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The Associated Press
Stories by The Associated Press
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NPR NewsJudge's order stops short of preventing the state from looking into other reports about children receiving similar care.
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NPR NewsThe police action was the most significant use of force to date by authorities against the protesters, who oppose coronavirus vaccine mandates.
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NPR NewsLocal authorities have placed up to 300,000 people under evacuation warnings in one of the country's worst flooding incidents.
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NPR NewsThe shootings took place at a Sacramento-area church, according to local law enforcement officials.
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NPR NewsThe hospitality greeting Ukrainians fleeing the violence in their native country has highlighted the stark differences in treatment given to migrants and refugees from the Middle East and Africa.
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NPR NewsMayor Eric Adams made the announcement as the city saw a dramatic drop in coronavirus infections.
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NPR NewsValery Gergiev had been represented since December 2020 by Munich-based Marcus Felsner, who started his own management company that year after leaving Opus3.
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NPR NewsNorth Korea launched a ballistic missile into the sea on Sunday, its neighbors said. It was the eighth of its kind this year and comes as U.S. attention is focused on the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
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NPR NewsThe latest wave of attacks targeted Ukrainian airfields and fuel supplies as the Russian invasion appears to have been blunted by fierce resistance even as the U.S. and EU send Ukraine more weapons.
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NPR NewsThe sanctions may do little to dim the jet-setting lifestyles of Russia's ultra-rich and infamous – much less force a withdrawal of tanks and troops.
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NPR NewsA strong earthquake shook Sumatra island, killing eight people, injuring 86 and leaving thousands displaced.
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NPR NewsAdam Johnson bragged that he "broke the Internet" after an image of him with the podium was made public. A federal judge sentenced Johnson to 75 days in prison.