NPR's Scott Simon remembers Gene Hackman, who played everymen, cops and villains over his long movie career. The 95 year old ...
Eileen and James Kramer were fired from their jobs at Lake Clark National Park in Alaska, even though they both recently ...
Trump will give his first speech to Congress next Tuesday since his reelection. It has characteristics of what Americans call ...
Faith Kipyegon, the fastest female miler in the world, could dip under 4 minutes with an extra boost from pacers.
Hamas says it is not willing to extend the first phase of the Gaza ceasefire, rejecting an Israeli request to delay ...
Cuts at NOAA mean fewer hurricane-hunter aircrafts will be gathering real time data on developing storms and that the team developing computer models for forecasts will be "gutted," insiders say.
An NPR investigation finds federal judges have enormous influence with few checks on their power. Law clerks and other ...
An NPR review of new data added to DOGE's "wall of receipts" finds the group quietly changed previous errors, added new ones ...
Voice of America is reviewing the social media posts of a reporter for possible bias against the Trump Administration. The ...
We look at the anticipated impact of of the USAID funding freeze, which helped some of the poorest people around the world. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to weigh in on the matter.
Federal employees have received a second email from the Office of Personnel Management asking them what they did last week.
We look at Friday's contentious press conference at the Oval Office, as well as updates on the Trump administration's cuts at federal agencies. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to weigh in on the matter.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results