Search Query
Show Search
TEXAS NEWS
HEALTH & WELLNESS
EDUCATION
POLITICS
ARTS & CULTURE
NEWSLETTERS
WAKE UP with KERA News
KERA News Weekday Update Newsletter Signup
WAKE UP with KERA News
KERA News Weekday Update Newsletter Signup
ABOUT
RADIO SCHEDULE
KERA STAFF
CONTACT
CAREERS
RADIO SCHEDULE
KERA STAFF
CONTACT
CAREERS
© 2026 KERA News
Menu
NPR for North Texas
Show Search
Search Query
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
KERA stream
All Streams
TEXAS NEWS
HEALTH & WELLNESS
EDUCATION
POLITICS
ARTS & CULTURE
NEWSLETTERS
WAKE UP with KERA News
KERA News Weekday Update Newsletter Signup
WAKE UP with KERA News
KERA News Weekday Update Newsletter Signup
ABOUT
RADIO SCHEDULE
KERA STAFF
CONTACT
CAREERS
RADIO SCHEDULE
KERA STAFF
CONTACT
CAREERS
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest
Oldest
Search
Move Over, Yellow 6. More Natural Colors From Plants Are Coming
From purple carrots and cabbage to grapes, the food industry is finding new ways to derive natural colors from plants. It's happening just as consumers are pushing Big Food to ditch artificial colors.
Grasslands Get Squeezed As Another 1.6 Million Acres Go Into Crops
Over the past decade, the government has been paying farmers to keep their land covered with native grasses instead of crops. But as grain prices have risen, the conservation reserve has shrunk by more than 25 percent. This decline in native grasslands means more soil erosion and less habitat for wildlife.
Listen
•
5:11
COVID-19 Will Cost Texas Agriculture At Least $6 Billion This Year, Experts Say
From Texas Standard : The traditional farm-to-table path for food has been disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. With so many people staying home and out...
Listen
•
5:23
Jan. 6 is set to be different this year — in a big way and more subtle ways too
In response to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot four years ago, Congress passed new rules to govern the presidential certification process. Those rules will be in effect Monday.
Listen
•
3:30
Red Cross Says 6 Of Its Workers Were Killed By Unknown Assailants In Afghanistan
The staffers were on their way to deliver livestock materials when they were attacked in the province of Jawzan. The International Committee of the Red Cross says it doesn't know who is responsible.
Want A Copy Of The Federalist Papers? On March 6, You'll Get Your Shot
Dallas-based Heritage Auctions has a rare book about to cross the block, a piece expected to fetch six figures at auction.This collection of essays —…
Listen
•
1:53
2 Cars, 5 Or 6 Bodies From Decades Ago Found In Oklahoma Lake
How did the cars and the people inside end up in western Oklahoma's Foss Lake? That's still a mystery. The vehicles and those last seen in them went missing in the '60s and early '70s. They were found by chance when sheriff's deputies were testing sonar equipment.
After 6 months of occupation, a small Ukrainian town has been liberated
The Ukrainian town of Balaklia was the first to be liberated as part of Ukraine's recent counteroffensive. The work to understand what happened there during six months of occupation is just beginning.
Listen
•
3:32
Week in politics: Trump's actions on Jan. 6 revealed; Steve Bannon guilty of contempt
Revelations from the January 6th committee and a bipartisan deal to reform the Electoral Count Act, the law former President Donald Trump and his allies sought to exploit.
Listen
•
4:22
New Jan. 6 Report Describes Intel Failures And The Warnings Police Got In December
A joint Senate committee probe released its report on the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. It detailed intelligence failures and new information about the warnings the Capitol Police got in December.
Listen
•
3:45
Previous
423 of 6,967
Next