The theme of the retreat is health — not healthcare — in Kentucky. That wider subject choice is intentional, with UK leaders ...
The former president took questions on immigration, the economy and abortion in the hour-long town hall in front of a ...
A new trove of letters and oral histories is shining a light on the successes and challenges of jailhouse lawyers: people in ...
The Transportation Expo event grew from the Council’s Public Input Subcommittee, which has spent the last two years working ...
An analysis of court documents by Kentucky Public Radio revealed the social media company TikTok knew users can become ...
Henry Clay High School has seen a number of environmental complaints and safety concerns, including even wildlife infestation ...
Outside of the presidential election, the vote on Amendment 2 is taking up the most bandwidth in Kentucky, with supporters ...
Michel Houellebecq is a controversial literary superstar. His new book, Annihilation, centers on a middle-aged Paris ...
Both major presidential candidates are reimagining swaths of land in the Southwest, much of it federally owned and maintained, as an opportunity to build more housing. Could this work on arid land?
Justine Kenin is an editor on All Things Considered. She joined NPR in 1999 as an intern. Nothing makes her happier than getting a book in the right reader's hands – most especially her own.
NPR's Scott Detrow continues his interview with journalist Bob Woodward about his book War, which details how the Biden administration has navigated Russia’s war with Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war.
Samantha Hodge-Williams was terrified as she lay in the operating room. Then the anesthesiologist offered a surprising source of calm.