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How much has the U.S. spent on the war in Iran
NPR's Leila Fadel asks Mark Cancian, a retired Marine colonel and a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, about how much the U.S. has spent on the Iran war.
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5:09
The history of the out-of-this-world playlist NASA uses to wake up mission crews
It's become a tradition: NASA's ground control plays music to wake up the astronauts on a mission. NASA's chief historian Brian Odom shares the history of the practice.
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2:31
Michigan wins school's second NCAA basketball title, beating UConn
Michigan clawed its way to victory Monday, defeating UConn and securing the school's second NCAA men's basketball title. NPR's A Martinez talks to Martenzie Johnson of ESPN and Andscape about the win.
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3:38
Nearly 50 years later, Cincinnati may get a real 'WKRP'
Nearly 50 years after a sitcom made the name famous, it appears there will actually be a "WKRP in Cincinnati."
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2:06
Could Trump's threats to Iran's civilian infrastructure be considered a war crime?
NPR's A Martinez talks to international law expert Asli Bali of Yale Law School about President Trump's threats to target Iran's civilian infrastructure, which could amount to a war crime.
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5:11
Vance visits Hungary to bolster support for prime minister ahead of election
Vice President JD Vance is in Budapest to join an election rally for incumbent Prime Minister Viktor Orbán ahead of Hungary's election.
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2:18
What scientists hope to learn from Artemis II's moon mission
NPR's A Martinez talks to Paul Hayne, a planetary scientist at University of Colorado Boulder, about what he and others working on future moon missions hope to learn from Artemis II.
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3:33
JP Morgan CEO talks about the economy, the Iran war and AI
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon about the economy, the impact of the war in Iran and artificial intelligence.
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7:46
Building AI bots becomes the latest viral craze in China
A fascination with AI bots, made with a program called OpenClaw, is sweeping China.
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3:49
Science conference focused on Western Alaska comes to Bethel
The Western Alaska Interdisciplinary Science Conference, also called WAISC, will run April 7-9 at Bethel’s cultural center.
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