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Making sense of Trump's current legal troubles
Former President Trump was supposed to testify under oath, facing questions from New York's attorney general. That and the Mar-a-Lago search barely scratch the surface of the legal headaches he faces.
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6:36
COVID-19 In DFW Aug. 23-Aug. 29: Hospitalizations Could Surpass Winter Peak Numbers Next Month
Emergency rooms are also filling up with patients across the state, and additional medical personnel are being deployed to help with the staffing crunch.
NPR's forecast for the 2024 song of the summer? Lots of country, with a little bit of espresso
Which songs will dominate summer playlists on radio, social and streaming platforms? Avid fans and followers of pop music know that by late spring most of the candidates are already climbing the charts, so we're looking at the current top 10 of Billboard's Hot 100 chart to see which entries have a chance to be the song of the summer.
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7:27
Blind loyalty is helping sustain Trump's power in the Republican party, new book says
NPR's Juana Summers talks with journalist Mark Leibovich about his new book Thank You for Your Servitude: Donald Trump's Washington and the Price of Submission.
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8:06
Why Harvard, Yale And Stanford May Not Be The 'Best' Colleges
A school should be defined by its commitment to great teaching and social equity, says the outgoing president of LaGuardia Community College.
'Qualified' Documents Indy 500 Trailblazer Janet Guthrie's Roadblocks In Male-Dominated Sport
Retired race car driver Janet Guthrie was the first woman to qualify for the Indianapolis 500. NPR's Don Gonyea speaks with Guthrie and filmmaker Jenna Ricker about the new documentary, Qualified.
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7:48
5 Things You Should Know About Chris Christie
The New Jersey governor has seen his political stock fall, but he tried to begin anew with his official presidential announcement at his high school alma mater.
In China, Pollution Fears Are Both Literal And Metaphorical
Fears of contagion shape politics in today's China. A protest by artists against smog was met with swift repression. That's because authorities fear a different kind of pollution: destabilizing ideas.
2 Russians medal at the Olympic figure skating final, but not Kamila Valieva
Two skaters from the Russian Olympic Committee took the top two spots at the women's program at the Beijing Olympics. Kamila Valieva, who has been at the center of a scandal, took fourth place.
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3:52
Researchers Examine Gap Between Rich And Poor
Steve Inskeep talks to Harvard economist Nathan Hendren, a co-author of the study, which shows social mobility in the United States is not decreasing. David Wessel, of the Brookings Institution and a contributor to The Wall Street Journal, says while mobility isn't getting any worse, there still is a big gap between rich and poor.
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5:43
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