Up First from NPR - Health Care Subsidies, Flooding In Washington, DOJ Under President Trump
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A pop-up cafe in Tokyo is giving people with dementia a place to volunteer as well as a sense of community. Its owner Toshio Morita has become something of a local celebrity. At Orange Day Café, muddled orders, long pauses and gentle confusion aren’t mistakes — they’re the point.
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A Northern Irish man who suffered a cardiac arrest had his life saved after his golden retriever, named Polly, alerted his wife after he stopped breathing. Polly the dog has been hailed a hero by the charity, the British Heart Foundation.
A revolutionary gene therapy has successfully treated patients with aggressive and previously incurable blood cancers.
In Kenya, the Rare Gem Talent School has been set up specifically to teach dyslexic children. A condition that is believed to impact around 10% of people globally.
A woman in Kerala, India, has started a camp to help women who are going through a divorce.
And a French man in London has become the face of a homelessness charity after his virtuoso piano playing at a train station went viral.
Our weekly collection of inspiring, uplifting and happy news from around the world.
What’s ailing Campbell’s soup? And why are investors jumpy again about AI? Plus, is Lululemon on the verge of making a comeback? Host Francesca Fontana discusses the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them.
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What’s ailing Campbell’s soup? And why are investors jumpy again about AI? Plus, is Lululemon on the verge of making a comeback? Host Francesca Fontana discusses the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them.
Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The current and former lawmakers get candid about bipartisan politics, party leadership and the state of the Senate.
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On the "CBS News Weekend Roundup", host Allison Keyes gets the latest on the release of mistakenly deported Kilmar Abrego Garcia from CBS's Jake Rosen, and CBS's Omar Villafranca takes a look at the detention of U.S. citizens and the separation of families. We'll hear from CBS's Jo Ling Kent about a popular online grocery service that's charging different people different prices for the same product. In the "Kaleidoscope with Allison Keyes" segment, a look at a new study on how the Trump administration's immigration crackdown is affecting the economy and moms with young children.
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Trump decided this past week that there was no downside to fully embracing the racist “shithole countries” rhetoric he denied seven years ago; but this mask coming fully off is just the latest chapter in a decades-long campaign to gut a very specific part of the constitution: the reconstruction amendments. On this week’s Amicus episode, Dahlia Lithwick talks to civil rights attorney Sherrilyn Ifill about the critical role the 14th Amendment has played in shaping American democracy, and why this full frontal assault on its protections should have everyone on high alert. In a week in which we found ourselves toggling between “the tide is turning!” and “all is lost!” Sherrilyn expertly guides us to an understanding of what winning looks like in this moment, and how the courts can still play a role in renewing America’s commitment to equal justice under the law, even when the Supreme Court is openly hostile to that proposition.
Sherrilyn Ifill’s substack newsletter: Is It Too Late?
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