Gonzaga's men's basketball team is headed to Wichita, Kansas, for their first round game of the NCAA tournament, while ...
The South African actor has been speaking out about racial injustice for decades, often in collaboration with the late ...
Ronald Osborne was a firefighter for many years. Early in his career, while battling a house fire, his life was in danger. It ...
WA food banks work to improve the quality of their offerings; UW researchers work to fight antibiotic resistance; Senate ...
A citizen commission approved a new salary schedule for members of the legislative, executive and judicial branches last ...
President Trump justified his use of a wartime law to deport people. The CEO of Democracy Forward argues that the president ...
With teens, it doesn't help to just say no to screen time. Instead, experts suggest teaching them to be smarter viewers of ...
Arab mediators are working to reach a new Israel-Hamas ceasefire deal that would secure the release of 12 living hostages out ...
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with author Colm Toibin about his new novel Long Island, which centers around a woman dealing with the fallout of a pregnancy caused by her husband's betrayal.
Thousands of USAID contracts have been cut. African health leaders say the cuts aren't surprising. But the lack of advanced warning has turned the lives of the already vulnerable upside down.
On Monday evening, a federal judge will press the Trump Administration on whether it violated a court order forbidding the deportation of detained non-citizens with little or no due process.
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks to University of Virginia law professor Amanda Frost about the barrage of legal challenges against the Trump administration, which insists it's complying with judicial rulings.