The Latest Jennifer Lyell, Southern Baptist sexual abuse whistle-blower, dies at 47 Jennifer Lyell, a prominent whistleblower within the Southern Baptist Convention who brought national attention to sexual abuse within the church, has died. She suffered from a series of strokes. Jason DeRose Nine months after Hurricane Helene, volunteers are helping families access homes In North Carolina, volunteers are re-building bridges that were swept away during Hurricane Helene. The bridges will finally allow access to houses that have been cut off by the storm for nine months. Zachary Turner National L.A. is quiet a day after downtown curfew Things are quiet in Los Angeles the day after Mayor Karen Bass instituted a curfew for a small portion of downtown. Liz Baker Sports 'Pink Pony Club' carries the Oilers This NHL playoff season a good luck charm for the Edmonton Oilers has been Chappel Roan's hit song Pink Pony Club. Justine Kenin National How the Los Angeles protests fit into conservative immigration strategy Simon Hankinson, senior research fellow in the Border Security and Immigration Center at The Heritage Foundation, talks with NPR's Mary Louise Kelly about federal efforts to enforce immigration law. Mary Louise Kelly National In Miami, deportations are raising concerns among Cuban-Americans South Florida's Cuban-American community supports President Trump, but some members are uneasy with his immigration policies. "I'm not for deporting people without criminal records." Greg Allen Education Seattle's Roosevelt High School sanctioned for illicit recruiting of football players District staff, coaches, and students at Seattle’s Roosevelt High School face wide-ranging sanctions after the state’s school athletics regulatory body found that the football program illicitly recruited students. Ann Dornfeld Politics Where public opinion stands on Trump's immigration policy Protests around the country continue and the Trump administration forges ahead with its aggressive immigration enforcement. Here's where public opinion stands on immigration. Domenico Montanaro A poet on capturing a difficult moment in time Donika Kelly wrote part of her new poetry collection, "The Natural Order of Things," during her first year of teaching, at a time when U.S. drone strikes in military conflicts were killing civilians. Neda Ulaby Politics Trump's DOJ makes its most sweeping demand for election data yet Voting officials say they've never seen a demand like the one the Justice Department sent to Colorado last month. Miles Parks Prev 894 of 1650 Next Sponsored
Jennifer Lyell, Southern Baptist sexual abuse whistle-blower, dies at 47 Jennifer Lyell, a prominent whistleblower within the Southern Baptist Convention who brought national attention to sexual abuse within the church, has died. She suffered from a series of strokes. Jason DeRose
Nine months after Hurricane Helene, volunteers are helping families access homes In North Carolina, volunteers are re-building bridges that were swept away during Hurricane Helene. The bridges will finally allow access to houses that have been cut off by the storm for nine months. Zachary Turner
National L.A. is quiet a day after downtown curfew Things are quiet in Los Angeles the day after Mayor Karen Bass instituted a curfew for a small portion of downtown. Liz Baker
Sports 'Pink Pony Club' carries the Oilers This NHL playoff season a good luck charm for the Edmonton Oilers has been Chappel Roan's hit song Pink Pony Club. Justine Kenin
National How the Los Angeles protests fit into conservative immigration strategy Simon Hankinson, senior research fellow in the Border Security and Immigration Center at The Heritage Foundation, talks with NPR's Mary Louise Kelly about federal efforts to enforce immigration law. Mary Louise Kelly
National In Miami, deportations are raising concerns among Cuban-Americans South Florida's Cuban-American community supports President Trump, but some members are uneasy with his immigration policies. "I'm not for deporting people without criminal records." Greg Allen
Education Seattle's Roosevelt High School sanctioned for illicit recruiting of football players District staff, coaches, and students at Seattle’s Roosevelt High School face wide-ranging sanctions after the state’s school athletics regulatory body found that the football program illicitly recruited students. Ann Dornfeld
Politics Where public opinion stands on Trump's immigration policy Protests around the country continue and the Trump administration forges ahead with its aggressive immigration enforcement. Here's where public opinion stands on immigration. Domenico Montanaro
A poet on capturing a difficult moment in time Donika Kelly wrote part of her new poetry collection, "The Natural Order of Things," during her first year of teaching, at a time when U.S. drone strikes in military conflicts were killing civilians. Neda Ulaby
Politics Trump's DOJ makes its most sweeping demand for election data yet Voting officials say they've never seen a demand like the one the Justice Department sent to Colorado last month. Miles Parks