen: Tariffs are coming for your refrigerators, dishwashers and other home appliances.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Bruce the bat dog gets called up to the Major League
Most baseball legends get their start in the minor league. Bruce the Bat dog got the news this week that he's getting called up to the majors.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Consequences for colleges whose students carry mountains of debt? Republicans say yes
House Republicans are considering a plan that would force colleges and universities to reimburse the government for a share of the federal loans their students don't repay.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Iran launches missiles after Israel's attack
Israel launched a massive attack on Iran, striking nuclear sites and killing top military commanders. In response, Iran has launched at least 100 missiles at Israel.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Where presidential tariff power comes from
President Trump's tariffs are facing challenges in courts. At the heart of those cases is a question about where presidential tariff power comes from. Here's the story of the limits of tariff power.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

The Israeli entrepreneur behind the controversial food distribution program in Gaza
Israeli entrepreneur Shahar Segal is behind two well-known food ventures. One is a sensation: a restaurant group with a Michelin star. The other is a controversy: a program in Gaza mired in violence.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Authorities say they've found the black box of plane involved in India crash
A day after a plane crash that killed at least 240 people, India's state-run media reports that its aviation watchdog has ordered Air India to undertake extra safety checks on its Boeing 787 planes.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Israel expands strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities
Early satellite imagery appears to show some damage at Iran's main site.

NPR Headline News
Jun 13, 2025

Why taking apart buildings piece by piece is a climate solution
Deconstruction is a growing approach to taking down homes that diverts waste from landfills, cuts carbon emissions and creates a circular economy for construction materials.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

Israel strikes Iran and braces for retaliation
Israel launched an airstrike on Iran overnight. Blasts were heard in the capital Tehran around 3am local time. Israel's defense ministry warned it expects missile and drone retaliation.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

House narrowly passes bill to claw back $1.1 billion from public media
The House of Representatives voted to claw back two years of federal funding for public broadcasting Thursday in a largely party line vote. The bill heads to the Senate next.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

House to vote on package of funding cuts affecting public media and international aid
The U.S. House of Representatives is scheduled to vote on a package of funding cuts that would affect public media and international aid.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

What's behind the rise in wearable health tracking devices
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Adam Clark Estes of Vox about his new story out titled: "I Covered my body in health trackers for 6 months. It ruined my life."

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

This week in science: humans' unique breathing, droughts and the diets of dinosaurs
Regina Barber and Rachel Carlson of Short Wave talk about humans' unique breathing patterns, how a hotter planet worsens droughts, and the diets of dinosaurs.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

This California block tried to quit fossil fuels. Here's what they learned
A project spearheaded by UC Berkeley researchers provides free electric appliances and solar panels to people. In exchange, researchers learn what works in an attempt to electrify on a larger scale.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

DHS official says immigration raids in LA will continue, despite the ongoing protests
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with assistant Secretary for Border and Immigration Policy Tony Pham — also a former acting director of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

Sen. Padilla was removed from DHS presser and briefly handcuffed
California Sen. Alex Padilla was forcibly removed from the press conference after entering the room and trying to speak with the Secretary of Homeland Security.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

Online sales of obesity drug alternatives carry on despite FDA deadlines
Since the FDA said shortages of Wegovy and Zepbound are over, compounding pharmacies are supposed to stop making copies of the drugs. But some of those business are trying to find ways to continue.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

Republican efforts to cut green energy credits meets resistance in the Senate
A small number of Senate Republicans are pushing back on their own party's plans to cut green energy credits that were approved under former President Biden.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

Saturday's military parade will be the first in D.C. since 1991's Victory Celebration
The last time the United States held a national military parade was in June 1991, timed to welcome returning veterans of the 100-day Persian Gulf War.

NPR Headline News
Jun 12, 2025

The U.S. will tax tomatoes from Mexico. It could mean higher prices for consumers
On July 14, the U.S. is set to impose a 21 percent anti-dumping duty on fresh tomatoes imported from Mexico, and the U.S. food industry fears that prices at grocery stores and restaurants will go up.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

RFK Jr.'s SNAP changes have people worried about losing benefits altogether
Over 20 states are trying to bar people from using food assistance to buy candy and soda, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has said he'll expand the ban. Some recipients fear they may lose aid altogether.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

The flag of Mexico has emerged as a symbol at the L.A. protests
Some protesters in LA have been waving the Mexican flag, drawing criticism from conservatives. The flag's use in such protests is fraught, and criticism often comes from the pro-immigrant movement.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

The GOP megabill could cost trillions, putting focus on fiscal conservatism rhetoric
President Trump's signature domestic policy bill is estimated to add trillions to the deficit. And that's putting new focus on Republicans and their rhetoric about fiscal conservatism.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

Nick Kroll and Andrew Rannells explain how 'I Don't Understand You' got made
The comedy horror film I Don't Understand You follows a couple's pre-adoption Italian vacation gone wrong in every way. NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks to the movie's stars, Andrew Rannells and Nick Kroll.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

Should you track your blood sugar with a continuous glucose monitor?
A continuous glucose monitor is a small device that sticks to your arm. Every few minutes it sends a signal to your phone estimating your blood sugar levels. But can it improve your health?

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

She served the American people for 35 years. Now her retirement income is on the line
President Trump's "Big Beautiful Bill" making its way through Congress includes a significant cut to federal employees' retirement benefits.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

What's behind the rhetoric about the protests in LA?
The rhetoric used by President Trump and pro-MAGA media is conflating words like "insurrection" and "invasion." Those terms also have specific legal meaning to justify using the military.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

Jennifer Lyell, Southern Baptist sexual abuse whistle-blower, dies at 47
Jennifer Lyell, a prominent whistleblower within the Southern Baptist Convention who brought national attention to sexual abuse within the church, has died. She suffered from a series of strokes.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

Nine months after Hurricane Helene, volunteers are helping families access homes
In North Carolina, volunteers are re-building bridges that were swept away during Hurricane Helene. The bridges will finally allow access to houses that have been cut off by the storm for nine months.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

L.A. is quiet a day after downtown curfew
Things are quiet in Los Angeles the day after Mayor Karen Bass instituted a curfew for a small portion of downtown.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

'Pink Pony Club' carries the Oilers
This NHL playoff season a good luck charm for the Edmonton Oilers has been Chappel Roan's hit song Pink Pony Club.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

How the Los Angeles protests fit into conservative immigration strategy
Simon Hankinson, senior research fellow in the Border Security and Immigration Center at The Heritage Foundation, talks with NPR's Mary Louise Kelly about federal efforts to enforce immigration law.

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

In Miami, deportations are raising concerns among Cuban-Americans
South Florida's Cuban-American community supports President Trump, but some members are uneasy with his immigration policies. "I'm not for deporting people without criminal records."

NPR Headline News
Jun 11, 2025

Where public opinion stands on Trump's immigration policy
Protests around the country continue and the Trump administration forges ahead with its aggressive immigration enforcement. Here's where public opinion stands on immigration.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

States with looser firearm laws saw a rise in gun-related deaths in kids, study shows
Children and teens in states with the most permissive gun laws are more likely to die in shootings than those in states with strict laws, a new study in JAMA Pediatrics shows.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Despite high stakes, some Iranians greet U.S. nuclear deal news with a shrug
President Trump has launched high-stakes talks with Iran over its nuclear program, but ordinary Iranians are unmoved.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Pakistan used Chinese weapons in its fight with India. The impact may be far-reaching
For the first time, a Chinese fighter plane made a debut in an active conflict. Pakistani pilots manned the Chinese J-10c during four days of clashes against India in May.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Grab your fishnets and cowboy boots for this queer line dancing night in NYC
Cowboy boots and fishnets might not feel like a natural pairing. But at this weekly queer line dancing night in New York City, that's almost the uniform.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Some states are seeing an increase in fraudulent odometer rollbacks on used cars
Looking to buy a used car? Check out the odometer. Some states are seeing an increase in fraudulent odometer rollbacks.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Country artist Orville Peck talks about hitting pause on his career to get sober
Orville Peck is a country music singer known for keeping some secrets -- performing under a stage name and a mask. He talked with Rachel Martin about hitting pause on his career to get sober.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Former CDC employees protest against dismantling of public health
Every Tuesday, protesters gather outside the CDC in Atlanta to point out possible public health dangers due to drastic federal cuts.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

After 150 years, a J.M.W. Turner painting resurfaces
Lost and tucked away in a private collection for over 150 years, one of J.M.W. Turner's earliest oil paintings has been rediscovered.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Trump's efforts to cut National Parks budget faces bipartisan pushback
President Trump wants to cut hundreds of millions of dollars from the National Park Service budget this year and much more next year. The effort is facing bipartisan criticism.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Retired Marine Corps. leader concerned about military deployment in LA
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with retired U.S. Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Walter Gaskin about President Trump's activation of Marines and what comes with following orders on American streets.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Retired Marine raises concerns over growing military response in L.A.
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with retired U.S. Marine Corps Lt. Gen. Walter Gaskin about President Trump's activation of Marines and what comes with following orders on American streets.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

The Los Angeles ICE raids are changing how immigrant communities go about their lives
Amid ongoing raids in Los Angeles, many immigrants are afraid to leave their homes. We hear what that's looking like from residents, workers and business owners in the San Fernando Valley.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

New Israeli-armed militia emerges in Gaza
A new anti-Hamas militia, comprising looters and criminals in Gaza, has emerged in Gaza with arms from Israel.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Women who want to be Catholic deacons are hopeful about Pope Leo XIV. Here's why
Those who've been advocating for women deacons in the Catholic Church are taking stock of the possibility under the papacy of Pope Leo XIV.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

A new father finds comfort in a doctor's words of advice
In 2019, Darren Wayman was about to become a new father. He was terrified. Then, a doctor came into the delivery room and said something that changed his perspective on parenthood.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

HHS head RFK Jr. is removing all members of a key CDC vaccine policy committee
Health and Human Services head, RFK Jr, is replacing all current members of CDC vaccine advisory committee. We discuss the potential impact on public health policy.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

New hope in the fentanyl fight after a decade of young Americans dying
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with addiction correspondent Brian Mann about the drop in overdose deaths among teens and young adults in the U.S.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

'Kill Your Darlings' untangles the secrets couple keep for - and from - one another
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks to author Peter Swanson about his new mystery novel, Kill Your Darlings, which explores the reasons behind a poet's act of murder against her own husband.

NPR Headline News
Jun 10, 2025

Bolsonaro takes the stand in historic Brazil coup trial
Brazil's former President Jair Bolsonaro took the stand Tuesday, accused of plotting a coup to cling to power after losing the 2022 election. It's the first time a former Brazilian leader is being tried for attempting to overthrow the government.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

California governor says Trump is sowing 'more chaos' by ordering Marines to LA
Gov. Gavin Newsom, D-Calif., told NPR that the deployment of National Guard troops in Los Angeles by President Trump is "an illegal act."

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Per California Gov. Newsom, Trump order to send in Guard affects all states
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Gov. Gavin Newsom, D-Calif., about the protests in his state and the federal government's decision to send in the National Guard.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Low turnout causes Italy's referendum on citizenship and job protections to fail
An Italian referendum on granting faster citizenship to immigrants has failed due to low voter turnout. Italy's right-wing government was against it and tried to boycott the democratic process.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Amid conflict, a cultural blockade remains between India and Pakistan
Social media is one of the few places where India and Pakistan can come together. But during the most serious escalation between the two nuclear powers in decades, content was censored .

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

A self-driving car startup is taking on the streets of Lima
In Lima, a city known for some of the world's wildest traffic, a Peruvian startup is testing driverless cars.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

The reaction as Trump's travel ban on citizens from a dozen countries takes effect
President Trump's travel ban on citizens from 12 countries went into effect today. Reaction to the ban has been more muted than to the bans of Trump's first term.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

American science and technology may suffer if U.S. revokes visas for Chinese students
The Trump administration said it would begin to "aggressively" revoke visas from Chinese students with connections to China's ruling Communist Party or who were studying in fields deemed critical.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

A seismic shift on clay: Carlos Alcaraz emerges the victor at French Open Final
The French Open started with a tearful farewell to the phenomenon that was Rafael Nadal — 14 time winner in Paris.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Spanish Flamenco thrives in New Mexico, with its own unique flavor
Albuquerque is home to the biggest flamenco gathering in the world outside Spain. One family has a lot to do with New Mexico embracing the art form.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Trump federalized the National Guard in L.A. Are more troops next?
Over the weekend, President Trump ordered 2,000 National Guard soldiers to Los Angeles, where people are protesting federal immigration raids.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Enlisting the national guard in deportation is a 'dangerous path' says former chief
NPR's Juana Summers talks with retired Major General Randy Manner, former Acting Vice Chief of the National Guard Bureau, about President Trump federalizing the guard for his deportation campaign.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Wall Street's five stages of tariff grief
As they process President Trump's chaotic tariffs and other economic policies, some of the country's most powerful CEOs are moving from denial and bargaining to public anger and depression.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Invasive bullfrog eradication allows pond turtles to recover
American bullfrog populations have exploded around the world with dire consequences for native wildlife. But researchers say they may have found a way to help these species rebound.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Sly Stone, visionary funk frontman of the Family Stone, has died at age 82
The musical visionary led a multi-racial funk band that produced five Top 10 hits in the late 1960s and early '70s.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

NIH scientists call on director to protect biomedical research
In a public letter, hundreds of scientists expressed their dissent to the Trump administration's policies affecting the National Institutes of Health and called on its director to support the agency.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Netflix's 'The Eternaut' makes a haunting series of an esteemed Argentine comic
El Eternauta has acquired near-mythic status in Argentina since it was first published in 1957.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

This city is exploring an unconventional solution to water scarcity: sewage
A booming population and changing climate have strained water supplies in St. George, Utah. Local leaders are betting that recycled wastewater can keep the city's taps flowing.

NPR Headline News
Jun 09, 2025

Broadway celebrates a spectacular season at the 2025 Tony Awards
No one show swept this year — and it turns out, that's a good thing.

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

Los Angeles immigration raid protests update
Members of the California National Guard have arrived in downtown Los Angeles. President Trump ordered 2,000 Guard troops to be deployed following protests in the LA area over raids by ICE.

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

CEO is charged after a journalist's home is vandalized
A CEO was charged after a journalist's home is vandalized after reporting on the CEO's alleged misconduct.

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass on protests
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass talks with NPR's Scott Detrow about President Trump sending National Guard troops to Los Angeles in response to anti-ICE protests.

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

Trump orders in National Guard to curb LA protests over immigration raids
President Trump federalized the National Guard to curb protests over immigration raids in Los Angeles.

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

Union leader detained at ICE raid in Los Angeles
Service Employees International Union California leader David Huerta was injured in a scuffle with federal agents. Sandra Diaz, vice president of SEIU-USWW California, talks with NPR's Scott Detrow.

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

How to build your own air filter for wildfire smoke
Air quality can be impacted by smoke from wildfires. Our reporter set out to build an air filter — in a style the EPA praised, using only things she already had at home.

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

Encore: making DIY air filters
Air quality can be impacted by smoke from wildfires. Our reporter set out to build an air filter -- in a style the EPA praised, using only things she already had at home.

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

What's the secret to actually making a good movie remake?
Remakes are as old as cinema itself. Why do they get so much love ... and hate?

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

In a crowded New Jersey governor primary, the state could see a party shift this fall
New Jersey holds primaries Tuesday in the race for governor, where President Trump has already jumped in with an endorsement. The state has a Democratic governor but could see a shift this fall.

NPR Headline News
Jun 08, 2025

Chile's Indigenous fishermen say the salmon industry threatens their way of life
Salmon farming is big business in Chile, and the U.S. is one of its largest markets. Yet the fish are not native, and fishermen say salmon are damaging ecosystems and an Indigenous way of life.

NPR Headline News
Jun 07, 2025

78th Tony Awards preview: What to expect on Broadway's biggest night
78th Tony Awards preview: What to expect on Broadway's biggest night

NPR Headline News
Jun 07, 2025

How to manage the flurry of text messages on any given day? Texting etiquette explained.
NPR's Life Kit explains the basic rules of texting etiquette.

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