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  • An Obama-era program, which lets prisoners use Pell grants for college, is wrapping up its first year. So far, there's no indication whether the Trump administration will continue it past expiration.
  • To celebrate Independence Day 2002, Morning Edition asked listeners to write essays "describing where in the country you feel most American, most connected to history." Hear and read a sample of the responses.
  • Book critic Maureen Corrigan reviews American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, And the Making of a Nation by Jon Meacham. His previous book, Franklin and Winston, was about the friendship between FDR and Churchill.
  • President Biden is passing the torch to Vice President Harris, which changes the narrative of the race against former President Donald Trump.
  • American soldiers in Baghdad have begun casting their absentee ballots for next month's presidential election. Iraqis are also expressing opinions on the upcoming U.S. vote. NPR's Emily Harris reports.
  • Qatar, the host country of the 2022 World Cup, is eliminated from competition, while in American football, the real season is just beginning.
  • President Obama took his budget agenda to Capitol Hill on Wednesday to round up skeptical Democrats. He seemed prepared to go along with changes as long as Congress' budget preserves down payments on his grand plan.
  • Chairman Bennie Thompson's letter to Jordan asks for information and an interview to discuss his conversations with President Donald Trump on Jan. 6.
  • Many Republican allies of former President Trump were outraged in 2021 when the Capitol was attacked. But as Trump's popularity endures, the party's elected leaders now largely overlook Jan. 6.
  • Host Jacki Lyden speaks with Carol Squiers, a writer nd editor at American Photo magazine, Sophie Elbaz a photojournalist based in aris, France and Lester Sloan, a photographer who worked with Newsweek magazine or 25 years. They answer the question "Is photojournalism dead?" and look at he current state of photojournalism.
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