The Latest National As the shutdown drags on, Senator Klobuchar urges action Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota says Democrats are united on affordability and calls on the president to help end the shutdown. Avery Keatley World How one athlete changed the story for Indian cricket India's new heroine is a come-back-kid who led her cricket team to world victory. She's also a target for Hindu extremists because she wears her Christianity on her sleeve Diaa Hadid Arts & Life Writing radio obituaries is an art of its own NPR's reporters on the choices and challenges of writing obituaries. Jason Fuller Music The next battle for Austin's music scene is against the algorithms KUT's Miles Bloxson and Elizabeth McQueen explore how Austin musicians are adapting to AI and the changing music industry. Ahmad Damen Israeli settlers and soldiers are redrawing the map of the West Bank As the world looks to Gaza, settlers in the West Bank are seizing land and terrorizing villages with impunity. Carrie Kahn Politics Judge says Education Dept. partisan out-of-office emails violated First Amendment A federal judge says the Trump administration "overplayed its hand" by inserting partisan language into workers' out-of-office autoreplies. Cory Turner Latin America Trump says boat crews are narco-terrorists. The truth is more nuanced, AP finds In interviews in villages on Venezuela's northeastern coast, from which some of the boats departed, residents and relatives said the dead men had been running drugs but were not narco-terrorists. The Associated Press After 40 years, plans to deploy a new undersea habitat are in progress A British engineering and research company is unveiling a "subsea human habitat," a base that four people can live and work in for missions of a week or more. It's the first new underwater habitat developed since the 1980s. Greg Allen Health CRISPR gene-editing works to reduce high cholesterol in a new study An experimental gene-editing treatment shows promise for permanently lowering levels of cholesterol and triglycerides, possibly helping cut the risk for heart disease. Rob Stein Health Doctor in Sudan wins $1 million prize for his extraordinary courage: 'It is my duty' Dr. Jamal Eltaeb of Sudan has been awarded the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. He says, "Every day we work in the impossible conditions with barely enough to keep people alive." Arundathi Nair Prev 642 of 1647 Next Sponsored
National As the shutdown drags on, Senator Klobuchar urges action Sen. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota says Democrats are united on affordability and calls on the president to help end the shutdown. Avery Keatley
World How one athlete changed the story for Indian cricket India's new heroine is a come-back-kid who led her cricket team to world victory. She's also a target for Hindu extremists because she wears her Christianity on her sleeve Diaa Hadid
Arts & Life Writing radio obituaries is an art of its own NPR's reporters on the choices and challenges of writing obituaries. Jason Fuller
Music The next battle for Austin's music scene is against the algorithms KUT's Miles Bloxson and Elizabeth McQueen explore how Austin musicians are adapting to AI and the changing music industry. Ahmad Damen
Israeli settlers and soldiers are redrawing the map of the West Bank As the world looks to Gaza, settlers in the West Bank are seizing land and terrorizing villages with impunity. Carrie Kahn
Politics Judge says Education Dept. partisan out-of-office emails violated First Amendment A federal judge says the Trump administration "overplayed its hand" by inserting partisan language into workers' out-of-office autoreplies. Cory Turner
Latin America Trump says boat crews are narco-terrorists. The truth is more nuanced, AP finds In interviews in villages on Venezuela's northeastern coast, from which some of the boats departed, residents and relatives said the dead men had been running drugs but were not narco-terrorists. The Associated Press
After 40 years, plans to deploy a new undersea habitat are in progress A British engineering and research company is unveiling a "subsea human habitat," a base that four people can live and work in for missions of a week or more. It's the first new underwater habitat developed since the 1980s. Greg Allen
Health CRISPR gene-editing works to reduce high cholesterol in a new study An experimental gene-editing treatment shows promise for permanently lowering levels of cholesterol and triglycerides, possibly helping cut the risk for heart disease. Rob Stein
Health Doctor in Sudan wins $1 million prize for his extraordinary courage: 'It is my duty' Dr. Jamal Eltaeb of Sudan has been awarded the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity. He says, "Every day we work in the impossible conditions with barely enough to keep people alive." Arundathi Nair