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  • With that pitch, coder boot camps are poised to get much, much bigger. Is this a new education delivery system?
  • Vote-trading scandals in the 1998 and 2002 Olympics forced the International Skating Union to make major changes to its judging system, including obscuring which judge issued which mark. Sports correspondent Mike Pesca discusses the issue of transparency and subjectivity in Olympics judging with NPR's Rachel Martin.
  • NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Kadia Goba, political reporter for BuzzFeed News, and Paul Kane, senior congressional correspondent and columnist for The Washington Post, about covering Congress.
  • That means the White House reached its revised enrollment goal for the first year the Affordable Care Act was in full effect.
  • PolitiFact, which is part of the Poynter Institute, is critical of a new documentary film series on Fox News about the January 6 insurrection. Poynter's…
  • The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot is extending the timetable for its public hearings into July.
  • Civil rights protesters argue Jena, La., school and law enforcement officials are dealing out harsh justice to the African-American teens for a schoolyard fight while overlooking their white counterparts who hung nooses to intimidate the black teens.
  • The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol is expected to hold two more hearings this week, including one in primetime.
  • The subpoena requires the former president to produce documents by Nov. 4 and to appear for testimony on or about Nov. 14.
  • In fiction, Adam Johnson offers a view of life in North Korea under Kim Jong Il. In nonfiction, Ronald Kessler looks into the FBI's tactical operations teams, and Peter D. Ward explores the likely impact of our rapidly melting ice caps.
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