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  • New Hampshire Public Radio's Natasha Haverty explores the small but growing Latino population in New Hampshire, and how Latinos there are responding to the heated campaign rhetoric about immigration.
  • A school shooting in a remote community in Saskatchewan has left four dead and a 17-year-old charged with murder.
  • First Mali, now Burkina Faso. West Africa has become the latest target for Al Qaeda, and it's mostly Westerners the militants have killed.
  • Recent terrorist attacks have prompted changes to the U.S. visa waiver program. But the changes have caused confusion in Europe and critics say they could spark retaliation.
  • Why do we love to read about dying? NPR's Rachel Martin asks critic Michelle Dean about the enduring popularity of books like "The Last Lecture" and "Tuesdays with Morrie."
  • A major quake in the early hours of Sunday morning woke up residents of Anchorage and could be felt across much of southern Alaska. There's no risk of a tsunami, the National Weather Service says.
  • Iraq's government is waging a costly war with the Islamic State while dealing with falling oil prices, millions of displaced citizens and staggering rebuilding costs.
  • Poland's new parliament has restricted the country's constitutional court and has put women undergoing fertilization treatments, in addition to others, in a tough position.
  • This February marks the sixtieth anniversary of the Aaron v. Cooper lawsuit, the first of many court battles to desegregate Little Rock schools. The…
  • This February marks the sixtieth anniversary of the Aaron v. Cooper lawsuit, the first of many court battles to desegregate Little Rock schools. Although…
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