The Brutalist Report - npr
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- Art researchers discover one of Dutch artist Vermeer's paintings is not actually his [1305d]
- A town employee quietly lowered the fluoride in water for years [1305d]
- 10 people died in a gas station blast in Ireland. Police say it was likely accidental [1305d]
- Anna Sorokin, a swindler who inspired a Netflix series, is freed but faces deportation [1305d]
- Arthur the Aardvark returns with a new podcast. His headphones are still on wrong [1305d]
- Liverpool will host the 2023 Eurovision Song Contest on behalf of Ukraine [1305d]
- North Korea blames the deployment of a U.S. aircraft carrier for latest tensions [1305d]
- California looks to target oil company profits in a special legislative session [1305d]
- A Supreme Court artist retires after 45 years documenting judicial history up close [1306d]
- As Ian's death toll rises, questions swirl why more Floridians didn't evacuate [1306d]
- More than a week after Hurricane Ian, the shock of what's ahead settles in for people [1306d]
- Crimea bridge blast could escalate Russia's war in Ukraine [1306d]
- In Idaho, America's first, and only, cobalt mine in decades is opening [1306d]
- A Ukrainian city struggles after Russian forces blew up its water supply [1306d]
- This trumpet-fueled walk-on song is professional baseball's latest craze [1306d]
- An LAPD officer who was killed in a training exercise was targeted, a lawyer alleges [1306d]
- How Loretta Lynn, country music and a rural Republican tide changed U.S. politics [1306d]
- GennaRose Nethercott uses folklore to explore a painful, and personal, history [1306d]
- Georgia prosecutor seeks testimony from Flynn and Gingrich in state election probe [1306d]
- Appeals court ruling allows Arizona abortions to restart [1306d]
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