This year, the month of March has seen an interesting convergence of major faith celebrations. Daniel Pschaida, who teaches ...
Volleyball teams comprised of girls ages 11-15 are playing in four venues for the Pacific Northwest Qualifier. They’re at The ...
On this week’s show, Dan Webster, Nathan Weinbender, Mary Pat Treuthart discuss a pair of films that, each in its own way, ...
For this week's Reporter's Notebook segment, NPR Addiction Correspondent Brian Mann explains the reasons behind the surprise drop in overdose deaths across the country.
From painting over a Black Lives Matter mural to temporarily scrubbing web stories of Navajo Code Talkers, scholars and activists say the Trump administration is trying to erase non-white history.
The FDA's top vaccine regulator says he was forced out by the Trump administration and criticizes HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s "misinformation and lies" about vaccines.
Springtime is the season of flowers, but it's also a time for new music. Who is putting out interesting projects this season?
Miami's Haitian community is hoping a lawsuit can postpone the return of many in the community to a country still roiling from violence.
Ron Currie's new novel, "The Savage, Noble Death of Babs Dionne," tells the story of a small-town drug mobster, a formidable woman of French descent. NPR's Scott Simon talks to Currie about it.
With major fiscal year 2026 budgets still unfinalized, the Idaho Legislature was unable to wrap up its annual legislative ...
Sarah Lucy Oliver has made our shows a weekly gathering for all of us — we here in the studio, control room and the desks ...
The Oscar-winning animated movie "Flow," which stars a black kitty, may be causing an increase in black cat adoptions. Superstitions about bad luck have often caused these felines to be overlooked.