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The judge in the Rittenhouse trial gains attention from his courtroom comments
Wisconsin judge Bruce Shroeder is generating a lot of social media scrutiny for his outspokenness in court while overseeing the homicide trial for Kyle Rittenhouse.
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3:16
Britney Spears could soon be free from the controlling conservatorship
Pop star Britney Spears has a big hearing in court Friday. It could decide whether to end the conservatorship that's controlled her life for the past 13 years.
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3:54
Event security is rexamined after last week's deadly crush of fans in Houston
Public safety officials and event planners are reevaluating their security plans following the crowd surge at Houston's Astroworld event that killed nine people.
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3:49
A missing N.J. teen is safely located in New York City after almost a month
Essex County, N.J., officials said that 14-year-old JaShyah Moore was spotted in Harlem and that it "appears she was a runaway." Prosecutors charged her mother with child endangerment.
States in the Southwest U.S. are facing COVID surges
Colorado hospitals are on the verge of a crisis as COVID-19 cases are rising. New Mexico and Utah are not far behind.
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7:57
A scientist crunched the numbers — here's what makes 'Every Breath You Take' eternal
The music we listen to varies according to the time of day, with qualities like tempo and danceability heightening later in the day, according to a data analysis of online music streaming habits.
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3:18
Why is Ethiopia detaining UN aid workers?
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with Stéphane Dujarric, spokesman for the UN Secretary-General António Guterres, on the detention of UN aid workers in Ethiopia and the political state of affairs there.
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3:50
When consumers want to reduce their carbon footprint, food choices matter
According to the World Bank, 20-30% of Earth's carbon emissions come from agriculture. When possible, consumers can reduce their carbon imprint through food choices.
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4:17
iBuyers use data to buy houses and turn a profit. Or at least that's the hope
iBuyers buy homes online and turn around and sell them. But they concentrate in certain places, where houses can be priced pretty well using a computer algorithm.
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3:37
A community-based solution to city code violations could be more effective than fines
Low-income homeowners are often the target for city code violations. Nonprofits in Kansas City are asking to move away from a punitive code system and toward a restorative one driven by the community.
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3:40
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