Arizona Public Radio | Your Source for NPR News
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito has declined to recuse himself from two Jan. 6-related cases despite calls to do so after news reports said controversial flags were flown outside his properties.
  • NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Carol Leonnig of The Washington Post about her reporting on the DOJ's delay in investigating Donald Trump's involvement in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack.
  • A judge has denied former President Donald Trump's request to block documents from being handed over to a House committee investigating the riot at the U.S. Capitol.
  • NPR's Sacha Pfeiffer talks with Democratic Congresswoman Zoe Lofgren of California about a new court filing from the House Jan. 6 committee.
  • The bipartisan measure, approved by the House, failed to win enough votes to overcome a GOP filibuster. The plan called for an independent body styled on the one that investigated the 9/11 attacks.
  • Over 6,000 octopuses have been found huddling around an extinct volcano deep in the Pacific Ocean near California, and researchers now think they understand why the octopuses find it so cozy.
  • The first presidential debate is high stakes. Can Trump avoid the sitting-president first-debate slump? Does Biden come across competently? And how personal will it get?
  • On today's newscast: Mill linked to Arizona uranium mining takes 136 tons of Japanese nuclear waste, Flagstaff man gets life in prison for the starvation death of his 6-year-old son, a second NAU runner qualified for the 2024 Paris Olympics, the Yavapai-Apache Nation approved a water rights settlement that resolves all claims in the Verde Valley, and more.
  • On today's newscast: Protests continued over the weekend against the mining and hauling of uranium ore, park rangers recovered the body of a Glendale woman swept away in a flash flood near the Havasupai Reservation in the Grand Canyon, city wastewater shows increased COVID-19 levels in Flagstaff, the third and final defendant in the starvation death of a 6-year-old Flagstaff boy has been sentenced to prison, and more...
  • On today's newscast: Transportation of uranium ore through the Navajo Nation is on hold, federal officials renewed a mining ban on thousands of acres of Oak Creek Canyon, a juvenile is charged in the death of a 6-month-old left alone in a car in Cordes Lakes, Republican vice-presidential nominee J.D. Vance made a campaign stop at the U.S.-Mexico border, and more
385 of 7,389