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'LA Times' Journalist Was Granted Rare Access To Pyongyang Celebration
David Greene talk to Jonathan Kaiman of the Los Angeles Times, who was invited by the North Korean government to cover the 105th birthday celebration of the country's founder.
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7:02
A Look Back At How Newspapers Covered The Civil Rights Movement
This week Audie Cornish travels to Birmingham, Ala., to revisit some of the stories that shaped that city and the nation in the summer of 1963. Today she talks with Hank Klibanoff, co-author of The Race Beat about how the newspapers covered the civil rights struggle fifty years ago.
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7:49
Creating a sperm or egg from any cell? Reproduction revolution on the horizon
Researchers are inching closer to creating human eggs and sperm in the lab that carry a full complement of anyone's DNA. It could revolutionize fertility treatment and raises huge ethical questions.
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7:02
'Morning Edition' staffers reflect on some of their memorable 2023 stories
Morning Edition editors and producers share some of their favorite stories of 2023 that they had a part in.
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6:40
Love's Better In Books: 5 Romantic Summer Reads
Romance author Eloisa James picks five sweet summer reads that turn trauma into romantic triumph. Whether you've been jilted at the altar, humiliated in the school paper or just plain rejected, James says you'll find these books "as healing as ice cream."
Ron DeSantis wanted to be like Trump. Now he's trying to prove he's not to win Iowa
The Florida governor molded himself in Trump's image as he rose in national prominence. Now he has the hard task of being just Trump enough without being Trump himself.
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4:50
Pressing Unanswered Questions Remain Regarding The Coronavirus
NPR's Noel King talks to Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, about how the coronavirus spreads.
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7:09
'Minari' Director Reflects On The Yi Family's Experience, And Parallels To His Own
Director Lee Isaac Chung's film is loosely based on his childhood. He tells NPR he's not trying to refute the idea of the American dream, but to speak to the feeling of "maybe waking up from a dream."
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7:55
Vicious Gang, Barrio Azteca, Gets Its Start In El Paso
In Texas, an El Paso-based gang has spread across the U.S., and has also sent some members to Mexico for training with the Zetas. They became a transnational gang due to the drug trafficking industry.
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7:47
Harris says Trump is 'cruel' at Georgia rally as she spotlights abortion restrictions
Kamala Harris has said former President Trump is “cruel” for how he talked about the family of a Georgia mother who died after waiting for treatment for complications from an abortion pill
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