The Latest Politics Comey and James seek case dismissal, arguing prosecutor was illegally appointed Lawyers for former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James asked a judge to dismiss their cases, arguing prosecutor Lindsay Halligan was illegally appointed. The Associated Press Thursday Evening Headlines Katie Wilson elected as Seattle's next mayor, Starbucks baristas go on strike, and Cal Raleigh falls short of winning the American League MVP. Paige Browning Politics Shutdown drama over, and Harrell exits stage left Hans Anderson Politics 'No one saw us coming'. Wilson accepts mayoral win in Seattle After a "bruising nine months" campaigning for Seattle mayor, Katie Wilson said "it's time to come together" as she officially accepted her mayoral win Thursday afternoon, hours after Mayor Bruce Harrell conceded. Dyer Oxley Catholic bishops talked about immigration and transgender care at U.S. gathering U.S. Catholic bishops gathered in Baltimore, where they elected new leaders, responded to Pope Leo's call to speak on immigration and issued new directives on transgender care for Catholic hospitals. Jason DeRose Latin America Tragedy looms 40 years after a volcano wiped out a Colombian village Forty years after the Nevado del Ruiz volcano wiped out the town of Armero, the ghosts of Colombia's deadliest tragedy still haunt its slopes, and families are still searching for lost children. John Otis Economy The government can now get back to measuring the economy with shutdown over Now that the government shutdown is over, federal number crunchers are back at work. It could take time, though, to make up for the jobs reports and inflation scorecards we missed in the last 6 weeks. Scott Horsley Science This week in science: A Saturn moon's ocean, chameleon eyes and energy used for AI Emily Kwong and Regina Barber of NPR's Short Wave discuss new findings about the ocean of Saturn's moon Enceladus, the secrets behind chameleons' eye movements and the energy use behind AI computing. Regina G. Barber Lights, Camera, Closures? - The state of independent movie theaters in Seattle KUOW's Paige Browning sits down with a panel of film experts to talk about the challenges independent movie theaters are facing in an era of streaming and movie studio consolidation. Paige Browning Education Are college students getting too many A's? Harvard University officials have recently raised the alarm on grade inflation. More than 60% of grades awarded to students have been A's. That's up 25% from two decades ago. Kai McNamee Prev 615 of 1647 Next Sponsored
Politics Comey and James seek case dismissal, arguing prosecutor was illegally appointed Lawyers for former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James asked a judge to dismiss their cases, arguing prosecutor Lindsay Halligan was illegally appointed. The Associated Press
Thursday Evening Headlines Katie Wilson elected as Seattle's next mayor, Starbucks baristas go on strike, and Cal Raleigh falls short of winning the American League MVP. Paige Browning
Politics 'No one saw us coming'. Wilson accepts mayoral win in Seattle After a "bruising nine months" campaigning for Seattle mayor, Katie Wilson said "it's time to come together" as she officially accepted her mayoral win Thursday afternoon, hours after Mayor Bruce Harrell conceded. Dyer Oxley
Catholic bishops talked about immigration and transgender care at U.S. gathering U.S. Catholic bishops gathered in Baltimore, where they elected new leaders, responded to Pope Leo's call to speak on immigration and issued new directives on transgender care for Catholic hospitals. Jason DeRose
Latin America Tragedy looms 40 years after a volcano wiped out a Colombian village Forty years after the Nevado del Ruiz volcano wiped out the town of Armero, the ghosts of Colombia's deadliest tragedy still haunt its slopes, and families are still searching for lost children. John Otis
Economy The government can now get back to measuring the economy with shutdown over Now that the government shutdown is over, federal number crunchers are back at work. It could take time, though, to make up for the jobs reports and inflation scorecards we missed in the last 6 weeks. Scott Horsley
Science This week in science: A Saturn moon's ocean, chameleon eyes and energy used for AI Emily Kwong and Regina Barber of NPR's Short Wave discuss new findings about the ocean of Saturn's moon Enceladus, the secrets behind chameleons' eye movements and the energy use behind AI computing. Regina G. Barber
Lights, Camera, Closures? - The state of independent movie theaters in Seattle KUOW's Paige Browning sits down with a panel of film experts to talk about the challenges independent movie theaters are facing in an era of streaming and movie studio consolidation. Paige Browning
Education Are college students getting too many A's? Harvard University officials have recently raised the alarm on grade inflation. More than 60% of grades awarded to students have been A's. That's up 25% from two decades ago. Kai McNamee