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  • Think of these three salad recipes as an introduction to a new season, a combination of color, textures and bright spring flavors. They are light but substantial and satisfying enough to be a main course for lunch or dinner.
  • Check your receipt. Grow your own veggies. Ask about senior discounts. NPR readers share their top tips on cutting costs at the grocery store.
  • About a week before the Jan. 6 attack, there was an "escalation" of then-President Donald Trump's demands about election fraud allegations, a former acting deputy attorney general testified.
  • If All Else Fails is a podcast from North Country Public Radio that explores how far-right extremism is gaining traction in upstate New York among law enforcement.
  • On this edition we talk with Alex Baumhardt of The Oregon Capitol Chronicle about the special session in the Oregon legislature to try and pass a transportation budget. Then we talk with KLCC's Nathan Wilk about safety concerns in downtown Eugene.
  • We head to Philomath to talk with the employees who now own minimalist shoe maker Softstar Shoes to learn about the process and their product.
  • For Giving Tuesday we talk with Public Radio stations and entities impacted by the congressional defunding of public media. We talk with Luke Burbank of Live Wire radio, Jack Harris and Mari Bergeron of KMUN in Astoria and Sue Matters of KWSO on the Warm Springs Reservation.
  • We talk with Sheryl Balthrop of the Eugene Mission and Tim Black about the Egan Warming Centers. Two institutions providing shelter and so much more.
  • We talk with Oregon Republican House leader Christine Drazan about funding battles in the legislature and we talk with KLCC's Karen Richards about a community college president trying to raise funds for students by running across the state. We also talk with Mia Maldonado of the Oregon Capitol Chronicle about new funding for seniors and Oregon airports.
  • Sheriff Kent Van der Kamp of Deschutes County is under scrutiny for lying under oath about his educational credentials and past employment. The Deschutes County District Attorney's office found he lied about attending USC and the University of Arizona, leading to his placement on the Brady list, which bars him from testifying in court. A state investigation by the Department of Public Safety Standards and Training (DPSST) found six instances of his dishonesty, potentially leading to the revocation of his certification. Despite public and internal office concerns, Van der Kamp has not resigned and plans to continue his tenure.
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