A group of health care providers and two Louisiana women who were denied abortion care are suing state officials to block a new law that makes common pregnancy medications controlled dangerous substances, arguing the law is discriminatory and unconstitutional.
Podcasts & Shows
Louisiana Considered
-
A separate review finds issues with an industry-funded insurance group.
-
NASA says a recently discovered comet has broken apart as it approached the sun.
-
Kory York allowed to plea no contest, avoids jail time in Ronald Greene case.
-
Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry has called the Legislature into a special session to make a deal on tax reform, according to a proclamation issued Saturday.
-
Next Sunday is the time to move clocks back in the U.S. Daylight saving time ends at 2 a.m. local time on Nov. 3.
Arts & Culture
NPR News
-
Getting Latinos to the polls in representative numbers has been challenging. A concert promoter thinks he’s got an answer using the growing popularity of Mexican regional music as a hook.
-
Harris and Trump are reaching out to voters in the southwest Thursday, particularly the swing states Nevada and Arizona.
-
The historic fight between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman is still revered as a cherished moment in the central African country's troubled history and has spurred an enduring love of boxing.
-
The 50-year-old had been reported overdue from a deer hunting trip. At least 30,000 brown bears are estimated to be in Alaska and mainly live along the southern coast.
-
Trump statues appeared next to sculptures of nude women in Portland and Philadelphia. The plaques bear the title In Honor of a Lifetime of Sexual Assault and quote Trump's Access Hollywood remarks.