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About
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Community Advisory Board
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Programs
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As Authorities Probe Twitter Hack, Ex-FBI Officials Warns: 'Get Ready For Copycats'
Lawmakers and government agencies say the attack exposes vulnerabilities in the social network's systems that could be exploited to spread disinformation.
American Christianity Must Reckon With Legacy Of White Supremacy, Author Says
White Too Long author Robert P. Jones says churches should be more in vocal on issues of social justice: "White Christians have been largely silent ... and have hardly begun these conversations."
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36:44
Gov. Hogan Says He's Taken Unprecedented Action To Try To Flatten COVID-19 Curve
NPR's Rachel Martin talks to Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan about his decision to issue a stay-at-home directive for his state, and his reaction to President Trump's response to the coronavirus crisis.
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5:31
Tuesday's Elections Show Impeachment Might Not Boost GOP As Much As It Hoped
The president's campaign may be raising lots of money off impeachment, but it may not be firing up rural voters as Republicans anticipated. We talk about that and six other lessons from the elections.
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•
4:16
Court Questions University's Affirmative Action Plan
At issue is whether the University of Texas, Austin discriminated against a white applicant when it did not offer her a spot. At Wednesday's argument, a court majority seemed poised to reverse or severely cut back previous decisions related to affirmative action programs in college admissions.
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6:13
Cliff Deal: What We Learned; What Comes Next
The lessons of the final deal come down to this: Washington is very nearly broken. Next up? Finishing the work this agreement postponed.
In New Ads Focused On Character, Obama And Romney Get Personal
In new ads, President Obama and Mitt Romney seek to raise doubts about each other's character. Romney accuses the president of being willing to do anything to stay president. Obama's ad accuses Romney of making a "blatantly false" claim.
Combing Through 41 Million Tweets To Show How #BlackLivesMatter Exploded
A new study by three media scholars reveals how the social protest movement spread on Twitter, with some fascinating — and sobering — findings.
As November Approaches, Trump Overhauls Campaign Staff
Donald Trump named a conservative media provocateur to lead his campaign — in the third major shakeup during the election season. David Greene talks to senior Trump adviser Boris Epshteyn.
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4:45
How FluMist Slipped From Preferred To Passe
A CDC advisory panel concluded the nasal spray vaccine is so ineffective that it shouldn't be used by anyone during the 2016-2017 flu season. Until 2015, the spray was the top choice for kids.
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