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Tens of thousands of tech workers have lost their jobs since Jan. 1
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Arun Sundararajan, Harold Price Professor of Entrepreneurship at New York University, about the effects of sweeping layoffs on tech workers.
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7:02
Morning news brief
Seven people are dead after California's second mass shooting in three days. U.S. senators hold a hearing on whether Ticketmaster and Live Nation have too much power. Oscar nominations are announced.
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11:19
A Georgia judge weighs release of a grand jury report into 2020 election interference
After an months-long investigation into efforts to overturn Georgia's 2020 election results by Donald Trump and his allies, a grand jury's report could be made public — or not.
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3:47
Additional classified documents are found at Biden's Delaware home
NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with Richard Painter, who served as chief ethics lawyer to the George W. Bush White House, about the probe into President Biden's handling of classified materials.
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4:01
Each story in 'The Faraway World' features characters searching for something more
NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with Patricia Engel about her book of short stories: The Faraway World.
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6:56
El Salvador is about to enter its 11th month of limited constitutional rights
El Salvador's brutal crackdown on gangs has led to thousands of arbitrary detentions and the militarization of the streets.
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4:14
Taxpayers are cautioned that refunds are likely to be smaller this year
The IRS starts accepting 2022 tax returns Monday. Jan Lewis of the American Institute of CPAs says some taxpayers might receive smaller refunds as many pandemic-related breaks are no longer available.
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1:37
Florida's AP African American studies ban should raise alarm elsewhere, lawmaker says
Florida state Sen. Shevrin Jones, a Democrat, says the proposed course "wasn't indoctrination, it wasn't ideology, it was facts." He fears blocking it will harm students in Florida and beyond.
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6:56
A change that kept people automatically enrolled in Medicaid is expiring soon
Beginning in April, a pandemic-era law that changed access to Medicaid is set to expire. Six million low-income people could lose access to health care.
VP Harris urges federal abortion protections on the anniversary of Roe v. Wade
Vice President Kamala Harris marked the 50th anniversary of Roe v Wade Sunday. She spoke about the path forward on reproductive rights after the Supreme Court overturned that landmark decision.
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3:37
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