Remembering longtime NPR foreign correspondent Anne Garrels who died at 71 Transcript NPR's Rachel Martin speaks with Columbia Journalism School Professor Emerita Ann Cooper about her friend, former NPR foreign correspondent Anne Garrels. STEVE INSKE...
The 2nd suspect in Canada's mass stabbing case dies in custody, police say Transcript A man suspected of killing 10 people and injuring more than a dozen has died after he was taken into custody in Saskatchewan, Canada. NPR's Rachel Martin talks to C...
Texas State Police downplay their role in Uvalde shooting failures, report says Transcript NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Lomi Kriel of the ProPublica-Texas Tribune investigative unit about state police shifting blame to local law enforcement for the s...
Meet the 7-year-old boy who is South Dakota's corn-bassador Transcript Nicknamed the Corn Kid, Tariq, who lives in New York, has been declared South Dakota's Official Corn-bassador after his passion for the vegetable went viral on TikTok and YouTube....
Guide racks up TikTok views explaining the megadrought in the Colorado River Transcript Understanding drought in the West is hard. A Colorado woman is explaining the problem to a new generation of water users to debunk misinformation that can easily...
FBI finds information about a foreign country's nuclear program in Mar-a-Lago search Transcript NPR's A Martinez talks to former CIA officer David Priess about reports that some of America's most closely guarded secrets were among documents seized fr...
A 1931 law criminalizing abortion in Michigan is unconstitutional, a judge rules Transcript ANN ARBOR, Mich. Enforcement of Michigan's 1931 abortion ban was blocked Wednesday by a judge who replaced her temporary order with a permanent injunction. Mi...
A 200-year-old Saguaro cactus has fallen due to a powerful monsoon Transcript Catalina State Park officials in Arizona believe powerful monsoon rains brought it down last month. Its trunk has splintered and its large arms are now sprawled on the grou...
Survivors of a massacre in South Korea are still seeking an apology from the U.S. Transcript More than 70 years ago a rebellion broke out in South Korea, which at the time was under American military rule. Tens of thousands were killed in the subsequ...
On Independence Day, Brazil's president plans to flaunt his military ties Transcript President Bolsonaro is urging supporters to take to the streets for Independence Day. This may be a precursor to more verbal attacks on democratic institutions ahead...
The midterm elections need workers. Teens, veterans and lawyers are stepping up Transcript Help is wanted at many voting sites around the U.S. as the general election season gets underway this month. In some communities, however, the ongoing COVID pa...
After 10 years as an explosive detection dog for the TSA, Eebbers is retiring Transcript Eebbers was the oldest working dog in the agency and was assigned to the Minneapolis-Saint Paul International Airport. He recently won first place in the TSA's c...
Farmland prices are up sharply. How did it get so expensive? Transcript Across the Midwest, farmland prices more than doubled over the past two years making it difficult for young farmers to grow their businesses. A MARTINEZ, HOST: Farmland is a limi...
The latest crowd-sourced poem is about hope for the new school year Transcript NPR's Rachel Martin talks to poet in residence Kwame Alexander, who shares his latest community crowd-sourced poem about the goals that teachers, parents and students have...
Skateboarders dream of shredding this famous bench. But first, they have to find it Transcript A bench has gone missing in Philadelphia this week and not for the first time. For skateboarders, the 13 feet of curved steel isn't just a bench. It's a st...