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  • From its association with workers' rights in the 19th century to its inclusion in a video game, the famous old Italian song "Bella Ciao" has an evolving legacy.
  • Jurors convicted Routh on five charges, including last year's attempted assassination of Trump as he golfed at his South Florida course. Routh represented himself in court and faces life in prison.
  • Funding for FEMA's disaster survivor hotline lapsed the day after the Texas floods, federal records show. It took DHS Secretary Kristi Noem five days to approve more money.
  • As four candidates hotly debated issues ranging from foreign policy to gender identity to immigration, it's clear Nikki Haley is seen as a threat and Trump still looms large even when he's not there.
  • On "Florida Matters Live & Local," Charles "Coach Chuck" Price spoke about how his "Felons Ain't Failures" program and podcast got started, his passion for recidivism and more.
  • Among them was a "radiant" woman who was raising two children. She and five other U.S. service members were killed last week when a refueling plane involved in the war with Iran crashed in western Iraq.
  • The worst water shortage in nearly a decade has drained regional water reserves and prompted emergency water restrictions and rule changes along the Peace River, raising concerns about the long-term impact on Southwest Florida’s ecosystems.
  • More than 12,000 Polk County seniors are estimated to need help with daily activities, but families and providers say cost and logistics often put care out of reach.
  • They range from property insurance reforms to fast-tracking the legalization of recreational marijuana.
  • President Clinton says he will sign a Defense Bill containing provisions the president has opposed, including requiring the military to discharge service members who carry the AIDS virus. NPR's Mara Liasson reports.
  • Linda Wertheimer speaks with chef David Page, who is preparing a meal for this evening based on the first cookbook published in America in 1796. Author Amelia Simmons stressed the use of indigenous foods and contains receipes which are still found in cookbooks today. This is the book's bi-centennial.
  • Linda and Robert read letters from All Things Considered listeners. (3:15) To contact All Things Considered, write to All Things Considered Letters, 635 Massachusetts Avenue Northwest, Washington DC 20001. The e-mail address is atc@npr.org.
  • Linda and Robert read letters from All Things Considered listeners. (2:30) To contact All Things Considered, write to All Things Considered Letters, 635 Massachusetts Avenue Northwest, Washington DC 20001. The e-mail address is atc@npr.org.
  • Host Alex Chadwick talks to Mark Smirnoff, editor of the Oxford American about the magazine's annual Southern Music issue, which contains a free CD. The music covers a wide range of styles and singers, all with some connection to the South.
  • Linda and Robert read letters from All Things Considered listeners. (3:00) To contact All Things Considered, write to All Things Considered Letters, 635 Massachusetts Avenue Northwest, Washington DC 20001. The e-mail address is atc@npr.org.
  • Noah talks with Dan Roth, who's a senior editor at Fortune Magazine about why the magazine voted The Container Store the best company to work for. It's the second year in a row the magazine has done so.
  • Susan speaks with Lt. Colonel Bill Bayles of the United States Army, the commanding officer of an Army battalion called in to help fight a wildfire burning in northern California. Bayles says the fire in northern California is contained and soon they heading north to Oregon.
  • Robert and Noah read from listeners' comments. To contact All Things Considered, the address is All Things Considered Letters, 635 Massachusetts Avenue, Northwest Washington, D-C 20001. (3:30) (S
  • have begun unearthing a mass grave site in Srebrenica believed to contain large numbers of Bosnian Muslims massacred by the Serbs.
  • the worst oil spill in the country's waters for more than 20 years.
  • The BBC's Andrew Whitehead reports that a box containing the last remnants of Mahatma Gandhi's ashes has been taken out of a bank vault for the first time by his great grandson. The ashes will be taken to the confluence of three of India's holiest rivers.
  • Linda and Robert read from listeners' comments. To contact All Things Considered, write to All Things Considered Letters, 635 Massachusetts Avenue Northwest, Washington DC 20001. To contact us via the Internet, the address is atc@npr.org.
  • The Pentagon announced today that an Iraqui weapons depot destroyed by American troops after the Gulf war contained chemical weapons. Some American soldiers may have been exposed to the chemicals. NPR's Martha Raddatz reports.
  • Robert and Linda read from listeners' comments. To contact All Things Considered, write to All Things Considered Letters, 635 Massachusetts Avenue Northwest, Washington D-C, 20001. To contact us via the Internet, the address is ATC@NPR.ORG.
  • Robert and Linda read from listeners' comments. To contact All Things Considered, write to All Things Considered Letters, 635 Massachusetts Avenue Northwest, Washington D-C, 20001. To contact us via the Internet, the address is ATC@NPR.ORG. )
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