The Latest Iraqi Kurds rush to quash reports of Kurds leading uprising in Iran Kurdistan's deputy prime minister tells NPR that Kurdish forces will not enter Iran or join the war, insisting "this is not our war" despite pressure from Washington and regional tensions. Jane Arraf National Security Why Ukraine is offering to help U.S. in drone warfare with Iran Ukraine was forced to become a world leader in drone warfare due to Russia's invasion. The lessons Ukraine learned will now be used to help the U.S. and its allies facing a drone onslaught from Iran. Greg Myre Front Page: Gas Prices, the Millionaire's Tax, Daylight Savings Time, and the Opera Every week we talk about the most fascinating stories in the news and what they say about the Pacific Northwest. We call it Front Page. Jason Burrows Law & Courts One year later: Mahmoud Khalil remains in limbo but ready to fight Khalil, who was detained last March, sits at the vanguard of a battle over immigrants' due process and civil rights pit against the Trump administration's mass-detention and deportation policies. Ximena Bustillo Politics Trump set to hold a press conference as U.S.-Israel-led Iran war enters second week It comes as oil and gas prices soar, throwing the global economy into turmoil. Saige Miller Business Live Nation's settlement with DOJ still isn't a done deal Live Nation has reached a settlement with the Department of Justice after a years-long antitrust battle. What could this mean for the broader live entertainment industry? Kathryn Fink Health Menopause hormone therapy is popular, so why the 'mad scramble' to fill prescriptions? With the removal of the black-box warning on hormone therapy for menopause, some providers and patients report shortages or delays, waiting for a pharmacy to restock transdermal estrogen patches. Allison Aubrey Music Musical treasures collected by late Indianapolis Colts owner up for auction The late Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay built a collection of musical artifacts including instruments played by the Beatles, Miles Davis and Bob Dylan. His family is putting them up for auction. National Security wait times at some U.S. airports soar as government shutdown drags on Security wait times have ballooned at several airports across the U.S. at Transportation Security Administration checkpoints. Workers are not getting paid as a partial government shutdown drags on. Joel Rose Science Epstein used his ties to Nobel laureate scientists to try to rebuild his image A 2006 conference for physicists in the U.S. Virgin Islands that included a trip to Jeffrey Epstein's private island shows how he used his wealth to build relationships with prominent scientists. Ava Berger Prev 100 of 1647 Next Sponsored
Iraqi Kurds rush to quash reports of Kurds leading uprising in Iran Kurdistan's deputy prime minister tells NPR that Kurdish forces will not enter Iran or join the war, insisting "this is not our war" despite pressure from Washington and regional tensions. Jane Arraf
National Security Why Ukraine is offering to help U.S. in drone warfare with Iran Ukraine was forced to become a world leader in drone warfare due to Russia's invasion. The lessons Ukraine learned will now be used to help the U.S. and its allies facing a drone onslaught from Iran. Greg Myre
Front Page: Gas Prices, the Millionaire's Tax, Daylight Savings Time, and the Opera Every week we talk about the most fascinating stories in the news and what they say about the Pacific Northwest. We call it Front Page. Jason Burrows
Law & Courts One year later: Mahmoud Khalil remains in limbo but ready to fight Khalil, who was detained last March, sits at the vanguard of a battle over immigrants' due process and civil rights pit against the Trump administration's mass-detention and deportation policies. Ximena Bustillo
Politics Trump set to hold a press conference as U.S.-Israel-led Iran war enters second week It comes as oil and gas prices soar, throwing the global economy into turmoil. Saige Miller
Business Live Nation's settlement with DOJ still isn't a done deal Live Nation has reached a settlement with the Department of Justice after a years-long antitrust battle. What could this mean for the broader live entertainment industry? Kathryn Fink
Health Menopause hormone therapy is popular, so why the 'mad scramble' to fill prescriptions? With the removal of the black-box warning on hormone therapy for menopause, some providers and patients report shortages or delays, waiting for a pharmacy to restock transdermal estrogen patches. Allison Aubrey
Music Musical treasures collected by late Indianapolis Colts owner up for auction The late Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay built a collection of musical artifacts including instruments played by the Beatles, Miles Davis and Bob Dylan. His family is putting them up for auction.
National Security wait times at some U.S. airports soar as government shutdown drags on Security wait times have ballooned at several airports across the U.S. at Transportation Security Administration checkpoints. Workers are not getting paid as a partial government shutdown drags on. Joel Rose
Science Epstein used his ties to Nobel laureate scientists to try to rebuild his image A 2006 conference for physicists in the U.S. Virgin Islands that included a trip to Jeffrey Epstein's private island shows how he used his wealth to build relationships with prominent scientists. Ava Berger