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The IMF's $15.6 billion loan to Ukraine will be its first to a country at war
The IMF's new loan to Ukraine will be its first to a country at war. NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Scheherazade Rehman, professor at George Washington University, about the agreement's significance.
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•
6:10
Saturday Sports: Women's and men's NCAA; World Baseball Classic's cinematic end
The women's and men's NCAA basketball tournaments continue and the World Baseball Classic comes to a cinematic end.
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4:18
India's main opposition leader has been disqualified from parliament
The head of India's main opposition party has been disqualified from parliament after a court convicted him of defaming Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
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3:27
Rachel Heng on her novel 'The Great Reclamation'
NPR's Scott Simon talks to Rachel Heng about "The Great Reclamation." Starting in 1940's Singapore, the novel follows the life of a child amid the great power conflicts playing out in the region.
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7:48
Google's 'ghost workers' are asking for labor rights
People who work to assure the quality of Google search results are asking for labor rights.
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3:57
What we know about teacher shortages and how to address them
With many U.S. school districts grappling with teacher shortages, we look at the forces behind these shortages and what can be done about them.
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3:54
Week in politics: Trump awaits indictment; debt ceiling negotiations continue
Former Pres. Trump awaits indictment as negotiations continue on Capitol Hill about the debt limit and entitlements.
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4:30
'Live free and die?' The sad state of U.S. life expectancy
A decade after a landmark report on Americans' shorter lives, the problem has only gotten worse. Unlike other wealthy nations, U.S. life expectancy has not bounced back from the pandemic.
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•
6:28
'Live free and die?' The sad state of U.S. life expectancy
A decade after a landmark report on Americans' shorter lives, the problem has only gotten worse. Unlike other wealthy nations, U.S. life expectancy has not bounced back from the pandemic.
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•
6:28
Fed needed to raise rates because inflation is still too high, Bostic says
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with Raphael Bostic, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, about the Fed's decision to raise interest rates again.
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4:31
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