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Senate Torture Report Takes A Step Closer To Becoming Public
The Senate Intelligence Committee has voted to release a report on the CIA's interrogation policies in the years after the Sept. 11 terror attacks. The next step requires the agency to determine how much of the report can be declassified. The report has become the centerpiece of a fight between the Senate and the CIA.
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•
4:06
Since The Pandemic Began, Many Kids Missed Out On Immunizations
With online schooling and missed doctor appointments, vaccinations for things like measles are off by as much as 18% from pre-pandemic levels — raising the prospect of outbreaks of old diseases.
Police: Rush Hour Helicopter Crash In London Could Have Been Much Worse
A helicopter flying across London seeking to land due to bad weather clipped a crane atop one of the city's tallest residential towers and fell into a street crowded with rush hour traffic. The pilot and one person on the ground died, and 13 others were injured.
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3:44
Hamish Kilgour, founding member of New Zealand's The Clean, has died at 65
Like the Velvet Underground before them, Kilgour and The Clean inspired tons of musicians to embrace impulsive creativity.
There Are Objections To The Proposed Flint Water Crisis Settlement
A federal judge is considering final approval of a $641 million settlement of lawsuits tied to the Flint Water Crisis, but some who are involved are raising objections to key elements of the deal.
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3:38
Congress tasks a federal watchdog to examine Indian Affairs' troubled tribal jails
The jails program has come under fire for numerous deaths. NPR and Mountain West found a previous review was managed by a retired official who oversaw the facilities when some of the deaths occurred.
Justice Department Warns Of 'Pain' From Looming Cuts
The Obama administration warns that the situation looks ugly for the department under the sequester. But for now, the most alarming claims — that prosecutors will drop cases and criminals will walk free — seem to be just that: alarms.
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4:01
Is A Recess Appointment Valid If The Senate Says It's Not Really Gone?
President Obama and Senate Republicans have different views when it comes to what counts as "recess." A federal appeals court is now weighing the question in a case challenging three of Obama's appointments.
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3:57
Climate change is making a springtime tradition for the Umatilla tribes hard to uphold
In March, women and girls from the Umatilla tribes gather wild celery. The tradition connects them to their ancestors and heralds the arrival of spring. But collecting the plant is getting harder.
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3:42
An oil CEO who will head global climate talks this year calls for lowered emissions
Sultan al-Jaber told energy industry power players on Monday that the world must cut emissions 7% each year and eliminate all release of methane.
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