The Latest National What's going on in Portland, Ore., that might contribute to fewer ICE arrests? Oregon is a defiant sanctuary state where protesters and immigration lawyers believe they're helping keep down the number of ICE arrests. Tom Homan, Trump's border czar, seems vexed and vows to pay Portland a visit. Martin Kaste Music 2 Supreme Court judges were found guilty of stress. They formed a band as their sentence NPR's Scott Simon talks with Minnesota Supreme Court Justices Anne McKeig and Sarah Hennesy, about their new amateur all-judge band, The Reasonable Doubts. Scott Simon Sports Saturday Sports: Michigan football fine; Brewers fans celebrate; Venus to the U.S. Open NPR's Scott Simon and sportswriter Michele Steele talk about sports (DRAFT) Scott Simon Politics A foreign policy expert offers insight on the meeting between Trump and Putin In the aftermath of the summit between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Evelyn Farkas of the McCain Institute. Scott Simon National Introducing the Scallopalooza festival in Massachusetts' 'scallop capital of the world' We check out Scallopalooza -- a night street festival AND a scallop-shucking contest -- in New Bedford, Mass. Caroline Losneck Politics Week in Politics: A review of the Trump-Putin meeting We look at how President Trump will spin the outcome of his summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin and the suit filed by Washington, D.C., against Trump over federalizing DC's police. Scott Simon Sports Meet John DeMarsico, the artistic director behind NY Mets' baseball cinematic visuals John DeMarsico is the broadcast director for Mets baseball -- and he shoots games like they're movies. Jeff Lunden World As arms race in Asia intensifies, a-bomb survivors make final plea for peace While atomic bomb survivors warn the catastrophic risks, leaders of nuclear-armed states and self-proclaimed 'realists' argue that the deterrence of nuclear weapons is what keeps them from being deployed. Anthony Kuhn National Amid growing 'scandal' of elder homelessness, health care groups aim to help The housing crisis is requiring creative scrambling and new partnerships from health care organizations to keep older patients out of expensive nursing homes as homelessness grows. Felice J. Freyer Science Chimpanzees pick up communication styles from their moms, not their dads A new study finds that chimpanzee babies learn vocal and visual communication patterns from their mothers. The findings may shed light on the way human babies learn from those close to them. Ari Daniel Prev 546 of 1652 Next Sponsored
National What's going on in Portland, Ore., that might contribute to fewer ICE arrests? Oregon is a defiant sanctuary state where protesters and immigration lawyers believe they're helping keep down the number of ICE arrests. Tom Homan, Trump's border czar, seems vexed and vows to pay Portland a visit. Martin Kaste
Music 2 Supreme Court judges were found guilty of stress. They formed a band as their sentence NPR's Scott Simon talks with Minnesota Supreme Court Justices Anne McKeig and Sarah Hennesy, about their new amateur all-judge band, The Reasonable Doubts. Scott Simon
Sports Saturday Sports: Michigan football fine; Brewers fans celebrate; Venus to the U.S. Open NPR's Scott Simon and sportswriter Michele Steele talk about sports (DRAFT) Scott Simon
Politics A foreign policy expert offers insight on the meeting between Trump and Putin In the aftermath of the summit between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Evelyn Farkas of the McCain Institute. Scott Simon
National Introducing the Scallopalooza festival in Massachusetts' 'scallop capital of the world' We check out Scallopalooza -- a night street festival AND a scallop-shucking contest -- in New Bedford, Mass. Caroline Losneck
Politics Week in Politics: A review of the Trump-Putin meeting We look at how President Trump will spin the outcome of his summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin and the suit filed by Washington, D.C., against Trump over federalizing DC's police. Scott Simon
Sports Meet John DeMarsico, the artistic director behind NY Mets' baseball cinematic visuals John DeMarsico is the broadcast director for Mets baseball -- and he shoots games like they're movies. Jeff Lunden
World As arms race in Asia intensifies, a-bomb survivors make final plea for peace While atomic bomb survivors warn the catastrophic risks, leaders of nuclear-armed states and self-proclaimed 'realists' argue that the deterrence of nuclear weapons is what keeps them from being deployed. Anthony Kuhn
National Amid growing 'scandal' of elder homelessness, health care groups aim to help The housing crisis is requiring creative scrambling and new partnerships from health care organizations to keep older patients out of expensive nursing homes as homelessness grows. Felice J. Freyer
Science Chimpanzees pick up communication styles from their moms, not their dads A new study finds that chimpanzee babies learn vocal and visual communication patterns from their mothers. The findings may shed light on the way human babies learn from those close to them. Ari Daniel