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  • M'hari Saito reports on Pennsylvania's York County Prison. The county makes a lot of money on the facility, housing prisoners for the Immigration and Naturalization Service. But critics say the detainees aren't getting the treatment they deserve.
  • NPR's David Welna reports from Broward County, one of the three Florida counties still recounting their ballots. In the center of this national turmoil, families in the area took a break over the weekend for a game of softball, but the talk inevitably turned to politics.
  • NPR's Peter Kenyon looks at the atmosphere in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties. A 5PM Sunday deadline has been put in place for all ballots to be turned in, and these counties are trying to comply.
  • The Texas Board of Education is likely to approve four textbooks on health that teach abstinence from sex without mentioning the benefits of condoms and other contraceptives. Texas buys so many textbooks, the state's version often becomes the national norm. Hear NPR's Barbara Bradley Hagerty.
  • The measure calls for the creation of a 3% tax on individual income over $1 million to use to reduce the property tax burden.
  • A cleanup is under way in the suburbs of Nashville, where at least 12 people died Friday in a new round of tornadoes. More than 160 houses were either damaged or destroyed. Funerals were held elsewhere in the state for victims of earlier storms that left 24 dead.
  • Here's your guide to the state of redistricting in six key states. The U.S. Supreme Court is set to decide three major cases this term that could determine how districts are drawn for the next decade.
  • Mercenary leader launched a failed rebellion against Russia's military leaders. White House promotes infrastructure and other projects. Activists in Atlanta protest against a police training facility.
  • NATO holds an emergency summit in Brussel. Biden's Supreme Court nominee faces a second day of questions from a Senate panel. Legal fights over Ohio's redistricting are about to come to a head.
  • Lightfoot is the city's first black female and openly gay mayor. After her swearing in, she laid out a plan to make Chicago "a city that families want to move to, not run away from."
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