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Students continue to protest at campuses across the country, despite the risk of arrest. Some schools now threaten demonstrators with disciplinary action, while others promise the opposite.
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From county clerks to poll workers, election workers are quitting their jobs over threats and harassment tied to election deniers.
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A new Johnny Cash song got NPR Music producer Lars Gotrich thinking about music released after a beloved artist dies. Check out "Well Alright," plus new music by Arooj Aftab and Tems on 8 Tracks.
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The new Department of Labor rules focus on the fiduciary standard of care.
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Doris Kearns Goodwin's late husband Dick Goodwin was a speechwriter for former Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, and former U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.
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Students at California State Polytechnic University Humboldt demand that the university divest from Israel because of Israel's treatment of Palestinians in Gaza.
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We've all been trained to look out for red flags on first dates, like when someone orders for you without asking or spends the entire evening talking about themselves. But what about financial red flags?
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April always brings some of the years' biggest poetry collections. So as it wraps up, we wanted to bring you two favorites — retrospective collections from Marie Howe and Jean Valentine.
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New York Times Andes bureau chief Julie Turkewitz recently spoke with migrants about their stories as they crossed the dangerous swath of jungle into Panama called the Darien Gap.
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This Friday, the owners of Just-In-Time Recreation will reopen its doors six months after one of the worst mass shootings in Maine history.
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A new report finds the inequality gap is getting worse between the children who have access to preschool and those who don’t.