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Alameda County held the first of these job fairs in July of 2024. Employers from non-profits to national corporations showed ...
NPR's Steve Inskeep and Michel Martin speak with David Isay, Founder and President of StoryCorps, about the Senate vote to cut funding for public broadcasting.
The weather system moving across the Florida Panhandle on Wednesday was showing a greater chance of becoming a tropical ...
An experimental technique that patches defective DNA with donated genetic material helped families at risk of passing rare ...
KQED said it is laying off 45 staff members. Another dozen have accepted voluntary retirement offers. Altogether, the ...
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors last night passed the city’s budget for the next two fiscal years. District 9 ...
The Senate Judiciary Committee is set to vote on a controversial judicial nominee who's courted controversy at the Justice Department this year.
The Trump administration's handling of what are known as the Epstein files has been creating a firestorm within the president's MAGA base. NPR recaps a timeline of the controversy.
NPR's Steve Inskeep asks John Dinkelman, new president of the American Foreign Service Association, about how layoffs will affect the State Department and American diplomacy.
Israel hit the Syrian military headquarters and close to the presidential palace in Damascus with airstrikes Wednesday. The UN Security Council will meet to discuss the crisis between the countries.
A stampede in Gaza left around 20 people dead as they were rushing to collect food at a U.S.- and Israeli-backed food distribution site.
President Trump signed bipartisan legislation Wednesday toughening criminal penalties for fentanyl traffickers. But some drug policy experts worry about funding for drug treatment and health care.
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