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U.S. envoy John Kerry points to some progress at U.N. climate summit
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks to U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for Climate John Kerry about his expectations on what would make the U.N. climate conference a success ahead of the final day of COP26.
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4:35
As climate talks come to a close, not all the countries there are on the same page
Negotiations are coming down to the wire at the U.N. climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland. There's a new draft agreement, but bitter differences remain between rich and poor countries.
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3:25
A pair of bald eagles was caught on video entangled on a Minnesota street
The two birds writhed around together on a residential street for minutes, unable to separate themselves from each other. They reportedly flew away unharmed without police intervention.
Olympic gymnast Sunisa Lee says she was pepper-sprayed in a racist attack in LA
The all-around champion, who is Hmong American, says she was with a group of friends of Asian descent in Los Angeles when people in a passing car yelled at them to "go back to where they came from."
Prosecutors will ask to add some lesser charges against Kyle Rittenhouse
The request could be an indication that prosecutors believe their case has not been as strong as they hoped, legal experts say.
Migrants entering Poland from Belarus face sub-zero temperatures and military patrols
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Matthew Luxmoore of Radio Free Europe about the growing migrant crisis on the border of Belarus and Poland.
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4:08
Several cities are reviving interest in rent stabilization
Voters in three U.S. cities –- Minneapolis, St. Paul and Boston -– indicated their interest this week in controlling fast-rising housing prices using a contentious method: rent control.
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4:04
This Julia Child documentary gives a new look at one of America's brilliant chefs
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Betsy West and Julie Cohen about their new documentary on Julia Child's life and work, Julia.
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8:00
A Navy medic and photographer uses art to reflect on his time in Afghanistan
After his military retirement, Chief Petty Officer Joshua Ives sifted through more than 15,000 photographs he took in Afghanistan. He created a mixed-media project called Noble Eagle.
The infrastructure plan passed. Now, departments are figuring out how to spend it
Government departments are scrambling to figure out how to spend the $1 trillion in the infrastructure package. Some will go to existing grant programs, while others need to be created from scratch.
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3:45
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