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  • Trump's tweets are considered part of the presidential record, which federal law says must be preserved. His deleted posts are alarming experts and prompting grassroots archival efforts.
  • Generation Z, which turned out in large numbers along with millennials last election, is still new to politics. A report exclusively obtained by NPR adds more context to the youngest voting bloc.
  • Mental health therapists at Veterans Affairs should begin sessions with patients saying they are in a shared office space, a memo obtained by NPR says. Trump's back-to-office orders start Monday for VA.
  • The first installment in a 6-part series from ward-winning producer Julian Crandall Hollick (HAH-lick). Four years ago, ollick was invited to live with the poor, illiterate pavement-dwellers on Apna treet, in downtown Bombay. The pavement dwellers are, for the most part, orking poor people who can't afford traditional housing. In the first episode, The Dance of the Water Spirits," Julian looks at the daily struggle to obtain ne of the necessities of life - water.
  • The law prohibits abortion after six weeks of pregnancy. It allows anyone to file lawsuits against a person who tries to help someone obtain an abortion after six weeks of pregnancy.
  • The decision was seen as a victory for student-athletes — but critics say that the ruling will further diminish the ability of low-income students to obtain higher education.
  • James Murray reports from Toronto that a local church is leading a campaign to perform marriages of gay couples that would be recognized under civil law. The church has begun the process of posting marriage banns for two homosexual couples before the congregation on three consecutive Sundays. Because of a loophole in provincial law in Ontario, the old Christian rite of posting marriage banns is the equivalent of obtaining a marriage license. Legal experts say this case and others like it eventually will force a ruling by Canada's Supreme Court.
  • In 2005, The New York Times published a story that exposed a secret NSA program to eavesdrop on Americans without obtaining a warrant. Investigative reporter Eric Lichtblau explains how the wiretap story made it to the front page after being held for a year.
  • The president addresses the U.N. General Assembly today. He and Republican opponent Mitt Romney will also be speaking to the Clinton Global Initiative.
  • Further fallout from the National Security Agency leaks dominated the news as the partner of a Guardian reporter was detained in the U.K. and word emerged that hard drives at the newspaper had been destroyed. And Steve Ballmer's departure announcement raised speculation about who will succeed him as Microsoft's CEO.
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