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When Mrs. Eisele Took Manhattan: Big City Failed To Awe Minnesota Journalist
In 1936, Country Home magazine sent its "rural correspondent of the year" Susan Eisele on a trip to NYC. With a 6-week-old in tow, she soaked up the city and hit it off with hard-bitten newspapermen.
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3:52
John Oliver Says U.S. Students Learn Virtually Nothing About Africa
So we asked a former U.S. student who went to live in Africa to come up with 11 factoids — a crash course on the continent. Note: We will not test you on these facts.
For Italy's Art Police, An Ongoing Fight Against Pillage Of Priceless Works
Italy is an art theft playground. An elite police squad combats the illicit trade in antiquities and art, but the chase is still on for a stolen Caravaggio painting — No. 1 on the most-wanted list.
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4:35
A Roundup Of Compelling New Nashville Music To Cure The Quarantine Blues
While Nashville's standard studio music-making processes remain at a standstill, here's another roundup of compelling new and recent music from Tré Burt, Paul Burch, Marshall Chapman and more.
Heavy Rotation: 8 Songs Public Radio Can't Stop Playing
From Amber Mark's exquisite cover of Nirvana's "Heart-Shaped Box" to the sparkling first track from Real Estate's upcoming album, these are public radio's most-loved songs of April.
What a Civil War-era provision could mean for candidates accused of inciting violence
North Carolina voters are challenging Rep. Madison Cawthorn's reelection eligibility. NPR's Michel Martin discusses why with Indiana University law professor Gerard Magliocca.
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6:29
Supreme Court backs a high school coach's right to pray on the 50-yard line
The 6-to-3 decision is the latest example of the court's conservative supermajority requiring more accommodation for religion in public schools and less separation between church and state.
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3:50
The relationships between polarization and democracy in the U.S.
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Didi Kuo of Stanford University's Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law about how political polarization is threatening democracy.
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6:40
Bob Woodward's new audiobook features hours of his interviews with ex-President Trump
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Bob Woodward about his recorded interviews with former President Donald Trump, which are featured in The Washington Post journalist's new audio book: The Trump Tapes.
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7:01
Despite Climate Concerns, Germany Bulldozes Land To Expand Coal Mines
A small farming town which lies in the path of an expanding open-pit coal mine is hoping German climate policy will eliminate the use of dirty coal before their village is consumed by the pit.
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6:36
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