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FDA advisers meet to review COVID-19 vaccines for children, including the nation's youngest
Long-awaited COVID-19 vaccines for children under the age of 5 could be approved by the Food and Drug Administration this week.
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•
4:43
'1619 Project' journalist lays bare why Black Americans 'live sicker and die quicker'
Linda Villarosa says bias in the health care system and the "weathering" affect of living in a racist society are taking a serious toll on African Americans. Her new book is Under the Skin.
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•
37:21
In Ukraine, open-source intelligence captures evidence for war crimes investigations
Publicly available information — and things like satellite imagery, phone videos or social media — are being pieced together to reveal secrets about the war.
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•
4:24
Comedian, satirist and singer Randy Rainbow gets serious (and not) in new memoir
Rainbow writes about his rise to success online in “Playing with Myself,” which is as funny as it is poignant.
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•
11:04
Retirees embrace intergenerational housing
For many Americans, retirement comes with a lot of anxiety — especially, where should I live?
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•
6:20
Selloff pushes stocks into bear market territory as interest rates rise
The Federal Reserve is meeting and may raise interest rates .75% for the first time in nearly 30 years.
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•
4:40
Supreme Court weighs in on immigration detentions
The Supreme Court ruled Monday that a specific federal law does not require a bond hearing to be given to immigrants who are detained while they wait for their deportation cases to move forward.
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5:51
Sen. Raphael Warnock on his new memoir 'A Way Out of No Way' and what gives him hope
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Sen. Raphael Warnock about his memoir A Way Out of No Way and how he proved himself wrong by winning a Georgia Senate seat as a Black Democrat.
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•
8:15
First minister of Scotland unveils campaign for Scottish independence
The first minister of Scotland, Nicola Sturgeon, announced that her relatively autonomous government in Scotland would pursue a second referendum on full Scottish independence.
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•
3:29
Criminal defense lawyers sound the alarm about mass incarceration in a post-Roe U.S.
NPR's Sacha Pfeiffer asks National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers executive director Lisa Wayne how her organization is gearing up for the criminalization of abortion.
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3:47
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