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Harvard University President Alan Garber sits down with Morning Edition, where he doubles down on his decisions. And, a look ...
A former police chief in Arkansas who is serving decades-long sentences for murder and rape escaped from prison. Grant Hardin ...
A new poll shows Arkansas farmers and ranchers believe they benefit from voluntary conservation programs from the U.S.
More than half of American workers don't have a college degree. Is manufacturing a ticket for them to the middle class?
Hells Canyon is the deepest river canyon in the United States. Now scientists have solved the mystery of when it formed.
A letter from the U.S. General Services Administration, which is dated Tuesday, tells agencies to submit a list of contracts ...
Cutting off research funding for Harvard University might hurt the school, its president Alan Garber told NPR, but it also ...
President Trump said weekend negotiations for a new nuclear deal with Iran were, in his words, "very good." NPR reports on the latest on the talks and what it might take to reach an agreement.
A new group backed by the U.S. is beginning to bring food to Gaza. But it is facing growing criticism, and the group's own director has resigned, saying the program is not humanitarian.
NPR's A Martinez asks Ahmed Bayram, spokesperson for the Norwegian Refugee Council, about the aid situation in Gaza after the resignation of the head of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation.
A 90-day pause in triple-digit tariffs on Chinese goods has left exporters and importers in a high state of uncertainty.
The Scripps National Spelling Bee is celebrating its 100th anniversary. Three generations of winners reflect on how the competition impacted their lives.
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