Join us for a unique afternoon tea showcasing the Idaho State Museum’s newest exhibit, A Life Lived for Others: Laura Moore ...
Köhler, a onetime head of the International Monetary Fund who became a popular German president before resigning abruptly in ...
An NPR listener wonders whether her husband's relationship with a female colleague is too close for comfort. He says she's ...
Siegel is the first American to be released as part of this deal. A total of 18 hostages have been released since the ...
NPR's Scott Simon talks with Patrick Patterson and Steve Scipio of the British funk band Cymande about their new album and about reconstituting the band after decades ...
An air ambulance with six people aboard crashed and then exploded on Friday evening in Philadelphia. The medical transport plane was returning a patient and her ...
President Trump is back and filling the airwaves with a constant churn of comments on just about everything, in contrast to the much quieter Biden administration.
NPR's Scott Simon asks Thérèse Kayikwamba Wagner, the Congolese minister for foreign affairs, about gains made by rebels backed by Rwanda.
In Ali Smith's latest novel, "Gliff," a brother and sister befriend a horse in a dystopian future. NPR's Scott Simon explores the issue of authoritarianism with the novelist and playwright.
Indiana teenager John Miley began recording radio sports broadcasts. There are now more than 44,000 of them in his collection.
NPR's Scott Simons speaks to Maha Nassar, a professor at the University of Arizona, about how Palestinians will view the Israeli Prime Minister's visit to the White House next week.
Most Louisianans no longer speak French but more and more schools in the state are teaching it. One small school, southwest of New Orleans, is immersing students in the state's local dialects.