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  • Steve Tripoli of member station WBUR reports that the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston suggests that African Americans seek help from their churches when they are rebuilding the local economies.
  • NPR's David Welna reports on a Bipartisan Civility Retreat for members of Congress this weekend in West Virginia. A number of members of Congress are seeking ways in which they can better communicate and work together.
  • NPR's Pam Fessler reports California Governor Gray Davis was in Washington yesterday seeking federal help for his state's energy problems.
  • The nine Democrats seeking their party's presidential nomination meet in Albuquerque, New Mexico for their second debate. Hear NPR's Mara Liasson.
  • Liane Hansen travels to Nebraska to talk with residents f several small towns. Life is quiet and peaceful there, but younger residents re moving to larger towns to seek their fortune.
  • Host Bob Edwards speaks with the artists of fAMOUS, an art project in San Francisco seeking to capture the metaphor of the quick rise and fall of the dot-com industry.
  • Catholic Nuns and lay women are seeking ways to involve more women in religious life. This sometimes involves new interpretations of the vows of celibacy, poverty, and obedience, as Karen Brown reports.
  • Software company SAS is No. 1 again — in large part because "its perks are epic." Boston Consulting is No. 2 and Wegmans Food Markets comes in at No. 3.
  • Thousands of protesters blockaded government buildings in Kiev seeking to oust President Viktor Yanukovich. Robert Siegel talks to Steven Pifer, former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine.
  • The Republican senator confirmed the news Tuesday. He survived a 2007 prostitution scandal to easily win re-election to the Senate three years later. If he fails in his bid to become governor, he could still keep his Senate seat and decide later whether to seek re-election to that post in 2016.
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