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The Associated Press
Stories by The Associated Press
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NPR NewsLawyers revealed three weeks ago that they had tentatively agreed to a settlement in which the prince would donate to Virginia Giuffre's charity and declare he didn't intend to malign her character.
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NPR NewsCritics, including the National Park Service, said exploding rockets after launch could rain fiery debris onto surrounding land, including a federally protected wilderness.
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NPR NewsObservers say Russia's use of such corridors were effective in attaining the goals of regaining control of opposition areas.
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NPR NewsExperts say New Zealand's actions have likely saved thousands of lives by allowing the nation to mostly avoid earlier, more deadly variants and buying time to get people vaccinated.
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NPR NewsA teenager was killed and two others were critically wounded after gunfire that appeared to come from a passing vehicle struck them, authorities in Des Moines said.
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NPR NewsThe San Antonio coach will try to set the record for most coaching wins on Wednesday.
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NPR NewsTwo children, their father and their grandmother were killed when a tornado hit the grandparents' home that didn't have a basement.
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NPR NewsA third round of talks is planned for Monday as some of the evacuation routes would funnel civilians toward Russia or its ally Belarus.
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NPR NewsNegative campaigns are aggravating South Korea's already severe political divide as presidential elections approach on Wednesday.
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NPR NewsHealth care experts say that confirmed deaths represent a fraction of the true number of deaths due to COVID because of limited testing.
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NPR NewsVice President Kamala Harris visited Selma, Ala., to commemorate a defining moment in the struggle for the right to vote.
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NPR NewsBosnian Serb forces laid siege to Sarajevo in the early 1990s. Some 350,000 people were trapped, subjected to daily shelling and cut off from regular access to electricity, food and medicine.