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Consumer prices in April were up 3.4% from a year ago — a smaller annual increase than the month before.
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Report from the Pew Research Center says Hispanic women in general continue to face pressure to play traditional roles, despite advances in educational attainment and entrepreneurship
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NPR's Juana Summers talks with Amy Argetsinger, author of There She Was: The Secret History of Miss America, about the recent controversy surrounding the resignations of Miss USA and Miss Teen USA.
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Every year thousands of musicians enter NPR's Tiny Desk Contest. This year's winner was announced Wednesday — an artist called The Philharmonik, with a song called "What's It All Mean?"
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Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico sustained multiple gunshot wounds at a political event in central Slovakia. Police have a suspect in custody.
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"Moon Trees" are starting to grow on Earth. They got that name because as seeds they spent some time in space.
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Five years since a New Haven house fire killed two tenants, families are suing city officials they claim were negligent.
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A war of words has erupted among Israel's top leadership over the government's handling of the war in Gaza. The country's military chief and prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu have been trading barbs.
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In Georgia, Democrats scramble to try to rebuild the multiracial coalition that helped them win in 2020. Now, some of the voters who helped Biden win aren't convinced they'll vote for him again.
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The district has cut positions over the last few years, with teacher advocates and city officials at odds over who’s ultimately responsible for the city’s educational budget woes.
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The 80-acre MIRA site along the Connecticut River in Hartford was used for decades as an incinerator for trash from other towns.
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The bill makes law the payment and health benefits for surviving family of any Connecticut police officer who dies from injuries sustained on duty.