The Latest U.S. military buildup continues as Iran faces possible strikes The U.S. is sending even more Navy ships and top-of-the-line warplanes into the Middle East. This comes as the U.S. and Iran are talking about that country's nuclear program. Greg Myre Two new children's books capture the sights, sounds and community-building of Ramadan As millions of Muslims begin observing Ramadan, NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks to Aya Khalil and Nadine Presley, authors of two new children's books about this holy month. Linah Mohammad Sports Shiffrin's Olympic win brings joy, U.S. men make history in cross-country U.S. Alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin finally medaled at the Winter Olympics, winning gold and breaking a long, agonizing streak of Olympic losses. Brian Mann Health FDA reverses course on Moderna flu shot A little more than a week after the FDA rattled the biotech industry by rejecting Moderna's mRNA flu vaccine without even reviewing the application, the agency changed course. But there's a catch. Sydney Lupkin Health ICE agents often ignore safety and privacy practices for detainee patients, Tacoma nurses say Nurses at a Tacoma hospital allege that ICE agents have repeatedly ignored practices safeguarding detainee patients’ privacy, health, and safety. Eilís O'Neill Business Fresh off their Super Bowl victory, the Seattle Seahawks are officially for sale The Seattle Seahawks are officially for sale. Dyer Oxley Politics Trump would like the government he leads to pay him billions President Trump is asking the federal government for billions of dollars in damages, putting his own Justice Department on the spot and creating an unprecedented ethical morass. Tamara Keith Food During Ramadan, dates are a favorite treat for many Muslims Muslims fast from sunrise to sundown during Ramadan as a private act of worship with deep meaning. National Do the people building the AI chatbot Claude understand what they've created? Anthropic is one of the world's most powerful AI firms. New Yorker writer Gideon Lewis-Kraus explains how they're trying to make chatbot Claude more ethical, and the implications of AI's widening use. Tonya Mosley National Russia's hybrid warfare rattles Poland and NATO Russia is stepping up covert attacks across Europe — rail sabotage, drones, cyber strikes — testing NATO. Polish officials warn "disposable agents" are sowing fear and weaken support for Ukraine. Rob Schmitz Prev 267 of 1649 Next Sponsored
U.S. military buildup continues as Iran faces possible strikes The U.S. is sending even more Navy ships and top-of-the-line warplanes into the Middle East. This comes as the U.S. and Iran are talking about that country's nuclear program. Greg Myre
Two new children's books capture the sights, sounds and community-building of Ramadan As millions of Muslims begin observing Ramadan, NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks to Aya Khalil and Nadine Presley, authors of two new children's books about this holy month. Linah Mohammad
Sports Shiffrin's Olympic win brings joy, U.S. men make history in cross-country U.S. Alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin finally medaled at the Winter Olympics, winning gold and breaking a long, agonizing streak of Olympic losses. Brian Mann
Health FDA reverses course on Moderna flu shot A little more than a week after the FDA rattled the biotech industry by rejecting Moderna's mRNA flu vaccine without even reviewing the application, the agency changed course. But there's a catch. Sydney Lupkin
Health ICE agents often ignore safety and privacy practices for detainee patients, Tacoma nurses say Nurses at a Tacoma hospital allege that ICE agents have repeatedly ignored practices safeguarding detainee patients’ privacy, health, and safety. Eilís O'Neill
Business Fresh off their Super Bowl victory, the Seattle Seahawks are officially for sale The Seattle Seahawks are officially for sale. Dyer Oxley
Politics Trump would like the government he leads to pay him billions President Trump is asking the federal government for billions of dollars in damages, putting his own Justice Department on the spot and creating an unprecedented ethical morass. Tamara Keith
Food During Ramadan, dates are a favorite treat for many Muslims Muslims fast from sunrise to sundown during Ramadan as a private act of worship with deep meaning.
National Do the people building the AI chatbot Claude understand what they've created? Anthropic is one of the world's most powerful AI firms. New Yorker writer Gideon Lewis-Kraus explains how they're trying to make chatbot Claude more ethical, and the implications of AI's widening use. Tonya Mosley
National Russia's hybrid warfare rattles Poland and NATO Russia is stepping up covert attacks across Europe — rail sabotage, drones, cyber strikes — testing NATO. Polish officials warn "disposable agents" are sowing fear and weaken support for Ukraine. Rob Schmitz