Two years ago in North Dakota, after months of protest by thousands of indigenous and environmental activists, pipeline opponents celebrated when the Obama administration denied a key permit for the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL).
Two years ago in North Dakota, after months of protest by thousands of indigenous and environmental activists, pipeline opponents celebrated when the Obama administration denied a key permit for the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL).
Gun control advocates view 2018 as a turning point in their campaign to strengthen the country's gun laws.
They cite widespread success in passing laws through state legislatures. They're also buoyed by Democratic victories in the midterm elections, which flipped control of the House of Representatives.
                    
                                                                                            
                        
Canada has much stricter gun laws than the United States, but gun violence is a growing problem in Canada's biggest city, Toronto. 2019 was its worst year ever for gun violence, and it’s been trending that way since 2014. Firearms coming in illegally from the U-S is a big reason why on the next Morning Edition from NPR News.
Morning Edition from NPR News airs weekday mornings from 6:00 am - 9:00 am on KRCB-FM Radio 91 / streaming @ norcalpublicmedia.org / Download the FREE KRCB App for your favorite mobile device!
(Photo: St. Louis Circuit Attorney’s Office [CC BY-SA 4.0])
Before Apple was a trillion-dollar company, before its phones and laptops came to dominate the tech industry, it was just a California startup working out of a garage. Now, one of the first products the company ever made — the Apple-1 computer — is about to be the star of a live auction on Sept.
                    
                                                                                            
                        Nearly 60 years ago, a U.S. B-52 bomber carrying two hydrogen bombs broke apart over rural North Carolina.
The bombs fell into a tobacco field. They didn't go off, but if they had, each 3.8-megaton weapon would've been 250 times more destructive than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.
                    
                                                                                            
                        Charlottesville, Virginia, hasn't fully recovered from a violent white supremacist rally more than a year ago.
The rise of opioid overdoses is prompting a group in Maine to take action - by handing out clean supplies to users. But is the group's work illegal? The uncommon beliefs of The Church of Safe Injection on the Morning Edition.
President Trump said Wednesday that he would accept a foreign government's dirt on a 2020 rival. A look at foreign election interference — the focus of the Mueller report — and opposition research.
                    
                                                                                            
                        It was 75 years ago when thousands of allied paratroopers took to the air, boarded planes, and dropped behind enemy lines.
It was 75 years ago when thousands of allied paratroopers took to the air, boarded planes, and dropped behind enemy lines. One of the last surviving veterans of that mission talks to NPR about D-Day, and how it shifted the momentum of World War II on the next Morning Edition from NPR News.
Morning Edition from NPR News airs weekday mornings from 6:00 am - 9:00 am on KRCB-FM Radio 91 / streaming @ norcalpublicmedia.org / Download the FREE KRCB App @ iTunes & Google Play!
Farmer Gao Yongfei is paying much closer attention to his more than 5,000 pigs than ever before.
That's because hundreds of pigs at farms nearby are dying from a mysterious virus, and Gao and his staff are now vigilantly checking his herd for symptoms of African swine fever.
                    
                                                                                            
                        Russia is still holding former U-S Marine Paul Whelan in Moscow on espionage charges.
                    
                                                                                            
                        
Democratic Congresswoman Veronica Escobar represents El Paso - a city that's made headlines in part because of the Trump administration's border policies. Now she responds to the president on national television - the Spanish-language answer to his State of the Union. We'll profile her. Plus, a recap of the Iowa caucuses on the next Morning Edition from NPR News.
Morning Edition from NPR News airs weekday mornings from 6:00 am - 9:00 am on KRCB-FM Radio 91 / streaming @ norcalpublicmedia.org / Download the FREE KRCB App for your favorite mobile device!
                    
                                                                                            
                        In a small town high up in the mountains of Puerto Rico, a cemetery devastated by Hurricane Maria is still closed - forcing some desperate residents to exhume the bodies of their deceased loved ones on their own.
                    
                                                                                            
                        
Eighteen years after 9/11, the United States and the Taliban appeared close to making peace. But when a Tailban bomb killed a U-S soldier in Afghanistan, President Trump ended peace talks instead. We look at the shifting currents of America's longest war on the next Morning Edition from NPR News.
Morning Edition from NPR News airs weekday mornings from 6:00 am - 9:00 am on KRCB-FM Radio 91 / streaming @ norcalpublicmedia.org / Download the FREE KRCB App @ iTunes & Google Play!
(Photo: A U.S. Army helicopter crew in Afghanistan, June 2017 - Capt. Brian Harris/AP/via NPR)
                    
                                                                                            
                        
On the next Morning Edition, a machine created to detect chemical weapons has a new mission on the streets of Boston. How it might help prevent drug overdoses. Also, the new film 'Queen and Slim' explores African Americans' relationship with the police. Noel King talks with the movie's screenwriter. Hear news, plus stories that affect your world on the next Morning Edition from NPR News.
Morning Edition from NPR News airs weekday mornings from 6:00 am - 9:00 am on KRCB-FM Radio 91 / streaming @ norcalpublicmedia.org / Download the FREE KRCB App for your favorite mobile device!
                    
                                                                                            
                        
A Massachusetts man spent 27 years in prison for a murder he didn't commit. He sued the police officers who he claims violated his civil rights - and won a million dollars for every year he lost. But does all that money matter to him? Plus, our continuing coverage of President Trump, Ukraine, and the House impeachment inquiry on the next Morning Edition from NPR News.
Morning Edition from NPR News airs weekday mornings from 6:00 am - 9:00 am on KRCB-FM Radio 91 / streaming @ norcalpublicmedia.org / Download the FREE KRCB App @ iTunes & Google Play!
(Photo: Mark and Mia Schand, wearing T-shirts from the innocence organization Centurion Ministries in 2015, just want to move forward - Karen Brown/New England Public Radio)
                    
                                                                                            
                        Last year, 33-year-old Walker Hughes — who has autism and is minimally verbal — was rushed to the hospital after he tried a new medication that made him agitated.
"We're driving at rush hour and my sweet guy is screaming and grabbing me and we're just scared to death," Walker's mom, Ellen Hughes, now 69, said in a StoryCorps interview recorded in February.
Page 2 of 43
Northern California
Public Media 
Newsletter
Get the latest updates on programs and events.
