-
'The loyalty of the listeners is the best reward': Sylvia Poggioli signs off after 41 years with NPRNPR's Senior European Correspondent in Rome, Italy, Sylvia Poggioli joins Lake Effect's Audrey Nowakowski to discuss her 41-year career as she prepares to leave the field of journalism and start her next venture.
-
NPR White House Correspondent Tamara Keith is visiting—who better to ask for the latest on 2023-'24?
-
The president drew a clear distinction with House Republicans, baiting them into several moments of hectoring, while seemingly getting them to agree to not cut Social Security or Medicare.
-
A federal judge in Wisconsin has ruled that a civil rights lawsuit filed by the father of a man shot and killed by Rittenhouse can proceed to the next phase.
-
Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who is assigned to the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, was the one who received the emergency application brought by a Wisconsin taxpayers group.
-
After five years of former host Sam Sanders, the acclaimed NPR show It's Been a Minute debuts new host, Brittany Luse on Oct. 8
-
The dugout canoe discovered most recently in a lake is believed to be the earliest direct evidence of water transportation used by native tribes in the Great Lakes region.
-
Nationwide, community members are protesting the teaching of social-emotional learning – largely because conservatives have linked it with another flashpoint in public education: critical race theory.
-
The queen served as the United Kingdom's monarch since 1952. Her reign spanned a remarkable arc in British history and was defined by duty to country — and considerable family pain.
-
Baldwin, the first openly gay person elected to the Senate, is leading the charge to secure the 10 Republican votes needed for a filibuster-proof majority to pass a bill codifying marriage equality.