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  • The final Grand Slam of the year isn't lacking in drama. Third-ranked Carlos Alcaraz lost to no. 74 Botic van de Zandschulp in a stunning upset, while Naomi Osaka's comeback hopes were dashed.
  • Leaders from Denmark and Greenland will meet with top U.S. officials in Washington on Wednesday to try to find a way out of a crisis caused by President Trump repeated demands to annex Greenland.
  • Renaissance: A Film by Beyoncé topped the box office over the weekend but took in far less than Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour did in its opening weekend. Doesn't matter — theater owners still win.
  • The immensely popular lottery will distribute a total of $2.8 billion in prizes this year, much of it in small prizes. Street and bar celebrations normally break out with winners singing and dancing.
  • The novelist and his wife survived successive crashes in Uganda in 1954. In the letter, Hemingway also describes shooting his first lion in Kenya with an old gun "held together with tape."
  • Hillary Clinton has the edge. She has to win just the states leaning in her direction to get enough electoral votes to be president. But Donald Trump has a path, albeit a narrow one.
  • In an interview from 2003 that has never been aired before, the late Frederick “Pal” Barger, founder of the regional restaurant chain Pal’s Sudden Service, talks about his business philosophy. With stores throughout East Tennessee and Southwest Virginia, Pal’s became the first restaurant company in America to win the prestigious Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award. Pal Barger died in October of 2020. August 23, 2025, would have been his 95th birthday.
  • In the first of two interviews, we look back on the summer of 1963, a critical time in the struggle for civil rights in America. Our guest is Odessa Woolfolk, founding director of the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, who remembers both the promise and the pain of that period in civil rights history.
  • This is part two of our interview with Odessa Woolfolk, Founding Director of the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, in Birmingham, Alabama. The institute is part of the Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument and is an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution.
  • We look back on some of the pivotal moments of the Civil Rights Movement in the South, with Odessa Woolfolk, founding Director of the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute.
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