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A planned exchange of 200 acres of state land on Spokane's West Plains to a developer faced a public backlash; Point-in-time ...
The case, which stems from a deadly crash in 2019, raises broader questions about the safety of Tesla's driver-assistance systems, and whether the company has exaggerated their capabilities.
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Stacey Abrams, author and former Democratic Georgia state representative, about her new thriller, "Coded Justice." She also talks about her political goals.
Savage has run for Spokane City Council seats in 2019, 2921 and 2023. Like fellow challenger Cody Arguelles, he's positioning ...
Zack Zappone was first elected in 2021. He talks with Owen Henderson about his decision to seek four more years.
The Atlantic Writer Charlie Warzel on his new reporting about Elon Musk, Grok and why a chatbot is calling for a new Holocaust.
NPR's Scott Simon and sportswriter Howard Bryant talk about the women's and men's tennis finals at Wimbledon and a controversial report alleging corruption in the NFL players' union.
NPR's Scott Simon talks with Mark Kurlansky about his new novel, "Cheesecake." It's a story of New York's restaurant and real estate scenes in the 1980s and, of course, that delectable dessert.
Cody Arguelles and his business partners will soon open a cigar lounge. But the retired military survival instructor and five ...
NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Abdul Feraji, investigative journalist from Afghanistan about the termination of Temporary Protected Status for Afghans in the U.S. on July 14.
President Trump is ratcheting up pressure on foreign governments over trade and the Federal Reserve over interest rates as he tries to steer the U.S. economy.
NPR's Scott Simon remembers some of the 27 young people who perished at Camp Mystic in the catastrophic flooding of the ...
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