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Will baseball feel the same if the umpire calling balls and strikes is a robot?
Major League Baseball partnered with the independent Atlantic League to experiment with the game. NPR's A Martinez talks to Rick White, president of the Atlantic League, about what they've been doing.
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4:27
Russia's brinkmanship over Ukraine appears to have gotten out of control
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Nina Khrushcheva, professor at The New School in New York, about what Russian President Putin could gain, and what Russia stands to lose in a standoff over Ukraine.
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•
6:44
Ahead of midterms, Colorado Democrats try to stop GOP gains with Latino voters
A new congressional district in Colorado is the state's most heavily Latino district. In the intense battle for Congress, Democrats are trying to stop recent Republican support from Latino voters.
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4:33
'And I say, Hey! HEY!' Aardvark Arthur's wonderful new days are ending
The world-famous aardvark first appeared in print over 45 years ago. The Emmy and Peabody award-winning TV show is about to begin its 25th and final season — and creator Marc Brown has a new book.
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5:24
Newscast: 01/24/22
A large earthquake shook Unalaska Friday night; Unalaska's International Longshore and Warehouse Union is about to lose many of its top-skilled workers;and a volcanic eruption near the island nation of Tonga earlier this month, shares some similarities with a blast that hit Alaska more than a century ago.
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10:28
What does the White House plan to do to combat inflation?
NPR's Rachel Martin talks to Brian Deese, director of the White House National Economic Council, about what the Biden administration is doing to take on inflation.
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4:37
Americans with non-life-threatening issues can get hospital-level treatment at home
The Biden administration massively expanded hospital-level care at home as part of its strategy to enhance hospital capacity. The Mayo Clinic says it's having an impact.
With many areas of the country past the peak of omicron, what comes next?
Many experts warn there will be more infections on the downslope of the omicron surge, but we're on the path to the virus becoming endemic — and that should mean fewer interruptions to daily life.
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7:04
News brief: Ukraine-Russia, omicron cases decline in places, Palin v. 'Times'
The U.S. weighs sending 5,000 troops to Eastern Europe to counter Russia. COVID cases decline sharply in areas of the Northeast and Midwest. Sarah Palin faces off against The New York Times Monday.
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11:10
1 Republican argues for a narrower approach to changing a 19th century voting law
NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to former Congressman Zach Wamp, a Republican from Tennessee, about efforts to rewrite the Electoral Count Act.
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6:52
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