The Latest National In the Pacific Northwest, tiny, old fire trucks from Japan have a big following Kei trucks are tiny trucks shipped from Japan. In the last 10 years, these trucks and vans have become more popular on American farms and cities as utility vehicles. Casey Martin In 'What Will People Think?,' a Palestinian American woman must hide her stand-up comedy career Sara Hamdan discusses her debut novel What Will People Think?, a story about a Palestinian American woman learning to chase her dreams and break cultural expectations. Ailsa Chang National How Trump's effort to move a federal office out of D.C. went in his 1st term President Trump set an April 14 deadline for federal agency reorganization plans, suggesting relocating offices out of D.C. to save money. But an agency move to Colorado in Trump's first term failed. Stina Sieg National How federal cuts are affecting school lunches at one Louisiana school A program that brings farm fresh foods to schools in Louisiana was cut by the Trump administration. Now some local lawmakers are pushing to get it back. Aubri Juhasz History Throughline: The birth of the modern federal civil service The hosts of the Throughline podcast bring us the story of how a presidential assassination gave rise to the modern federal civil service. Rund Abdelfatah National Colorado's rape kit backlog is a barrier to investigations and arrests A nationwide backlog in rape kit testing was largely solved in 2018. But Colorado has fallen behind again due to a corrupt investigator. Progress to catch up will be slow. Bente Birkeland Mass displacement in Gaza as Israel increases airstrikes Palestinians have been massively displaced from areas of Gaza under a new Israeli military effort. Many have ended up in Gaza City where families are pitching tents near a once-picturesque seaport. Daniel Estrin Business Tariffs throw a wrench in Worcester's manufacturing growth President Trump wants to bring manufacturing back to the U.S. We visit Worchester, Massachusetts, which once made things like wire and paper, to see how manufacturing there has changed. Liz Neisloss Animals How LED lights can help birds avoid fatal run-ins with windows Shining ultraviolet lights on windows can substantially decrease the number of birds that fly into them and die, new research at Utah State University shows. Clarissa Casper Politics Trump calls Putin 'absolutely crazy' following Russia's latest barrage on Ukraine Trump's remarks were a rare rebuke of the Russian president and followed a storm of drone and missile attacks on Ukrainian cities on Sunday evening. Jackie Northam Prev 1521 of 1648 Next Sponsored
National In the Pacific Northwest, tiny, old fire trucks from Japan have a big following Kei trucks are tiny trucks shipped from Japan. In the last 10 years, these trucks and vans have become more popular on American farms and cities as utility vehicles. Casey Martin
In 'What Will People Think?,' a Palestinian American woman must hide her stand-up comedy career Sara Hamdan discusses her debut novel What Will People Think?, a story about a Palestinian American woman learning to chase her dreams and break cultural expectations. Ailsa Chang
National How Trump's effort to move a federal office out of D.C. went in his 1st term President Trump set an April 14 deadline for federal agency reorganization plans, suggesting relocating offices out of D.C. to save money. But an agency move to Colorado in Trump's first term failed. Stina Sieg
National How federal cuts are affecting school lunches at one Louisiana school A program that brings farm fresh foods to schools in Louisiana was cut by the Trump administration. Now some local lawmakers are pushing to get it back. Aubri Juhasz
History Throughline: The birth of the modern federal civil service The hosts of the Throughline podcast bring us the story of how a presidential assassination gave rise to the modern federal civil service. Rund Abdelfatah
National Colorado's rape kit backlog is a barrier to investigations and arrests A nationwide backlog in rape kit testing was largely solved in 2018. But Colorado has fallen behind again due to a corrupt investigator. Progress to catch up will be slow. Bente Birkeland
Mass displacement in Gaza as Israel increases airstrikes Palestinians have been massively displaced from areas of Gaza under a new Israeli military effort. Many have ended up in Gaza City where families are pitching tents near a once-picturesque seaport. Daniel Estrin
Business Tariffs throw a wrench in Worcester's manufacturing growth President Trump wants to bring manufacturing back to the U.S. We visit Worchester, Massachusetts, which once made things like wire and paper, to see how manufacturing there has changed. Liz Neisloss
Animals How LED lights can help birds avoid fatal run-ins with windows Shining ultraviolet lights on windows can substantially decrease the number of birds that fly into them and die, new research at Utah State University shows. Clarissa Casper
Politics Trump calls Putin 'absolutely crazy' following Russia's latest barrage on Ukraine Trump's remarks were a rare rebuke of the Russian president and followed a storm of drone and missile attacks on Ukrainian cities on Sunday evening. Jackie Northam