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An experimental technique that patches defective DNA with donated genetic material helped families at risk of passing rare ...
Schools aren't responsible for keeping students safe when they're enroute to school -- or even just outside the school boundaries -- the Arizona Supreme Court ruled Tuesday.
In a post to Truth Social on Wednesday morning, Trump railed against Democrats, and some of his own supporters, calling the ...
After NPR reported on a Department of Homeland Security tool to check the citizenship of registered voters, three U.S.
Far-Flung Postcards is a weekly series in which NPR's international team shares moments from their lives and work around the ...
TEL AVIV, Israel — Israel on Wednesday conducted airstrikes in downtown Damascus, the Syrian capital. The Israeli military ...
Seesawing tariffs and turbulent financial markets are playing out on social media feeds, impacting the multibillion-dollar influencer industry in what could be a new recession indicator.
Once deported to Bhutan, some Nepali-speaking Bhutanese refugees say they are told to leave. Many have since disappeared, ...
Former national security adviser Mike Waltz defended his use of the encrypted Signal app during a Senate confirmation hearings Tuesday on his nomination as President Trump's ambassador to the U.N.
Scientists are finding ways to minimize the effects of aging on the brain. Here are some ways to keep it healthy.
The Supreme Court on Monday ruled to allow the Trump administration to resume its efforts to dismantle the U.S. Department of Education. What will that mean to schools, students and families?
How are states and local school districts preparing for a future without the Department of Education? NPR asks Robert Taylor, superintendent of the Wake County Public School System in North Carolina.