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   NEWS: NPR HEADLINE NEWS
NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

More frustrated prosecutors at the U.S Attorney's office in Minnesota call it quits
Turmoil continues at the U.S. Attorney's office in Minneapolis. This week another attorney was removed from a special assignment dealing with immigration cases after telling a judge she hates her job.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

Is a new Iran nuclear deal possible?
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with NPR's Geoff Brumfiel and Greg Myre about the upcoming meeting between Iran and the United States.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

Get ready for the Olympic halfpipe
To get ready to watch the Winter Olympics, we talk to former Olympian Tricia Byrnes about some snow boarding terminology.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

Olympic athletes protest big oil
Several athletes are objecting to the International Olympic Committee over sponsorship of the Games by major oil companies. They say fossil fuel use threatens winter conditions needed for snow sports.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

What a recent executive order from Trump means for housing costs
President Trump recently signed an executive order targeting large institutional investors that buy up homes. But in some circumstances, those large investors have led to more housing affordability.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

Plastic surgeons say transgender youth should wait until age 19 for surgery
The American Society of Plastic Surgeons says transgender youth should wait until age 19 to have any surgeries. Surgery is already rarely performed for transgender young people.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

Father James Martin chronicles the meandering path that brought him to the priesthood
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with Father James Martin about his new book Work in Progress: Confessions of a busboy, dishwasher, caddy, usher, factory worker, bank teller, corporate tool, and priest.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

Can't solve a puzzle? Sleep on it, a new study suggests
NPR's Short Wave talks about babies' perceptions of rhythm, how sleep may help us solve puzzles and why snakes may be able to fast so long.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

Metal band Megadeth and Harry Styles each hit No. 1 this week on the Billboard Charts
NPR Music's Stephen Thompson reports on new music shaping the charts.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

A "Jane Doe" in the R. Kelly trials is ready to share her real name. And her story


NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

A "Jane Doe" in the R. Kelly trials is ready to share her real name. And her story.
A once anonymous R. Kelly survivor, Reshona Landfair is now ready to reclaim her voice.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

A 'Jane Doe' in the R. Kelly trials is ready to share her real name. And her story
A once anonymous R. Kelly survivor, Reshona Landfair is now ready to reclaim her voice.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

On a frozen river, Ukrainian revelers party to keep their spirits and bodies warm
In Kyiv, dance parties on a frozen river keep spirits — and bodies — warm after Russian strikes shattered Ukraine's energy grid.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

Medical staff say immigration enforcement near medical facilities affects care
Medical professionals say the Trump administration's reversal of a policy that kept immigration enforcement from happening in or near medical facilities is having an impact on people's health.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

FBI says it's taking ransom notes 'seriously' in Nancy Guthrie's disappearance
In the search for Nancy Guthrie, law enforcement says they are investigating ransom notes that were sent to media.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

Trump approval is low, a new poll shows. Here's who's pulling away
The latest NPR/PBS News/Marist poll shows what Americans think of President Trump and his policies.

NPR Headline News
Feb 05, 2026

The Winter Olympics in Italy were meant to be sustainable. Are they?
Italy's Winter Olympics promised sustainability. But in Cortina, environmentalists warn the Games could scar these mountains for decades.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Pioneering African-American baseball player Ron Teasley has died at 99
Ron Teasley, one of the last remaining veterans of the Negro Leagues, has died. A native of Detroit, Teasley sparkled on the baseball diamond. He was 99.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

A group of mudlarkers see what's hiding by a Philadelphia creek
"Mudlarking" is the hobby of searching for keepsakes along muddy creek banks. An old marble is enough to get people outdoors for this pursuit best performed in the winter.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

American dream denied: A Frenchman's ICE nightmare
A young French tennis coach who once lived the American dream describes being detained, shackled and expelled under the Trump administration's tightened border rules.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

The who, what, and how of the new Trump Accounts
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Ron Lieber, financial columnist for The New York Times, about the ins and outs of the newly created Trump Accounts.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Measles outbreak in South Carolina continues but may be slowing
South Carolina released the newest numbers on its measles outbreak, and there's news of other cases around the country.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Congress fully funds health agencies, restoring RFK Jr.'s cuts
The bipartisan budget that Trump just signed is a 180-turn from how funding for health agencies were slashed in 2025. But grantees and people in the agencies remain suspicious.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Scientists say this brain network may explain range of Parkinson's symptoms
Parkinson's disease can affect sleep, thinking and smell, as well as movement. A new study may explain why.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Border czar Tom Homan to immediately reduce federal agents in Minnesota by 700
The Trump administration is pulling hundreds of ICE agents from Minnesota — and allowing for the possibility of further drawdowns. Border czar Tom Homan says about 2-thousand officers will remain.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

The Trump administration's efforts to end TPS for Haitians was blocked — for now
A federal judge has blocked the Trump administration's efforts to revoke Temporary Protected Status for some 330,000 Haitian immigrants in the U.S., for now.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Lawsuit from families of men killed in boat strikes is the first to reach U.S. court
Relatives of two Trinidadian men killed in a U.S. airstrike last year are suing over what they call extrajudicial killings. It's the first such case to land in an American courthouse.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

'The Washington Post' cuts a third of its staff
The Washington Post is cutting a third of its staff, leading some to say owner Jeff Bezos should sell the company.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

For the first time in decades, the U.S. and Russia have no limits on nuclear weapons
The last major arms control treaty between Russian and the U.S. will expire on Thursday, but experts are cautiously optimistic that there won't be another arms race. At least not right away.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

The auteur of 'Strange Loop' tackles an opera like no other
The Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize winner is trying something new — instead of a musical for Broadway, he's written an opera, now playing in Philadelphia.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Russia's hybrid attacks throughout Europe are becoming more dangerous
Russia escalates hybrid attacks across Europe, threatening infrastructure, civilians, NATO.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Here's how this 87-year-old triathlete keeps her heart strong
Despite issues with her heart, this octogenarian still competes in triathlons. She's proof that preventive medicine paired with smart lifestyle choices help seniors stay active longer.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

What is 'ski mountaineering,' the new sport added to the Winter Olympics?
Ski mountaineering is a new sport in the 2026 Winter Olympics in Italy and mogul skiing, gets an additional twist; skiers now participate in pairs.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Moltbook is the newest social media platform — but it's just for AI bots
A new message board for artificial intelligence agents has prompted some strange conversations, and existential questions about the inner lives of bots.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Here's looking at you, kid: How the term for a young goat made the leap to children
Kid, meaning a young goat, is a word that was borrowed from the Vikings around the 9th century. Centuries later, it came to mean a child and a teasing joke.

NPR Headline News
Feb 04, 2026

Will calls to 'abolish ICE' sway voters in 2026? The strategy has Democrats split
The Trump administration's immigration efforts have led some Democrats to call for abolishing ICE. Others won't go as far, wary of appearing out of step with voters who want immigration laws enforced.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

Leaders of Gateway train tunnel project sue Trump administration over withheld money
A massive tunnel project that would link New York and New Jersey could run out of money by the end of the week. Developers are suing the Trump administration in an effort go get the funding flowing.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

The latest Epstein files are tarnishing and toppling powerful figures in the U.K.
Epstein's photos and emails have already prompted King Charles to strip his brother Andrew of his title "prince." Now, they've prompted one of Britain's top diplomats — Peter Mandelson — to step down.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

A thriving Muslim school in Alabama looked to expand, but was met with Islamophobia
A Muslim school near Birmingham, Ala., was thriving — winning academic awards, increasing enrollment and looking to expand. Then came the lawn signs, the first warning that trouble was on the way.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

A San Francisco coyote makes a great escape to Alcatraz
A coyote was spotted swimming to Alcatraz and now appears to be thriving. Ecologist Christopher Schell at the University of California Berkeley has been following this saga.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

Ken Burns wants viewers to give history a second look with 'The American Revolution'
NPR's history podcast Throughline speaks with Ken Burns about his latest documentary, The American Revolution.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

Ken Burns' wants viewers to give history a second look with 'The American Revolution'
NPR's history podcast Throughline speaks with Ken Burns about his latest documentary, The American Revolution.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

It's hard to tell, so far, what Trump has planned for the Kennedy Center
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with David Graham of The Atlantic about President Trump's vision for the Kennedy Center and the intersection of art and politics.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

Award winning poet Kimberly M. Blaeser combines science and spirituality
Kimberly Blaeser, a former poet laureate of Wisconsin, will accept a prize from the National Book Foundation next month for her collection of poems, Ancient Light.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

Minneapolis has daily deportation flights. One man is documenting them
A professional airplane enthusiast has been tracking the federally chartered deportation flights out of the Minneapolis airport as DHS sends detainees to other states and, eventually, other countries.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

Trump says he wants Republicans to 'nationalize' elections
President Trump said in an interview he wants Republicans to "nationalize" elections. It's the latest instance of Trump's willingness to meddle in election administration.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

VA staff feel the chill of Alex Pretti's death
Alex Pretti was an ICU nurse at the VA Hospital in Minneapolis. Some staff feel the VA Secretary hasn't done enough to honor their colleague.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

Syria, once home to a large Jewish community, takes steps to return property to Jews
A Jewish heritage foundation has set out to help restore private property appropriated after Syrian Jews left the country.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

Back seats aren't as safe as they should be. A crash test is trying to help
Better engineering has made the front seat much safer in head-on collisions. But the back seat hasn't kept pace. It's a problem one vehicle safety group is trying to solve.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

House votes to end partial government shutdown, setting up contentious talks on ICE
The House has approved a spending bill to end a short-lived partial government shutdown. Now lawmakers will begin contentious negotiations over new guardrails for immigration enforcement.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

Despite a 'ruptured' knee ligament, Lindsey Vonn says she will compete in the Olympics
The 41-year-old's remarkable comeback from retirement was thrown into jeopardy after she hurt her knee during a crash in competition last week. But that won't keep her from racing in the Olympics.

NPR Headline News
Feb 03, 2026

I thought I'd heard my dad's voice for the last time. A movie helped me find it again
A period drama, a Supreme Court case and voice our film critic hadn't heard in decades.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

Amid power outages, an unusual number of locals visit Nashville's honky tonk district
While winter storms caused major power outages in Nashville, its downtown music scene saw a lot more locals who took up hotel rooms usually occupied by tourists.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

An uneasy détente: Trump and Colombia's Petro to meet at White House
Of all the relationships Trump has had with world leaders, the one with Colombia's President has perhaps been one of the most volatile - but for the first time on Tuesday, President Petro will hold a face to face meeting with President Trump at the White House.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

Scientists release a map of the clearest picture yet of what dark matter looks like
Dark matter makes up most of the universe, yet we have very little understanding of it. Scientists recently released a map that gives the clearest picture yet of what dark matter looks like.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

The method for estimating a dinosaurs' age at death may be off, research suggests
A growing body of research on dinosaurs' closest living relatives suggests the method that's been used to estimate how old a dinosaur was when it died may be leading paleontologists astray.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

What we know about the contents of the recent release of Epstein files
More than 3 million newly-released pages of the Epstein files show more about the life and relationships of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. They also contain unredacted names of his accusers.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

How state officials are taking action against federal agents
In the wake of Minnesota, several Democratic-led states are looking for ways to limit immigration agents' activities. Some Republican-led states are ordering local governments to cooperate with them.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

Bad Bunny made history taking home the Grammy for album of the year
Bad Bunny made history Sunday night at the Grammys, taking home the most coveted prize: album of the year.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

In her last Olympic season, US cross-country ski phenom Jessie Diggins looks stronger than ever
Olympic gold medalist and winningest US cross country skier ever Jessie Diggins is hanging up her ski boots at the end of this season. Her openness about struggling with eating disorders has won her fans off of snow, too.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

Kilmar Abrego Garcia has become a symbol of the pitfalls of immigration enforcement
Immigration attorneys and advocates see Kilmar Abrego Garcia's case as a symbol of the bigger travails of mass deportation.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

Opening of Rafah crossing is just the start of a massive undertaking to rebuild Gaza
Gaza's key border crossing with Egypt opened briefly for the first time in a year. Only a handful Palestinians were able to leave, but it's an important step in an undertaking to rebuild Gaza.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

Epstein survivor committed to transparency despite redaction problems in files
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with Annie Farmer, one of Jeffrey Epstein's victims, about what may be in the final release of the Epstein files by the Department of Justice.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

Looking at Ye's apology through a bipolar disorder lens
NPR's Scott Detrow talks with music journalist and mental health advocate Kiana Fitzgerald about the latest public apology from the artist formerly known as Kanye West.

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

Trump says he's closing the Kennedy Center for renovations. We have questions
After President Trump announced plans for a "Complete Rebuilding" of the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., what exactly did he mean, and what does it mean for the arts?

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

Refugees relive the trauma they fled as ICE targets them in Minnesota
The Trump administration says it's reviewing thousands of cases to look for potential fraud. A judge ordered a temporary pause, saying refugees cannot be arrested "without warrants or cause."

NPR Headline News
Feb 02, 2026

After being hit by a car, she was saved by a lavender bunny
Eight years ago, Joann Moschella was injured after her bicycle was hit by a car. That's when her unsung hero appeared, dressed in a furry lavender bunny suit.

NPR Headline News
Feb 01, 2026

Tense negotiations in Washington to end partial government shutdown
House Speaker Mike Johnson predicts the partial shutdown will be over by Tuesday.

NPR Headline News
Feb 01, 2026

Minnesota woman says local police freed her from immigration agents' custody
A Minnesota woman says that after she filmed immigration agents, the officers chased her, detained her at gunpoint, and later dropped her off with local police.

NPR Headline News
Feb 01, 2026

What does normal look like in Caracas one month after the Maduro operation?
Nearly a month after U.S. forces seized Nicolás Maduro, Caracas is settling into an uneasy normal, with major changes and lingering questions about what lasts and what comes next.

NPR Headline News
Feb 01, 2026

Population growth is slowing, and the ripple effects could be wide
Immigration crackdowns may be slowing U.S. population growth and reshaping the economy, says Luke Pardue, policy director at the Aspen Institute Economic Strategy Group.

NPR Headline News
Feb 01, 2026

Faith leaders in Memphis join together to support Afghan refugees
Two Memphis pastors, Stephen Cook and Latif Salar, are working to protect Afghan church members after the Trump administration halted asylum processing.

NPR Headline News
Feb 01, 2026

Doctors say measures to control an incurable lung disease aren't enough
Silicosis is an often deadly lung disease linked to inhaling toxic dust from cutting engineered stone. California has passed new safety measures for workers in the last few years, but doctors say they aren't enough.

NPR Headline News
Feb 01, 2026

With Iran in turmoil, the U.S. pressures Lebanon's Hezbollah to disarm
Hezbollah is being squeezed in Lebanon as Iran's economic crisis limits support, and the U.S. presses Beirut to force the group to disarm while Israel keeps bombarding Lebanon.

NPR Headline News
Feb 01, 2026

Hollywood takes some shortcuts when it comes to depicting Americans abroad
An NPR panel looks at how movies portray Americans abroad, from romantic self discovery to culture clash and stereotypes.

NPR Headline News
Jan 31, 2026

As shutdown begins, lawmakers clash over how immigration agents operate
A partial government shutdown is now underway. How long it will last depends on congressional agreement over a DHS funding deal that proposes new guardrails on immigration enforcement.

NPR Headline News
Jan 31, 2026

On a trip to Denmark, a reporter sees lawmakers take on the role of diplomats
NPR congressional correspondent Barbara Sprunt watched U.S. lawmakers attempt a diplomatic rescue mission in Denmark amid the Greenland crisis.

NPR Headline News
Jan 31, 2026

After backsliding, democracy often comes back weaker and more fragile
Losing democracy once can make it harder to restore it, even after a democratic government returns to power. University of Birmingham professor Nic Cheeseman analyzed three decades of data.

NPR Headline News
Jan 31, 2026

'Ye Gods' asks guests where their moral compass comes from
What does it mean to have faith, and where do our moral codes come from? Scott Carter of 'Ye Gods' podcast tries to tackle these big questions.

NPR Headline News
Jan 31, 2026

'Getting to Reparations' argues a clear path and legal strategy to atone for slavery
Dorothy Brown, a Georgetown University law professor, lays out a case for reparations in her new book Getting to Reparations: How Building a Different America Requires a Reckoning with Our Past.

NPR Headline News
Jan 31, 2026

Israel advances a 'lost tribe' immigration plan despite discredited ancestry claims
Who are the Bnei Menashe, an ethnic group from India that has been immigrating to Israel? Judy Maltz of Ha'aretz has covered the community for more than a decade.

NPR Headline News
Jan 31, 2026

Madison Beer on the themes she unlocks in 'Locket'
Madison Beer talks about her new album 'Locket', and growing up in the public eye since age 13.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

Minnesota corrections commissioner disputes ICE arrest numbers
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Paul Schnell, commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Corrections, over his agency's dispute of Homeland Security claims around arrest numbers.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

How the blockade between Afghanistan and Pakistan is affecting people on both sides
Borders between Pakistan and Afghanistan have been closed since October, disrupting trade around the region. It's part of a broader dispute over how to handle increasingly active militant groups.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

A stencil of a handprint in an Indonesian cave is the oldest known rock art
Scientists have discovered what they say is the earliest known rock art, in a cave in Indonesia. They say the image dates to more than 67,000 years ago.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

Oprah opens up about how she stayed grounded when she first rose to fame
On Wild Card, well-known guests answer the kinds of questions we often think about but don't talk about. Oprah opens up about how she stayed grounded when she first rose to fame.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

States look at banning masked agents, but local police have doubts
We look at the potential for conflict between local police and federal immigration agents as Democratic states consider banning law enforcement from wearing masks or otherwise concealing their IDs.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

Remembering actor Catherine O'Hara of 'Schitt's Creek' and 'Home Alone'
Actor Catherine O'Hara has died at the age of 71. She had a long career, winning an Emmy for her role on the sitcom Schitt's Creek, and spent years as a featured player in Christopher Guest movies.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

Catherine O'Hara played drunk better than anyone
O'Hara observed people closely; she found the tics, the mannerisms, the specific beats of drunkenness and used them to open us up to her characters' frailty, their vulnerability, their humanity.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

Residents in Nashville still struggle with power outages a week after winter storm
Residents of Nashville are still struggling to recover from a winter storm as more freezing weather is expected this weekend.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

After a record-long shutdown last fall, why Democrats were willing to risk another
The government is set to shutdown at the end of the day Friday. Shutdowns have evolved in recent years from rare collapses of government function to increasingly frequent political tools.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

Tim Walz says Trump administration wants to 'twist reality' in Minnesota
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz about the Trump administration's immigration crackdown in his state.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

DOJ says it has met legal obligations with latest Epstein files release
The Justice Department says it has released more than 3 million pages of materials tied to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, to comply with the law.

NPR Headline News
Jan 30, 2026

What to know about Kevin Warsh, President Trump's proposed Fed chair
President Trump announced he plans to nominate Kevin Warsh to succeed Jerome Powell as chair of the Federal Reserve. Gene Sperling, former director of the National Economic Council, weighs in.

NPR Headline News
Jan 29, 2026

Senators reach a spending deal
Senators have reached a deal they hope will avoid a lengthy government shutdown and allow time to negotiate reforms to the Department of Homeland Security.

NPR Headline News
Jan 29, 2026

Department of Justice involved across various fronts in Minneapolis
The Department of Justice and FBI are ceding their traditional role leading investigations in the wake of shootings in Minneapolis to the Department of Homeland Security.

NPR Headline News
Jan 29, 2026

With his first Grammy nomination, Destin Conrad embraces personal evolution
Destin Conrad went from teen social media star to a musician touring the world on some of its biggest stages. In 2025, he put out both an R&B and jazz album and earned his first Grammy nomination.

NPR Headline News
Jan 29, 2026

A year after the DCA collision, families push for elusive changes to aviation safety
A year after the midair collision near Washington, D.C., families of the victims are pushing for action on aviation safety, including crash-avoidance technology. And they're digging in for a fight.

NPR Headline News
Jan 29, 2026

Sen. Ron Johnson addresses federal immigration operations in Minneapolis
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Republican Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin about the immigration crackdown in Minneapolis and the impasse over Department of Homeland Security funding on Capitol Hill.

NPR Headline News
Jan 29, 2026

We've been hearing about the EU's economic 'bazooka.' Here's what it is
As tensions simmer between the European Union and the U.S. over the Trump administration's trade policies and its play for Greenland, we've been hearing about the EU's economic "bazooka." What is it?

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