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NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

Harris went to two Black churches yesterday as part of 'souls to the polls' tradition
Vice President Harris has spent the past two Sundays in Black churches, a time-honored election season tradition for Democrats.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

Two runners become 1st married couple to win Detroit Free Press Marathon
Sydney Devore-Bowman and Andy Bowman met at a race two years ago. She encouraged him to try the Detroit half-marathon, and now they're married and have both won the full marathon.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

Texas holds hearing about law prohibiting 'junk science' in court cases
Texas death row inmate Robert Roberson was hours away from his execution last week when a judge halted the attempt. Roberson is set to testify before a state legislative committee on Monday.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

Thousands of migrant workers find themselves stranded as fighting ramps up in Lebanon
Thousands of migrant workers - many of them African - have been left stranded in Lebanon - unable to afford the trip home, or worse, abandoned by their employers with no permission to leave.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

Paris bargoers choose next U.S. president in straw poll in century-old tradition
In one Paris bar, predicting the outcome of the U.S. presidential election is a long tradition. For over a century, a straw poll taken there has been pretty accurate at predicting the winner.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

American activist talks about how having a target on his back has changed his life
Indian officials were in the U.S. earlier in October for talks about an alleged plot to target an American activist. He talks about how having a target on his back has changed his life.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

With two weeks left, campaign travel is ramping up even more for Harris and Trump
Millions of Americans have already voted, and the presidential candidates are ramping up travel even more this week. We get up to date on the state of the race and the week ahead.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

Trump calls Venezuelan migrants criminals. Some Venezuelans agree, others fight back
Donald Trump often focuses on Venezuelans when he warns about criminal immigrants coming to the U.S. It's a narrative that has surprisingly taken root even in some Venezuelan-American communities, and it offers a window into one reason support for mass deportations seems to be rising among some Latinos.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

Medicaid can now pay for care given on sidewalks. It could help mitigate homelessness
Medicaid can now pay for medical and mental health care delivered on the sidewalk. This will transform how care for unhoused people can be given in the states that take advantage of the policy change.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

In Nevada, Native voters can now cast a ballot online
Tribal communities often face obstacles to casting a ballot, including a lack of polling locations and unreliable mail service. In Nevada, Native voters can now cast a ballot online.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

The Biden Administration wants health insurance to cover all OTC contraception
The Biden Administration has proposed a rule to require private health insurance to cover over-the-counter birth control pills, spermicide, condoms and plan B.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

Blinken heads off on another visit to Middle East as conflict spreads
Israeli forces killed the Hamas leader in Gaza last week and they've been pressing their offensive against Hezbollah in Lebanon too. Israel is also poised to strike Iran.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

Biden wants Head Start teachers to get a raise. But it's unclear who will pay for it
A new Biden administration rule meant to raise the wages of teachers in the federal Head Start preschool program could force local programs to scale back if Congress doesn't agree to increase funding.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

How the presidential race is shaping up in North Carolina
With 16 electoral votes at stake and the presidential race decided by thin margins and contentious down-ballot races, North Carolina has become a major focal point for the Harris and Trump campaigns.

NPR Headline News
Oct 21, 2024

To save nature, world leaders aim to turn words into action at biodiversity summit
The United Nations effort to achieve "harmony" with the natural world kicks off in Colombia this week. Recent reports show there's a lot of work to do to achieve that goal.

NPR Headline News
Oct 20, 2024

Leaked documents describe possible Israeli strike on Iran
A former US intelligence official has confirmed with NPR that highly classified US intelligence documents that appeared on a pro-Iranian site are authentic. The documents describe preparations by Israel in advance of a possible strike on Iran.

NPR Headline News
Oct 20, 2024

5 years after massive protests in Chile, what's left of the desire for change?
Five years after the tumultuous protests in Chile demanding social and economic equality, what's left of the revolutionary spirit and desire for change?

NPR Headline News
Oct 20, 2024

Understanding the relationship between Russia and North Korea


NPR Headline News
Oct 20, 2024

Just weeks ahead of Election Day, presidential candidates target swing states


NPR Headline News
Oct 20, 2024

Life Kit has last-minute costume tips for Halloween
NPR"s Life Kit has tips on how to find the perfect last minute Halloween costume.

NPR Headline News
Oct 20, 2024

Some in the Haitian community find a home in Tijuana, Mexico
Haitian immigrants have started families in Tijuana, learned Spanish, opened up businesses and are looking forward to a different version of the "American dream."

NPR Headline News
Oct 20, 2024

Actor Mark Duplass plays a game of Wild Card
Actor and filmmaker Mark Duplass plays a game of Wild Card with NPR's Rachel Martin

NPR Headline News
Oct 20, 2024

1,000-year-old seed germinates. But what is it?
Dr. Sarah Sallon planted a 1,000-year-old seed that could soon could bare extinct fruit.

NPR Headline News
Oct 20, 2024

First Ambassador for the Arctic on the U.S. interest in the region


NPR Headline News
Oct 19, 2024

Encore: Coldplay tops album chart, thanks to old-fashioned sales and modern tricks
The British band Coldplay tops the Billboard 200 this week with its latest album.

NPR Headline News
Oct 19, 2024

World Series preview


NPR Headline News
Oct 19, 2024

Helene victims have become crucial in relief efforts
Many victims of Hurricane Helene have become vital volunteers in the ongoing relief efforts in Western North Carolina.

NPR Headline News
Oct 19, 2024

Gory, low-budget slasher 'Terrifier 3' tops the box office


NPR Headline News
Oct 19, 2024

After Yahya Sinwar's killing, journalist reflects on interviewing him


NPR Headline News
Oct 19, 2024

Europe's view of the U.S. Election


NPR Headline News
Oct 19, 2024

Japanese puppetry comes to America
For the first time in about 30 years, a Japanese theater that uses human-sized puppets is performing across the country.

NPR Headline News
Oct 19, 2024

'What the Vote' podcast digs into what Gen Z voters are thinking about


NPR Headline News
Oct 19, 2024

Moldova chooses president, decides on EU path as Kremlin meddles in both votes
Moldova Chooses President and Decides on EU Path as Kremlin Meddles in Both Votes

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

This week in science: protecting butterflies, ocean migration and Madagascar frogs
NPR's Short Wave tells about an ambitious plan to protect monarch butterflies from climate change, new research about a massive ocean migration, and seven new frog species found in Madagascar.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

It's been a historically popular season for the WNBA
Game 4 of the WNBA Finals Friday night may mark the end of a historic season for the league, with records broken in TV ratings and attendance.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Reba McEntire on mentors, bridging generations and her TV return with 'Happy's Place'
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with country music icon Reba McEntire about her new NBC sitcom Happy's Place, about a woman who inherits her father's restaurant with a half sister she's never met.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Justice advocate has concerns about 'new era' for death penalty cases
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with Bryan Stevenson, the founder and executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative, about the death penalty cases that have come under scrutiny this year.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Dwindling 'double hater' voters are picking sides
NPR returns to 12 swing voters who disapproved of both Joe Biden and Donald Trump back in May to find out where they've landed with Kamala Harris as the nominee and the election just weeks away.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

How Arizona residents are reacting to a potential new immigration policy
An immigration proposal on Arizona ballots this fall is raising worries across the political spectrum.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Emo music is having a moment at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
Emo music has largely flown under the radar, but with a new exhibit at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame focusing on one of its founding labels, it's time for another look.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Presidential campaigns converge on Michigan
The presidential campaigns are projecting confidence in Michigan. But the fact that candidates from both major parties are in the state on the same day shows how close the race is in this key state.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Now in her 50s, Kylie Minogue says she feels liberated
NPR's Brittany Luse, host of It's Been a Minute, talks with Australian pop singer Kylie Minogue. Her new album Tension II is a follow-up to last year's Tension.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

The challenges of vaccinating 590,000 kids against polio in the war zone of Gaza
Public health officials are hoping to reach the more than half a million Gaza children who received their first dose a few weeks back. But a shifting battlefield is making everything more challenging.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

North Gaza is starving as humanitarian aid declines
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Antoine Renard, the World Food Programme Country director for Gaza, about how people in north Gaza are starving and aid shipments reached their lowest level in September.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

A proposed abortion rights amendment in Missouri is rapidly gaining support
An referendum to legalize abortion in Missouri is gaining supporters in part as a reaction to the states current strict ban.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Kids ask a NASA scientist about the mission to Jupiter's moon Europa
NASA has just launched a mission to Jupiter's icy moon Europa. A NASA scientist answers kid's questions about the mission and its goals.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Charles Ives' vision of America still strikes an unsettling chord
To mark the 150th anniversary of the maverick American composer's birth, pianist Jeremy Denk releases an Ives tribute album that educates, delights and confounds.


NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Ozempic shows promise for treating alcohol and drug abuse, study finds
The weight-loss drugs are linked with reduced rates of excess drinking and opioid overdoses, suggesting they may tamp down substance use cravings too.

NPR Headline News
Oct 18, 2024

Barbed wire, high fences: some election spots in Arizona close, but others step up
Some election locations in Arizona are shutting their doors in the face of security threats — but others are expanding their footprint.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Lake Michigan's mysterious sinkholes
Two years ago, scientists surveyed the floor of Lake Michigan looking for shipwrecks. They found something mysterious and unexpected — a cluster of sinkholes on the lakebed.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Iowa college students make emergency contraceptives accessible following abortion ban
Iowa now has a six-week abortion ban. Some Iowa college students say schools aren't doing enough to ensure access to emergency contraceptives and birth control. So they're taking it on themselves.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Helene wrecked homes. Could updated building codes reduce risks from future storms?
Many homes were damaged or destroyed in North Carolina during Hurricane Helene and many more remain at risk from future storms. That's in part because state lawmakers have rejected or delayed efforts to modernize building codes.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

What the assassination of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar means for on the war in Gaza
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Daniel Byman, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, about the assassination of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar and what it means for the war in Gaza.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Omaha voters know they could decide the next president
To have a shot at the White House, Democrats need to win one of Nebraska's five Electoral College votes. Here's how they're trying to do that.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

One of Ukraine's most celebrated poets is currently touring the U.S.
Marianna Kiyanovska lives in Ukraine, but she's reading her poetry at more than a dozen U.S. universities in October. Her latest poetry collection is called The Voices of Babyn Yar.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Why voting security in Arizona's largest jurisdiction is more intense in 2024
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Stephen Richer, the Republican Maricopa County Recorder, about his office's intense preparations to secure early voting in the swing state of Arizona.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Trump sidestepped some questions in town hall with Latino voters
Former President Donald Trump faced some tough questioning from Latino voters Wednesday night. He largely sidestepped those questions in his answers and instead stuck to his broader campaign themes.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Unaddressed vision impairment doesn't just impact individuals — it affects economies
Vision impairment is a common problem in large parts of Asia, Africa and Latin America. It has a serious effect on economies. One solution: providing eye glasses. But it turns out that can be tricky.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Victims of clergy sex abuse and LA Archdiocese reach nearly $900 million settlement
More than 1,300 clergy sex abuse survivors and the Archdiocese of LA have reached a settlement worth nearly $900 million. The church says no donations to parishes or schools will be go to the payouts.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

One leg at a time: Chinese textile company makes the world's largest pair of jeans
A textile company in Southern China has reset the Guinness World Record for the largest pair of jeans. The pants are over 250 feet long.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Israel says its troops have killed Yahya Sinwar, the Oct. 7 attack mastermind
Israel's military says its troops have killed Yahya Sinwar, an architect of the Oct. 7 attack on Israel. His death is being seen as a possible chance to end the war he started just over a year ago.

NPR Headline News
Oct 17, 2024

Helene's damage to North Carolina's Green River affects businesses that depend on it
In western North Carolina, tubing, rafting and kayaking shops are assessing whether the rivers will be safe enough to open by next Summer following the devastating damage from the remnants of Hurricane Helene.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

Liam Payne, former member of One Direction, dies at 31
Payne, who came to fame as a teen in the massively popular British boy band One Direction, died in Buenos Aires after falling from his hotel balcony, according to reporting by the Associated Press.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

NYC isn't known for its Mexican food. A restaurant week was organized to change that
In New York, a young group of community organizers recently pulled together a week-long celebration of Mexican restaurants. They stress it's about the workers as much as the food.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

These organizers want you to know that New York does have good Mexican food
There's a misconception that New York City has no authentic Mexican food. But its first ever Mexican Restaurant Week, organized by an arts collective called Migo Events for Hispanic Heritage Month, raises visibility for the wide range of flavors and cuisines that unite the Mexican-American diaspora.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

How an anesthesiologist brought comfort to a woman on the operating table
On this week's "My Unsung Hero" from Hidden Brain: Samantha Hodge-Williams was terrified as she lay in the operating room. Then the anesthesiologist offered a surprising source of calm.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

BOOK: WAR PART II
NPR's Scott Detrow continues his interview with journalist Bob Woodward about his book War, which details how the Biden administration has navigated Russia's war with Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

Journalist Bob Woodward weighs in on Biden's presidency in new book 'War'
NPR's Scott Detrow continues his interview with journalist Bob Woodward about his book War, which details how the Biden administration has navigated Russia's war with Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

An illegal wine ring — busted in Europe — garnered up to 15 thousand euros per bottle
Six people have been arrested in connection with an international criminal network selling fake bottles of high-end French wine.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

Harris and Trump see federal land in the Southwest as an opportunity for more housing
Both major presidential candidates are reimagining swaths of land in the Southwest, much of it federally owned and maintained, as an opportunity to build more housing. Could this work on arid land?

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

A man's colorful obituary for his father has gone viral
An obituary posted on Facebook mentions Robert Adolph Boehm's habit of wearing unconventional hats, his possibly dangerous hobbies and his "last unintelligible and likely unnecessary curse."

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

A Russian man us freed after serving time for daughter's anti-war art
A single father was sentenced to prison after his then 12-year-old daughter was caught with drawings critical of Russia's war in Ukraine at her local school. He has been freed after nearly two years.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

In China, the price of vegetables has rocketed. The culprit: climate change
According to official statistics, the average price of fresh vegetables in China rose nearly 20% in August. A visit to the crops in China's northeast helps explain the price spike.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

Actor Gael Garcia Bernal talks about finding his home in the theater for 'Wild Card'
Actor Gael Garcia Bernal draws a question from the Wild Card deck and talks about feeling at home in the theater.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

A whistleblower reveals how abuse of prisoners spreads from one prison to another
In 2023, the Federal Bureau of Prisons shut down a troubled unit at the prison in Illinois. The former warden is now the director of the federal center that does specialized training of prison staff.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

A surge of people are leaving Lebanon for Syria amid Israel-Hezbollah conflict
Some one million people in Lebanon have been displaced from their homes. Many of them have crossed the border into Syria -- fleeing one war-torn country for another.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

Trump focuses on women's issues in front of all-women audience in Fox News town hall
The former president took questions on immigration, the economy and abortion in the hour-long town hall in front of a friendly crowd of women in suburban Atlanta.

NPR Headline News
Oct 16, 2024

'Cheat Code to Life': Jailhouse lawyers help incarcerated people — and themselves, too
A new trove of letters and oral histories is shining a light on the successes and challenges of jailhouse lawyers: people in prison who help themselves and others navigate the legal system.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Hurricanes like Helene and Milton leave behind a trail of psychological damage
NPR's Juana Summers talks with with Dr. Sandro Galea, dean of the Boston University School of Public Health, about the mental health consequences of devastating hurricanes like Helene and Milton.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

A receding Lake Powell is bringing Colorado River rapids in Utah back to life
There's a lot of anxiety about climate change shrinking Lake Powell, but it also means whitewater rapids upstream have re-emerged. Thrillseekers can now run them for the first time since the 1960s.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Listen to singles from Green Day's 'Dookie' on a doorbell, wax cylinder or toothbrush
For the 30th anniversary of Dookie, Green Day is offering de-mastered singles: each individually crafted for the most mediocre sound quality at best.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Actor Al Pacino reflects on his biggest roles
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with actor Al Pacino about his career and biggest roles.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

The National Ballet of Ukraine aims to represent its country and culture on U.S. tour
The National Ballet of Ukraine is on its first-ever tour of the U.S. since the country's independence from the USSR in 1991. Ukrainian Ambassador to the U.S. calls the tour a "symbol of resiliency."

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Kamala Harris is wooing Republicans in Pennsylvania Wednesday with a call for unity
In remarks focused on unity and patriotism, Kamala Harris will speak alongside prominent Republicans Wednesday as her campaign and its allies focus on winning over disaffected Republican voters.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Kamala Harris works to win over disaffected Republican voters in Pennsylvania
As Kamala Harris heads back to Pennsylvania Wednesday, her campaign and its allies are focusing on Republican voters there.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Latino voters have changed their views on abortion, research shows
Research shows 62% of Latinos believe abortion should be mostly legal. That's a big jump from 20 years ago.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Video game fans return to the town of Silent Hill
Video game company Konami once led the industry with creative and original titles. The development of several remakes and new games has fans excited that they might be back on track.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Local officials in Georgia must certify election results as early voting begins
A Georgia judge has ruled that local election officials must certify results -- as early in-person voting begins in the swing state.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Mayors along the southern border defy national narratives by backing Democrats
Border security is seen as a strength for Republicans, but along Arizona's southern border, many mayors are backing the Democrat in the state's race for U.S. Senate, as well as Vice President Harris.

NPR Headline News
Oct 15, 2024

Bob Woodward talks about his new book and the most serious nuclear threat he's covered
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with legendary journalist Bob Woodward, whose new book War -- like so many of his books about the American presidency over the last half century - is generating headlines.

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

Research into the root of wealth and poverty among nations wins Economics Nobel Prize
The Nobel Prize in Economics was awarded Monday to a trio of U.S.-based researchers, for their study of the institutional roots of wealth and poverty among nations.

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

A USDA program may be killing wild animals that they're not supposed to, records show
A USDA program kills wild animals at the request of private livestock owners. NPR obtained exclusive documents to show how its employees manage wildlife.

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

We talk to pollsters about their models of the electorate this year
Pollsters try to create an accurate model of the electorate. But that model can change abruptly, like when Vice President Harris became the Democratic nominee.

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

A nominee for North Carolina's schools chief has a track record of conspiracy theories
The Republican candidate for superintendent of schools in North Carolina calls schools "indoctrination centers" and has a shot at a victory.

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

Kenyan runner Ruth Chepngetich set a new women's marathon world record
Kenyan runner Ruth Chepngetich smashed the women's marathon world record yesterday in Chicago by nearly two minutes.

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

New book looks at how the federal government categorizes Native identity
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Carrie Lowry Schuttepelz about her new book The Indian Card: Who Gets to Be Native In America.

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

A look at everything in swing for Arizona voters
Arizona could go either way this presidential year -- that's what makes it a swing state. But it could also go either way on down the state's ballot, right to a question on abortion rights.

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

As fears about election security grow, military veterans are filling as poll workers
A non profit has trained more than 160,000 veterans as poll workers, in the face of growing threats and skepticism about the security of elections.

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

BOOK: SONNY BOY - Al Pacino
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with actor Al Pacino about his new memoir, "Sonny Boy."

NPR Headline News
Oct 14, 2024

D.C. birdwatchers remember the land's history on Indigenous People's Day
In Washington, D.C., residents celebrated Indigenous People's Day by birdwatching on Roosevelt Island. Centuries before the island became a memorial to the president, it was home to Native Americans.

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