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The Department of Homeland Security plans to use military bases in New Jersey and Indiana to detain immigrants amid its broader crackdown.
Actor and Grammy Award winner Malcolm-Jamal Warner, best known for his role as the sweet teenager Theo Huxtable on The Cosby ...
NPR has learned that the Pentagon has also approved the expansion of the U.S. Naval Base on Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, for the ...
In Nothing More of This Land, Aquinnah Wampanoag writer Joseph Lee takes readers past the celebrity summer scene and into the ...
Dr. Nick Maynard tells NPR he's treating children shot at food distribution sites and witnessing what he believes is the ...
Lawmakers added a $50 billion program for rural health to President Donald Trump’s massive tax and spending package with ...
Teacher John Scopes was convicted and fined $100 for violating a Tennessee law that banned the teaching of evolution because ...
Billionaire Elon Musk is launching a new political party. He said he wants to break the duopoly that Republicans and ...
A federal judge in Boston is weighing arguments from both sides in Harvard's lawsuit against the Trump administration. Harvard claims the government's freezing of research funds is illegal.
President Trump wants to bring shipbuilding back to the U.S., in large part to counter China's dominance. But turning that into reality will mean rebuilding an entire industry from the ground up.
In Maryland, more youth are tried as adults than in almost any other state. State Sen. William Smith is on a mission to change that.
Actor, director and musician Malcolm-Jamal Warner, best known for his role as the sweet teenager Theo Huxtable on "The Cosby Show," has died at age 54. NPR looks at the legacy he leaves behind.
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