The Latest Health Using an app to rate food for nutrition? Take the results with a grain of salt Food apps can help you figure out what's in your food and whether it's nutritious. Just scan the barcode on the packet with your phone. But different apps can give very different results. Here's why. Maria Godoy Politics Vets in LA hope, with Trump order, that they can finally come home President Trump has ordered a Veterans Affairs campus in West Los Angeles to house 6,000 homeless vets by 2028, but details are elusive. Quil Lawrence National Her son had a meltdown in public. A stranger responded with understanding In 2016, Tulika Prasad was at the grocery store checkout line with her seven-year-old son, who is non-verbal and autistic. A woman understood what was going on when Prasad's son had an outburst. Laura Kwerel Science The European Space Agency will beam the famous 'Blue Danube' waltz into space A performance of the masterpiece will be transmitted into space on Saturday. The waltz has been associated with space travel since its inclusion in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey. Rebecca Hersher World Morning news brief Russia intensifies strikes on Ukraine, summer travel season gets underway in the U.S., federal government forecasts above-normal fire potential in much of the West and some southeastern states. A Martínez Books Author Jonathan Horn discusses his new book, 'The Fate of the Generals' NPR speaks with Jonathan Horn about his new book, "The Fate of the Generals," which tells the story of two commanders in World War II who received the same medal but found honor on different paths. Steve Inskeep Business U.S. sheep industry cautiously optimistic over Trump's tariffs Many in agriculture are worried that Trump administration tariffs will be bad for their bottom lines. The American sheep industry, though, is cautiously optimistic. Rae Solomon Education Florida ends program that allowed some immigrant students to pay in-state tuition Florida has eliminated a program that allowed immigrant students under DACA protections to pay in-state tuition. Now, thousands have to figure out how to finish college with higher costs. Nancy Guan Sports Inside a Louisiana factory making torpedo bats that have become all the rage Torpedo baseball bats hit it big when the Yankees set a new team record with nine home runs in one game earlier this season. We visit a factory in Louisiana to see what makes them so special. Alana Schreiber Education Words of wisdom from some of this year's memorable commencement speakers College graduation can be a time of excitement but also one of uncertainty. We've gathered words of wisdom from some of this year's high-profile commencement speakers, including Kermit the Frog. Hosts Prev 1524 of 1648 Next Sponsored
Health Using an app to rate food for nutrition? Take the results with a grain of salt Food apps can help you figure out what's in your food and whether it's nutritious. Just scan the barcode on the packet with your phone. But different apps can give very different results. Here's why. Maria Godoy
Politics Vets in LA hope, with Trump order, that they can finally come home President Trump has ordered a Veterans Affairs campus in West Los Angeles to house 6,000 homeless vets by 2028, but details are elusive. Quil Lawrence
National Her son had a meltdown in public. A stranger responded with understanding In 2016, Tulika Prasad was at the grocery store checkout line with her seven-year-old son, who is non-verbal and autistic. A woman understood what was going on when Prasad's son had an outburst. Laura Kwerel
Science The European Space Agency will beam the famous 'Blue Danube' waltz into space A performance of the masterpiece will be transmitted into space on Saturday. The waltz has been associated with space travel since its inclusion in the film 2001: A Space Odyssey. Rebecca Hersher
World Morning news brief Russia intensifies strikes on Ukraine, summer travel season gets underway in the U.S., federal government forecasts above-normal fire potential in much of the West and some southeastern states. A Martínez
Books Author Jonathan Horn discusses his new book, 'The Fate of the Generals' NPR speaks with Jonathan Horn about his new book, "The Fate of the Generals," which tells the story of two commanders in World War II who received the same medal but found honor on different paths. Steve Inskeep
Business U.S. sheep industry cautiously optimistic over Trump's tariffs Many in agriculture are worried that Trump administration tariffs will be bad for their bottom lines. The American sheep industry, though, is cautiously optimistic. Rae Solomon
Education Florida ends program that allowed some immigrant students to pay in-state tuition Florida has eliminated a program that allowed immigrant students under DACA protections to pay in-state tuition. Now, thousands have to figure out how to finish college with higher costs. Nancy Guan
Sports Inside a Louisiana factory making torpedo bats that have become all the rage Torpedo baseball bats hit it big when the Yankees set a new team record with nine home runs in one game earlier this season. We visit a factory in Louisiana to see what makes them so special. Alana Schreiber
Education Words of wisdom from some of this year's memorable commencement speakers College graduation can be a time of excitement but also one of uncertainty. We've gathered words of wisdom from some of this year's high-profile commencement speakers, including Kermit the Frog. Hosts