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Amid power outages, an unusual number of locals visit Nashville's honky tonk district
While winter storms caused major power outages in Nashville, its downtown music scene saw a lot more locals who took up hotel rooms usually occupied by tourists.
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2:36
Local law enforcement authority key to enforcing federal immigration orders, Tarrant sheriff says
Sheriff Bill Waybourn discussed how to protect America’s borders during a panel with Mercy Culture leaders.
White Sands fossil footprints challenge notions about human history
How long have humans lived in North America? For decades, the commonest answer has been perhaps 14,000 years — but new findings add weight to arguments for a longer human history in the Americas.
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4:03
What scientists hope to learn from Artemis II's moon mission
NPR's A Martinez talks to Paul Hayne, a planetary scientist at University of Colorado Boulder, about what he and others working on future moon missions hope to learn from Artemis II.
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3:33
Israel orders evacuation of Tyre's last safe neighborhood as strikes intensify
In Lebanon, Israeli airstrikes are emptying parts of an ancient city, but for residents too old or too sick to flee, staying behind is the only option.
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8:13
DHS agents shot a woman at a protest in Chicago
Federal immigration agents shot a woman in Chicago this weekend after they say they were boxed in by several cars and had their vehicles rammed. Chicago residents are tense.
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3:44
It was her dream to ride in a Mustang convertible; one volunteer made it come true
Elaine Wirth always loved sports cars, but at age 76 thought she'd never get to ride in a Mustang convertible. Her assisted living home made that dream come true.
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3:12
Telling Stories About Ourselves In 'The Faraway Nearby'
"Stories are compasses and architecture," says author Rebecca Solnit. "We navigate by them, we build our sanctuaries and prisons out of them, and to be without a story is to be lost in the vastness of the world."
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5:43
Bullock And McCarthy, Packing 'Heat' (And Laughs) In Boston
Director Paul Feig and writer Katie Dippold have found a perfect pair of leads for their cop comedy. Critic Bob Mondello says Oscar winner Sandra Bullock and Oscar nominee Melissa McCarthy turn out to have enviable comic chemistry.
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3:44
Go Fish (Somewhere Else): Warming Oceans Are Altering Catches
Fish are moving away from the equator and toward the poles to maintain their preferred water temperature. That means, for example, that fishermen are seeing swordfish normally found in the Mediterranean swimming near Denmark. But in the tropics, there are no fish to replace the ones that are leaving.
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3:57
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