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  • The co-host for NPR Music's All Songs Considered shares the albums he returned to the most in 2013.
  • What was once another shortened way to call a friend "brother," the word "bruh" is now being used widely, especially by Gen Alpha kids, to address parents, express sadness, frustration, happiness and seemingly everything else under the sun.
  • The Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol began its work Tuesday. Four police officers who defended the building that day testified.
  • Also: Man arrested with firebombs in Seattle had maps of area colleges; at George Zimmerman's trial, mothers disagree about whose voice is on key recording; NBA's Dwight Howard opts to sign with the Houson Rockets.
  • Also: IRS's actions add to conservatives' case against Obama; Pakistanis go to polls after campaign marred by violence; astronauts prepared for spacewalk to station's leaks; survivor of Bangladesh building collapse said to be "doing great."
  • NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Mary Mahoney and Allison Horrocks about their new book Dolls of Our Lives: Why We Can't Quit American Girl.
  • NPR Economics Correspondent John Ydstie examines the question of whether the American economy is just cooling off or actually entering a recession. The Federal Reserve has been raising interest rates, incrementally, attempting to keep inflation under control. But some analysts are afraid the Fed's monetary policy has done too much to slow the economy.
  • Host Lisa Simeone talks with Phillip J. Brutus, a newly-elected state representative to the Florida legislature. Brutus, is the first Haitian-American elected to the Florida statehouse; he represents the 108th district in Miami. This week Rep. Brutus may be asked to join his colleagues in the legislature to name Florida's 25 electors.
  • Residents in South Gate, Calif., vote to oust the mayor, treasurer and two council members, amid allegations that they conducted city business through backroom deals and gave city contracts to friends. Adolfo Guzman-Lopez of member station KPCC reports.
  • Records show that a top aide at the Illinois Department of Public Health took a leave of absence to work on political campaigns in the fall of 2016 while…
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