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Temperatures in Europe are increasing at twice the average global rate, speeding up glacial melts and threatening the continent’s largest rivers. The glaciers in the Swiss Alps have already lost nearly two-thirds of their ice over the past century. If the current climate continues, it is possible that by 2100 you "wouldn’t find any ice anymore," says Swiss glaciologist Daniel Farinotti. The water that glaciers have stored for centuries flows down to Europe’s biggest rivers during the hot and dry summer months, replacing rainwater and snowmelt from the spring. A glacier in the Swiss Alps is the source for several rivers, including the Rhône, the Rhine, the Danube and the Po. Without those masses of ice, the rivers will be forever altered. See photos and read more about the important work being done to track the rapid melt. |
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Trump on Monday said he intended to send National Guard troops to Memphis as part of what he says is an attack on crime. Trump added that he still hopes to send troops to Chicago, though it’s unclear how he can legally do so. The news gives fresh relevance to our recent interview with Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who has declined to ask for the military.
This interview with Pritzker was an opportunity to see him respond to an immigration enforcement surge in Chicago — and to hear from one of the governors who is thinking of a run for president.
Democrats have talked of Pritzker as a possible candidate since at least 2022-2023, when he was seen as a possible alternative to President Joe Biden, should Biden drop out. Pritzker was a governor of a big state and a billionaire, which would make it possible for him to jump-start the financing for a campaign.
“Oh, I had no aim or desire. I didn't take it seriously, other than I'm flattered,” he told me. When Biden at last did drop out in 2024, it was too late for a primary and Pritzker supported Kamala Harris, the president’s choice.
Will the 2028 campaign be different? Pritzker hasn’t said, but indicated that he feels ready. “There are things that governors will learn in their executive functions and things that I came into office understanding, having executive positions in the private sector, that are very helpful in running any kind of organization, especially the largest organization that exists in the United States.”
He's one of several governors — along with California’s Gavin Newsom, Michigan’s Gretchen Whitmer, and Kentucky’s Andy Beshear — who may see an opening. Democrats and Republicans alike will be scanning interviews like ours for relevant information. |
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Ever wished to be a fly on the wall in the meetings and conversations that are shaping the future of the U.S. and the world? Now you can with NPR’s newest podcast, Sources & Methods.
Every Thursday, host Mary Louise Kelly sits down with a team of NPR correspondents to discuss the biggest national security stories of the week, taking you inside the Pentagon, State Department, and CIA with military officials, intelligence experts and diplomatic leaders.
Listen to Sources & Methods on the NPR App, or wherever you get your podcasts. |
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The Cleveland Museum of Art |
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| Have you ever wanted your coffee drinking experience to be a little more special? NPR’s Word of the Week, “zarf,” could help. They are devices dating back to the Ottoman Empire that people used to hold the hot drinks. |
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| Movie star and film visionary Robert Redford died at his home in Utah yesterday at 89. He was renowned for his roles in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Sting and All The President's Men. |
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| The Trump administration has continued to ramp up ICE operations throughout the country. NPR wants to hear from people whose lives have been altered by the change. Fill out this form, and your experience could be featured in Morning Edition. |
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