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  • Kimberly Koehler shares insight on the online dating scene and advice for those looking for love online.
  • The co-hosts of the NPR Politics Podcast discuss compelling moments and takeaways from the first public hearing by the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
  • In an upsurge of Mideast violence, Israeli soldiers kill at least six armed Palestinians in raids in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. It was the first Israeli incursion deep inside the Gaza Strip since it withdrew settlers and troops from there last year.
  • The agreement by the budget committee chairmen is no grand bargain. It's more like a minibargain. All the really hard stuff was sidestepped because the ideological rift between Washington Democrats and Republicans made it impossible to include those items.
  • It's a mystery how butterflies manage to make their brilliant wing colors, but Yale physicists got a glimpse when they took the question to the lab, breeding dull brown butterflies into purple ones.
  • September is a busy time here in Milwaukee. As schools are starting up and the summer is winding down, there are a lot of opportunities to get out and enjoy the great weather while we still have it. Adam Carr from the Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service highlights five events to do this September.
  • The convention kicks off Monday. Will it be as exciting as Donald Trump has promised or will it be ... traditional?
  • The full weight of the recession has come bearing down on the labor market. Employers shed more than half a million jobs in November. The unemployment rate is now 6.7 percent and economists expect it to go significantly higher. Layoffs are accelerating in just about every industry.
  • Spring has sprung in Milwaukee, which means it’s a great time to get outside and enjoy the new life in the city.
  • NPR's Ari Shapiro went to Kiev this month planning to report several feature stories on the Ukrainian revolution. Instead, he found himself documenting a country edging toward civil war.
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