The Latest National Backyard chicken rentals increase as egg prices fluctuate When the price of eggs seesawed up and down, more people opted to buy chickens for their backyard and to make it an easier option: They rented them. Skyler Rossi National The latest in NIH grant funding A U.S. federal court judge in Boston has ordered the restoration of the grants issued by the National Institutes of Health that had been canceled by the Trump administration. Craig LeMoult National The strategy behind nonviolent protest movement in the U.S. NPR's Juana Summers talks with Harvard Kennedy School of Government political scientist Erica Chenoweth about whether protests like those against President Trump change minds or policies. Juana Summers Remembering Nina Kuscsik, a trailblazer in women's running Back in the 1970s, the prevailing thought was that it wasn't safe for women to run. A leader in the fight for a woman's right to run has died. Nina Kuscsik was 86. Justine Kenin The new conflict between Israel and Iran has defied expectations, expert says NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Aaron Stein, president of the Foreign Policy Research Institute, about the stakes and the history of nuclear proliferation in the Middle East. Mary Louise Kelly World As Israel turns its focus to Iran, the death toll mounts in Gaza -- and hunger deepens Palestinians say Israeli forces killed scores of people trying to reach food aid in Khan Younis on Tuesday in the deadliest attack of recent weeks on hungry crowds attempting to get food in Gaza. Aya Batrawy World 4 things to know as the war between Israel and Iran intensifies Panic and confusion gripped Iran's capital, Tehran, as Israel warned civilians to evacuate or face more potential strikes as conflict between the two countries spilled into its fifth day. Scott Neuman Politics Alex Padilla recounts his removal from DHS news conference in emotional Senate speech The California Democrat returned to the Senate floor Tuesday to warn that the Trump administrations response to immigration protests in Los Angeles should "shock the conscience of our country." Claudia Grisales Inside KUOW KUOW and The Seattle Times' collaborative podcast 'Lost Patients' wins Scripps Howard Award KUOW Health Kraft Heinz to remove artificial dyes from all products, like Jell-O and Kool-Aid By 2027, Kraft Heinz says all artificial food dyes will be replaced with natural colors. The move comes two months after federal officials called on food companies to stop using synthetic dyes. Maria Godoy Prev 1328 of 1643 Next Sponsored
National Backyard chicken rentals increase as egg prices fluctuate When the price of eggs seesawed up and down, more people opted to buy chickens for their backyard and to make it an easier option: They rented them. Skyler Rossi
National The latest in NIH grant funding A U.S. federal court judge in Boston has ordered the restoration of the grants issued by the National Institutes of Health that had been canceled by the Trump administration. Craig LeMoult
National The strategy behind nonviolent protest movement in the U.S. NPR's Juana Summers talks with Harvard Kennedy School of Government political scientist Erica Chenoweth about whether protests like those against President Trump change minds or policies. Juana Summers
Remembering Nina Kuscsik, a trailblazer in women's running Back in the 1970s, the prevailing thought was that it wasn't safe for women to run. A leader in the fight for a woman's right to run has died. Nina Kuscsik was 86. Justine Kenin
The new conflict between Israel and Iran has defied expectations, expert says NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Aaron Stein, president of the Foreign Policy Research Institute, about the stakes and the history of nuclear proliferation in the Middle East. Mary Louise Kelly
World As Israel turns its focus to Iran, the death toll mounts in Gaza -- and hunger deepens Palestinians say Israeli forces killed scores of people trying to reach food aid in Khan Younis on Tuesday in the deadliest attack of recent weeks on hungry crowds attempting to get food in Gaza. Aya Batrawy
World 4 things to know as the war between Israel and Iran intensifies Panic and confusion gripped Iran's capital, Tehran, as Israel warned civilians to evacuate or face more potential strikes as conflict between the two countries spilled into its fifth day. Scott Neuman
Politics Alex Padilla recounts his removal from DHS news conference in emotional Senate speech The California Democrat returned to the Senate floor Tuesday to warn that the Trump administrations response to immigration protests in Los Angeles should "shock the conscience of our country." Claudia Grisales
Inside KUOW KUOW and The Seattle Times' collaborative podcast 'Lost Patients' wins Scripps Howard Award KUOW
Health Kraft Heinz to remove artificial dyes from all products, like Jell-O and Kool-Aid By 2027, Kraft Heinz says all artificial food dyes will be replaced with natural colors. The move comes two months after federal officials called on food companies to stop using synthetic dyes. Maria Godoy