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Individual grants fuel diverse research, from break dancing to enslaved beer brewers
The National Endowment for the Humanities recently announced grants for 245 projects, including research on Latina members of the military, Black women brewers, and the history of break dancing.
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•
3:57
Take A Ride on the Big Shaker in Los Altos
A soon-to-close exhibition at the Los Altos History Museum encourages visitors to take emergency preparation seriously.
Vladimir Putin Backs Trump, Calling Impeachment Charges 'Completely Made Up'
The Russian president said so Thursday during his annual marathon news conference in Moscow. During the year-end event, Putin also suggested that Russia's presidential term limits "could be removed."
Adults have a lot to say about masks. How do students feel about them?
Elementary school teacher Katy Wright in Montana decided to ask her students how they feel about having to wear masks in school.
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•
2:58
A crop of candidates are insisting they won their elections, despite not being close
Some candidates who finished way down in Georgia's primaries have said their elections were tainted by fraud, and at least one is fundraising off of that.
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3:45
The FDA approves an Alzheimer's drug that appears to modestly slow the disease
The Food and Drug Administration has approved an Alzheimer's drug that appears to modestly slow down the disease. (Story aired on Weekend Edition Saturday on Jan. 6, 2023.)
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3:50
Immerse yourself in nature with these 2021 Wildlife Photographer of the Year images
The top two winners of the 2021 Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition were selected from more than 50,000 entries worldwide. They are a biologist from France and a 10-year-old from India.
Rep. Adam Smith fears Trump will use military as his 'personal police force'
NPR asks Rep. Adam Smith of Washington state, top Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, about the mobilization of U.S. Marines and deployment of National Guard troops in Los Angeles.
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7:36
Climate Magic: Bonita Eloise Ford
What if helping address climate change were akin to trying to start a fire without matches? In this beautiful conversation, Bonita draws a parallel between her attempts to start fire with a bow drill and the way she hopes we can all keep showing up in the world, and not give up.
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•
59:00
'Peril,' Latest Book About Trump, Also Examines Biden's Style Of Policymaking
The new book Peril — written by Washington Post journalists Bob Woodward and Robert Costa — turns out to be just as much about Joe Biden, and how he got to be Trump's successor.
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7:47
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