The Latest Former Israeli PM Ehud Olmert says his country is committing war crimes in Gaza NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. In a recent article in the Israeli publication "Haaretz," he said his country is committing war crimes in Gaza. Steve Inskeep Health COVID shots no longer recommended for healthy kids and pregnant women, RFK Jr. says The federal government has removed COVID-19 vaccines from the list of shots recommended for healthy pregnant women and children. The change is raising concerns among some independent experts. Michel Martin Arts & Life Word of the Week: How 'pride' shifted from vice to a symbol of LGBTQ empowerment The word pride has shifted over the millennia, from being first used to describe one of the seven deadly sins in Roman Catholic theology to becoming a global symbol for LGBTQ strength and empowerment. Juliana Kim National 'We're in a holding pattern': Home sales and building slump in the face of uncertainty Would-be homebuyers are finding lots of reasons to wait. Laurel Wamsley Politics In a county that backed Trump, people depend on Medicaid and are conflicted about cuts Medicaid plays a vital role in many rural communities that favored President Trump in the 2024 election. But residents still seem open to Republican plans to cut perceived waste in the program. Noam Levey Will AI collapse the career ladder? It's graduation season. But it's a tough time to be looking for your first job. On today's episode, entry-level jobs are supposed to be the first rung of the career ladder. So why is that ladder breaking? And what can new grads do about it? Monica Nickelsburg Politics U.S. stops scheduling visa interviews for foreign students The State Department has halted the scheduling of new visa interviews for foreign students while it prepares to expand the screening of their activity on social media, officials said. The Associated Press National Ex-police chief sentenced for rape and murder escaped prison disguised as prison guard Law officers searched Arkansas' rugged Ozark Mountains for an ex-police chief and convicted killer who escaped prison by impersonating a guard and walking out through a gate a guard opened for him. The Associated Press World Noem urges Poles to elect Trump ally as CPAC holds its first meeting in Poland The Conservative Political Action Conference held its first meeting in Poland on Tuesday, just days before a presidential election between a liberal mayor and a conservative backed by President Trump. The Associated Press Music Former Sean Combs employee Capricorn Clark says he kidnapped her On Tuesday, Clark, who worked for Combs for more than a decade, accused him of kidnapping her during a chaotic 2011 episode involving his former girlfriend, Cassie Ventura, and the rapper Kid Cudi. Anastasia Tsioulcas Prev 1514 of 1648 Next Sponsored
Former Israeli PM Ehud Olmert says his country is committing war crimes in Gaza NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. In a recent article in the Israeli publication "Haaretz," he said his country is committing war crimes in Gaza. Steve Inskeep
Health COVID shots no longer recommended for healthy kids and pregnant women, RFK Jr. says The federal government has removed COVID-19 vaccines from the list of shots recommended for healthy pregnant women and children. The change is raising concerns among some independent experts. Michel Martin
Arts & Life Word of the Week: How 'pride' shifted from vice to a symbol of LGBTQ empowerment The word pride has shifted over the millennia, from being first used to describe one of the seven deadly sins in Roman Catholic theology to becoming a global symbol for LGBTQ strength and empowerment. Juliana Kim
National 'We're in a holding pattern': Home sales and building slump in the face of uncertainty Would-be homebuyers are finding lots of reasons to wait. Laurel Wamsley
Politics In a county that backed Trump, people depend on Medicaid and are conflicted about cuts Medicaid plays a vital role in many rural communities that favored President Trump in the 2024 election. But residents still seem open to Republican plans to cut perceived waste in the program. Noam Levey
Will AI collapse the career ladder? It's graduation season. But it's a tough time to be looking for your first job. On today's episode, entry-level jobs are supposed to be the first rung of the career ladder. So why is that ladder breaking? And what can new grads do about it? Monica Nickelsburg
Politics U.S. stops scheduling visa interviews for foreign students The State Department has halted the scheduling of new visa interviews for foreign students while it prepares to expand the screening of their activity on social media, officials said. The Associated Press
National Ex-police chief sentenced for rape and murder escaped prison disguised as prison guard Law officers searched Arkansas' rugged Ozark Mountains for an ex-police chief and convicted killer who escaped prison by impersonating a guard and walking out through a gate a guard opened for him. The Associated Press
World Noem urges Poles to elect Trump ally as CPAC holds its first meeting in Poland The Conservative Political Action Conference held its first meeting in Poland on Tuesday, just days before a presidential election between a liberal mayor and a conservative backed by President Trump. The Associated Press
Music Former Sean Combs employee Capricorn Clark says he kidnapped her On Tuesday, Clark, who worked for Combs for more than a decade, accused him of kidnapping her during a chaotic 2011 episode involving his former girlfriend, Cassie Ventura, and the rapper Kid Cudi. Anastasia Tsioulcas