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Chile's Indigenous fishermen say the salmon industry threatens their way of life

Reinaldo Caro unloads his catch from the shoreline of the Almirante Montt Gulf, Chilean Patagonia.

Salmon farming is big business in Chile, and the U.S. is one of its largest markets. Yet the fish are not native, and fishermen say salmon are damaging ecosystems and an Indigenous way of life.

(Image credit: John Bartlett for NPR)

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Recovery Failure: Why we struggle to rebuild for the next storm

A truck is stuck in water and mud following flooding from Hurricane Helene in western North Carolina.

NPR and the PBS series Frontline investigate the forces keeping communities from building resiliently, and the special interests that profit even when communities don't.

(Image credit: FRONTLINE)

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Boulder Jewish Festival moves forward with heightened security after attack

Women embrace before a community vigil at the Boulder Jewish Community Center to mark an attack in Boulder, Colo., Wednesday, June 4, 2025.

The festival, which kicks off Sunday morning, is set to take place at the same site where a group was attacked with Molotov cocktails during a vigil for Israeli hostages in Gaza last week.

(Image credit: Andy Cross)

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Salmonella outbreak linked to California egg distributor sickens 79 people

Recalled organic and cage-free brown eggs distributed by August Egg Company have the plant code number P-6562 or CA5330 printed on their carton or packaging.

U.S. health officials confirmed the salmonella infections were linked to contaminated organic and cage-free brown eggs from August Egg Company. All recalled eggs should be thrown away, the CDC said.

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Vance voices loyalty to Trump but says he 'understands' Musk's frustration

President Donald Trump, center, and Vice President JD Vance, right, and Elon Musk met backstage prior to a presidential campaign event at the Butler Farm Show in Butler, Pa., on Oct. 5, 2024.

As the Trump-Musk feud escalated, JD Vance signaled loyalty to Trump during a recent podcast appearance. At the same time, the vice president said he understands Musk's frustration.

(Image credit: Bloomberg)

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78th Tony Awards preview: What to expect on Broadway's biggest night

78th Tony Awards preview: What to expect on Broadway's biggest night

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Coco Gauff wins the French Open to claim her 2nd Grand Slam title

Coco Gauff celebrates after winning her women

The 21-year-old American star battled back over three sets to defeat the world's top-ranked player, Aryna Sabalenka. Gauff is the first American to win at Roland-Garros since Serena Williams in 2015.

(Image credit: Thibuad Moritz)

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Israel says it has retrieved the body of a Thai hostage in Gaza

This undated photo provided by the Hostage

Israel said it had retrieved the body of Nattapong Pinta, who was abducted during the Oct. 7, 2023, attack that sparked the war. He had come to Israel to work in agriculture.

(Image credit: Hostage's Family Forum)

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A former police chief who escaped from an Arkansas prison is captured

This combo of images released by the Arkansas Department of Corrections shows the recapture of escaped inmate Grant Hardin, an ex-police chief and convicted killer, by Arkansas law enforcement officers and the U.S. Border Patrol on Friday, near Moccasin Creek in Izard County, about 1.5 miles northwest of Calico Rock prison.

A former police chief and convicted killer known as the "Devil in the Ozarks" was captured by law enforcement 1.5 miles from the prison he escaped from following a nearly two-week-long manhunt.

(Image credit: Arkansas Department of Corrections)

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The many ways Ukraine carries out unprecedented drone attacks

Ukrainian troops prepare to launch a drone in eastern Ukraine on April 30. Throughout the war, Ukraine has carried out innovative drone attacks never seen before in combat.

With one surprise attack after another, Ukraine keeps inventing new ways to wage war with drones. In turn, Russia is building a massive drone army of its own.

(Image credit: Genya Savilov)

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Should federal rental aid come with a time limit? Here's how it works in one place

Becca Morris in the home she

The Trump administration wants to allow a cutoff date for housing subsidies. The plan is deeply controversial, but Delaware offers a potential model for success.

(Image credit: Wesley LaPointe)

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4 takeaways from Erin Patterson's testimony at her toxic mushroom triple murder trial

Erin Patterson, pictured at her home in Leongatha, Victoria, Australia, in August 2023. Three people died of death cap poisoning after eating a meal she had cooked the previous month.

Patterson is accused of putting death cap mushrooms in a meal she served her estranged husband's relatives in July 2023, killing three. She took the stand in Week 6 of the trial gripping Australia.

(Image credit: Jason Edwards)

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Torture and treason trials: what's happening in Tanzania?

Kenyan journalist and human rights activist Boniface Mwangi (R) and Ugandan activist Agather Atuhaire (L) during a joint press conference in Nairobi on June 2, 2025 following their three-day detention and alleged torture by Tanzanian authorities.

Tanzania's government is facing growing accusations of repression after prominent human rights defenders say they were beaten and sexually assaulted while in custody.

(Image credit: TONY KARUMBA)

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'Doctor Who' is about possibility. Ncuti Gatwa's role embodied that

Ncuti Gatwa as the Doctor.

Until recently, the long-running British show was too often content with iteration. Actor Ncuti Gatwa brought an unapologetic queerness to the character of the Doctor.

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'You barely see people out': How immigration raids are reshaping daily life in Puerto Rico's Dominican enclave

Juan Vega Paredes, a Dominican man who was arrested by immigration authorities in Puerto Rico in January, poses for a portrait in his home in San Juan, Puerto Rico on June 3, 2025.

Puerto Rico's Dominican immigrant community is on edge following a series of immigration raids, which started in January. People have stopped going to work, sending kids to school, or attending medical appointments. What was once a lively barrio is now mostly quiet in the wake of the crackdown.

(Image credit: Keren Carrión/NPR)

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How the U.S. became highly reliant on Elon Musk for access to space

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with a payload of 20 Starlink satellites is seen in the evening sky above Lawndale, Calif., after being launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base on June 18, 2024.

Besides its flights to the International Space Station and Starship program, SpaceX is deeply embedded in the Department of Defense. The feud between Elon Musk and President Trump could end all that.

(Image credit: Patrick T. Fallon)

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A baklava crawl in the Turkish city that's obsessed with the pastry

Different types of baklava are on display and being packaged at Gulluoglu, a shop in Gaziantep, Turkey. The city has many shops dedicated to the sweet pastry.

Here's how the Turkish city of Gaziantep became synonymous with baklava, the sweet pastry made of layers of phyllo dough, filled with nuts and soaked in syrup or honey.

(Image credit: Claire Harbage)

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WorldPride caps off its first D.C. celebration with a weekend parade

Participants watch the Capital Pride Parade in 2024 in Washington, D.C.

The global LGBTQ+ festival was held for the first time in the nation's capital. Organizers say the current political environment has dampened the excitement surrounding the celebration.

(Image credit: Aaron Schwartz)

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Does Georgia's fetal 'personhood' law mean a pregnant woman must stay on life support?

Adriana Smith is a patient at Emory University Hospital Midtown in Atlanta. Emergency complications early in her pregnancy led to brain death, but she remains on life support as the pregnancy continues, according to her family. Her case has become a symbol of the medical and ethical issues stemming from a Georgia law that bans most abortions and confers fetal "personhood" rights.<!-- raw HTML omitted -->

The anti-abortion movement is rallying around new laws that establish fetal 'personhood.' Doctors are scrambling to adjust, but even conservatives don't always agree on how they should be applied.

(Image credit: Brynn Anderson)

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6 feel-good exercises to alleviate sore, achy feet

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Foot care professionals share movements that can reduce the risk of injury, prevent and alleviate pain, and improve overall foot health. Give them a try the next time your dogs are barking.

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Spanish Flamenco thrives in New Mexico, with its own unique flavor

Yjastros, the American Flamenco Repertory Company, performing in Albuquerque

A lot of folks know New Mexico for green chiles, the largest hot air balloon festival in the world, and the birthplace of the bomb. But it's also a global center of flamenco_—_the passionate dance, song and music of the Roma people of southern Spain.

(Image credit: Thaïs Coy)

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With $2.7 billion settlement approved, college sports' big money era is officially here

Starting this fall, NCAA Division I schools will be able to pay players directly up to a salary cap of $20.5 million.

The settlement in House v. NCAA brings an end to the NCAA's long-standing tradition of amateurism. Starting this fall, schools will be able to pay players directly up to a salary cap of $20.5 million.

(Image credit: Jae C. Hong)

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ICE raids grow tense as protesters confront immigration agents

ICE agents used what appeared to be a smoke device to disperse the crowd near Buona Forchetta in San Diego, Calif., on May 30, 2025.

Bystanders and protesters have been confronting ICE agents as the Trump administration ramps up immigration enforcement.

(Image credit: Lara McCaffrey)

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Deportees are being held in a converted shipping container in Djibouti, ICE says

Camp Lemonnier uses stacks and rows of "Containerized Living Units," or CLUs, which the military likens to shipping containers, to house thousands of personnel at the U.S. base in Djibouti. A group of migrants is being held in a converted shipping container, according to court filings.

Deported migrants have been stuck at a military base in Djibouti for over two weeks — and ICE officers are also there, guarding them 24 hours a day.

(Image credit: U.S. Navy photo / Screenshot by NPR)

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What's the CBO? Meet the nonpartisan agency under fire from Republicans.

The Congressional Budget Act of 1974 established the Congressional Budget Office, an agency designed to provide lawmakers with objective information about the budgetary impacts of proposed bills. Up until that point, the scorekeeping within the government came from the executive branch.

Top Republicans, including President Trump, are criticizing the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office over its assessment that GOP's signature policy bill could add $2.4 trillion to the deficit.

(Image credit: Visual Generation)

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Supreme Court grants DOGE access to confidential Social Security records

The Social Security Administration office in San Francisco

The order, for now, overturns actions that limited DOGE's access to sensitive private information. In a separate case, the court said DOGE did not have to share internal records with a watchdog group.

(Image credit: Justin Sullivan)

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Trump admin asks SCOTUS to intervene and allow Ed Dept cuts

The Trump administration is asking the U.S. Supreme Court intervene and allow it to make personnel cuts at the Education Department.

In an emergency appeal, the administration is asking the Supreme Court to lift a lower-court order blocking mass staffing cuts at the Education Department.

(Image credit: Andrew Harnik)

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Sea turtle Dilly Dally released into the ocean with three flippers after undergoing amputation

An adolescent loggerhead sea turtle named Dilly Dally, whose front flipper was amputated after she was rescued in January suffering from predator wounds, crawls toward the Atlantic Ocean after being released, on the beach in front of Loggerhead Marinelife Center in Juno Beach, Fla., Wednesday, June 4, 2025.

Dilly Dally, a loggerhead turtle who survived a run-in with a predator that ultimately cost her a flipper, has been rereleased into the wild.

(Image credit: Rebecca Blackwell)

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He led George W. Bush's PEPFAR program to stop AIDS. Now he fears for its future

In this 2007 photograph, President George W. Bush holds Baron Mosima Loyiso Tantoh, 4, whose mother Kunene Tantoh, left, is HIV positive and who worked with a program for mothers with HIV in Cape Town that was supported by U.S. funds. At that time, Bush was asking Congress to approve $30 billion over the next five years for PEPFAR, the program that he

Dr. Mark Dybul was an architect of PEPFAR, a program credited with saving 26 million lives. Now its future could be in jeopardy as Congress reviews the Trump administration's funding rescission memo.

(Image credit: Carol T. Powers)

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A Family in Gaza Struggles to Get By

Mahasin al-Zaneen hugs her son, Hassan, the youngest of her eight children. The 39-year-old widow is trying to keep them safe and from starving amid Israel

Amid Israel's expanding war in Gaza and its restrictions on aid entering the territory it's getting harder and harder for civilians to find enough to eat. A U.N.-backed report warns half a million people in Gaza are facing starvation. We hear what life is like there for a mother and her eight children.

(Image credit: Anas Baba)

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