The Latest National This Colorado city is trying to make public planning meetings more fun and engaging City planning meetings are important, but they can be very boring. To encourage input, Boulder, Colorado, is letting the public add photos and other media to an interactive map of changes they want. Emma VandenEinde Three Austrian nuns are still on the run Three elderly Austrian nuns recently fled a nursing home and broke into their former convent. They have rejected an offer to stay in convent if they promise to get off of social media. Esme Nicholson Arts & Life Student Podcast: Fry bread's complicated place in Native culture Fry bread is a popular food in many Native communities — but has a dark history. One student talks to her grandmother about its complicated place in Native culture. Student Podcast Challenge Pope pushes interfaith dialogue in Lebanon, a country once torn by sectarian war The pope is calling for interfaith harmony in a country still haunted by sectarian divides. Ruth Sherlock Climate Data centers are thirsty for water. This Nevada city is prepared, at least for now Outside Reno, Nev., a massive data center campus is being built to support artificial intelligence. The center sits in the nation's driest state and will need billions of gallons of water to operate. Kaleb Roedel Business As political winds shift, top chipmaker TSMC looks beyond Taiwan The lifeblood of Silicon Valley — advanced microchips — pumps from a science park on Taiwan's west coast, mostly from TSMC, the world's biggest chipmaker. But now the company is looking abroad for places to grow. John Ruwitch Politics Suspect in DC National Guard attack appeared to suffer personal crisis Rahmanullah Lakanwal an Afghan national, is accused of shooting two National Guard soldiers on November 26. One of those soldiers, 20-year-old Sarah Beckstrom, died from her wounds. Brian Mann Government City of SeaTac recenters around Angle Lake light rail station SeaTac's old city hall sits near a freeway onramp. It's hard to reach if you don't drive. Officials say the building is crumbling anyway. So, they're starting over in a better spot. Joshua McNichols Arts & Life From subways to galleries: Miami's Museum of Graffiti traces the appeal of street art A new show at Miami's Museum of Graffiti traces the origins and development of street art. What began in the 1970s with teenagers tagging New York subway cars has grown into a worldwide art movement. Greg Allen Politics Washington lawmakers want to regulate license plate readers Washington state lawmakers next year hope to rein in law enforcement’s use of automated license plate readers amid revelations federal immigration authorities are using the data. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard Prev 25 of 1653 Next Sponsored
National This Colorado city is trying to make public planning meetings more fun and engaging City planning meetings are important, but they can be very boring. To encourage input, Boulder, Colorado, is letting the public add photos and other media to an interactive map of changes they want. Emma VandenEinde
Three Austrian nuns are still on the run Three elderly Austrian nuns recently fled a nursing home and broke into their former convent. They have rejected an offer to stay in convent if they promise to get off of social media. Esme Nicholson
Arts & Life Student Podcast: Fry bread's complicated place in Native culture Fry bread is a popular food in many Native communities — but has a dark history. One student talks to her grandmother about its complicated place in Native culture. Student Podcast Challenge
Pope pushes interfaith dialogue in Lebanon, a country once torn by sectarian war The pope is calling for interfaith harmony in a country still haunted by sectarian divides. Ruth Sherlock
Climate Data centers are thirsty for water. This Nevada city is prepared, at least for now Outside Reno, Nev., a massive data center campus is being built to support artificial intelligence. The center sits in the nation's driest state and will need billions of gallons of water to operate. Kaleb Roedel
Business As political winds shift, top chipmaker TSMC looks beyond Taiwan The lifeblood of Silicon Valley — advanced microchips — pumps from a science park on Taiwan's west coast, mostly from TSMC, the world's biggest chipmaker. But now the company is looking abroad for places to grow. John Ruwitch
Politics Suspect in DC National Guard attack appeared to suffer personal crisis Rahmanullah Lakanwal an Afghan national, is accused of shooting two National Guard soldiers on November 26. One of those soldiers, 20-year-old Sarah Beckstrom, died from her wounds. Brian Mann
Government City of SeaTac recenters around Angle Lake light rail station SeaTac's old city hall sits near a freeway onramp. It's hard to reach if you don't drive. Officials say the building is crumbling anyway. So, they're starting over in a better spot. Joshua McNichols
Arts & Life From subways to galleries: Miami's Museum of Graffiti traces the appeal of street art A new show at Miami's Museum of Graffiti traces the origins and development of street art. What began in the 1970s with teenagers tagging New York subway cars has grown into a worldwide art movement. Greg Allen
Politics Washington lawmakers want to regulate license plate readers Washington state lawmakers next year hope to rein in law enforcement’s use of automated license plate readers amid revelations federal immigration authorities are using the data. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard