Meet the Democrats seen as up-and-comers for 2028 — or maybe sooner (www.npr.org)
a.k.a. 6 people that would have a better chance than Joe Biden at beating Donald Trump in November. Also Kamala Harris is here.
Who is backing Biden? We're keeping track (www.npr.org)
A new way to prevent HIV delivers dramatic results in trial. “The trial began on August 2021 and, so far, not a single woman who received the injections has contracted HIV.” (www.npr.org)
Biden is still weighing whether to stay in the race, Hawaii governor says (www.npr.org)
What to know about the U.K. election, with Labour forecast to knock out Conservatives (www.npr.org)
116 people are killed in one of India's deadliest stampedes (www.npr.org)
What to know about Louisiana's new surgical castration law (www.npr.org)
Supreme Court says Trump has absolute immunity for core acts only (www.npr.org)
Republicans are turning Biden’s voter registration order into a partisan flash point (www.npr.org)
This Sudanese refugee asks: Why is the world ignoring her country's crisis? (www.npr.org)
Can Biden come back from a bad debate the way Reagan did in 1984? (www.npr.org)
At the border, migrants ‘wait and see’ as encounters with Border Patrol dip 40% (www.npr.org)
SCOTUS appears to post opinion allowing Idaho to offer emergency medical abortions (www.npr.org)
A U.S. Supreme Court opinion erroneously — and briefly — posted on the court’s website seems to indicate that the court will temporarily allow abortions in medical emergencies in Idaho, according to Bloomberg News.
The brain makes a lot of waste. Now scientists think they know where it goes (www.npr.org)
Israeli Supreme Court rules that the military must begin drafting ultra-Orthodox men (www.npr.org)
Paris wants an AC-free Olympic Village. Team USA and others aren't so chill with it (www.npr.org)
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange strikes plea deal with the U.S. (www.npr.org)
“Australian leaders have been lobbying the Biden administration to drop the criminal case for years. President Biden confirmed at a news conference in April that American authorities had been “considering” such a move”
Years before intimacy coordinators on Hollywood sets, there was the 1996 film Bound (www.npr.org)
Deadly methanol-laced bootleg liquor kills dozens in South India (www.npr.org)
Couples say they can't get married because of this government program's outdated rules (www.npr.org)
Russia wages a scorched-earth war in Ukraine with retrofitted bombs and new airstrips (www.npr.org)
A supermarket trip may soon look different, thanks to electronic shelf labels (www.npr.org)
Grocery store prices are changing faster than ever before — literally. This month, Walmart became the latest retailer to announce it’s replacing the price stickers in its aisles with electronic shelf labels. The new labels allow employees to change prices as often as every ten seconds....
A Russian court has sentenced a U.S. soldier to nearly 4 years in prison (www.npr.org)
This is what Russian propaganda looks like in 2024 (www.npr.org)
Pro-Russia social media accounts amplifying stories about divisive political topics such as immigration and campus protests over the war in Gaza....