• PBS NEWSHOUR
  • WATCH
  • politics
      • Shields and Brooks
      • Supreme Court
      • Vote 2016
      • Election Calendar
      • Politics Monday
  • arts
      • Art Beat
      • Poetry
        • Where Poetry Lives
      • Photo Essays
  • nation
      • Supreme Court
      • Race Matters
      • Essays
      • Brief But Spectacular
  • world
      • Social Entrepreneurship
  • economy
      • Making Sen$e
      • Social Security
      • Ask the Headhunter
      • Paul Solman
  • science
      • Science Wednesday
      • Innovation and Invention
      • Miles O’Brien
  • health
      • Long-Term Care
  • education
      • Teachers
      • Teachers’ Lounge
      • Student Reporting Labs
  • teachers
  • The Rundown
  • TV SCHEDULE
  • ABOUT US
  • FEEDBACK
  • PRESS
  • SUBSCRIPTIONS
  • PRIVACY
  • JOB OPENINGS
  • RECENT PROGRAMS
  • POLITICS
  • ARTS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • ECONOMY
  • SCIENCE
  • HEALTH
  • EDUCATION
  • TEACHERS
  • THE RUNDOWN
PBS NEWSHOUR
sandb (1)
Shields and Brooks
Shields and Brooks on Trump’s primary sweep, Clinton’s ‘woman’s card’
fatalmistake2
Military
RELATED
  • 16 blamed for mistakes in deadly U.S. attack on Afghan clinic
Pentagon: Hospital bombing due to U.S. offensive strike to assist Afghan forces
On Thursday, Wendy Thomas Russell joined a growing chorus of voices calling for parents to stop punishing their children — particularly through the employment of timeouts. Today, her advice on what to do instead. Photo by Getty Images
Nation
wendyWendy Thomas Russell
Column: 12 alternatives to timeouts when kids are at their worst
BY Wendy Thomas Russell  
Vice President Joe Biden arrives at Amman's military airport, Jordan in March. Biden made a surprise trip to Baghdad on Thursday to address the infighting currently gripping the country. Photo by Muhammad Hamed/Reuters
World Quiz
How well do you know the world: Tanzaynia and a surprise trip
BY Larisa Epatko   BY Larisa Epatko  
  • THE RUNDOWN
  • EDITOR'S PICKS
  • MAKING SEN$E
  • ART BEAT
  • PHOTO ESSAYS
  • U.S. Army General Joseph Votel, commander, U.S. Central Command, briefs the media at the Pentagon in Washington, U.S. April 29, 2016 about the investigation of the airstrike on the Doctors Without Borders trauma center in Kunduz, Afghanistan on October 3, 2015. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas  - RTX2C6NN
    full episode
    PBS NewsHour full episode April 29, 2016
    April 29

    Friday on the NewsHour, what the Pentagon discovered in its investigation of last year’s bombing of an Afghan hospital. Also: Inside Virginia’s delegate dance, Shields and Brooks talk politics, a global walking tour of human history, “Shuffle Along” revives its predecessor’s forgotten legacy and the Senate approves a new national mammal. Continue reading →

  • Police in riot gear hold back demonstrators against U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump outside the Hyatt hotel where Trump is set to speak at the California GOP convention in Burlingame, California, U.S., April 29, 2016. REUTERS/Noah Berger - RTX2C7BU
    Politics
    News Wrap: Protesters and police clash at Trump rally
    April 29

    In our news wrap Friday, there was a melee between police and protesters at a Trump rally in California for the second day in a row, Also, fresh violence rocked the Syrian city of Aleppo. Insurgents shelled a mosque, killing at least 15, and new air raids hit rebel-held areas. Continue reading →

  • Screen Shot 2016-04-29 at 9.29.56 PM
    Vote 2016
    GOP candidates jockey for delegate ‘free agents’ in Virginia
    April 29

    After Donald Trump’s sweeping wins across five Northeastern states Tuesday, his trailing opponents are redoubling their efforts to keep the GOP front-runner from a delegate majority. In Virginia, Trump may have won the primary, but that was just the first step in selecting the state’s convention delegates. John Yang reports on the politicking at a Republican convention in that key swing state. Continue reading →

  • salopek2
    World
    The man who’s walking around the world follows footsteps of old Silk Road traders
    April 29

    Three years ago, Pulitzer-winning journalist Paul Salopek embarked on a decade-long walk around the world, charting the path of the original human emigrants who left their birthplace in eastern Africa to spread across the globe. As he prepares to follow the Silk Road from Central Asia into China, Salopek checks in with Hari Sreenivasan to reflect on his journey thus far and what lies ahead. Continue reading →

    RELATED
    • Journalist goes on a walk around the world to find the story of humanity
    • What an ancient boneyard reveals about our earliest global wanderers
  • shuffle along
    Arts
    Remixing ‘Shuffle Along,’ a musical that brought new sounds and moves to Broadway
    April 29

    Almost everything has been forgotten about “Shuffle Along,” the 1921 Broadway musical written, performed and directed by African Americans. But the production was hugely influential, altering the evolution of the art form. Now there’s a new “Shuffle Along,” a new musical about the original, starring Audra McDonald and choreography by Savion Glover. Jeffrey Brown reports. Continue reading →

  • bison
    NewsHour Shares
    Honoring the bison as America’s national mammal
    April 29

    In our NewsHour Shares moment of the day, the Senate unanimously passed legislation designating the American bison as the country’s national mammal, in recognition of the bison’s historical and contemporary significance. The bill, which passed through the House Tuesday, will now head to the White House for approval. Continue reading →

  • Beyoncé kicked off her Formation Tour this week in Miami.
    Arts
    What Beyoncé teaches us about the African diaspora in ‘Lemonade’
    April 29 BY Kamaria Roberts and Kenya Downs 

    By now, countless think pieces and listicles have broken down Beyoncé’s ode to black womanhood in her latest visual album “Lemonade.” But the acclaimed offering by the R&B diva does more than just pay homage to African-American women or southern culture, it offers fans a musical and visual journey through the African diaspora. Continue reading →

  • Justin Reid, Moton Museum's Associate Director for Museum Operations, describes the events that led to the 1951 student walkout and strike. Photo courtesy by Jeff Feinstein
    Teachers' Lounge
    Column: This little known site is the birthplace of the student civil rights movement
    April 29 BY Jeff Feinstein 

    The Moton Museum in Farmville, Virginia, recently commemorated the 65th anniversary of the 1951 Moton Student Strike. A few years after the strike, Moton High provided a majority of the plaintiffs in the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education school desegregation case. Jeff Feinstein, a U.S. history teacher at West Potomac High School in Alexandria, Va., shares what it was like to introduce his students to a key civil rights event. Continue reading →

  • A civil defence member carries a child that survived from under the rubble at a site hit by airstrikes in the rebel held area of Old Aleppo, Syria, April 28, 2016. REUTERS/Abdalrhman Ismail     TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY      - RTX2C2IT
    full episode
    PBS NewsHour full episode April 28, 2016
    April 28

    Thursday on the NewsHour, an airstrike on a hospital is another sign that the Syrian cease-fire is in jeopardy. Also: Bringing the delegate fight to Indiana, how North Carolina’s bathroom law sparked business backlash, criminal justice reforms from the Senate and Obama administration, E.O. Wilson’s plan to save biodiversity and what it means to be unapologetically black. Continue reading →

  • SUBSCRIBE
  • FOLLOW US
SUPPORT FOR PBS NEWSHOUR PROVIDED BY
LATEST NEWS BLOG
  • Loading...
PBS NEWSHOUR
Loading...
ABOUT Judy Woodruff ABOUT Gwen Ifill
SUPPORT FOR PBS NEWSHOUR PROVIDED BY
  • BNSF RAILWAY
  • Fathom
  • LINCOLN FINANCIAL GROUP
  • Mutual of America
ABOUT Hari Sreenivasan
SUBSCRIBE
Receive The Daily Dispatch From the NewsHour Politics Team
Receive audio podcasts directly to your device
MORE
  • MOST READ
  • MOST DISCUSSED
  • 1
    Column: 12 alternatives to timeouts when kids are at their worst
  • 2
    Shields and Brooks on Trump’s primary sweep, Clinton’s ‘woman’s card’
  • 3
    Column: Why you should never use timeouts on your kids
  • 4
    Do you live in a bubble? A quiz
  • 5
    How North Carolina's bathroom law sparked a business backlash
  • 1
    Column: Why you should never use timeouts on your kids
  • 2
    How North Carolina's bathroom law sparked a business backlash
  • 3
    Analyzing Trump’s tough-talking foreign policy speech
  • 4
    Column: 12 alternatives to timeouts when kids are at their worst
  • 5
    What it means to be unapologetically black
TOPICS
  • RECENT PROGRAMS
  • POLITICS
  • ARTS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • ECONOMY
  • SCIENCE
  • HEALTH
  • EDUCATION
  • TEACHERS
  • TV LISTINGS
  • ABOUT US
  • PRESS
  • FEEDBACK
  • SUBSCRIPTIONS
  • PRIVACY
  • JOB OPENINGS

© 1996 - 2016 NewsHour Productions LLC.
All Rights Reserved.

Support the kind of journalism done by the NewsHour... Become a member of your local PBS station.