The Latest What the freed Israeli hostages' first few days of freedom will look like All 20 surviving Israeli hostages have been freed by Hamas after spending more than two years in captivity in Gaza. Daniel Estrin Books Former Supreme Court Justice Kennedy's new memoir is unusually revealing Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, who stepped down from the court in 2018, has written a book about his life on the court and off. It's far more revealing than most books written by justices. Nina Totenberg National The price of a paycheck: one town's ICE dilemma The ICE detention center in Folkston, Ga., is expanding to become one of the nation's largest immigrant detention centers. Operated by a private prison corporation GEO Group, it will hold more than 3,000 detainees. Sergio Martínez-Beltrán Sports Raleigh homers, Polanco drives in 2 runs and Mariners beat Blue Jays 3-1 in ALCS opener TORONTO (AP) — Bryce Miller overcame a shaky first inning and gave the tired Seattle Mariners the start they needed in the AL Championship Series opener. Associated Press Economy Washington’s paid leave program heads toward a fiscal cliff Washington’s innovative paid family and medical leave program could be hundreds of millions of dollars in the red within a few years, unless the Legislature acts. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard Education Gun deaths among high schoolers on the rise, WSU study finds Firearm-related deaths are up dramatically among middle- and high school-aged youth, according to a new study led by Washington State University researchers. Emily Fitzgerald/Washington State Standard Arts & Life 'Twice' author Mitch Albom asks: What if you could relive any moment of your life? Albom explores that question in a new novel. He's also the author of Tuesdays with Morrie, which chronicled Albom's relationship with Morrie Schwartz, his old college professor who died of ALS. Tonya Mosley Politics Naked bike ride protest caps week of demonstrations in Portland As many Portlanders return to work Monday after a relatively sedate and rainy weekend of marches and protests, the city awaits word on whether the National Guard will be allowed to deploy to city streets. OPB Staff National Tackles, projectiles and gunfire: Many fear ICE tactics are growing more violent Videos taken by eye witnesses of federal agent encounters with immigrants in Chicago and elsewhere have shown increasingly tense incidents. Immigrant advocates and observers say they're indicative of a larger trend of aggression among federal immigration officers. Meg Anderson World As the ceasefire begins, a look at the Gaza war by the numbers With start of the Israel-Hamas ceasefire and release of hostages and prisoners, here are some key figures related to the Gaza war and the Hamas-led attack on Israel that sparked it. NPR's International Desk Prev 324 of 1650 Next Sponsored
What the freed Israeli hostages' first few days of freedom will look like All 20 surviving Israeli hostages have been freed by Hamas after spending more than two years in captivity in Gaza. Daniel Estrin
Books Former Supreme Court Justice Kennedy's new memoir is unusually revealing Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy, who stepped down from the court in 2018, has written a book about his life on the court and off. It's far more revealing than most books written by justices. Nina Totenberg
National The price of a paycheck: one town's ICE dilemma The ICE detention center in Folkston, Ga., is expanding to become one of the nation's largest immigrant detention centers. Operated by a private prison corporation GEO Group, it will hold more than 3,000 detainees. Sergio Martínez-Beltrán
Sports Raleigh homers, Polanco drives in 2 runs and Mariners beat Blue Jays 3-1 in ALCS opener TORONTO (AP) — Bryce Miller overcame a shaky first inning and gave the tired Seattle Mariners the start they needed in the AL Championship Series opener. Associated Press
Economy Washington’s paid leave program heads toward a fiscal cliff Washington’s innovative paid family and medical leave program could be hundreds of millions of dollars in the red within a few years, unless the Legislature acts. Jake Goldstein-Street/Washington State Standard
Education Gun deaths among high schoolers on the rise, WSU study finds Firearm-related deaths are up dramatically among middle- and high school-aged youth, according to a new study led by Washington State University researchers. Emily Fitzgerald/Washington State Standard
Arts & Life 'Twice' author Mitch Albom asks: What if you could relive any moment of your life? Albom explores that question in a new novel. He's also the author of Tuesdays with Morrie, which chronicled Albom's relationship with Morrie Schwartz, his old college professor who died of ALS. Tonya Mosley
Politics Naked bike ride protest caps week of demonstrations in Portland As many Portlanders return to work Monday after a relatively sedate and rainy weekend of marches and protests, the city awaits word on whether the National Guard will be allowed to deploy to city streets. OPB Staff
National Tackles, projectiles and gunfire: Many fear ICE tactics are growing more violent Videos taken by eye witnesses of federal agent encounters with immigrants in Chicago and elsewhere have shown increasingly tense incidents. Immigrant advocates and observers say they're indicative of a larger trend of aggression among federal immigration officers. Meg Anderson
World As the ceasefire begins, a look at the Gaza war by the numbers With start of the Israel-Hamas ceasefire and release of hostages and prisoners, here are some key figures related to the Gaza war and the Hamas-led attack on Israel that sparked it. NPR's International Desk