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Five years later, survivors of the Las Vegas shooting struggle with the fallout
On Oct. 1, 2017, a gunman opened fire on a music festival in Las Vegas. Today, survivors of the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history are still struggling with the fallout.
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5:07
Why the hijab is at the center of protests in Iran
NPR's Scott Simon asks National Iranian American Council Research Director Assal Rad why the hijab has become a lightning rod in Iranian society.
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4:52
Saturday Sports: NFL back under the microscope, U.S. women's basketball team win
A professional football player's terrible injury puts the NFL under the microscope again. Meanwhile, the U.S. women's basketball team is triumphant.
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4:02
Tom Stoppard brings his Jewish identity to the stage – decades after he learned of it
All four of the playwright's grandparents died in the Holocaust, but Stoppard only learned he was Jewish in middle age. Now, at 85, he engages with his family history in the play Leopoldstadt.
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5:25
Jackson residents struggling for clean water decry decades of disinvestment
Residents of Jackson, Miss., are still trying their best to function without safe and reliable drinking water, and some decry decades of disinvestment in the state's majority-Black capital city.
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7:40
How local and national leaders are tested by major natural disasters
If handled well, storms like Hurricane Ian can cement politicians' images as community leaders — competent and trusted to help constituents get what they need. If mishandled, they can mar legacies.
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3:59
A bad year for Wall Street gets even worse, as stock markets finish September down
Amid heightened uncertainty about the global economy, all three U.S. indexes are in a bear market as the third quarter comes to a close.
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3:49
Ginni Thomas, wife of Justice Clarence Thomas, testifies before Jan. 6 panel
GOP activist Ginni Thomas testified for several hours behind closed doors before the House Select Jan. 6 committee. Her lawyer released a statement that she answered all the panel's questions.
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1:58
Lawyers are lining up to participate in the Camp LeJeune water lawsuit claims
A new law makes it easier for people to sue the government for illnesses from contaminated water at Camp Lejeune. The legal action could become one of the largest mass civil cases in history.
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4:24
After wreaking devastation across Florida, Ian is on track to hit South Carolina
When Hurricane Ian slammed into Fort Myers, Fla., it left a trail of destruction from high winds and storm surge flooding. As people get back into their communities, they're deciding what's next.
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3:52
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