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The White House steps in to unclog the overwhelmed shipping industry
Global supply chain issues have hampered the economic recovery. The Biden administration is trying to fix some of those issues through deals with the private sector.
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4:12
Manufacturers rush to ramp up rapid COVID test production as demand soars
NPR's Adrian Florido speaks with Estela Raychaudhuri, president of InBios International, about challenges faced by coronavirus rapid test kit manufacturers amid the current surge.
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4:26
'Black Is Beautiful' Beer By Black Brewer Helps Pour Money Into Social Justice Reform
Last year a Black-owned Texas brewery asked the craft industry to take their beer, Black is Beautiful, and use the proceeds to support equality, inclusion and social justice reform. It worked.
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4:36
Look Out, 1962 Mets -- Here Come the Royals
Currently, the Kansas City Royals are the worst team in Major League Baseball, with just 11 wins and 37 losses so far this season. If the trend continues, they could lose more games than the 2003 Detroit Tigers (43-119) or the infamous 1962 New York Mets, which holds the record for most losses in a season (40-120). What's wrong with the Royals? Robert Siegel talks with Alan Schwarz, senior writer for Baseball America.
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0:00
For Latinos, the Uvalde shooting has an extra layer of grief and trauma
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Maria Maldonado-Morales, clinical social worker at Texas Children's Hospital, about the way Latinos have felt after the shooting in Uvalde.
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4:49
Rob Delaney Talks About Gratitude, Perspective, Spaceships And A Career With Teeth
Rob Delaney has almost 670,000 Twitter followers. He talks to NPR's Audie Cornish about what that means for his traditional standup career, and whether he cares if you call him a "Twitter comedian."
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5:54
Border Patrol arrests dozens as operation begins in Charlotte, North Carolina
U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents made dozens of arrests in Charlotte, North Carolina, over the weekend. It's the latest city targeted by the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.
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3:24
Rite-Aid files for bankruptcy amid deluge of opioid lawsuits
The national pharmacy chain faces more than a thousand lawsuits linked to the sale of Oxycontin and other opioid pain pills.
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3:54
The Doorbuster 'Black Friday' Stretches Into Online Sales Events
NPR's Michel Martin speaks to Washington Post retail reporter Abha Bhattarai about the holiday shopping season and the state of retail amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
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3:59
The FDA is likely to sign off on Pfizer's COVID booster for all vaccinated adults
By the end of the week, the Food and Drug Administration is poised to authorize the Pfizer booster for anyone age 18 and older, who is already vaccinated.
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3:46
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