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Tampa Bay Eviction Crisis
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After Quake, A Struggle To Reach Remote Areas Of Afghanistan, Pakistan
Afghan and Pakistani officials are working to reach remote villages hit by Monday's 7.5-magnitude earthquake. The quake was centered 130 miles underground, which seismologists say significantly lessened its impact.
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•
3:46
Pakistan's Army Chief Gains Power Under Democratic Rule
Pakistan has a democratically elected government, but the power of the army is growing and so is that of the man who runs it.
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•
4:23
WikiLeaks Founder Caught In Diplomatic Standoff
The diplomatic duel over Australian WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange intensified with Britain and Ecuador battling over his future. Ecuador says it will give Assange asylum. For now, he's holed up in Ecuador's London embassy. Britain says it wants Assange extradited to Sweden, where he's wanted over a rape allegation.
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•
3:57
The recipe for a better 'Bake-Off'? Fun format, good casting, and less host shtick
The Great British Baking Show has had a long and bumpy ride, but it's finally righted the ship by focusing on the fundamentals.
European Authorities Probe Soccer Corruption
Investigators in Europe have revealed evidence that hundreds of soccer games were fixed by gambling syndicates. The scandal even includes national teams competing for places in soccer's biggest tournament: the World Cup.
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•
3:40
Pakistan Pressures Afghan Refugees To Go Home
Authorities are responding with draconian measures following the massacre of more than 130 students in Pakistan. Officials are focusing on Afghan refugees, even though the killers were Pakistani.
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•
4:33
One Month After School Attack, Pakistan Remembers Victims
It has been a month since an attack in a school in Peshawar killed at least 150 people, mostly school children. On Friday, the country remembered the victims with vigils and demonstrations.
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•
3:40
Prince Harry wins landmark phone hacking case against one of Britain's major tabloids
A U.K. judge ruled against the publisher of the Daily Mirror, finding that the paper used phone hacking to gather information unlawfully on the Duke of Sussex.
How a patent dispute is affecting Apple customers
NPR's A Martinez speaks with analyst Philip Elmer-DeWitt about a patent dispute that has Apple taking its latest smartwatches off the shelves, as well as how it affects consumers.
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•
3:49
Air Force will discipline 15 members following classified leaks in online forum
The Air Force says it's disciplining 15 members following it's investigation of an Air National Guardsman accused of classified leaks online.
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•
3:43
Fallout continues from a controversial hearing on antisemitism on college campuses
Following the resignation of the University of Pennsylvania's president after controversial testimony on Captiol Hill last week, critics continue to attack the presidents of Harvard and MIT.
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•
3:37
In Post-Gadhafi Libya, Enmities Continue To Smolder
Revenge attacks are alarming those hoping for a swift transition to peace in Libya. Some villages where loyalists to overthrown dictator Moammar Gadhafi used to live are now abandoned, and locals hope they stay away. As well, militias still have their weapons, and regional rivalries are at play.
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•
4:23
Too Much GI Bill Money Going To For-Profit Schools?
The nation's for-profit colleges and universities received more than $1 billion in benefits from the Post-Sept. 11 GI Bill in the last year alone. But some say the for-profit schools aren't policed well enough — which creates an opening for abuses — and their dropout rates are too high.
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3:51
Russia's Olympic Track Team To Learn Whether It May Compete In Rio
The leaders of the international body that regulates track-and-field is to decide on Friday whether Russian athletes will be allowed in the Rio Olympics. This comes in the middle of a doping scandal.
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•
3:51
New In Paperback May 7-13
It's a rich week for fiction, with new novels from Ann Patchett and Jennifer Weiner, and a debut by Chad Harbach that marries a literary sensibility with a love of baseball — plus Jorie Graham's new poetry collection. In nonfiction, Erik Larson is back with the story of an American ambassador in Germany in 1933.
Country music star Toby Keith is dead at 62 after battle with stomach cancer
Country music star Toby Keith, who dominated the charts in the 1990s and 2000s with a string of hits, has died at 62. The singer had been diagnosed with stomach cancer.
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•
2:33
Duke Energy will seek approval of a base rate hike
Duke Energy Florida will seek state approval of a three-year plan that would increase customers' base electric rates and expand solar-power generation. But the utility said it expects customers’ overall bills would decrease in 2025.
A year after the Ohio train derailment, experts still worry about toxins it released
A year after the fiery train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, experts and others are still concerned about toxins and their aftereffects.
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•
3:37
The likely targets of the U.S. air strikes in Iraq and Syria
The U.S. has conducted a series of retaliatory strikes against Iran-backed militants in Iraq and Syria. Our correspondent in the Iraqi capital, Baghdad, has the latest.
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•
4:22
Palestinian architect says the destruction must become part of Gaza's reconstruction
Can ruins become the material for rebuilding? NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with Palestinian architect Yara Sharif about the future reconstruction of Gaza.
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•
4:00
In The Life Of 'Olive Kitteridge,' It's The Little Things That Add Up
The HBO miniseries starring Frances McDormand is based on a collection of stories about residents in a small town in Maine. It's about family, friends and the tenuous relationships that make up life.
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•
5:13
Meta is limiting how much political content users see. Here's how to opt out of that
Meta is now limiting the amount of political content it recommends to Instagram and Threads users. Here's why it made the change — and how to opt out of it.
This year it's a slow crawl to financial aid packages for students
Colleges are just beginning to receive long-overdue FAFSA data. Meanwhile, students who've been accepted to college still face weeks before they receive aid offers.
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•
3:17
US officials warn of ISIS-K threat
ISIS-K has claimed responsibility for the deadly assault on a Moscow concert hall, and US officials are warning the group has also set its sights on western targets.
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•
3:46
Ticket prices for the women's Final Four games rival the men's
Call it the Caitlin Clark effect: The average sales price for a ticket to the women's college basketball semifinal was nearly double that of the men's event, the ticketing company Logitix reported.
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