
Here & Now
Mondays-Fridays noon-2 pm
For more information or to listen to more segments, visit the official website for Here and Now.
Public Radio's daily news magazine bringing up-to-date midday news between Morning Edition and All Things Considered.
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Private office phone booths are becoming a thing — especially in a world of open-floor-plan office spaces that are too noisy and don't give coworkers enough privacy.
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Uber is selling off its operations in Southeast Asia to a local rival named Grab.
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Monday night the Commerce Department announced it would reinstate a citizenship question in the federal census, which will next be taken in 2020.
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Clark, a 22-year-old black man, was unarmed when he was killed in his grandparents' backyard on March 18.
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With anti-immigrant sentiment on the rise in the U.S., some immigrants are turning to classes and private services to try to reduce their accents.
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The Trump administration also ordered Russia's consulate in Seattle to close, as the U.S. and European nations seek to jointly punish Moscow.
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John Bolton's appointment as President Trump's national security adviser is causing alarm among those who think Bolton is too quick to use military force.
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Fifteen years ago this week, President George W. Bush announced the start of the Iraq War. Matt Ufford was a Marine lieutenant in charge of a tank platoon.
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One of the main sticking points in the plans centers on intellectual property, as well as imports.
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The man police identified as the suspect in the Austin, Texas, bombings detonated a bomb as officers approached his vehicle to arrest him.
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