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2026 Florida Legislature
2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Not So Forever Home
Paycheck To Paycheck
Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Black Mental Health
Unequal Shots
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2026 Florida Legislature
2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season
Not So Forever Home
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Florida And Climate Change
Corporate Buyouts
Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
Growing Up With Guns
Black Mental Health
Unequal Shots
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U.S. Officials Press For Deeper Coronavirus Origins Investigation
Leading U.S. officials have renewed calls for a deeper investigation into the origins of the coronavirus outbreak.
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•
4:23
Music Critic Picks Favorite Listens On Doja Cat's 'Planet Her'
Singer and rapper Doja Cat released her third studio album, entitled Planet Her. Music critic Briana Younger discusses some of the album's standout songs.
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•
3:53
The 'Human Error' That's Snarling The New York City Mayor's Race
City officials admitted they failed to remove 135,000 test ballots from the election management system before starting to count the real votes from Election Day and early voting, skewing the results.
Biden Announced A Bipartisan Infrastructure Deal. What Happens Now?
President Biden and a bipartisan group of senators now have an infrastructure deal. But there's a long road ahead: Lawmakers must also pass other parts of his economic agenda.
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•
4:24
Here's What We Know About The Condition Of The Florida Building Before It Collapsed
The building was undergoing a county-required 40-year inspection. There were some indications the area of the building was sinking.
Dozens Of People Still Unaccounted For In Florida Condo Collapse
In Surfside, Fla., rescue crews are still combing through the wreckage of the 12-story condominium that collapsed Thursday morning. Dozens of people are unaccounted for as the investigation begins.
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•
3:38
H1N1 Was The Last Pandemic. Here's Why COVID-19 Isn't Yet In That Category
The new coronavirus disease has been diagnosed in 28 countries, and new outbreaks are worrisome. But the World Health Organization sees some encouraging trends.
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•
3:42
After Nevada Caucuses, Bernie Sanders Emerges As Democratic Front-Runner
With a decisive and sweeping victory in the Nevada caucuses, Bernie Sanders is now the front-runner for the Democratic nomination. The other candidates are now vying to be the Sanders alternative.
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•
3:39
Portugal Is Scrambling To Save Vacation Season From New COVID-19 Strains
As new COVID-19 strains threaten southern Europe's summer of recovery, tourism-reliant countries are scrambling to save vacation season while adapting their hospitality industries to the uncertainty.
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4:13
'Willy Wonka' Composer Leslie Bricusse Is Still Busy At Age 90
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory turns 50 in June, and Hook turns 30 in December. Both were shaped by the English lyricist and composer Leslie Bricusse, who remains vital and busy at age 90.
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•
4:23
After Condo Collapse, Florida Officials Scramble To Find Other Unsafe Buildings
The collapse of the Champlain Towers South condominium has led officials across Florida to search for other buildings that could be structurally unsafe. On Friday, a 156-unit building was evacuated.
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•
4:44
Rescue Crews Are Still Searching For Survivors 9 Days After The Florida Condo Collapse
Hopes of rescuing more people from the collapsed building in Surfside, Fla., are fading.
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•
4:07
Texas Lawmakers Return For A Second Shot At Tighter Voting Laws
The U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision upholding a restrictive Arizona voting law has activists elsewhere concerned. In Texas, state lawmakers are set to unveil a new voting bill.
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3:48
'No Sudden Move' Intrigues With Double-Crosses, Dirty Dealings In 1950s Detroit
Benicio Del Toro and Don Cheadle play low-level gangsters who get sucked into a into a major corporate conspiracy in Steven Soderbergh's engrossing new film.
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6:04
Pulitzer Prize-Winning Photojournalist Danish Siddiqui Is Killed In Afghanistan
The 38-year-old journalist, who worked for the Reuters news agency, died in southern Afghanistan during a clash between Taliban militiamen and Afghan troops with whom he was embedded.
The Death Toll From Haiti's Earthquake Rises Amid Fears Of Storm's Threat
Tropical Depression Grace is adding to the misery of the earthquake zone in Haiti, where doctors are scarce and efforts continue to find survivors of Saturday's quake.
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•
3:40
The Earthquake In Haiti Left More Injuries Than The Country's Doctors Can Handle
Rescue efforts continue in the southwest of Haiti, the country hardest-hit by last weekend's earthquake. A shortage of physicians is inhibiting efforts to treat the injured.
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•
3:39
Which Helps The Economy More: A Rebound In Stocks Or Housing?
Both housing and the stock market have been on the upswing in recent months. But a full recovery in the housing market would be more significant to the overall economy. That's because more Americans have something at stake in home values than in stock prices.
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•
3:58
The West's Water Supply Is Low. Some Cities May Have To Cut Back On Water Use Soon
The unprecedented declaration of a water shortage in the Colorado River system mostly means less water for Arizona farmers for now, but cutbacks to cities are likely coming soon.
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•
3:34
When The People In Charge Of U.S. Cybersecurity Get Hacked
Director of National Intelligence James Clapper says his home email and phone accounts have been hacked. CIA Director John Brennan's private accounts were targeted in October. What lessons can be learned?
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4:06
On Equal Pay Day, Why The Gender Gap Still Exists
President Obama issued a proclamation making April 12 "Equal Pay Day." NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Harvard economics professor Claudia Goldin about what's behind the pay gap between men and women.
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•
4:30
Republicans Win Governor's Races In Mississippi, Kentucky
Across the country Tuesday, voters cast ballots in state and local elections. Ohio voters rejected a referendum to legalize marijuana, and Republicans won governor's races in Mississippi and Kentucky.
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•
3:50
As Cybercrime Proliferates, So Does Demand For Insurance Against It
Companies are clamoring for coverage against losses due to hackers. But insurance firms are being selective: The risk involved isn't well understood — and the crimes themselves are evolving rapidly.
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•
4:52
Pentagon Opens All Combat Positions To Women
The Pentagon will admit women to all its combat positions, Defense Secretary Ash Carter announced Thursday. The policy change drops the last major barrier to equal service in the military.
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•
3:52
Many Of Oregon's Coastal Schools, Hospitals And Fire Stations At Tsunami Risk
The buildings are in the tsunami zone, meaning they'd likely be washed away in the event of a massive earthquake and tsunami. Seismologists say there's a 37 percent chance of a major quake along the West Coast in the next fifty years — the kind of quake that hit Japan in 2011.
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3:55
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