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  • The day's top stories include more violence in Pakistan, the ongoing search for ousted Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi and deadly murder sprees in Nevada and West Virginia.
  • It may sound like an episode of The Twilight Zone, but this isn't fiction. Zambia's top prosecutor dropped his own corruption charges and set himself free. NPR's Scott Simon discusses the case.
  • Measure to Address Abandoned Horse Problems Passes Out of Committee
    The Kentucky General Assembly is considering legislation that would tackle problems associated with abandoned horses. The House Agriculture and Small…
  • When a season is lost, some teams will take it easy their last few games — or the last 82, if it's the Philadelphia 76ers — in hopes of securing a better draft pick. But not this NFL cellar-dweller.
  • The Broadway League has announced an extension of closures related to COVID-19 to May.
  • Lt. Col. Alexander Vindman is a foreign affairs expert who serves on the National Security Council. He has been described as having told investigators he worried immediately about the Ukraine affair.
  • The annual Fancy Farm political event takes place this weekend, signaling the unofficial kickoff of the fall election season in Kentucky. Capitol reporter…
  • World Cafe guest host Michaela Majoun conducts an in-depth interview with the pair of rock legends.
  • Japanese company Suzumo introduced what it calls a sushi robot at a food expo in Tokyo last week. The cutting-edge sushi-making machine is about 10 times quicker than the most productive sushi chef. No word yet on the price for the counter-top device which weighs about 20 pounds.
  • Two halves of an ancient Greek statue have been reunited and are on display in a Turkish museum. The top half spent the last two decades in the Boston Fine Arts Museum. Turkish officials said it was illegally removed from an archaeological site in southwestern Turkey and they spent years trying to get it back.
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