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The Associated Press
Stories by The Associated Press
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NPR NewsNorth Korea claimed Thursday to have conducted the second successful test flight of a hypersonic missile. Wednesday's launch was the North's first known weapons test in about two months.
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NPR NewsEmployees of a Starbucks store in upstate New York who voted to unionize last month walked off the job, saying they lacked the staff and resources to work safely amid surging COVID-19 cases.
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NPR NewsPlessy was arrested trying to board a "whites-only" train car. The Supreme Court's decision in Plessy v. Ferguson ushered in an era of laws that kept schools, housing and other venues segregated.
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NPR News"Losing so many kids is just devastating," Mayor Jim Kenney said. The four smoke alarms in the building did not appear to have been working, fire officials said.
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NPR NewsWillie Stokes, 61, was freed in a murder case marred by detectives who allegedly offered a witness sex and drugs at police headquarters in 1983 in exchange for false testimony.
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NPR NewsHong Kong authorities announced a two-week ban on flights from eight countries and held 2,500 passengers on a cruise ship for coronavirus testing as the city attempted to stem an omicron outbreak.
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NPR NewsThe omicron variant is outpacing the government's ability to make and execute clear pandemic public policy.
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NPR NewsThere was plenty of outrage from motorists, some of whom were stranded overnight Monday into Tuesday, posting pleas for help on social media.
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NPR NewsAn athletic Hungarian farm dog and a tiny pet of bygone Russian aristocrats are the latest breeds in the American Kennel Club's purebred lineup for 2022.
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NPR NewsIsrael's refusal to recognize liberal Reform and Conservative streams of Judaism has long been a point of tension with American Jews.
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NPR NewsSokhary Chau said his mother managed to keep her seven children alive for four years, surviving Cambodia's civil war to deliver them safely to the U.S.
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NPR NewsTeachers now are left to decide how — or whether — to instruct their students about the events that sit at the heart of the country's division.