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  • Premieres Monday, April 14, 2025 at 8 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS app. Watch astonishing treasures from ROADSHOW's Baltimore stop, including 1865 Lewis M. Rutherford lunar photographs, a Patek Philippe & Tiffany platinum pocket watch, ca. 1910 and Lynne Drexler oil paintings. One is worth up to $570,000!
  • Tuesday, March 4, 2025 at 9:30 p.m. on KPBS TV / Stream now with KPBS Passport! Meet the American women who built the planes and flew them, fought on the warfront and the home front, cracked codes and broke barriers. The “secret weapon” that helped win the war, they forever changed the world in the process.
  • NOAA relies on hundreds of contracts to keep the agency running. The new commerce secretary is reviewing many of them individually, causing disruptions to many normal operations within the agency.
  • flute, viola, cello, piano, marimba music by Michael Torke, Philippe Gaubert, Zoltán Kodály, & Composers Circle Commission by Oliviana Marie earth. wind. water. fire. Join us for an evening celebrating the natural forces of earth, wind, water, and fire through the works of renowned composers Michael Torke, Philippe Gaubert, Zoltán Kodály, and a special Composers Circle Commission by Oliviana Marie. The concert features a unique blend of flute, viola, cello, piano, and marimba, beautifully capturing the essence of the elements. The program includes Torke’s evocative After the Forest Fire for flute, cello, and marimba, Gaubert's impressionistic Trois Aquarelles for flute, cello, and piano, and Kodály’s lyrical Adagio for viola and piano. The highlight of the evening will be the premiere of Oliviana Marie's The Elements, a four-movement composition inspired by the beauty and power of nature. Expand your experience by arriving early to explore Mingei’s "Blue Gold" exhibit, available for free admission to concert attendees before the performance begins at 7:30 p.m. Beth Ross Buckley, flute Travis Maril, viola Abe Liebhaber, cello Dana Burnett, piano Michael Jones, percussion Mingei International Museum on Facebook / Instagram
  • The only way migrants can plead their case for asylum in the U.S. is to make an appointment through the Biden administration's CBP One mobile app. The app has a long wait list and migrants in a Tijuana shelter are praying for an appointment before President-elect Donald Trump takes office.
  • The Supreme Court's stay, which allows the administration to execute the firings for now, while it litigates in federal court, does not mean the terminations were lawful.
  • Tariffs on steel and aluminum are increasing to 25% — not the 50% that President Trump had recently threatened, but high enough to be a headache for automakers.
  • Eighteen states count mail-in ballots that are received after Election Day, but a new order by President Trump challenges the practice.
  • A new study out this week from the museum think tank Remuseum suggests free admission attracts more visitors without increasing costs.
  • The U.S. has generally kept tariffs low, but a few domestic industries have long been protected by import taxes and other trade barriers. They offer clues about how Trump's new tariffs might work out.
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