Author Travis Jonker and illustrator Matthew Cordell talk about the real model ship that inspired their picture book about a ...
A trove of secret documents show teens’ increasingly reliant on TikTok and how executives were acutely aware of the potential ...
The semi-retired life looks good on them. My father is now a regular patron at the local public library where he and Mom took ...
It is not uncommon for political commentators to call a late-breaking story during a presidential election an "October ...
A bump in the elephant brain stem pointed scientists to the wrinkles on their trunks and the role those folds play in the ...
Gael García Bernal was basically fated to be an actor. He talks to NPR's Wild Card about being the best version of himself, ...
Many residents impacted by inland flooding near Tampa can't return home as floodwaters slowly recede. One church in Valrico ...
Harris wants to make it easier for eligible voters to cast ballots and rebuild Voting Rights Act protections against racial ...
Since the remnants of Hurricane Helene hit Asheville, most of the city has been without running water. The people of ...
Facing threats and misinformation, election officials are under intense pressure this fall. NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Justin Roebuck, who oversees elections in Ottawa County, Michigan.
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.
We take a look at what Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump are doing to reach voters in battleground states and in demographics that have not been favoring them so far.