News from WHCP
In the household of a woman we're calling Inez, there is always the fear that while they live a normal life in a normal neighborhood, someone will be taken by ICE.
NPR Top News
Ryne Sandberg, a Hall of Fame second baseman who became one of baseball's best all-around players while starring for the Chicago Cubs, has died. He was 65.
Music News and Stories
-
The Broadway musical is a living, breathing and deeply grooving homage to a bygone era of Cuban music.
-
Community and culture are two guiding forces in Ruby Ibarra's music. The Filipina American rapper — and 2025 Tiny Desk Contest winner — is joined by rock legend June Millington and an all-Filipino band.
-
Kehlani’s Tiny Desk invites viewers on a ride through several of their biggest hits.
-
The indie band brings its authenticity and bedroom pop style to the Tiny Desk’s slightly bigger space.
More News from NPR
-
The 2016 legal battle raised questions about the line between freedom of expression and privacy, and what is actually newsworthy. Questions that needed to be reexamined in light of the invention of the internet, according to law experts.
-
President Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer discussed doing more to feed the starving population in Gaza — at odds with the Israeli prime minister who claimed there was no starvation.
-
A study of more than 2,100 people ages 60 to 79 found that an intensive two-year program of mental and physical activities, along with a heart-healthy diet, improved memory and thinking.
-
This planned destruction of birth control devices is part of the dismantling of USAID services — and is linked to allegations by the government that cite abortion. Critics are speaking out.
-
It is the first time that Jewish-led organizations in Israel have made such accusations against the country during nearly 22 months of war.
-
Twenty-one states are suing after the USDA demanded states turn over sensitive data on food assistance applicants. The lawsuit calls the demand an "Orwellian surveillance campaign."