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At the moment’s prime tales
Israel launched practically 2,000 prisoners yesterday as a part of the preliminary part of a ceasefire settlement with Hamas. Hamas additionally freed the final 20 surviving Israeli hostages. Among the Palestinians who returned to Gaza had been journalists, medical doctors and first responders who had been taken from hospitals and off the streets by troopers. NPR’s Aya Batrawy tells Up First that a number of the returned Palestinians confirmed indicators of torture on their our bodies and extreme malnutrition, and a few struggled to stroll.
One of many Palestinian prisoners launched underneath the prisoner-hostage swap and ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas gestures as he and others disembark from their bus upon arrival at Ramallah Cultural Centre in Ramallah, within the occupied West Financial institution, on Oct. 13, 2025, coming from Ofer army jail within the Israel-occupied Palestinian territories. The preliminary part of the Gaza ceasefire deal consists of the discharge of 47 Israeli hostages, dwelling and deceased, taken on Oct. 7, 2023, in alternate for 250 Palestinian prisoners and 1,700 Gazans held by Israel for the reason that outbreak of the struggle.
Mosab Shawer/Center East Photos/AFP through Getty
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Mosab Shawer/Center East Photos/AFP through Getty
- 🎧 NPR’s Anas Baba witnessed the individuals’s return to Gaza and mentioned he noticed a mixture of pleasure and survival as many embraced family members. However a lot of them haven’t any properties to return to and have found that their households are gone. Israeli troops nonetheless occupy Gaza and will not be withdrawing till Hamas disarms. Batrawy says it’s nonetheless unsure whether or not Hamas will comply with storing or handing over offensive weapons. As Gaza seems to rebuild, President Trump’s peace plan does not deal with the West Financial institution or the creation of a Palestinian state, leaving the foundation of the battle unresolved.
- 🎧 Trump has returned from a visit to the Center East and is receiving plenty of credit score for the ceasefire deal, says NPR’s Tamara Keith. There have beforehand been transient ceasefires within the struggle. The query now’s whether or not this time might be completely different. Keith emphasizes that that is solely the primary part of a multiphase peace plan for Gaza. By making the journey to the Center East, Trump has invested political capital within the peace being an enduring one. For the settlement to carry, the president can’t simply transfer on; he must keep engaged and preserve making use of strain, in keeping with Keith.
- ➡️ Here is a take a look at the struggle in Gaza, by the numbers.
Federal immigration officers have been seen in numerous movies utilizing more and more aggressive ways whereas detaining immigrants. A majority of People say they disapprove of the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement ways, in keeping with a current survey from The New York Instances and Siena College.
- 🎧 Ed Yohnka with the ACLU of Illinois tells NPR’s Meg Anderson that officers are dragging individuals out of automobiles and roughly taking people who find themselves simply strolling on the road. Yohnka and different observers say federal brokers have tear-gassed individuals and shot them with pepper balls whereas focusing on immigrants, protesters and journalists. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement says its officers are appearing in keeping with legislation and coverage. Gil Kerlikowske, the previous commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Safety, tells Anderson that immigration officers are not ready to police an city setting, and good policing in cities is about getting the general public to belief you.
New 2025 testing knowledge point out that U.S. college students in third to eighth grade scored beneath 2019 efficiency ranges in studying. The info comes from the Spring 2025 MAP Development Evaluation by NWEA, a Ok-12 testing and analysis group. The outcomes present there is a bit more room for optimism in the case of math, the place some grades confirmed enchancment. All grades are nonetheless behind in comparison with pre-pandemic scores.
Value of dwelling

Veterinarian Janet Sosnicki, 36, checks the temperature of Theodore throughout a drive by way of veterinarian clinic on the Salem Animal Rescue League in Salem, New Hampshire on Might 27, 2020. – Many veterinarian places of work have been closed to the general public through the pandemic and plenty of have choses to do outdoors visits to cut back the unfold of the covid-19 virus. (Photograph by Joseph Prezioso / AFP) (Photograph by JOSEPH PREZIOSO/AFP through Getty Photos)
Joseph Prezioso/AFP/Getty Photos
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Joseph Prezioso/AFP/Getty Photos
NPR’s sequence Value of Residing: The Worth We Pay is inspecting what’s driving value will increase and the way individuals are coping after years of cussed inflation.
When you’ve got a pet, odds are you may have felt the elevated value of pet care. The Indicator from Planet Cash talks with Veterinarian Adam Hechko about why costs are hovering. Here is what he needed to say:
- 🐶 The price of working a veterinary observe has elevated with issues like treatment, partly attributable to tariffs. Hechko says the price of a field of examination gloves is greater than twice what it was a 12 months or so in the past.
- 🐶 For a lot of practices, the price of labor exceeds 50% of total working prices, as a result of wages for these careers should rise over time.
- 🐶 Individuals are keen to spend extra money on pet care. Hechko says this noticeable shift within the tradition of pet possession pertains to pandemic lockdowns. Some individuals’s solely social interactions or supply of companionship throughout that point had been their pets. Hechko believes that is why extra individuals are keen to pay extra for the perfect care to maintain their pet wholesome.
Hearken to what else Hechko has to say about the price of pet care, or learn the transcript from the interview. This week, the sequence will cowl the rising value of well being care. Keep up-to-date on the newest tales right here.
How are increased costs altering the best way you reside? Fill out this manner to share your story with NPR.
Image present

Spaghetti Cumbia posa para un retrato en Vasquez Rocks, en el norte del condado de Los Ángeles, el 26 de marzo de 2022.
Ivan Kashinsky
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Ivan Kashinsky
Cumbia Throughout Latin America is a visible report masking the individuals, locations and cultures that preserve this music style alive in six international locations.
The members of the band Spaghetti Cumbia grew up listening to Latin music of their Los Angeles properties, together with cumbia. Residing in LA, the group grew to become closely influenced by traditional rock, punk rock and hip-hop. They created their very own model by mixing cumbia with their influences and including a Spaghetti Western sound. The band members credit score their love for music for saving them from connecting with the mistaken crowd within the ’90s, when gang violence was at its peak on the town’s east aspect, which was a preferred vacation spot for immigrants. Spaghetti Cumbia mentioned there was no time to spend on the streets between rehearsals and studio periods. Be taught extra about how Los Angeles helped form cumbia music and see footage from the band’s gigs. You can too learn the article in Spanish.
3 issues to know earlier than you go

Marc Maron attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Apple TV+ New Collection “Stick” at AMC Century Metropolis 15 on Might 29 in Los Angeles, California.
Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/FilmMagic
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Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic/FilmMagic
- Former President Barack Obama was the ultimate visitor on actor and comic Marc Maron’s bi-weekly podcast, which ended yesterday on episode 1,686. Obama supplied perception into the present state of politics and mirrored on WTF with Marc Maron‘s legacy.
- The Nobel Prize in Economics was awarded yesterday to Joel Mokyr, Philippe Aghion, and Peter Howitt for his or her analysis on how cycles of technological innovation drive financial progress and result in artistic destruction.
- After graduating from highschool in 1971, Silvana Clark enrolled at a group school after receiving steering from her drama trainer, George Meshke, who had taken a job there. Dealing with monetary difficulties for the following semester, she knowledgeable Meshke, who then helped her safe a scholarship. Towards the top of the college 12 months, Clark found her unsung hero was really the one chargeable for paying her charges, an act she says she’s going to always remember.
This text was edited by Suzanne Nuyen.