Morning Edition
Every weekday for over three decades, Morning Edition has taken listeners around the country and the world with two hours of multi-faceted stories and commentaries that inform, challenge and occasionally amuse.
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Episodes
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Scottish Man Misses Air Travel, But Mostly He Misses In-Flight Meals
When the pandemic deprived Nik Sennhauser of Glasgow of his beloved cuisine, he decided to recreate some of his favorite meals in his home kitchen — such as fried chicken and waffles.
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Biden To Reaffirm Support For NATO At Brussels Summit
President Biden attends the NATO summit in Brussels on Monday, meeting with key allies before he squares off with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Geneva on Wednesday.
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Colbert Welcomes Back A Live Audience To 'Late Show'
CBS Late Show host Stephen Colbert will tape his show in front of a live studio audience at the Ed Sullivan Theater for the first time since the pandemic shut down live performances.
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Trump's DOJ Investigated Democrats On House Intelligence Committee, Source Says
The Trump Justice Department subpoenaed Apple in 2018 to obtain metadata of at least two Democratic members of the House intelligence panel — as well as their current and former staff and family.
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U.N. Says Ethiopia's Civil War Has The Country On The Brink Of Catastrophe
A civil war that began last year in the Tigray region of Ethiopia has the international community concerned as hundreds of thousands of people in the region now live in famine.
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Price Increases May Continue For A Few More Months, Ex-Fed Official Says
NPR's Sarah McCammon talks with Donald Kohn, former vice chair of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, about the latest economic data on inflation, and the outlook for the economy.
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Survey Says: America Loves Game Shows
The Strong National Museum of Play in Rochester, N.Y., is starting an archive solely devoted to game show history. It will include old set designs, props and scripts.
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States Scale Back Pandemic Reporting, Stirring Alarm
More than two dozen states have reduced how frequently they report what's happening with the pandemic in their states, raising alarm among some public health experts.
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Researchers Examining Medieval Skeletons Find Really Bad Bunions
The study found painful-looking degeneration in foot bones. The problem? Pointy shoes, known as poulaines, that were popular in 14th century Britain.
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How Role Models Like Rosa Parks Shaped A Distracted Kid Into A Leader
At StoryCorps, the Rev. Farrell Duncombe remembered those who nurtured him — like Rosa Parks, his former Sunday school teacher, who joked once that as a kid, "I ain't think you was gonna be nothing."
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Morning News Brief
President Biden is in Cornwall, England, for the G-7 summit. Israel's parliament is set to vote Sunday on a new government. Wildfires burn in 11 states, including California, Arizona and Colorado.
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Privacy Experts Ask: Should State-Issued IDs Be Stored On Our iPhones?
Apple says it is working with states to digitize government-issued IDs. The announcement has privacy advocates on edge.