NPR's A Martinez speaks with Washington Post art and architecture critic Philip Kennicott about President Trump's plan to temporarily close the Kennedy Center.
The government is still in a partial shutdown, but the House Speaker predicts it will be over by Tuesday. In the meantime, lawmakers are still divided over Department of Homeland Security policy ...
Amid the partial government shutdown, we hear from House Minority Whip Rep. Katherine Clark, D-Mass., about funding for the Department of Homeland Security.
Smith's book, Sacred Rest, she outlines different kinds of rest you may be craving. From the mental to the physical, ...
A partial government shutdown is under way after Congress missed its funding deadline, with lawmakers advancing a plan to reopen most agencies while negotiations over Homeland Security and immigration ...
The Trump administration says it's reviewing thousands of cases to look for potential fraud. A judge ordered a temporary ...
Farmers in the U.S. have grown cannabis since the 1600s — but policymakers are still figuring out how to regulate two famous types of Cannabis sativa. A historian calls the plant "incredibly cryptic." ...
During the coronavirus pandemic, TikTok and Instagram creator Hobby Bobbins taught herself how to restore vintage dresses. Now, she's brought dozens of old wedding dresses back to life.
Things are looking bleak for a fix in Congress for ACA premiums that doubled, on average, this month. And Republicans are ...
Eight years ago, Joann Moschella was injured after her bicycle was hit by a car. That's when her unsung hero appeared, ...
A new report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office calculates the cost of efforts to fire civil rights staff, and ...
After President Trump sent an armada to the Middle East, Iran's Supreme Leader warned a U.S. attack would spark regional war. The International Crisis Group's Ali Vaez talks about what's next.