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Millions of people will gather to celebrate the coronation of King Charles III
Pomp and pageantry? Check. Flag-waving tourists? You bet. A modern monarchy appealing to young diverse Britons? Maybe. In Charles' coronation, the royals will try to balance tradition and reality.
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3:39
Hospitals Torn On Reducing Repeat Admissions
Patients admitted repeatedly to hospitals can be a big source of revenue and a big quality problem. Soon Medicare will penalize hospitals that readmit too many patients too often. Hospitals are trying some new approaches to care to get ready for the change.
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•
4:29
Calls grow for Chicago officer who killed a Black teenager to face federal charges
"Sixteen shots and a cover-up" was the rallying cry after a video showed a Chicago police officer killed a black teenager in 2014. On Thursday, Jason Van Dyke gets an early release from prison.
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3:25
House panel to examine what went wrong with the 5G rollout
A congressional hearing examines why the activation of 5G service near airports was plagued by many delays and much confusion.
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3:35
The Federal Reserve is ready to raise interest rates soon despite the war in Ukraine
Fed Chair Jerome Powell says the central bank is prepared to begin raising interest rates this month to fight inflation despite economic uncertainty after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
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4:10
Texas House holds vote on impeachment of state AG Ken Paxton
The Texas legislature is voting Saturday on the impeachment of the state's attorney general.
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3:55
The conflict in Sudan leaves hundreds dead, including babies at an orphanage
NPR's Leila Fadel talks to Reuters journalist Maggie Michael about the deaths of at least 50 children at a state-run orphanage in Sudan since fighting began weeks ago in Khartoum.
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4:15
A Korean American connects her past and future through photography
Through her work, photographer Arin Yoon re-examines her connection to the U.S., reconsidering histories while exploring her connection to the landscape, her children and their past and future selves.
What It Was Like To Be A Wall Street Recruit After The Bailouts
A reporter shadowed eight young people during their first two years on Wall Street, when the bailouts were still fresh and anti-Wall Street sentiments were running high.
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5:19
On This Spanish Slave Ship, Nothing Was As It Seemed
In The Empire of Necessity, historian Greg Grandin tells the story of a slave revolt at sea. The 1805 event inspired Herman Melville's Benito Cereno, and Grandin's account of the human horror is a work of power and precision.
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5:57
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