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Kentucky or Louisville? Media around the state pick a rivalry winner

Who will win the UK-U of L rivalry game? Reporters from around the state make their picks.

        

Your Friday Briefing

Shutdown, New York Sky, ‘Bandersnatch’: Here’s what you need to know.

Texas Nonprofit Says ICE Is Releasing Migrants Onto El Paso Streets

As more Central Americans arrive at the border, immigration agencies are already beyond their limits. Nonprofits — like Annunciation House, a shelter organization in El Paso, Texas — is helping out.

News Brief: Government Shutdown, Migrant Crisis, Stock Volatility

The government shutdown is expected to stretch into 2019. The secretary of Homeland Security visits El Paso, Texas, Friday. Stocks end higher after spending much of Thursday in negative territory.

With U.S. Troops Leaving Syria, What Will The Fight Against ISIS Look Like?

Many wonder where the fight against ISIS will occur next. David Greene talks to Douglas Ollivant, a former Iraq director at the National Security Council, about that battle against ISIS.

Critics Say U.S. Withdrawal From UNESCO Allows Different Agendas To Surface

The U.S. stopped paying dues to the U.N. Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization after it recognized a Palestinian state in 2011. The U.S. will be out of the group by the end of the year.

Oregon Experiences Economic Fallout From Wildfire Smoke

Worsening wildfire smoke has become an annual annoyance that’s starting to affect the state’s economy. Retailers, tourist outfits and even realtors say they’re planning differently for 2019.

After Italy Turns Against Migrants, They Are Trying To Get To France

Italy’s populist government cracks down on migrants. Those who risked their lives to get into Italy are doing it all over again to get out of the country. In some cases, they traveling over the Alps.

‘I Feel Invisible’: Native Students Languish in Public Schools

At Wolf Point High School in rural Montana, Native American students face the same neglect Native students across the U.S. do as they navigate a school system that has failed American Indians.

A Second Chance for Prisoners, and Their Warden

As a school board member in Wolf Point, Mont., Ron Jackson couldn’t help struggling Native American students as much as he hoped. Now some of them are his inmates.

Sears Is Dying, but Workers’ Loyalty Lives On

Across the country, legions of former employees gather regularly to celebrate a bygone era of retailing.

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