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Looking back on Japan's surrender in WWII, 80 years later
The process of Japanese surrender went smoothly until Col. Lawrence Cosgrave signed his name on the wrong line.
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•
4:30
Congress returns with a full agenda and little time
Both Republicans and Democrats are asking for more information from the White House on convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
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•
5:55
Trump says Space Command will move to Alabama, after long battle over its HQ
President Trump announced he intends to move U.S. Space Command headquarters to Huntsville, Ala., after a protracted battle over whether it would stay in Colorado, as former President Joe Biden advocated.
In 'The Martians,' author David Baron explores Mars mania of the 20th century
At the turn of the 20th century, society seemingly became obsessed with the idea of life on Mars.
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•
10:52
Nearly 500 Indiana schools will receive $27 million total for school safety upgrades
The state of Indiana will deliver more than $27 million to nearly 500 schools this year through its school safety grant program.
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0:56
New books this week track John Williams' life, future pandemics and NASA fiction
This week's publishing highlights are a bumper crop of biography, science and fiction — including new reads the from authors of The Sweetness of Water, The God of Small Things, and Deadliest Enemy.
Vogue promotes Chloe Malle to top editor spot
Malle takes over as the leader of American Vogue immediately. Malle, who has been with the publication since 2011, will still report to Anna Wintour who remains Condé Nast's chief content officer.
Greetings from the Negev desert, where traces remain of a vanished ancient civilization
Far-Flung Postcards is a weekly series in which NPR's international team shares moments from their lives and work around the world.
'Kill Your Darlings' untangles the secrets couple keep for – and from – one another
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks to author Peter Swanson about his new mystery novel, Kill Your Darlings, which explores the reasons behind a poet's act of murder against her own husband.
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8:02
The Los Angeles ICE raids are changing how immigrant communities go about their lives
Amid ongoing raids in Los Angeles, many immigrants are afraid to leave their homes. We hear what that's looking like from residents, workers and business owners in the San Fernando Valley.
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