The Latest Sports Dodgers win Game 3 of the World Series after 18 innings The Dodgers beat the Blue Jays in Game 3 of the World Series after a thrilling 18 innings, matching the longest game by innings in postseason history. Steve Futterman National Federal food benefits will run out Nov. 1. How the nation's food banks are responding NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Claire Babineaux-Fontenot, CEO of Feeding America, about the looming expiration of federal food assistance and what it means for food banks across the country. Steve Inskeep National Trump administration expands political pressure campaign to SNAP benefits As the government shutdown drags on, the Trump administration says Democrats will be to blame when millions of Americans will lose their SNAP benefits Nov. 1. Michel Martin Politics America's immigration crackdown is disrupting the global remittance market America's immigration crackdown might have serious financial consequences for a range of countries. Greg Rosalsky World NEWSBRIEF: SNAP BENEFITS AND SHUTDOWN, TRUMP IN JAPAN, HURRICANE MELISSA President Trump addresses troops in Japan, SNAP benefits will run out for millions of Americans Nov 1., Hurricane Melissa barrels toward Jamaica as Category 5 storm. Steve Inskeep National The racial history of the 'overpopulation time bomb' and 'pronatalism' movements Code Switch explores the racial history of two seemingly opposing movements that inform today's declining birthrates. Michel Martin Animals Moo-sic to their ears: Farmers find cows love jazz music Farmers are serenading cows with smooth jazz. Studies on whether it boosts milk production are in-cow-clusive, but herds seem udderly delighted by the groovy tunes. Steve Inskeep Education How one school prepares kids for school shootings while protecting them from trauma With students back in class, school shootings are on the rise. NPR's Leila Fadel visits a school in Minnesota to see how it's preparing students for the worst while trying to minimize trauma. Leila Fadel Politics As Trump talks of designating antifa a foreign terrorist group, experts see danger The designation would have, as one domestic terrorism expert told NPR, a "cascading effect across civil society, including social media organizations, civic organizations and everything in between." Ryan Lucas Politics Fight over government layoffs continues as shutdown drags on A federal judge in San Francisco will consider whether to indefinitely halt the thousands of layoffs of federal employees announced by the Trump administration since Oct. 1. Andrea Hsu Prev 266 of 1648 Next Sponsored
Sports Dodgers win Game 3 of the World Series after 18 innings The Dodgers beat the Blue Jays in Game 3 of the World Series after a thrilling 18 innings, matching the longest game by innings in postseason history. Steve Futterman
National Federal food benefits will run out Nov. 1. How the nation's food banks are responding NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Claire Babineaux-Fontenot, CEO of Feeding America, about the looming expiration of federal food assistance and what it means for food banks across the country. Steve Inskeep
National Trump administration expands political pressure campaign to SNAP benefits As the government shutdown drags on, the Trump administration says Democrats will be to blame when millions of Americans will lose their SNAP benefits Nov. 1. Michel Martin
Politics America's immigration crackdown is disrupting the global remittance market America's immigration crackdown might have serious financial consequences for a range of countries. Greg Rosalsky
World NEWSBRIEF: SNAP BENEFITS AND SHUTDOWN, TRUMP IN JAPAN, HURRICANE MELISSA President Trump addresses troops in Japan, SNAP benefits will run out for millions of Americans Nov 1., Hurricane Melissa barrels toward Jamaica as Category 5 storm. Steve Inskeep
National The racial history of the 'overpopulation time bomb' and 'pronatalism' movements Code Switch explores the racial history of two seemingly opposing movements that inform today's declining birthrates. Michel Martin
Animals Moo-sic to their ears: Farmers find cows love jazz music Farmers are serenading cows with smooth jazz. Studies on whether it boosts milk production are in-cow-clusive, but herds seem udderly delighted by the groovy tunes. Steve Inskeep
Education How one school prepares kids for school shootings while protecting them from trauma With students back in class, school shootings are on the rise. NPR's Leila Fadel visits a school in Minnesota to see how it's preparing students for the worst while trying to minimize trauma. Leila Fadel
Politics As Trump talks of designating antifa a foreign terrorist group, experts see danger The designation would have, as one domestic terrorism expert told NPR, a "cascading effect across civil society, including social media organizations, civic organizations and everything in between." Ryan Lucas
Politics Fight over government layoffs continues as shutdown drags on A federal judge in San Francisco will consider whether to indefinitely halt the thousands of layoffs of federal employees announced by the Trump administration since Oct. 1. Andrea Hsu