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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 King Charles begins the formal process to strip Prince Andrew of titles. He'll be known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor.
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 Natasha Sarin, president of the Budget Lab at Yale and former Biden administration official, discusses the rise of private credit and the financial risks that brings.
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 Regina Barber and Emily Kwong of Short Wave talk about spider web architecture, storytelling and memory, and why more TV pixels may not translate to a better viewing experience.
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 Last night in Game 5, Blue Jays pitcher Trey Yesavage had one of the best performances ever by a rookie in a World Series. Now Toronto is one game away from winning it all for the first time since '93.
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 "Window shopping" has begun for some people buying health insurance through the Affordable Care Act -- and some patients could see big increases in their premiums.
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with White House correspondent Deepa Shivaram and Pentagon correspondent Tom Bowman about President Trump's meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 Each year, about 1,400 Spirit Halloween shops pop up across the U.S. Two student journalists, Isabel Jacobson and Adam Sanders, visited their local shop to meet the spirited employees who work there.
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 If the government shutdown isn't resolved by Nov. 1, some 65,000 low-income children will be at-risk of losing access to Head Start child care and early learning.
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 Planet Money thought it was the perfect team to get into the board game business, since many games are all about economics. But making a game that's fun and teaches people about economics turns out to be hard.
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 Toads have made their way to just about every corner of the world, even potentially Antarctica, something deemed unthinkable in the past. What's behind this vast toad migration?v
 
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 | Oct 30, 2025 
 President Trump and several others in his administration have been talking about using the National Guard to help with mass deportations -- and possibly invoking the Insurrection Act. Now, those plans might be playing out.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 Volunteer firefighters are essential in many small, rural communities. They're especially needed in the Western U.S. where fires have been growing. We'll meet one of them.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 Residents of Cortina, Italy, worry about the effects of the 2026 Winter Olympics on their town.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 NPR's Juana Summers talks with Sen. Peter Welch of Vermont about his support for a bill to provide SNAP benefits to recipients in spite of the shutdown.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with Bloomberg digital culture reporter Cecilia D'Anastasio about an emerging industry of video editing -- designed to help content creators go viral online.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 Scientists are observing the skies as the comet 3i/ATLAS makes a close flyby of Earth.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 The Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark interest rate today for the second time in six weeks. The central bank is trying to shore up the sagging job market.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 More than 130 people were killed in Rio de Janeiro's deadliest-ever police raid targeting a major drug cartel.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 Noted feminist Bible scholar Phyllis Trible influenced generations of Christians. She died this month at the age of 92.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 Mirjana Spoljaric, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, discusses how the ICRC operates amid renewed violence in Gaza and works to uphold humanitarian principles during the fragile ceasefire.
 
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 | Oct 29, 2025 
 Tens of millions of people are at risk of losing federal food and nutrition benefits due to the government shutdown. Food bank administrators say they are working overtime to meet demand.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 The Trump administration is considering removing aluminum from vaccines, a move opposed by most public health experts.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 After a whooping cough outbreak killed two infants, Louisiana health officials waited months to officially alert physicians or do public outreach. That's not the typical public health response.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 NPR's Ailsa Chang goes on a nighttime hike in search of spiders, with Lisa Gonzalez of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 The order came after the Israeli military said it was fired upon beyond the yellow truce line.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 Amazon is laying off 14,000 workers -- about 4 percent of its workforce. This is part of a larger trend by American companies. They're betting that they can grow without growing their workforces.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 President Trump is set to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping in Korea. Here's what's at stake.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 The Trump administration appears to be relying on unmarked vehicles in immigration enforcement, NPR has learned.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 Gender inequality is accelerating young Japanese women's flight from rural areas to the cities, further depressing the country's already low birthrate.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 Websites fashioned like online marketplaces match aspiring farmers with land owners who want to pass their property to someone who will be a good steward of their work. It's part of a growing trend.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 Sudan's army has retreated from the key Darfur city of El Fasher after an 18-month siege amid reports of mass civilian deaths.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 Reusing, planning ahead and hunting for joy, shoppers are expected to spend a record amount this Halloween.
 
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 | Oct 28, 2025 
 Since Trump's election, gun groups catering to progressives and people of color report a surge in interest as they look to defend themselves in a country that, to them, feels increasingly unstable.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 Social media can push us to the dark side with negative content. A new study finds watching inspiring videos for just three minutes a day can boost your mood and reduce stress.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 A nonprofit based in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, is providing smart homes to people with ALS. They use eye tracking software and a small joystick to control everything in the house.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 Families of Colorado-based troops who liberated Italian mountain regions in World War 2 visit the area and talk with locals about fascism on the 80th anniversary of the war's end.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 Hurricane Melissa will hit Jamaica as a massive Category 5 storm, and dump huge amounts of rain. Climate change makes large, rainy storms more likely.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 The dynamic drummer worked with jazz innovators and avant-garde pioneers across his career.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 More than two dozen Democratic states are suing the Agriculture Department after the Trump administration said it would not use emergency funds to pay SNAP benefits during the shutdown.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 The Trump administration now says it won't use a contingency fund to pay SNAP benefits to about 1 in 8 Americans in November.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 The Trump administration now says it won't use a contingency fund to pay SNAP benefits to about 1 in 8 Americans in November, a departure from earlier guidance announced before the shutdown.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 French police question two suspects in the Louvre jewelry theft, caught thanks to DNA evidence.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 Violence is escalating in Cameroon as Monday's election results confirm 92-year-old President Paul Biya, the world's longest-ruling leader, for another term.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 Billboard ranked what they consider the best Halloween songs. All Things Considered staffers have strong opinions about Billboard's take.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 A settlement was reached to reunite and provide services for immigrant families that were separated at the border, but the ACLU says the Trump administration is severely undermining the agreement.
 
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 | Oct 27, 2025 
 Californians vote on whether to draw new congressional districts next month. Their decision might come down to how they feel about Gov. Gavin Newsom's confrontation with President Trump.
 
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 | Oct 26, 2025 
 Racers and their dogs from around the world hit Wisconsin's trails for a fast, snowless take on traditional sled dog racing. Katie Thoresen from member station WXPR reports.
 
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 | Oct 26, 2025 
 All Things Considered producers Avery Keatley and Marc Rivers talk about movies that capture the eerie spirit of Halloween without the blood, gore, or jump scares.
 
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 | Oct 26, 2025 
 A vineyard in Virginia has turned pest control into a pastime, arming visitors with electric fly swatters to protect its vines from lanternflies. Randi B. Hagi with member station WMRA reports on its fly swatting competition.
 
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 | Oct 26, 2025 
 A new program at the University of Cambridge library in the UK is asking people to bring in their floppy disks so that any digital artifacts on them can be extracted. Among rediscovered files are documents once belonging to Stephen Hawking, says technical analyst Leontien Talboom.
 
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 | Oct 26, 2025 
 Despite the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, the two year-long war in Gaza has left a grim legacy - as well as tens of thousands killed, according to Gaza health authorities, about 170,000 have been wounded and many have lost limbs. Jane Arraf profiles a doctor who lost his leg after an aid truck hit him.
 
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 | Oct 26, 2025 
 French police have arrested suspects in last week's daring Louvre heist, where thieves disguised as maintenance workers stole a collection of imperial-era jewels in under seven minutes.
 
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 | Oct 26, 2025 
 A Boston woman's rape case fell apart after a DNA match came too late for prosecution, revealing how Massachusetts' 15-year deadline leaves many survivors without justice. WBUR's Willoughby Mariano reports.
 
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 | Oct 26, 2025 
 During his visit to Malaysia, President Trump highlighted a peace deal between Thailand and Cambodia while signaling trade goals and upcoming talks with China and Japan.
 
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 | Oct 25, 2025 
 The Portland Trail Blazers head coach was among several NBA figures arrested this week for allegedly participating in illegal gambling schemes.
 
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 | Oct 25, 2025 
 New sanctions on Russian oil giants show President Trump's frustration with President Putin as his peace effort falters.
 
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 | Oct 25, 2025 
 The Trump administration's goals to crack down on drug trafficking may be at odds with cuts to aid programs meant to fight coca at its source in the Amazon
 
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 | Oct 25, 2025 
 The Port of Houston is feeling the strain as unpaid customs officers, rising tariffs, and a prolonged government shutdown disrupt trade and threaten jobs across Texas.
 
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 | Oct 25, 2025 
 As the ceasefire takes hold, Prime Minister Netanyahu faces a turning point in his political future, according to Anshel Pfeffer of The Economist.
 
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 | Oct 25, 2025 
 For the first time, NATO allowed journalists to witness its annual nuclear exercise, a once-secret event that now serves as both a show of transparency and a message of deterrence toward Russia.
 
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 | Oct 25, 2025 
 NPR's Neda Ulaby and Bob Mondello reflect on Susan Stamberg's lasting influence on arts reporting, sharing how her inventive use of sound, vivid writing, and curiosity taught generations of journalists to make listeners see what they could not watch.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 NPR's Juana Summers speaks with R&B musician Leon Thomas, who describes his new EP Pholks as a collaboration of polymaths inspired by multi-talented artists like Prince and Quincy Jones.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 A youth orchestra in the Kyiv region composes a symphonic poem, re-creating the sound of wartime nights in Ukraine.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 Because of the shutdown, the federal government is belatedly releasing new Consumer Price Index numbers, which the Social Security Administration needs to adjust for next year's benefits.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 Over a week after ex-typhoon Halong swept through western Alaska, people in the affected villages are taking stock. In Kipnuk, state officials estimate that over 90% of structures have been destroyed.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 Last night's Billboard Latin Music awards honored Bad Bunny, who received the lifetime achievement award. When the legendary Rita Moreno handed it off, the moment was like the passing of a baton.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 The FBI says card shuffling machines were hacked to cheat at poker as part of a major illegal gambling scheme. NPR's Ailsa Chang talks to a reporter who's been covering the machines' vulnerabilities.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 NPR's Adrian Florido talks with ambassador James B. Story, a former top diplomat to Venezuela, about the rising tensions between the U.S. and Venezuela, and what President Trump's goals might be.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 The World Series gets underway Friday evening in Toronto between the Blue Jays and Los Angeles Dodgers. The Dodgers superstar Shohei Ohtani and Blue Jays' Vladimir Guerrero Jr. are set to shine.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 A core business line for Western Union is migrant workers in the U.S. sending money back home. An earnings call reflects a lot less of that since President Trump took office.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 Republicans in Georgia are worried about losing a rare off-year election in November because rural voters might not show up at the polls.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 NPR's Adrian Florido speaks with George Retes, a U.S. citizen who was detained by federal immigration officers in July while attempting to enter his workplace.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 On his first album in nearly a decade, global superstar Miguel pulls inspiration from his personal life and Mexican heritage.
 
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 | Oct 24, 2025 
 For years, the Kremlin has been cracking down on the internet. It has banned Facebook and Instagram. Now, it's pushing a new app called "Max" for a wide range of internet services.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Fall is when farmers apply for credit and other assistance ahead of spring planting. The federal shutdown means they can't.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 After Texas Gov. Greg Abbott ordered cities to remove art from roadways, issues of political messaging — and who gets to define it — prompted confusion across the state.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Ticketmaster's CEO made waves with a recent comment that event tickets are underpriced. Economics 101 backs him up. So why do ticket prices seem so out of control?
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy meets with European Union leaders as they prepare massive new financing for Kyiv's war effort.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 More than 25 years ago, Philip Pullman's first novel, The Golden Compass, introduced readers to heroine Lyra Belacqua. Now, more than 25 years later, her story comes to a close in The Rose Field.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Researchers have found a new "grue jay" bird in South Texas, a hybrid between blue and gray jay birds that is likely the result of shifting weather patterns and climate change.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Misty Copeland was the first Black principal dancer at the prestigious American Ballet Theatre.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Kevin Blackistone, a national sports columnist at The Washington Post, about where Thursday's NBA gambling arrests fit within the history of sports gambling scandals.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 The city of Toronto is buzzing in anticipation for their Blue Jays first World Series since 1993.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Local leaders in Astoria, Oregon are building a hospital meant to withstand earthquakes and tsunamis, but the Trump administration canceled its FEMA grant, and the shutdown has stalled communication.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Billboard magazine implemented new rules for when old songs must be removed from the Hot 100.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Cattle ranchers are upset at President Trump over his comments that he plans to buy beef from Argentina. Ranchers say it will hurt struggling farmers.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Following Portland's example, demonstrators at No Kings protests around the U.S. donned inflatable costumes to counter the Republican narrative that the events are hate-filled and un-American.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 NPR's Adrian Florido speaks with California Rep. Robert Garcia, a Democrat, on an investigation he is leading into arrests of U.S. citizens by federal immigration authorities.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 A new peer-reviewed analysis shows K-12 students who got regular access to social and emotional learning had better test scores and better grades.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 With the theft of valuable jewels from The Louvre this week, NPR looks into the economic imperatives for going to the trouble of stealing artifacts from museums.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 NPR's It's Been a Minute podcast explored some of the pitfalls of relying on AI search results, including concerns about accuracy and bias.
 
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 | Oct 23, 2025 
 Prosecutors say Rozier and others passed confidential intel to organized crime groups to help wager on NBA games. Billups allegedly participated in a separate scheme involving underground poker games.
 
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 | Oct 22, 2025 
 An Oregon penitentiary is showcasing its inmates' debating skills. They make arguments, speak to others' perspectives and resolve disputes amicably.
 
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 | Oct 22, 2025 
 An Oregon penitentiary is showcasing its inmates' debating skills. They make arguments, speak to others' perspectives and resolve disputes amicably.
 
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 | Oct 22, 2025 
 The President's "cardiac age" has been reported to be 14 years younger than his chronological age. What does this mean, and who can get this test?
 
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 | Oct 22, 2025 
 Many Christians are worried that the rise of Christian Nationalism — the idea that the U.S. government should be ruled by Christian beliefs — is doing harm to their religion.
 
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 | Oct 22, 2025 
 President Trump's expansive interpretation of executive power is continuing to reshape federal spending in a government shutdown.
 
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 | Oct 22, 2025 
 Portland launches York Fest, an event to honor an enslaved Black man named York who entered what is now Oregon as part of the Lewis and Clark expedition.
 
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 | Oct 22, 2025 
 Scientists test a traditional method for fermenting yogurt... using ants.
 
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 | Oct 22, 2025 
 American Eric Lu is the newest winner of the prestigious International Chopin Piano Competition held in Warsaw, Poland.
 
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