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   NEWS: NPR HEADLINE NEWS
NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

How Selena's Texas hometown continues to honor her 30 years after her death
Thirty years after the death of Selena Quintanilla, Texas Standard's Raul Alonzo visits places in Corpus Christi where the icon of Tejano music is remembered and memorialized.

NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

New study shows impact of foreign aid cuts on HIV/Aids treatment
Study in the Lancet finds that with US and European cuts to foreign assistance programs the provide AIDS treatments and medicines there will be millions of news cases and deaths from AIDS in the coming years. Reporter: Emanuel; Editor: Davis

NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

Muslims in Altadena look for normalcy at the end of Ramadan after mosque burned down
Wildfires in Los Angeles destroyed the only mosque in the Altadena area. As the community prepares to celebrate the end of Ramadan, it's finding ways to give kids — and adults — a sense of normalcy.

NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

Ukraine is at the cutting edge of drone innovation, but Russia is catching up
The war between Russia and Ukraine is now largely being fought with drones. Ukraine is at the cutting edge of wartime drone innovation, producing over 2 million in 2024 -- but Russia is close behind.

NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

Famed conductor Michael Tilson Thomas holds last concerts
With a recurrence of cancer, famed conductor Michael Tilson Thomas is ending his musical career. One of his final concerts is in Miami Beach, where he'll lead the orchestral academy he helped found.

NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

Root, root, root for Opening Day! What the upcoming season looks like for MLB
The Major League Baseball season kicks off on Thursday. NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks to Keith Law, a senior baseball writer for The Athletic, about what fans should look out for.

NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

Tariffs hurt small newspapers
A newspaper on the rural Colorado-New Mexico state line says new tariffs on Canadian newsprint could be the straw that breaks their back financially. Many newspapers are barely hanging on.

NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

Friends defend Turkish student arrested by ICE
Friends and family of Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk, who was arrested by U.S. immigration officials, are frightened and concerned for her safety.

NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

South Korea admits agencies mishandled international adoptions
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Deann Borshay Liem, who was born in South Korea and adopted into an American family, about the Korean government admitting adoption agencies engaged in malpractice.

NPR Headline News
Mar 27, 2025

How right-wing media is covering the Signal group chat controversy
Conservative media figures are responding to the news that top officials shared sensitive military information over texts. Some claim it's a hoax, others that it was a brilliant ploy.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

President Trump announces 25% tariffs on all cars shipped to the U.S.
President Trump announced new tariffs of 25% on imported autos. The move is intended to encourage auto manufacturers to build factories in the United states.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

In Pakistan, the spirit of Ramadan has fueled a unique — and controversial — trend
Muslims have been observing Ramadan, a time known for increased generosity. But in Pakistan's largest city, the spirit of Ramadan has also fueled a migration trend among charity seekers.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

The Parable of Peanut the meme coin: How a real-life squirrel became a cryptocurrency
In just 7 years, Peanut the Squirrel went from being an anonymous street rodent, to a famous influencer, to a billion dollar cryptocurrency. His story is a parable of the modern attention economy.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

Veterans and service members react to Signal chat controversy
The news of the leak to a reporter of life-and-death operational details lands differently with veterans and active duty troops, who can be prosecuted for much less significant "spillage" incidents.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

Montana's skies come alive with spring bird migration
Each spring, hundreds of thousands of swans, geese, cranes and other waterfowl descend on a Montana lake on their way to the Arctic. A small town festival draws thousands of bird fans.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

The economics of America's aging oil wells
More than three-quarters of U.S. oil wells, collectively, make just 6% of the country's oil. They're called marginal wells because of how small their output is. But they're a big deal.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

Legal challenges are expected for President Trump's voter registration executive order
President Trump has signed an executive order requiring proof of citizenship to register to vote. Voting rights advocates argue the order doesn't allow birth certificates to be used as documentation.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

Actor Uzo Aduba shares about a moment when she realized her mom was only human
On Wild Card, famous guests answer the kinds of questions we all think about but don't often talk about. Actor Uzo Aduba tells us about a moment when she realized her mom was only human.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

What to know about investing when the market is down
The markets have fallen lately. Your knee-jerk reaction might be to sell. NPR's Life Kit host Marielle Segarra explains why that's not a good idea -- and what to do instead.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

Top security officials defend the use of messaging group chat to House committee
The Atlantic magazine published a group chat with the defense secretary that had details on U.S. airstrikes in Yemen. Democrats called for resignations while many Republicans said it's no big deal.

NPR Headline News
Mar 26, 2025

Violent crackdown sends Syrian Alawites over the border into Lebanon
The euphoria of Syria's new dawn has turned to violence. Alleged massacres of minority Alawites have sent a fresh wave of refugees into neighboring Lebanon.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Here's what 23andMe filing for bankruptcy could mean for your data
NPR's Juana Summers talks with John Verdi, senior vice president for policy at the Future of Privacy Forum, about 23andMe's bankruptcy filing and what a potential sale could mean for customers' data.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Wisconsin's Supreme Court race is revealing how voters feel about Trump's term so far
The race for one seat on the Wisconsin Supreme Court has become a test of how voters are feeling about President Trump's first months in office. It's also broken judicial race fundraising records.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

More babies and mothers are dying in Afghanistan after USAID cuts, midwives say
In March, the World Health Organization announced more than 200 health care facilities had shut down, or suspended operationsin Afghanistan as a result of the Trump administration's funding freeze.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

What's the point of the trade deal with Mexico and Canada if Trump imposes tariffs?
President Trump has vowed tariffs on Mexico and Canada, but the U.S. has a trade deal with its North American neighbors, one that Trump crafted in his first term. So what's the point of the deal now?

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

'Tilt' is the story of an epic journey following a catastrophic quake
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Emma Pattee. Her debut novel, Tilt, is about a devastating earthquake in the Pacific Northwest, and one pregnant woman's quest to get back home after it.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Threat of deportation for pro-Palestinian activists an old tactic
NPR's Juana Summers talks with David Cole, who represented eight activists threatened with deportation for their pro-Palestinian views in 1987, about similar cases now, like that of Mahmoud Khalil.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Democratic Senator Mark Warner reacts to leak of military strike information
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks to Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia about questioning top Intelligence officials today on Capitol Hill about war plans being leaked in a group chat with a journalist.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Intelligence leaders testify that they didn't share classified info in chat group
Lawmakers were split by party at a hearing Tuesday over how much attention they paid to sharing of sensitive military information with a journalist on Signal.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

A check-in on the NCAA women's basketball tournament — as its biggest star is injured
The NCAA Women's Sweet 16 is set. NBC Sports Insider Nicole Auerbach breaks down the matchups ahead, the domino effect of the game's BIGGEST star JuJu Watkins' injury.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

How Europeans are reacting to the U.S. intelligence group chat leak
Europeans react with surprise and humor to the report that U.S. defense officials discussed a military operation in Yemen via a group chat on the Signal app.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Mike Huckabee's Senate confirmation hearing begins amid controversy and protests
The Senate confirmation hearing for Mike Huckabee, President Trump's pick for ambassador to Israel, is being held Tuesday after it was delayed by controversy over his appointment.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Mia Love, the first Black woman elected to Congress as a Republican, has died
Mia Love, the daughter of Haitian immigrants, defied stereotypes as the first Black Republican woman elected to Congress, representing Utah from 2015 to 2019. She died on Sunday at age 49.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Why some Los Angeles homes are being built to resist wildfires — and some aren't
The wildfires in LA were so large, they burned areas that weren't considered at risk. That means as residents start the process of rebuilding, thousands of them won't be required to use fire-resistant building materials. Experts say those materials dramatically reduce the chance a house will burn. But now, Los Angeles officials are changing the rules to require more homeowners to use these materials - a rare example of tightening the rules post-disaster, instead of loosening them.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Hill Republicans aim to rein in judges but divided on strategy
Following court decisions restricting the Trump administration's policies on immigration enforcement and cuts to federal agencies GOP lawmakers are pushing back. But they're split on how to respond.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Lavender, citrus and candy: weed's signature aroma changes with the times
A tour of a grow facility in Maryland reveals the wide variety of scents from different cannabis strains.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

Hamdan Ballal, a Palestinian director beaten by Israeli settlers, is now released
Hamdan Ballal, who won an Oscar for No Other Land about Palestinians under Israeli occupation, was attacked by Israeli settlers and later detained by Israeli security forces, his lawyer tells NPR.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

When Eleanor Heginbotham's car broke down on New Year's Eve, a group of strangers jumped in
Eleanor Heginbotham was at the post office on New Year's Eve 2022 when her car wouldn't start. For 40 minutes, a group of strangers came to her aid, including someone who would later become a friend.

NPR Headline News
Mar 25, 2025

These churches offer shelter and sanctuary to vulnerable migrants. Here's why
Some are offering sanctuary to immigrants, others are ministering to families in different ways.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

VA employees are being called to work in the office. But some say there isn't room
Under the Trump administration, federal agencies are calling employees into the office. At the VA, therapists and doctors say this change is more than inconvenient — it could compromise patient care.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

Russia's history of broken agreements with Ukraine
As negotiators try to hammer out a partial ceasefire, NPR's Juana Summers talks to Harvard historian Serhii Plokhy about Russia's history of broken promises to Ukraine.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

A lullaby artist talks about writing empowering, soothing songs for kids (and adults)
Mama Nous writes children's lullabies and simple songs that acknowledge universal emotional truths and help people process their feelings. Kids love them, but so do adults.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

Astronaut Amanda Nguyen discusses her new memoir and activism around sexual assault
NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with activist and astronaut Amanda Nguyen on her new book, Saving Five: A Memoir of Hope,

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

Supreme Court confronts another challenge to the Voting Rights Act
The case is nearly identical to a case the court ruled on two years ago from Alabama, though the outcome could make it more difficult for minorities to prevail in redistricting cases.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

Israeli strikes in Gaza targeted key hospital and journalists
Israel's war against Hamas has killed tens of thousands of people, with the latest strikes targeting a hospital and journalists.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

Wildfires devastate western North Carolina, fueled by debris from flooding
Fighting growing wildfires in western North Carolina is hampered by debris left over from Hurricane Helene-related flooding, which was 6 months ago this week.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

K-pop band NewJeans announce indefinite hiatus amid legal battle with record label
K-pop group NewJeans, also known as NJZ, announced in Hong Kong on Sunday that they would be taking an indefinite break. The decision comes amid an ongoing legal battle with the group's record label.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

An attorney explains why she's challenging her firm not to capitulate to Trump
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Rachel Cohen, who wrote that she was resigning from her major law firm if it would not stand up to threats from the Trump administration.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

How Trump is using popular political issues to test the system of checks and balances
President Trump is banking on the public caring more about the politically popular things he is trying to do than how he is going about doing them in his fights with the judicial branch.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

Churches and Sanctuary
How are churches and other houses of worship reacting to the Trump administration's immigration crackdown? Some are offering sanctuary to immigrants, others are ministering to families in different ways.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

Speaking into a microphone? Your audio quality can impact the way people view you
A new study shows that the quality of a person's microphone in a video meeting affects how the speaker is perceived by others.

NPR Headline News
Mar 24, 2025

Democrats in Trump-won districts call on party to rebrand
Democrats need to flip three seats to take back the House next year - and the path to a majority likely runs through districts President Trump carried. Democrats who won alongside Trump offer their prescription for a party they say needs to make big changes.

NPR Headline News
Mar 23, 2025

Pope Francis is released from the hospital
Pope Francis was released from the hospital in Rome where he's been held since mid February.

NPR Headline News
Mar 23, 2025

The triumph of the Bukele Doctrine
How the self described "world's coolest dictator," El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele, has been embraced by the Trump administration.

NPR Headline News
Mar 23, 2025

Does your resume need a makeover? Life Kit is here to help.
LIfe Kit has tips on how to improve your resume.

NPR Headline News
Mar 23, 2025

From Trump's comments to climate change: What it's like to cover Greenland
A team from All Things Considered recently went to Greenland for a reporting trip.

NPR Headline News
Mar 23, 2025

Did the unitary executive theory pave the way for President Trump's second term?


NPR Headline News
Mar 23, 2025

'Funny Because It's True' tells the history of satirical paper 'The Onion'
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Christine Wenc, author of the new book Funny Because It's True: How the Onion Created Modern News Satire.

NPR Headline News
Mar 22, 2025

Former first lady of Massachusetts Kitty Dukakis dies at age 88
Kitty Dukakis, the former first lady of Massachusetts and outspoken advocate for people with mental illness and addiction, has died.

NPR Headline News
Mar 22, 2025

Catching up on the Trump administration's recent immigration developments


NPR Headline News
Mar 22, 2025

Hundreds arrested in Turkey protests
Hundreds of people were arrested during protests in Turkey overnight, as the main opposition party planned to nominate the imprisoned mayor of Istanbul as its presidential candidate.

NPR Headline News
Mar 22, 2025

In Maine, syrup makers are opening their doors to show how their work is done
This weekend, maple producers throughout Maine are opening the doors to their sugarhouses. For one family of eighth-generation maple producers, this year has been a long time coming.

NPR Headline News
Mar 22, 2025

Alexander Ovechkin aims for NHL scoring record


NPR Headline News
Mar 22, 2025

Pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet champions an all but forgotten composer
Pianist Jean-Yves Thibaudet has performed with the world's most renowned orchestras on grand stages. He talks with NPR's Scott Detrow about his set at the Tiny Desk.

NPR Headline News
Mar 22, 2025

'An Arm and a Leg" podcast explores the cost of health care in the U.S.


NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

McNeese Cowboys upset the Clemson Tigers, starting a March Madness Cinderella story
The McNeese State University Cowboys beat out the Clemson Tigers on Thursday, marking its first March Madness victory in its 52-year history.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

Europe goes it alone on Ukraine defense
European leaders gathering in Brussels agree to a massive defense fund that will "buy European" only.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

Tamino's new album reflects the loss and change of a move across the ocean
The new album from Belgian singer Tamino, Every Dawn's A Mountain, is a mysterious reflection on loss and change after he settled in New York City.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

What we know about Elon Musk's visit to the Pentagon on Friday
Tech billionaire Elon Musk visited the Pentagon on Friday. Questions about the purpose of the visit ignited a firestorm.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

The rise of Israel's finance minister Bezalel Smotrich
A look at the rise Israel's finance minister who has become perhaps the most influential man in the country, alongside Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

Why the Trump administration is targeting a Venezuelan gang
As the Trump administration invokes a decades old law in their pursuit of Tren de Aragua gang members, we find out more about their origins and their reach.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

Painting by Winston Churchill sells for more than $1 million
Christie's held an auction for "The Bay of Eze," a painting by former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. With fees and all, the painting ended up selling for 945,000 pounds.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

Some flights will resume after fire shut down London's Heathrow Airport
London's Heathrow Airport closed for after a nearby fire caused a major power outage at the facility. More than 1,300 flights were canceled, with hundreds of thousands of passengers affected.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

Judge questions White House push to deport alleged gang members under Alien Enemies Act
Amid mounting tensions between the White House and the judiciary, Federal Judge James Boasberg held a hearing on President Trump's push to use wartime powers to deport alleged Venezuelan gang members. Boasberg has been demanding answers from the Justice Department about whether the Trump administration violated his orders to halt removal flights to El Salvador, while families and lawyers for the men have come forward to dispute that they're gang members.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

'Moments of Freedom' depict the lives of people recently released from prison
This season of KALW's Uncuffed podcast features vignettes of the lives of people recently released from prison, called "Moments of Freedom."

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

Gold, statues and a Declaration of Independence copy: Trump's Oval Office redesign
President Trump has remade the Oval Office, adding a copy of the Declaration of Independence behind a curtain, and lots of golden touches.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

Trump says Education Department will no longer oversee student loans, 'special needs'
The president said federal student loans would move to the Small Business Administration, and hinted that the Department of Health and Human Services would take over special education oversight.

NPR Headline News
Mar 21, 2025

Sudan's army recaptures presidential palace in Khartoum
Sudan's army has taken control of the presidential palace in Khartoum, in a major turning point during the war. The palace and the capital had been occupied by the Rapid Support Force paramilitary since the start of the war, but over the last year the army have been making gradual gains.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

The Boston Celtics are set to be sold for a record-breaking $6.1 billion
The Boston Celtics are being sold for $6.1 billion. The sale is pending approval by the NBA. If approved, the purchase of the Celtics would be the largest of any sports franchise in the United States.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Law experts raise alarms over police action in DOGE Institute of Peace dispute
Washington, D.C., police were in an awkward position during this week's standoff involving the U.S. Institute of Peace when DOGE and Trump staffers sought access to the building to install a new president.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Why D.C. police decided to side with DOGE in Institute of Peace standoff
Washington, D.C., police were in an awkward position during this week's standoff between the U.S. Institute of Peace and DOGE staffers, who sought access to the building to install a new president.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Here are the standout video games at the Independent Games Festival awards
There's no way to know what the next big hit video game will be, but fans may have gotten a hint Wednesday night in San Francisco at the at the Independent Games Festival.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Three escalating conflicts in the Middle East threaten the wider region
Three Middle East conflicts have reignited, threatening the wider region. Israel is bombing Gaza, the U.S. launched strikes against the Houthis in Yemen, and Syria's civil war is boiling again.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

This week in science: origins of life, birds speech, and how TikTok gets ADHD wrong
In this week's Short Wave roundup, Berly McCoy and Regina Barber talk about the origins of life on Earth, what bird brains illuminate about human speech and how ADHD is mischaracterized on TikTok.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

The dangers of sports betting aren't well-understood, experts warn
Americans will likely wager 3 billion dollars on March Madness this year -- legally. Since a 2018 Supreme Court decision deregulated it, 38 states have legalized gambling. Experts say we are only beginning to understand the implications of this change to legal gambling to peoples mental health -- and warn its dangers are not well understood.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Muslim youth in foster care come together for iftar
There are around 240,000 Muslims living in Michigan, and less than a dozen Muslim foster families. An iftar celebration hoped to help Muslim foster youth find a spiritual community.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Colorado constituents press Democrats on the party's plan to oppose Trump
Attendees at a town hall hosted by Congressional Democrats expressed frustration with the party -- saying they want lawmakers to give them outlines of a plan to fight against the Trump administration.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

U.S. military offensive targets Houthi rebels to stop their Red Sea shipping attacks
For more than a year, Houthi rebels have been attacking ships, choking off transit in one of the world's most critical waterways. The Pentagon says it'll stay till the Houthis stop the attacks.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Congress may kill the program that saved thousands of veterans from foreclosure
An NPR investigation helped lead to 15,000 veterans being saved from losing their homes, but some in Congress want to kill the rescue program.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Lonely? There's an app for that!
A number of tech companies have rolled out apps and products aimed at helping ease the loneliness epidemic, but some experts explain how technology itself is part of the issue.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

What's at stake as 'Severance' gets ready to drop its final episode of the season
The season finale of Severance drops on Apple TV this week, wrapping up one of the most visually adventurous and conceptually mind-bending seasons of TV around.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Trump threatens judge pressing DOJ for answers over El Salvador deportations
The chief judge of the federal district court in Washington, D.C., is facing calls for impeachment after blocking one of President Trump's immigration plans.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Why don't we remember being babies? Brain scans reveal new clues
Why can't we remember when we were babies? Scientists who scanned infants' brains found that they do make memories. The findings suggest these memories may still exist, but are inaccessible to us.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Why a DOJ prosecutor resigned, telling coworkers and bosses 'you serve no man'
Former Assistant U.S. Attorney Sean Murphy resigned from the Department of Justice, telling NPR, 'It just was not a Department of Justice that I any longer wanted to associate with.'"



NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Report: (Smaller) Museums should make admission free
A new study out this week from the museum think tank Remuseum suggests free admission attracts more visitors without increasing costs.

NPR Headline News
Mar 20, 2025

Hamas fires first rockets since Israel broke recent ceasefire
The Israeli military expanded its ground offensive in Gaza, and killed at least 80 Palestinians in a new wave of strikes Thursday. Hamas fired its first rockets since Israel broke a recent ceasefire.

NPR Headline News
Mar 19, 2025

Trump to sign order aiming to close the Education Department
The Trump administration has already moved to cut the department's staff by half.

NPR Headline News
Mar 19, 2025

Colorado gun control bill could make mass shootings less deadly
Lawmakers in Colorado are close to passing a law restricting guns with detachable magazines. It attempts to mitigate damage during mass shootings and would be one of the strictest gun laws in the U.S.

NPR Headline News
Mar 19, 2025

Volcano west of Anchorage is 'likely' to erupt in upcoming weeks or months
Last week, officials announced that a volcano 80 miles west of Anchorage is "likely" to erupt within the next few weeks or months. That could send ash into the air for hundreds of miles.

NPR Headline News
Mar 19, 2025

Jamie Raskin is leading the Democrats' legal strategy against the Trump administration
Two months into President Trump's second term, Democrats are still struggling over how to push back. House Democrats have turned to Maryland Congressman Jamie Raskin.

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