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The legacy of Lani Guinier
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Spencer Overton, law professor at George Washington University Law School, about the legacy of Lani Guinier, a legal scholar in the field of voting rights.
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•
8:52
The role of tiny blood clots in long COVID
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with scientist Resia Pretorius of Stellenbosch University in South Africa about the key role of microclots in the diagnosis and treatment of long Covid.
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•
7:10
The Golden Globes go on, but won't be televised
The Golden Globes take place in Beverly Hills Sunday. But there will be big changes: limits on the audience size, nominees are not expected to attend — and the ceremony won't even be televised.
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•
4:35
Death toll rises to 10 after a wall of rock fell on boaters in a Brazilian lake
A towering slab of rock broke from a cliff and toppled onto pleasure boaters drifting near a waterfall in a Brazilian lake Saturday. Dozens were injured.
What's different about college football bowl games this year
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with sportswriter Spencer Hall of The Shutdown Fullcast about why college players are sitting out of bowl games this season.
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6:56
22 tips for 2022: If you want to succeed, choose your failures — in advance
If you feel like you're always running behind on your task list and can never quite get enough done, it's probably because you've got too much to do. Try strategic underachievement.
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19:38
Wisconsin Republican Sen. Ron Johnson is running for reelection
The controversial Republican said he will seek a third term, in what is expected to be a hotly contested race that could determine which party controls the Senate.
A fire in a Bronx apartment building leaves 19 dead, including 9 children
One resident described seeing a wall of "thick, chalky smoke. The type of smoke you can't breathe" in the building's hallway when he tried to leave his apartment.
The future of solitary confinement in New York City jails
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Vincent Schiraldi, senior fellow at Columbia University Justice Lab, about the use of solitary confinement at Rikers Island.
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•
7:05
Rising sea levels threaten affordable housing
Lots of low-income and public housing is threatened by rising seas. Losing those units will make the affordable housing crisis even worse, and put more people at risk of homelessness.
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4:25
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