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  • Newsweek correspondent Maziar Bahari was arrested in Tehran in 2009 while covering Iran's election protests. He explains how he endured 118 days in Iran's notorious Evin Prison, where he was repeatedly interrogated and tortured — and how he now views his homeland.
  • Comic-Con Independent Film Fest's 'Judge's Choice' Winner Opens
  • Brock Savelkoul survived a rocket explosion and shootout in Iraq. He never dreamed his showdown would come with police in a pasture in North Dakota.
  • Life along the Grand Trunk Road connecting Indian and Pakistan offers ample evidence of the contrasts in the two countries and their cultures. But at the table, at least, you notice the similarities, not the differences. The NPR team finishes its journey on the historic road by mulling over the region's culinary legacy.
  • Dr. Douglas Gwatidzo has been a witness to the results of beatings and other physical abuse suffered by political opponents of Zimbabwe's president, Robert Mugabe. Gwatidzo will participate Friday in a briefing for the U.S. Congress.
  • The Department of Veterans Affairs reports car crashes are a leading cause of death among combat veterans during their first years home. We'll find out the scope of the problem, why it's happening and what is being done to address it.
  • It's Coachella weekend, and though all you survivalists may be pondering what to pack, Culture Lust contributor Meredith Hattam has bigger things on her mind (wardrobe, people!)
  • Capt. Juan Guerrero, who lost part of his calf when his Humvee hit a roadside bomb in Iraq, was one of 200 wounded, ill and injured athletes who competed in the first-ever Wounded Warrior Games last week in Colorado Springs, Colo. The competition helps show service members that there is life after an injury.
  • Put down the candy and remote control, Mom and Dad. If you want to reduce the risk of raising an overweight child, it's time to clean the pantry of processed foods and start pedaling that bike.
  • Joplin, Mo., residents at an area shelter are grateful to have stepped out of destroyed homes with just the clothes on their backs. Still in shock, they haven't started worrying yet about what happens next.
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