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The Associated Press
Stories by The Associated Press
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NPR NewsThe school says it allows Ohio State to control use of "The" on branded products associated with and sold through athletics and collegiate channels, such as T-shirts, baseball caps and hats.
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NPR NewsThe owner of seven Louisiana nursing homes whose residents suffered in squalid conditions after being evacuated to a warehouse as Hurricane Ida approached last year was arrested on Wednesday.
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NPR NewsThe inmates were discovered missing from a satellite camp in Hopewell, Va., on Saturday. Officials did not release details about the escape but said an internal investigation is underway.
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NPR NewsThe increase is in line with analysts' expectations and comes as the Bank of England says inflation could hit 11% in October, when a cap on domestic energy bills is lifted.
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NPR NewsThe new policy gives the department permanent rules about when officers can and can't engage in an activity that can endanger themselves, those they're chasing and bystanders.
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NPR NewsThe jurors' decision is a major legal defeat for the 84-year-old entertainer once hailed as America's dad.
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NPR NewsWatson could still be suspended if the NFL determines he violated the league's personal conduct policy.
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NPR NewsMore strikes are planned later this week in a rail dispute over pay, working conditions and job security.
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NPR NewsScientists say a fisherman caught a giant stingray that measured almost 13 feet from snout to tail in the Mekong River.
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NPR NewsThe Osaka court ruling underscores how divisive the issue remains in Japan, the only member of the Group of Seven major industrialized nations that does not recognize same-sex unions.
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NPR NewsThe iconic restaurant capsized in the South China Sea less than a week after it was towed away from the city.
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NPR NewsWorkers at a Maryland Apple store voted to form a union. But forming a union is a lengthy process that labor experts say is heavily stacked against workers in favor of their employers.