Craft Beers Without The Buzz: Brewing New Options For The ‘Sober Curious’
More people are choosing to drink less, driven by growing concerns about health and wellness. But there haven’t been many high-quality nonalcoholic beers available. Booming demand has forced a change.
Alzheimer’s Reshapes The Lives Of A Family In New York
Alzheimer’s disease puts incredible strain on relationships. One couple in New York is talking publicly about how the disease is changing their marriage.
Pilots Criticize Boeing, Saying 737 MAX ‘Should Never Have Been Approved’
Pilots criticize Boeing and the FAA, calling for simulator training, saying the 737 MAX “Was fatally flawed and should never have been approved.”
72 Philadelphia Police Officers Placed On Desk Duty Over Offensive Social Media Posts
Police officials in Philadelphia are describing the action as the largest removal of officers from the street in recent memory.
NYC’s Controversial Rent Control Measure Could Spread To The Rest Of The State
As tenants embrace protections in NYC’s new rent control measures, landlords worry it will set a national precedent and chase good landlords out of the business and degrade rental housing.
Alabama’s Africatown Hopes For Revival After Slave Ship Discovery
The Clotilde was discovered last month in the Mobile River, bringing new attention to a small community founded by African captives that were brought to the U.S. on the ship.
Hundreds Of Migrants From Central Africa Cross Southern U.S. Border To Seek Asylum
The crisis on the Southern border has been driven by a surge of Central American migrants. Now there’s a new face of the crisis: hundreds of African migrants crossing the border to seek asylum.
The Recent Influx Of African Asylum Seekers Is Taxing Social Services In Maine
Many African asylum seekers have made their way to Portland, Maine. They are joining large communities of immigrants from the Congos, Angola and other countries who have settled there.
What Happens When A Hot New Restaurant Transforms An Established Old Neighborhood
NPR’s Ari Shapiro speaks with Frank Shyong of the Los Angeles Times about how popular restaurants, and the clients they attract, are changing places like L.A.’s Chinatown.
Former Actin ICE Director Weighs In On Trump’s Plan To Deport Millions
NPR’s Ari Shapiro talks with John Sandweg, former acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, about President Trump’s pledge to deport millions of people in the U.S. illegally.
Judge’s Order Sets Up Potential New Block Against Census Citizenship Question
The Supreme Court is expected to rule soon on the Trump administration’s plans for a citizenship question. But an order by a federal judge in Maryland could complicate the question’s legal fate.
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