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Morning news brief
A watchdog says the U.S. Secret Service deleted many text messages sent around Jan. 6. Biden meets with Palestinian Authority President. And, a deadly strike in Vinnitsyia, Ukraine kills at least 23.
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•
11:06
A litter of critically endangered red wolf pups surprises scientists
There are about 250 endangered red wolves in the U.S. Recently, a litter of four was born in captivity — an unexpected, but welcome surprise since the male was thought too old to breed.
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•
3:28
How the son of sharecroppers helped send the world's most powerful telescope to space
Gregory Robinson grew up as one of 11 children of tobacco sharecroppers in rural Virginia. He reflects on his journey to NASA, where he directed the groundbreaking James Webb Space Telescope program.
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•
7:02
Tioga, Pennsylvania police controversy illustrates need for better background checks
It's getting harder for "wandering cops" — people who lose law enforcement certification in one state and get hired elsewhere. Many more departments are now performing interstate background checks
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3:06
North Carolina's Green Party says Democrats are working to keep it off 2022 ballot
The North Carolina Board of Elections, which is controlled by Democrats, has — so far — refused to give the Green Party a spot on the ballot, citing possible fraud in their ballot petition.
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4:55
Secret Service erased texts from two-day period spanning Jan. 6 attack, watchdog says
A Secret Service spokesman disputes the Department of Homeland Security inspector general's account, saying its request came after a mobile phone migration had started, but no messages were lost.
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•
3:30
Germany rushes to decouple itself from Russian gas
Germany is scrambling to build infrastructure to replace its dependence on Russian gas. NPR's Rob Schmitz reports that time is not on its side.
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5:29
Biden's second day in Israel; the U.S. economic outlook; what's happening in Sri Lanka
Biden continues a second day of meetings in Irsael. What company earnings can tell us about the economy. And, Sri Lanka sees another day of chaos.
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•
10:55
An update on the crisis in Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka spent its first night under curfew, with a government in chaos, and protesters on the streets of the capital Colombo. How will calm be restored?
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3:26
The U.S. student population is more diverse, but schools are still highly segregated
A new report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office finds that public schools remain highly segregated along racial, ethnic and socioeconomic lines. One reason: school district secession.
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3:16
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