The Latest Sports Super Bowl 60 is set and it's a rematch from 11 years ago: Patriots vs. Seahawks The Patriots will seek their NFL-record seventh Super Bowl victory when they face the Seahawks on Feb. 8 at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. The Associated Press National Power outages and canceled flights as winter storm brings snow, sleet and ice Reporters from across the NPR Network are covering the storm in each state — the impact and how officials are responding. The NPR Network Widespread outages follow weekend freezing rain, with more ice ahead A massive winter storm brought freezing rain and widespread outages in the South, with icy conditions lingering in the North through Monday. Stan Ingold Books In 'The Starseekers', magic, mystery and romance collide with timelines Author Nicole Glover's new book 'The Starseekers' focuses on a space-race themed magical murder mystery, with a Black woman at the center. Jeanette Woods Health A CrossFit-like race is booming in Asia, and young people are driving the surge Hyrox, a timed fitness race that mixes running with workout stations, is selling out across Asia as young people fuel a booming wellness economy. Stephanie Yang World Where is the threat from Russia and China in the arctic? As Trump points to Russia and China near Greenland, experts say the biggest Russian and Chinese activity is elsewhere in the Arctic. Jackie Northam Immigration The border flow slows to a trickle as asylum cases in Mexico drag on for months Barred from the US, stranded in Mexico: migrants at the border have faced uncertainty and stalled asylum claims. Nina Kravinsky Movies We finally watched the movies we were not allowed to see as kids Many of our childhood movie choices are defined by the films our parents wouldn't let us see. An NPR panel of movie lovers discusses the films they were forbidden to watch and what it was like to finally see them. Ryan Benk National Why de-escalation training and communication matters when federal agents police city streets The third Minneapolis shooting in three weeks has renewed questions about immigration agents' role, training, and use of force. We put these questions to Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum. Henry Larson A rare snowfall sends Tulsa sledders to the hills In Tulsa, Oklahoma, the snow brought out sledders and creative rides, even in extreme cold. Sarah McCammon Prev 90 of 1638 Next Sponsored
Sports Super Bowl 60 is set and it's a rematch from 11 years ago: Patriots vs. Seahawks The Patriots will seek their NFL-record seventh Super Bowl victory when they face the Seahawks on Feb. 8 at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. The Associated Press
National Power outages and canceled flights as winter storm brings snow, sleet and ice Reporters from across the NPR Network are covering the storm in each state — the impact and how officials are responding. The NPR Network
Widespread outages follow weekend freezing rain, with more ice ahead A massive winter storm brought freezing rain and widespread outages in the South, with icy conditions lingering in the North through Monday. Stan Ingold
Books In 'The Starseekers', magic, mystery and romance collide with timelines Author Nicole Glover's new book 'The Starseekers' focuses on a space-race themed magical murder mystery, with a Black woman at the center. Jeanette Woods
Health A CrossFit-like race is booming in Asia, and young people are driving the surge Hyrox, a timed fitness race that mixes running with workout stations, is selling out across Asia as young people fuel a booming wellness economy. Stephanie Yang
World Where is the threat from Russia and China in the arctic? As Trump points to Russia and China near Greenland, experts say the biggest Russian and Chinese activity is elsewhere in the Arctic. Jackie Northam
Immigration The border flow slows to a trickle as asylum cases in Mexico drag on for months Barred from the US, stranded in Mexico: migrants at the border have faced uncertainty and stalled asylum claims. Nina Kravinsky
Movies We finally watched the movies we were not allowed to see as kids Many of our childhood movie choices are defined by the films our parents wouldn't let us see. An NPR panel of movie lovers discusses the films they were forbidden to watch and what it was like to finally see them. Ryan Benk
National Why de-escalation training and communication matters when federal agents police city streets The third Minneapolis shooting in three weeks has renewed questions about immigration agents' role, training, and use of force. We put these questions to Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum. Henry Larson
A rare snowfall sends Tulsa sledders to the hills In Tulsa, Oklahoma, the snow brought out sledders and creative rides, even in extreme cold. Sarah McCammon