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When Your Team Moves, What's A Fan To Do?
The Rams will be moving back to the L.A. area after more than 20 years in St. Louis. What would you do if your favorite sports team relocated? Would you stay loyal or choose a new team to cheer for?
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2:11
The Man Behind The Patriots' Curtain: Who's Ernie Adams?
Coach Bill Belichick and quarterback Tom Brady deservedly get a lot of praise for the success of the New England Patriots. But there's another name crucial to the organization that not many know.
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3:57
Looking At Oscar Nominee List As A Symptom Of Hollywood's Racial Bias
For the second year in a row, the Oscar nominees for acting categories are decidedly — white. NPR's Scott Simon speaks with film critic and interviewer Bobby Rivers about the pallid list.
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4:22
More Bad News For Coal Mine-Reliant States
On Friday, the Obama administration announced a halt to new coal leases on federal land. In Wyoming, most of the federally-owned coal mines and revenue from coal leases pays for school construction.
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3:14
GE's Big City Move Part Of Larger Tech Trend
This week, GE announced it will move from a 42-year-old suburban campus in Fairfied, Conn., to Boston. Experts say corporations make this sort of move to get access to universities and tech workers.
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3:33
Anti-Establishment MPs Shake Up Spain's New Parliament
The new Spanish parliament looks very different than its predecessor. The assembly now has its first black MP, a physicist who uses a wheelchair and a record number of female lawmakers.
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3:39
Family Bonds Are Never Bland In 'The Past'
In her latest novel, The Past, Tessa Hadley focuses on four siblings spending one last holiday at a soon-to-be-sold summer home. Tensions simmer, secrets break out of storage — but love remains.
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6:12
'Glory Of The World' Is More Wacky Birthday Party Than Traditional Play
The play celebrates Catholic monk Thomas Merton's 100th birthday. But it isn't really about Merton — it's about human complexity, and at times the action resembles the film Animal House.
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4:49
Aid Groups Confronted With Syria's Starvation Tactics
The UN secretary general has describing the use of starvation by the warring sides in Syria as a "war crime." The UN met on the matter today.
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2:24
'People Are Still Dying On The Streets' In Mexico's Drug War
Despite the well-publicized capture of drug kingpin "El Chapo," ordinary Mexicans don't think much has changed in the ongoing violence.
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3:54
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