EU lawmakers approve an overhaul of the bloc's migration laws European Union lawmakers have approved a major revamp of the bloc's migration laws, hoping to end years of division and deprive the far right of a vote-winning campaign issue ahead of June elections. The Associated Press
An unusual museum heist: A man smuggled a painting into the building Munich's Pinakothek der Moderne museum announced that it had fired an employee from its technical services team. The man snuck in after hours and hung his own painting. Christopher Intagliata
Holmes Chapel, English village of Harry Styles' youth, needs fans to be tour guides Many tourists visit sites such as a bakery where Styles once worked and a Chinese restaurant where he once dined with Taylor Swift. Tourism has been great for local businesses.
With the House back in session, an agenda item is what to do about aid for Ukraine NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with Democratic Rep. Tom Suozzi of New York about his visit to Ukraine, and the status of U.S. funding for Ukraine's fight against Russia.
Investigative journalists track suspected cartel boss using his google reviews NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with open source researcher Connor Plunkett, about his report with Bellingcat titled "Kinahan Cartel: Wanted Narco Boss Exposes Whereabouts by Posting Google Reviews." Michael Levitt
Reflecting on NATO's past and future as the alliance celebrates its 75th anniversary NPR's Leila Fadel talks to former NATO Deputy Secretary General Rose Gottemoeller about how the alliance got its start, and its importance in a changing world.
A mayor in Ukraine aids his town's few remaining people, as Russia closes in Russian attacks have driven out most of Chasiv Yar's residents. NPR accompanies the mayor on a routine visit to check on those who remain. Polina Lytvynova
NATO is marking 75 years since its founding after the end of World War Two The alliance has grown from just a dozen members in 1949 to the current 32 — including Sweden, which is attending its first meeting as a full member Thursday morning. Steve Inskeep
Glasses aren't just good for your eyes. They can be a boon to income, too That's the finding of a new study in Bangladesh, which gave reading glasses to hundreds of people and then measured their earnings. Gabrielle Emanuel
Farmers encircle EU headquarters in tractors to protest agricultural policies European farmers have staged several protests against agricultural policies recently, the most recent one in Brussels featuring fireworks and liquid manure. Teri Schultz