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Professor Andrew Delbanco gave this year's annual Jefferson Lecture, titled, "The Question of Reparations: Our Past, Our Present, Our Future," where he addressed reparations for slavery in the U.S.
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The former military analyst has been called both a hero and a traitor for leaking classified information about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. In a new memoir, she talks about why she did it.
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Clark wants to make it easier to cook dinner. John Powers reviews the Indian epic RRR. Author and podcaster Jacob Goldstein says we don't think of money as a technology, but we should.
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NPR's Ailsa Chang talks to Chicago-based photographer Christian Lee, who wanted to know why more Black Americans are buying guns. So, he started photographing Black gun owners in his hometown.
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McBryde mixes passionate music with novelistic details on a concept album about the inhabitants of a small rural town, named after the songwriter Dennis Linde.
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Author and podcaster Jacob Goldstein says we don't think of money as a technology, but we should. He traces the first paper currency to China's Sichuan province, and ponders the Fed's next move.
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NPR's Sacha Pfeiffer talks with Makiya Seminera, editor-in-chief of The Alligator, about protests against Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse, who will most likely be the University of Florida's new president.
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Pioneering DJ Art Laboe, who spent seven decades on the air in Southern California, died Friday at age 97.
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In a southern city in Ukraine, Russian forces destroyed the municipal water supply five months ago. Residents have been struggling to get clean water ever since.
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Conspiracy theorists want to get rid of voting machines, but research has found hand counting to be less accurate and more expensive.