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  • Millenials are changing the definition of "starter homes" in the Twin Cities. That's according to Bloomington-Normal Association of Realtors President Ed…
  • The ground forces are also getting closer to key Russian supply lines that run from the border to Russian-occupied areas in the Donetsk region.
  • Filmmaker Marshall Curry talks about his new documentary Street Fight. The chronicle of the 2002 mayoral race in Newark, N.J., illustrates the city's rough-and-tumble politics.
  • Souped-up cars, dangerous stunts and rowdy crowds. In Oakland, Calif., they're key elements of illegal street rallies. Will a police crackdown simply move the street parties to another city?
  • Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick trails his challenger in Tuesday's nonpartisan primary, according to the latest polls. Kilpatrick has struggled with budget problems and questions over his personal conduct. Quinn Klinefleter of member station WDET reports.
  • Georgian officials announce an inactive grenade was found near the site where President Bush spoke in the capital city of Tbilisi Tuesday. Officials say the president was in no danger.
  • Designed more than 100 years ago, New York's subway has been upgraded over the years. But it continues to rely on a complicated blend of old and new technology to move thousands of riders each day. Beth Fertig of member station WNYC reports.
  • Singer Jane Olivor went from performing folk music in clubs in New York City in the early 1970s to becoming a major pop star, performing at Carnegie Hall. But with fame came misfortune, with the death of her husband and a long battle with stage fright that kept her from singing for several years. Olivor has returned to the stage and has released a new CD and DVD of a recent live performance. Jane Olivor talks to NPR's Liane Hansen about her return to singing and the Safe Return project.
  • City officials fired former Police Chief Sam Dobbins in July after the Mississippi Center for Investigative Reporting made public a 17-minute recording of him using racist and homophobic language as he boasted of killing 13 people in the line of duty.
  • Elsewhere, Elon Musk has furthered angered Ukrainians and supporters of the embattled regime by announcing that he cannot “indefinitely” continue to fund the Starlink satellite terminals.
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