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  • Explore how Latino DNA has shaped the identity of the U.S. since before her inception.
  • An Edinburgh police detective and a team of misfits search for a woman who vanished several years earlier. Critic John Powers says the byplay of characters makes Dept. Q worth watching.
  • In an election season rife with surprises, you might add this week’s revelation by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
  • The Senate Judiciary Committee has approved a plan that would give the nearly 12 million undocumented workers now living in the United States a path to citizenship. The debate now moves to the full Senate. NPR's Jennifer Ludden helps explain the politics and policies involved.
  • We hear a lot about the brains of learners. A new book explores the brain processes involved in teaching.
  • He is best-known as lead singer and merrymaker-in-chief for Cincinnati rockers The Menus , but Tim Goldrainer is equally at home with Sinatra, Martin,...
  • The local governments suing drug companies over the opioid crisis have not reached a settlement in the more than 1,800 lawsuits pending in federal court in Cleveland. But attorneys for the plaintiffs are proposing a way to divide up any settlement dollars among — possibly — all cities and counties across the country. The attorneys are asking Judge Dan Polster to approve the plan at a June 25 hearing. All Things Consideredhost Tony Ganzer spoke with ideastream’s Nick Castele about the cases, the proposal and if a settlement is likely.
  • Eight cinematic shorts on emerging cultural icons.
  • The average tenure for large-district superintendents is 3 1/2 years. Joshua Starr hit it on the nose.
  • Lagging consumer spending and business investment offset the boost from strong exports thanks partly to the boom in artificial intelligence.
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