In 1944, as Allied troops celebrated D-Day victory, a French family experienced a trauma that would be felt for generations: ...
French families recall rapes committed by a handful of GIs after D-Day. A note to listeners that this piece mentions sexual assault.
NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Harvard professor Cass Sunstein about Ted Olson. The legal great, who argued 65 US Supreme Court cases, including the one that legalized gay marriage, died this week.
NPR's Scott Simon and Howard Bryant of Meadowlark Media discuss a pair of undefeated runs in the NFL and NBA, plus the latest from the ATP Finals in Italy.
NPR's Scott Simon talks to Vitalii Bardetskyi, a Ukrainian DJ and music journalist, about a new compilation of music from that country called "Even the Forest Hums." ...
President-elect Trump assembled his national security team with a series of rapid-fire choices. There's a clear pattern: Most nominees are best known for their support of Trump rather than their ...
A fire tore through a neonatal intensive care unit in a hospital in northern India, killing 10 newborn babies and injuring 16 ...
Elk have made a comeback in part of the Appalachian mountains and they're attracting tourists during mating season.
We look at the efforts to broker a ceasefire between the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah and Israel. Fighting has escalated between the two, pushing the conflict deeper into Lebanon.
Jake Paul won a unanimous decision over Mike Tyson as the hits didn't match the hype in a fight between a young ...
We look at some of President-elect Donald Trump's cabinet nominations and how his choices might distinguish his second term from his first.
Federal data shows that rates of new sexually transmitted infections are slowing in the U.S. It's a rare sign of improvement that suggests prevention efforts are working.