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  • Can online comments be redeemed? That conversation, plus highlights from our tech coverage on-air and online, are in our latest week in review.
  • What does the realignment of the big NCAA conferences tell us about the future of college sports? NPR's Daniel Estrin talks to Daniel Libit, a reporter at Sportico.
  • Ed Martin advanced bogus claims about election fraud in swing states in 2020, and he spoke at a boisterous rally in Washington the day before the siege on the Capitol.
  • Decenas de personas se reunieron en Glenwood Springs el 7 de agosto para celebrar la inauguración de Benedict Apartments, una residencia para adultos mayores de 55 años valorada en $23 millones. Catholic Charities está detrás del nuevo edificio, que lleva el nombre de los difuntos filántropos de Aspen Fritz y Fabi Benedict, quienes donaron alrededor de $2.1 millones en fondos para viviendas asequibles a la organización sin fines de lucro en la década de 1990.
  • Uncooked, the Indian spice hing may smell of sulfur and onions to some. But add a dash to your food, and magical things happen.
  • Clinical trials show Wegovy triples the average weight loss seen with other drugs. Whether it will reach many patients largely depends on whether insurers decide to cover it.
  • This year, key battles for control of the Senate will take place in about 10 states -- including five Southern states where Democrats are retiring. The Democrats need to win two seats to regain the majority they lost in 1994. Hear NPR's Renee Montagne and NPR's Ken Rudin.
  • Republican presidential candidate John McCain is almost certain to win the party's nomination. So, McCain is turning his attention to the general election. This week, the Arizona senator said his success in the general election depends on whether people believe the war in Iraq is working.
  • President Obama bypassed Congress this week in appointing Richard Cordray to head the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and filling vacancies on the National Labor Relations Board. Republicans called the appointments an unconstitutional power grab and said they were made while the Senate was still technically in session.
  • Supporters of stem-cell research in Missouri have likely turned in enough signatures to place a measure protecting stem-cell research on the ballot. But Sen. Jim Talent (R-MO) has announced he will oppose the measure -- a stance that pro-life groups had long requested.
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