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  • Game-makers are in San Francisco this week for the industry's largest global event. Roughly 20,000 people from 100 countries are there. And a game that hasn't even been created yet is getting lots of attention. It's also exposing the rift between the creative and business minds in this $33 billion industry.
  • While Republican presidential front-runner Mitt Romney argues that his opponents have no realistic shot at winning enough delegates to secure the nomination, the same could eventually be true for Romney if a four-way race continues. NPR takes a look at the latest delegate numbers.
  • It was a big night for Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum. He won the primaries in Mississippi and Alabama. Mitt Romney was running third in both states.
  • When President Obama announced two weeks ago that the United States would be withdrawing troops from Iraq by the end of the year, the other top news…
  • As we head into the holiday season this might be a good moment to reflect on the roots of our collective consumer delusion.
  • By Maria CarterKansas City, MO – Last year 24 patients and family members left Children's Hospital in New Orleans and boarded a plane bound for Kansas…
  • By Matt HackworthBELTON, Mo. – One of the jobs of the World Health Organization is to set the global standard for food safety. The United States follows…
  • By Steve BellKansas City, MO – With current auditor Claire McCaskill bowing out to run for the Senate, the race features a Republican and a Democrat who…
  • In 1952, the federal government created a program that encouraged Native Americans to move off reservations and into cities such as Chicago, Denver and Los Angeles. They were lured by the hope of a better life, but for many that promise was not realized.
  • Six women in Derry, N.H., talk with Morning Edition's Steve Inskeep about the economy, federal spending and who's the biggest flip-flopper in Tuesday's GOP primary.
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