An increasing number of women are joining the Ukrainian military, with thousands serving in frontline roles, as Russia’s full-scale war on Ukraine nears its fourth year. NPR’s Joanna Kakissis talks to some of these Ukrainian women who are training and fighting to defend their country.
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The Source - Texas hemp industry faces new possible ban
CBS News Roundup - 11/11/2025 | World News Roundup Late Edition
Supreme Court extends hold on full SNAP payments as government shutdown nears an end. House gears up to vote on bill that would reopen the government. Chaos continues at airports.
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PBS News Hour - World - News Wrap: Kansas county to pay $3 million for police raid on newspaper
PBS News Hour - World - BBC under scrutiny over edit of Trump’s speech on Jan. 6
Marketplace All-in-One - More labor market blues
Business owners aren’t too optimistic about the labor market, according to an NFIB survey. About a third are struggling to fill an open position, and around a quarter said labor quality was their most pressing issue. In this episode, we scrape together a picture of today’s labor market, sans government data. Plus: Cities issue bonds at a record pace, we explain the consequences of Trump’s proposal to back 50-year mortgages and one report shows real wage growth has slowed to 2%.
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Marketplace is more than a radio show. Check out our original reporting and financial literacy content at marketplace.org — and consider making an investment in our future.
PBS News Hour - Art Beat - ‘The Gales of November’ explores the Edmund Fitzgerald tragedy and the legend it inspired
Consider This from NPR - Why Fetterman still thinks his party is wrong on Israel, shutdown & the working class
When John Fetterman won Pennsylvania's senate seat in 2022, Democrats across the country treated him as a hero and an example of a path forward for the party in the populist Trump era.
Three years later, he often finds himself at odds with his party – most recently, on the government shutdown, Israel, and working class voters.
He delves deeper into his political views and experiences in a new memoir out this week, titled Unfettered. In the book, he’s also deeply honest about his struggles with mental health.
“Honestly, I know millions of Americans suffer,” Fetterman told NPR. “And to really understand what [...] true deep depression is like [...] that's part of the conversation in the book.”
This episode was produced by Tyler Bartlam with audio engineering from Andie Huether. It was edited by Ashley Brown and Nadia Lancy. Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.
You can also watch the full conversation between NPR’s Scott Detrow and Fetterman here.
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The Gist - Jon Levy: “We Don’t Really Want Authenticity”
Behavioral scientist Jon Levy, author of Team Intelligence: How Brilliant Leaders Unlock Collective Genius, joins to talk about why he collects astronauts, Olympians, and other outliers for secret salons—and what they've taught him about trust and connection. He explains why status isn't the same as popularity, how our networks quietly determine our habits and fortunes, and why so-called "authentic" leaders are really just people who match our prewritten narratives. Plus, a Spiel on a government shutdown that changed very little in the real world beyond making everyone mad at Washington and Democrats mad at each other. Also: the "Bono, Lead Singer of U2 Disorder," museum "wayfinding," and one New York Times rice recipe that produced enough leftovers to feed six FTEs.
Produced by Corey Wara
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Newshour - El Fasher survivors in Sudan recount hospital atrocities
Survivors who fled El Fasher in Sudan have described witnessing atrocities as the city fell to the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces last month. The RSF has denied killing nearly five hundred patients and staff at the Saudi Maternity Hospital after capturing the city from the army. We hear a special report from Barbara Plett Usher in Nairobi.
Also in the programme: German songwriters score a victory over AI; and Iraq goes to the polls.
(Picture: Remnants of a shell that targeted the refugee centre, in El Fasher, Sudan, October 7, 2025. Credit: REUTERS)
