Thursday, May 31, 2018

NPR News: Last Straw For Plastic Straws? Cities, Restaurants Move To Toss These Sippers

Last Straw For Plastic Straws? Cities, Restaurants Move To Toss These Sippers
As awareness grows about the environmental toll of single-use plastics, U.S. retailers and regulators alike are finding ways to decrease their use. And straws have become a prime target.

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Media Invited to See Latest NASA Drone Traffic Management Technologies

NASA invites media to learn the latest about its national campaign to test and refine its Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) Traffic Management (UTM) technologies at 10 a.m. PDT Wednesday, June 6, at the agency’s Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley, California.

May 31, 2018
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NPR News: New Research On Parents And Favoritism

New Research On Parents And Favoritism
Parents may think they treat their children equally, but new research shows that parents show bias when forced to choose between spending on sons and daughters.

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NPR News: New Research On Parents And Favoritism

New Research On Parents And Favoritism
Parents may think they treat their children equally, but new research shows that parents show bias when forced to choose between spending on sons and daughters.

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Wednesday, May 30, 2018

NPR News: Get Screened Earlier For Colon Cancer, Urges American Cancer Society

Get Screened Earlier For Colon Cancer, Urges American Cancer Society
Noting a sharp rise in colorectal cancer among younger people, the American Cancer Society now suggests that healthy adults get their first screening five years earlier — at age 45.

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NPR News: Get Screened Earlier For Colon Cancer, Urges American Cancer Society

Get Screened Earlier For Colon Cancer, Urges American Cancer Society
Noting a sharp rise in colorectal cancer among younger people, the American Cancer Society now suggests that healthy adults get their first screening five years earlier — at age 45.

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NPR News: The Conflicting Educations Of Sam Schimmel

The Conflicting Educations Of Sam Schimmel
More than 50 years after the federal government forced hundreds of Native Alaskans into boarding schools, their descendants are haunted by — and trying to overcome —residual trauma.

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Tuesday, May 29, 2018

NPR News: Scientists Use Lasers To Map An Ancient City In Jordan

Scientists Use Lasers To Map An Ancient City In Jordan
The researchers used a technology known as LiDAR to map the city of Jerash. It's helping them understand its past, as a growing modern city encroaches on the well-preserved ancient site.

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NPR News: Canada's Government Buys Controversial Oil Pipeline, To Ensure It Gets Expanded

Canada's Government Buys Controversial Oil Pipeline, To Ensure It Gets Expanded
The pipeline connects oil sands facilities near Edmonton, Alberta, to Burnaby, near Vancouver on the coast in British Columbia.

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NPR News: Official Death Toll From Maria In Puerto Rico Is Way Off, Researchers Say

Official Death Toll From Maria In Puerto Rico Is Way Off, Researchers Say
A new Harvard study suggests that the death toll in Puerto Rico from last year's hurricane is many times higher than originally believed — closer to 5,000 than the official count of 64.

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Monday, May 28, 2018

NPR News: Great White Sharks Have A Secret 'Cafe,' And They Led Scientists Right To It

Great White Sharks Have A Secret 'Cafe,' And They Led Scientists Right To It
These sharks have a hidden life that's becoming a lot less hidden, thanks to a scientific expedition that was years in the making.

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NPR News: Great White Sharks Have A Secret 'Cafe,' And They Led Scientists Right To It

Great White Sharks Have A Secret 'Cafe,' And They Led Scientists Right To It
These sharks have a hidden life that's becoming a lot less hidden, thanks to a scientific expedition that was years in the making.

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Saturday, May 26, 2018

NASA Administrator Reflects on Legacy Record-Breaking Skylab, Apollo Astronaut

The following is a statement from NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine on the passing of Apollo and Skylab astronaut Alan Bean:

May 26, 2018
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Family Release Regarding the Passing of Apollo, Skylab Astronaut Alan Bean

The following is an obituary article released on the behalf of Alan Bean’s family:

May 26, 2018
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Friday, May 25, 2018

NPR News: Amishi Jha: How Can We Pay Better Attention To Our Attention?

Amishi Jha: How Can We Pay Better Attention To Our Attention?
What exactly is attention, and how can we reclaim it? Neuroscientist Amishi Jha says there's a powerful link between mindfulness, meditation and attention.

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Thursday, May 24, 2018

NPR News: Asteroid Impact That Wiped Out The Dinosaurs Also Caused Abrupt Global Warming

Asteroid Impact That Wiped Out The Dinosaurs Also Caused Abrupt Global Warming
The crash of the space rock that slammed into the Yucatan Peninsula also warmed up the Earth's atmosphere for 100,000 years. And scientists say it's a cautionary tale for people living today.

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NPR News: NOAA Expects Hurricane Season For 2018 To Be Near Or Above Normal

NOAA Expects Hurricane Season For 2018 To Be Near Or Above Normal
After a devastating 2017 hurricane season, the Atlantic isn't likely to get a break this year, NOAA says. The agency predicts 10 to 16 named storms this season, including up to four major hurricanes.

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NASA, Space Station Partners Announce Future Mission Crew Members

NASA astronauts Christina Hammock Koch and Andrew Morgan have been assigned to spaceflights scheduled to launch in 2019. Both Koch and Morgan were selected as NASA astronauts in 2013.

May 24, 2018
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NPR News: What's Going On In Your Child's Brain When You Read Them A Story?

What's Going On In Your Child's Brain When You Read Them A Story?
There are many ways young children encounter stories. A new study finds a "Goldilocks effect," where a cartoon may be "too hot" and audiobooks "too cold" for learning readers.

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Wednesday, May 23, 2018

NPR News: Echoes Of Cuba? U.S. Employee In China Hit With 'Sensations Of Sound And Pressure'

Echoes Of Cuba? U.S. Employee In China Hit With 'Sensations Of Sound And Pressure'
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said "the medical indications are very similar and entirely consistent" with symptoms reported by American diplomats in Cuba, where there were reports of sonic attacks.

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NPR News: Trying Physical Therapy First For Low Back Pain May Curb Use Of Opioids

Trying Physical Therapy First For Low Back Pain May Curb Use Of Opioids
A study of patients with low back pain finds that those who got physical therapy first needed fewer pricey scans and surgeries and had "significantly lower out-of-pocket costs" for treatment overall.

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NPR News: Trying Physical Therapy First For Low Back Pain May Curb Use Of Opioids

Trying Physical Therapy First For Low Back Pain May Curb Use Of Opioids
A study of patients with low back pain finds that those who got physical therapy first needed fewer pricey scans and surgeries and had "significantly lower out-of-pocket costs" for treatment overall.

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NPR News: California's Message To Hospitals: Shape Up Or Lose 'In-Network' Status

California's Message To Hospitals: Shape Up Or Lose 'In-Network' Status
Covered California, the state's health insurance exchange, will exclude hospitals from insurance networks if they don't reduce their numbers of C-sections, back scans and opioid prescriptions.

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Tuesday, May 22, 2018

NPR News: Scientists Take A Ride On The Pacific's 'Shark Highway'

Scientists Take A Ride On The Pacific's 'Shark Highway'
Biologists knew the sharks sometimes traveled from waters off Costa Rica south to the Galapagos Islands, but they'd never actually witnessed it.

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NPR News: Scientists Take A Ride On The Pacific's 'Shark Highway'

Scientists Take A Ride On The Pacific's 'Shark Highway'
Biologists knew the sharks sometimes traveled from waters off Costa Rica south to the Galapagos Islands, but they'd never actually witnessed it.

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NPR News: Nothing Certain In Search For 'Regulatory Certainty' At EPA

Nothing Certain In Search For 'Regulatory Certainty' At EPA
Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt often cites the need for "regulatory certainty." But even some supporters of his sweeping rollbacks say they're creating the opposite.

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NPR News: Routine DNA Screening Moves Into Primary Care

Routine DNA Screening Moves Into Primary Care
The Pennsylvania-based health care chain Geisinger Health System plans to soon offer DNA sequencing as part of routine care for all patients. Is there a downside?

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Monday, May 21, 2018

Steve Jurczyk Appointed NASA Associate Administrator; Krista Paquin Retires; Melanie W. Saunders Named Acting Deputy Associate Administrator

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine has named Steve Jurczyk as associate administrator, the agency's highest-ranking civil servant position

May 21, 2018
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NPR News: NASA Launching New Satellites To Measure Earth's Lumpy Gravity

NASA Launching New Satellites To Measure Earth's Lumpy Gravity
The two satellites, which are collectively called GRACE and will replace two retired probes, are one of the most important tools for understanding the effects of climate change.

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NPR News: Trump Hints At Plan To Create 'Space Force' As Sixth Military Branch

Trump Hints At Plan To Create 'Space Force' As Sixth Military Branch
While the Pentagon opposes the measure, the military has conducted operations in space for 50 years.

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NPR News: Hawaii Volcano's Lava Spews 'Laze' Of Toxic Gas And Glass Into The Air

Hawaii Volcano's Lava Spews 'Laze' Of Toxic Gas And Glass Into The Air
Lava from the Kileaua volcano is pouring into the Pacific Ocean, generating a plume of "laze" — hydrochloric acid and steam with fine glass particles — into the air.

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NPR News: Levees Make Mississippi River Floods Worse, But We Keep Building Them

Levees Make Mississippi River Floods Worse, But We Keep Building Them
For more than 150 years, scientists have known that levees increase flood risk on the Mississippi River. That hasn't stopped local officials from building up levees in response to more severe floods.

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NPR News: Levees Make Mississippi River Floods Worse, But We Keep Building Them

Levees Make Mississippi River Floods Worse, But We Keep Building Them
For more than 150 years, scientists have known that levees increase flood risk on the Mississippi River. That hasn't stopped local officials from building up levees in response to more severe floods.

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California Students to Link Up with NASA Astronauts on Space Station

Students from Pacoima and San Fernando, California, will have the opportunity to talk with astronauts on the International Space Station on Tuesday, May 22, as part of NASA’s Year of Education on Station.

May 21, 2018
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NASA Sends New Research on Orbital ATK Mission to Space Station

Astronauts soon will have new experiments to conduct related to emergency navigation, DNA sequencing and ultra-cold atom research when the research arrives at the International Space Station following the 4:44 a.m. EDT Monday launch of an Orbital ATK Cygnus spacecraft.

May 21, 2018
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NPR News: French Researchers: Hitler Really Did Die In The Bunker In 1945

French Researchers: Hitler Really Did Die In The Bunker In 1945
Conspiracy theories have abounded for years about the fate of the Führer, ranging from his escape to Argentina aboard a German U-boat to living out his days at a secret Nazi moon base.

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Sunday, May 20, 2018

NPR News: The Case Of The Stolen Succulents

The Case Of The Stolen Succulents
California Fish and Wildlife agents are combating a rash of succulent poaching incidents on the state's coastline, apparently to satisfy a booming demand for the plants in Korean and Chinese markets.

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NPR News: Magdalena Skipper Is Named New Chief Of 'Nature'

Magdalena Skipper Is Named New Chief Of 'Nature'
NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro talks to Magdalena Skipper, who the journal Nature has chosen as its new editor-in-chief. Skipper is the first woman to hold the post.

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Saturday, May 19, 2018

@CleanStreamsDE: Have you seen the official results yet? If not, check them out in the @NCCDE official results press release: https://t.co/WOwQFFqTzj

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NPR News: USDA Unveils Prototypes For GMO Food Labels, And They're ... Confusing

USDA Unveils Prototypes For GMO Food Labels, And They're ... Confusing
The labels use the letters BE, for bioengineered, not GMO, which critics say could baffle consumers. One design features a smiling sun that a skeptic calls "essentially propaganda for the industry."

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Friday, May 18, 2018

NPR News: Report: Most Former Research Chimps Should Move To Retirement Sanctuaries

Report: Most Former Research Chimps Should Move To Retirement Sanctuaries
A working group convened by the National Institutes of Health looked at where chimps that had been used in research should live now. Unless relocating chimps would endanger them, a sanctuary is best.

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NPR News: Report: Most Former Research Chimps Should Move To Retirement Sanctuaries

Report: Most Former Research Chimps Should Move To Retirement Sanctuaries
A working group convened by the National Institutes of Health looked at where chimps that had been used in research should live now. Unless relocating chimps would endanger them, a sanctuary is best.

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NPR News: Why The $#%& Can't He Wash The Dishes?! The Chores That Can Sink A Relationship

Why The $#%& Can't He Wash The Dishes?! The Chores That Can Sink A Relationship
A study finds that washing dishes is a big deal for women when it comes to the division of labor. But it taps into an even bigger idea — that women are emotionally exhausted by household management.

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NPR News: Officials In Hawaii Hand Out Thousands Of Masks As Kilauea Spews More Ash

Officials In Hawaii Hand Out Thousands Of Masks As Kilauea Spews More Ash
County officials have distributed about 2,000 N95 masks as they warn that ash fallout is the biggest health concern for residents.

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Thursday, May 17, 2018

NPR News: Starbucks Training Focuses On The Evolving Study Of Unconscious Bias

Starbucks Training Focuses On The Evolving Study Of Unconscious Bias
Scientists and leadership trainers says it's nearly impossible to train people out of their biases, but organizations can develop ways of mitigating the effects of it. Often, it involves teamwork.

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NPR News: Banned, Ozone-Depleting Chemical Is Still Being Produced Somewhere, Scientists Say

Banned, Ozone-Depleting Chemical Is Still Being Produced Somewhere, Scientists Say
Trichlorofluoromethane, or CFC-11, hurts the ozone layer and was supposed to have been phased out of production by 2010. Supposedly. But NOAA scientists say CFC-11 emissions began to rise after 2012.

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NASA Invites Media to Upcoming Launch of Science to Space Station

Media accreditation now is open for the launch of the next SpaceX delivery of NASA science investigations, supplies and equipment to the International Space Station, currently targeted for late June.

May 17, 2018
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NPR News: Warming Waters Push Fish To Cooler Climes, Out Of Some Fishermen's Reach

Warming Waters Push Fish To Cooler Climes, Out Of Some Fishermen's Reach
From bass to lobster, hundreds of species that live along U.S. coastlines are projected to migrate north over the next 80 years, making them harder to catch and manage. It's already happening.

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NPR News: Warming Waters Push Fish To Cooler Climes, Out Of Some Fishermen's Reach

Warming Waters Push Fish To Cooler Climes, Out Of Some Fishermen's Reach
From bass to lobster, hundreds of species that live along U.S. coastlines are projected to migrate north over the next 80 years, making them harder to catch and manage. It's already happening.

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NPR News: 'Ballistic Blocks' Shooting From Kilauea's Crater, USGS Says

'Ballistic Blocks' Shooting From Kilauea's Crater, USGS Says
Volcanic rocks 2-feet in diameter have been found in a parking lot a few hundred yards from the volcano's Halemaumau crater, the U.S. Geological Survey reports.

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Wednesday, May 16, 2018

NASA Satellites Reveal Major Shifts in Global Freshwater

In a first-of-its-kind study, scientists have combined an array of NASA satellite observations of Earth with data on human activities to map locations where freshwater is changing around the globe and to determine why.

May 16, 2018
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NASA Television Updates Coverage of Earth-Observing Satellite Duo Launch

Media are invited to cover the prelaunch briefing and launch of the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment Follow-On (GRACE-FO), NASA’s latest Earth-observing satellite mission.

May 16, 2018
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NPR News: Why Do Some Lizards Have Green Blood?

Why Do Some Lizards Have Green Blood?
Scientists are trying to figure out how green-blooded lizards might benefit from the unusual pigment. The answer could provide new insights into human illnesses like jaundice and malaria.

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NPR News: Why Do Some Lizards Have Green Blood?

Why Do Some Lizards Have Green Blood?
Scientists are trying to figure out how green-blooded lizards might benefit from the unusual pigment. The answer could provide new insights into human illnesses like jaundice and malaria.

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NPR News: As '13 Reasons Why' Returns, Schools Try To Help Students Who Are Thinking Of Suicide

As '13 Reasons Why' Returns, Schools Try To Help Students Who Are Thinking Of Suicide
About 1 in 5 teens may have contemplated suicide. But new research suggests that schools as a whole can make a difference.

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Tuesday, May 15, 2018

NPR News: Asteroid Will Pass Between The Earth And The Moon Tuesday (Don't Panic)

Asteroid Will Pass Between The Earth And The Moon Tuesday (Don't Panic)
First spotted in 2010, a space rock is zooming toward Earth, making a close pass on Tuesday that will see it fly safely by - about halfway between our planet and the moon.

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NPR News: Asteroid Will Pass Between The Earth And Sun Tuesday (Don't Panic)

Asteroid Will Pass Between The Earth And Sun Tuesday (Don't Panic)
First spotted in 2010, a space rock is zooming toward Earth, making a close pass on Tuesday that will see it fly safely by - about halfway between our planet and the moon.

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NPR News: Battered By Bleaching, Florida's Coral Reefs Now Face Mysterious Disease

Battered By Bleaching, Florida's Coral Reefs Now Face Mysterious Disease
Florida's coral reefs are being decimated by a mysterious disease. It comes after years of warming waters have bleached coral reefs around the world, leaving them weakened.

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NPR News: Kids Are Taking Fewer Antibiotics, More ADHD Meds

Kids Are Taking Fewer Antibiotics, More ADHD Meds
Doctors are prescribing fewer drugs to children, especially antibiotics. But use of certain drugs include ADHD medications has increased.

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NPR News: Kids Are Taking Fewer Antibiotics, More ADHD Meds

Kids Are Taking Fewer Antibiotics, More ADHD Meds
Doctors are prescribing fewer drugs to children, especially antibiotics. But use of certain drugs include ADHD medications has increased.

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NPR News: Louisiana Wants To Use The Muddy Mississippi To Build Up Its Coast

Louisiana Wants To Use The Muddy Mississippi To Build Up Its Coast
Louisiana has big plans to redirect parts of the Mississippi River to build up its shrinking coast. New research suggests it won't help nearly enough.

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Monday, May 14, 2018

NASA Announces New Director of Johnson Space Center

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine announced Monday the selection of Mark Geyer as the next director of the agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.

May 14, 2018
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Old Data Reveal New Evidence of Europa Plumes

Scientists re-examining data from an old mission bring new insights to the tantalizing question of whether Jupiter’s moon Europa has the ingredients to support life.

May 14, 2018
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NPR News: On East Coast Oyster Farms, 'Women Are Rising Up From The Bay In A Big Way'

On East Coast Oyster Farms, 'Women Are Rising Up From The Bay In A Big Way'
More women are joining their male peers among the ranks of oyster farmers. This could be because of growing marine science programs — and a desire to have a hands-on connection with the food system.

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NPR News: Icy Moon Of Jupiter Spews Water Plumes Into Space

Icy Moon Of Jupiter Spews Water Plumes Into Space
Researchers have evidence supporting the existence of plumes of water shooting up from the interior of Jupiter's icy moon Europa.

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NPR News: Scientific Debate Centers On Giant Crack In Africa's Rift Valley

Scientific Debate Centers On Giant Crack In Africa's Rift Valley
A deep, wide gash has slashed across the Great Rift Valley floor in a geologically hot part of Kenya. Some wonder if East Africa will eventually separate from the continent.

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Sunday, May 13, 2018

NPR News: Trump's 'Energy Dominance' Gets Slow Start On Federal Land

Trump's 'Energy Dominance' Gets Slow Start On Federal Land
Despite President Trump's pledge to boost oil and gas drilling on federal land some statistics show there was more activity during the Obama administration.

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Saturday, May 12, 2018

NPR News: New Orleans Pressured To Reconsider Permit For Power Plant Backed By Paid Actors

New Orleans Pressured To Reconsider Permit For Power Plant Backed By Paid Actors
In New Orleans, activists who spoke in favor of a proposed gas plant turned out to be paid actors. Environmentalists are calling on the city council to reconsider its approval of a plant permit.

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NPR News: Doctor Behind Asperger's Syndrome Subject To Name Change

Doctor Behind Asperger's Syndrome Subject To Name Change
In the book "Asperger's Children: The Origins of Autism in Nazi Vienna," Edith Sheffer writes about the doctor who first diagnosed Asperger's Syndrome. Sheffer tells NPR's Michel Martin how Hans Asperger's Nazi ties were hidden for years.

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NPR News: Tardis Optional: Time Travelers Invited To Stephen Hawking Service

Tardis Optional: Time Travelers Invited To Stephen Hawking Service
Applications to attend a memorial service for the famous scientist are open to the public. Anyone born between 1918 and 2038 can apply.

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NPR News: Researchers Tackle Gun Violence Despite Lack of Federal Funding

Researchers Tackle Gun Violence Despite Lack of Federal Funding
Despite a federal ban on funding the study of gun violence, researchers have published hundreds of studies in recent years exploring risk factors and solutions to the problem.

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NPR News: Researchers Tackle Gun Violence Despite Lack of Federal Funding

Researchers Tackle Gun Violence Despite Lack of Federal Funding
Despite a federal ban on funding the study of gun violence, researchers have published hundreds of studies in recent years exploring risk factors and solutions to the problem.

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NPR News: The $1 Fentanyl Drug Test

The $1 Fentanyl Drug Test
Public health experts are encouraging drug users to test their drugs for fentanyl with a $1 strip. NPR's Scott Simon talks to Traci Green of Brown University about the technology.

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Friday, May 11, 2018

NASA Television to Air Coverage of Earth-Observing Satellite Duo Launch

Media are invited to cover the prelaunch briefing and launch of the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment Follow-On (GRACE-FO), NASA’s latest Earth-observing satellite mission. The briefing on Thursday, May 17, and launch on Saturday, May 19, will air on NASA Television and the agency’s website.

May 11, 2018
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Oklahoma, Illinois Students to Link Up with NASA Astronauts on Space Station

Students from Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Edwardsville, Illinois, will have the opportunity to talk with astronauts on the International Space Station next week as part of NASA’s Year of Education on Station.

May 11, 2018
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NPR News: Earth's 'Bigger, Older Cousin' Maybe Doesn't Even Exist

Earth's 'Bigger, Older Cousin' Maybe Doesn't Even Exist
In 2015, to great fanfare, NASA announced a planet discovery considered a milestone in the hunt for another Earth. But now some researchers say it's not clear that this planet actually exists.

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NPR News: Earth's 'Bigger, Older Cousin' Maybe Doesn't Even Exist

Earth's 'Bigger, Older Cousin' Maybe Doesn't Even Exist
In 2015, to great fanfare, NASA announced a planet discovery considered a milestone in the hunt for another Earth. But now some researchers say it's not clear that this planet actually exists.

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NASA Hosts Live Discussion about Europa Findings, Potential for Life

NASA will host a Science Chat at 1 p.m. EDT Monday, May 14, to discuss the latest analysis of Jupiter’s moon Europa and its status as one of the most promising places in the solar system to search for life.

May 11, 2018
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NPR News: From Collards to Maple Syrup, How Your Identity Impacts The Food You Like

From Collards to Maple Syrup, How Your Identity Impacts The Food You Like
When people are reminded of their cultural roots, the food representing that culture tastes better. Scientists could harness that food and identity association to help people eat more healthfully.

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NPR News: From Collards to Maple Syrup, How Your Identity Impacts The Food You Like

From Collards to Maple Syrup, How Your Identity Impacts The Food You Like
When people are reminded of their cultural roots, the food representing that culture tastes better. Scientists could harness that food and identity association to help people eat more healthfully.

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NPR News: Can A Cocktail Of Vitamins And Steroids Cure A Major Killer In Hospitals?

Can A Cocktail Of Vitamins And Steroids Cure A Major Killer In Hospitals?
Two big studies aim to rigorously test what could be a revolutionary treatment for a common and deadly disease: sepsis. Many doctors are awaiting the results before changing their practice.

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NPR News: Can A Cocktail Of Vitamins And Steroids Cure A Major Killer In Hospitals?

Can A Cocktail Of Vitamins And Steroids Cure A Major Killer In Hospitals?
Two big studies aim to rigorously test what could be a revolutionary treatment for a common and deadly disease: sepsis. Many doctors are awaiting the results before changing their practice.

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Thursday, May 10, 2018

NPR News: Record Heat In The Gulf Fueled Hurricane Harvey's Deluge

Record Heat In The Gulf Fueled Hurricane Harvey's Deluge
New research shows how scorching temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico led to massive rainfall when the storm hit last year. The findings also suggest global warming will make the problem worse.

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NPR News: When Cancer Patients Ask About Weed, Many Doctors Say Go For It

When Cancer Patients Ask About Weed, Many Doctors Say Go For It
About half of oncologists recommend medical marijuana to patients, though most feel ignorant of its proper medical use.

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NPR News: The Bigger The Mother Fish, The More Babies She Has

The Bigger The Mother Fish, The More Babies She Has
Plus-sized mamma fish have a size advantage over their petite counterparts: They can produce more eggs, and those eggs produce larger fish. It's a reminder that protecting big fish matters.

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NPR News: The Bigger The Mother Fish, The More Babies She Has

The Bigger The Mother Fish, The More Babies She Has
Plus-sized mamma fish have a size advantage over their petite counterparts: They can produce more eggs, and those eggs produce larger fish. It's a reminder that protecting big fish matters.

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Wednesday, May 9, 2018

NPR News: Google's New Voice Bot Sounds, Um, Maybe Too Real

Google's New Voice Bot Sounds, Um, Maybe Too Real
The company touts AI that peppers its conversation with "uh" and "hmm" to imitate the tics of human speech. Many observers took issue with how the bot apparently tricked a human on the phone.

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NPR News: Attitude Of Exactitude: How Precision Made The Modern World

Attitude Of Exactitude: How Precision Made The Modern World
We put a very fine point on it.

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NPR News: Tobacco Smoke Residue Can Become Airborne Again Indoors

Tobacco Smoke Residue Can Become Airborne Again Indoors
Researchers have found that residue stuck on smokers' clothes, furniture or other surfaces can become airborne and pollute indoor air.

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NPR News: Tobacco Smoke Residue Can Become Airborne Again Indoors

Tobacco Smoke Residue Can Become Airborne Again Indoors
Researchers have found that residue stuck on smokers' clothes, furniture or other surfaces can become airborne and pollute indoor air.

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NPR News: The Colonel In the Kitchen: A Surprising History Of Sous Vide

The Colonel In the Kitchen: A Surprising History Of Sous Vide
Cooking food in a vacuum-sealed bag in a hot water bath is the height of haute cuisine. But an ex-Army colonel testing tastier hospital food seems to have had a lot to do with developing sous vide.

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Powers Appointed NASA Press Secretary

Megan Powers has been selected by NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine to be the agency’s press secretary, working in the Office of Communications.

May 09, 2018
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NASA Awards Grants for Research into Life in Universe

NASA has awarded five-year grants, each approximately $8 million, to three research teams that will study the origins, evolution, distribution and future of life in the universe.

May 09, 2018
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NPR News: Reporter On New Email Dump That Reveals Secret Inner Workings Of The EPA

Reporter On New Email Dump That Reveals Secret Inner Workings Of The EPA
New York Times reporter Eric Lipton says the response to a recent FOIA request shows that Scott Pruitt and his staff have gone to great lengths to keep the public and the news media at a distance.

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NPR News: Artificial Intelligence Takes Scientists Inside Living Human Cells

Artificial Intelligence Takes Scientists Inside Living Human Cells
Diseases like cancer involve changes that occur inside a cell — and usually out of sight. A new technology can reveal a cell's inner workings, using inexpensive graphics processors from video games.

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NPR News: Artificial Intelligence Takes Scientists Inside Living Human Cells

Artificial Intelligence Takes Scientists Inside Living Human Cells
Diseases like cancer involve changes that occur inside a cell — and usually out of sight. A new technology can reveal a cell's inner workings, using inexpensive graphics processors from video games.

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Tuesday, May 8, 2018

NPR News: For Babies Of The Opioid Crisis, Best Care May Be Mom's Recovery

For Babies Of The Opioid Crisis, Best Care May Be Mom's Recovery
Early findings on infants born with neonatal abstinence syndrome are reassuring, and doctors are optimistic that normal development can continue. Making sure parents are treated for addiction is key.

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NPR News: For Babies Of The Opioid Crisis, Best Care May Be Mom's Recovery

For Babies Of The Opioid Crisis, Best Care May Be Mom's Recovery
Early findings on infants born with neonatal abstinence syndrome are reassuring, and doctors are optimistic that normal development can continue. Making sure parents are treated for addiction is key.

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NASA, Uber to Explore Safety, Efficiency of Future Urban Airspace

NASA has signed a second space act agreement with Uber Technologies, Inc., to further explore concepts and technologies related to urban air mobility (UAM) to ensure a safe and efficient system for future air transportation in populated areas.

May 08, 2018
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NPR News: How Prized Bull Semen And DNA Testing Are Reshaping America's Beef Herd

How Prized Bull Semen And DNA Testing Are Reshaping America's Beef Herd
Cattle ranchers know that making the best steak starts with the genetic makeup of the herd. Now those genetics have taken a historic leap thanks to new, predictive DNA technology.

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Monday, May 7, 2018

NASA Astronaut Available for Satellite Interviews Before First Spaceflight

NASA astronaut Serena Auñón-Chancellor will be available at 8 a.m. EDT Tuesday, May 15, for live satellite interviews one last time before she launches June 6 on her first spaceflight.

May 07, 2018
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Genes in Space Students to Speak with NASA Astronauts on Space Station

Students from Houston area schools who participated in the Genes in Space challenge, will talk to astronauts on the International Space Station during an events hosted by Boeing and Space Center Houston, the official visitor center of NASA’s Johnson Space Center. The event is part of NASA’s Year of Education on Station.

May 07, 2018
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NASA Highlights Science on Next Orbital ATK Mission to Space Station

NASA will host a media teleconference at 1 p.m. EDT Thursday, May 10, to discuss select science investigations and technology demonstrations launching on the next Orbital ATK commercial resupply flight to the International Space Station.

May 07, 2018
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NPR News: Lyme Disease Is On The Rise Again. Here's How To Prevent It

Lyme Disease Is On The Rise Again. Here's How To Prevent It
The tick-borne illness is spreading north and south — about 300,000 U.S. cases a year. As scientists work on better diagnostic tests and surveillance tools, you can take steps to cut your risk.

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NPR News: Lyme Disease Is On The Rise Again. Here's How To Prevent It

Lyme Disease Is On The Rise Again. Here's How To Prevent It
The tick-borne illness is spreading north and south — about 300,000 U.S. cases a year. As scientists work on better diagnostic tests and surveillance tools, you can take steps to cut your risk.

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Sunday, May 6, 2018

NPR News: NASA Launches New Mars Mission

NASA Launches New Mars Mission
NASA is launching a probe to explore the center of Mars. NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro talks with Oliver Morton, author of Mapping Mars, about what scientists hope to learn.

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NPR News: Springtime Weather Finally Warms Up Inland Alaska

Springtime Weather Finally Warms Up Inland Alaska
Spring thaw brings the chance to pick up trash hiding under the snow--and it's also time to prepare for the "state bird." (The mosquito.)

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Saturday, May 5, 2018

NPR News: NASA InSight Kicks Off 6-Month Journey To Mars

NASA InSight Kicks Off 6-Month Journey To Mars
The InSight Mars lander was successfully launched on Saturday morning, by an Atlas V rocket taking off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. It will gather data on Mars' interior.

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NASA, ULA Launch Mission to Study How Mars Was Made

NASA’s Mars Interior Exploration using Seismic Investigations, Geodesy and Heat Transport (InSight) mission is on a 300-million-mile trip to Mars to study for the first time what lies deep beneath the surface of the Red Planet.

May 05, 2018
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NPR News: Surfers Head Inland To Compete On Machine-Made California Waves

Surfers Head Inland To Compete On Machine-Made California Waves
At Surf Ranch, built by 11-time World Surf League Champion Kelly Slater, waves are made by a machine, perfectly engineered for surfing.

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NPR News: 3 Black Teenage Scientists Had A Breakthrough, Then Came The Trolls

3 Black Teenage Scientists Had A Breakthrough, Then Came The Trolls
NPR's Scott Simon reflects on the hatred expressed online for three African-American high school girls who entered a science competition.

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Friday, May 4, 2018

NPR News: Doctors Stumped By Rare Eye Cancer Cases In North Carolina, Alabama

Doctors Stumped By Rare Eye Cancer Cases In North Carolina, Alabama
Ocular melanoma typically affects six out of every 1 million people, but doctors have found dozens of cases where the patients have connections to either Huntersville, N.C., or Auburn, Ala.

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NPR News: NASA Is Heading Back To Mars To Peer Inside The Red Planet

NASA Is Heading Back To Mars To Peer Inside The Red Planet
The NASA mission is set to launch Saturday morning. The InSight spacecraft will land in the Elysium Planitia to listen for "Marsquakes" and learn more about what Mars is made of.

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Thursday, May 3, 2018

NPR News: Landowner Aims To Bring Wolves Back To Scotland, Centuries After They Were Wiped Out

Landowner Aims To Bring Wolves Back To Scotland, Centuries After They Were Wiped Out
The proposal to reintroduce wolves to the Scottish Highlands is controversial, just like the Yellowstone project it's modeled after.

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NPR News: Landowner Aims To Bring Wolves Back To Scotland, Centuries After They Were Wiped Out

Landowner Aims To Bring Wolves Back To Scotland, Centuries After They Were Wiped Out
The proposal to reintroduce wolves to the Scottish Highlands is controversial, just like the Yellowstone project it's modeled after.

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NPR News: Yellowstone's Largest Geyser Erupts 3 Times Puzzling Scientists

Yellowstone's Largest Geyser Erupts 3 Times Puzzling Scientists
Yellowstone's Steamboat Geyser, which is the world's largest active geyser, has erupted three times in the past two months. The last time Steamboat erupted three times in one year was in 2003.

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NPR News: NASA Tests New Nuclear Reactor For Future Space Travelers

NASA Tests New Nuclear Reactor For Future Space Travelers
The reactor could keep the lights on during future long-duration missions far from Earth.

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NPR News: Midwestern Vintner Saves The Forgotten Grapes That Saved Europe's Wines

Midwestern Vintner Saves The Forgotten Grapes That Saved Europe's Wines
Jerry Eisterhold wanted to make unique wines. And it all started when he pulled a random, rare book from his shelf, written by a 19th-century horticulturist whose work had fallen into obscurity.

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NPR News: Australian Politician Warns Tourists: Don't Feed The Kangaroos

Australian Politician Warns Tourists: Don't Feed The Kangaroos
A member of the New South Wales Parliament is calling for warning signs at a hospital that has become a hot spot for tourists wanting kangaroo selfies after several attacks there.

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Wednesday, May 2, 2018

NPR News: In Oklahoma, Pruitt Ended Environmental Unit, Declined To Push Pollution Case

In Oklahoma, Pruitt Ended Environmental Unit, Declined To Push Pollution Case
When Scott Pruitt served as Oklahoma's Attorney General, he took over a major pollution lawsuit brought by his predecessor. Critics accuse Pruitt of inaction on the case, which remains unresolved.

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NASA to Preview Pair of Upcoming US Spacewalks, Provide Live Coverage

Two NASA astronauts are scheduled to venture outside the International Space Station for a pair of six-and-a-half-hour spacewalks May 16 and 30.

May 02, 2018
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NPR News: A Temperature Roller Coaster Could Be Coming

A Temperature Roller Coaster Could Be Coming
Global warming has so far seen a gradual rise in average temperatures. But that may change, with extreme variations. And poor countries could bear the brunt of it.

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NPR News: How Did Birds Lose Their Teeth And Get Their Beaks? Study Offers Clues

How Did Birds Lose Their Teeth And Get Their Beaks? Study Offers Clues
Modern birds are dinosaurs without toothy jaws, and with bigger brains. Newly published research fills in some of the missing links in their evolution.

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NPR News: How Did Birds Lose Their Teeth And Get Their Beaks? Study Offers Clues

How Did Birds Lose Their Teeth And Get Their Beaks? Study Offers Clues
Modern birds are dinosaurs without toothy jaws, and with bigger brains. Newly published research fills in some of the missing links in their evolution.

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Demonstration Proves Nuclear Fission System Can Provide Space Exploration Power

NASA and the Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) have successfully demonstrated a new nuclear reactor power system that could enable long-duration crewed missions to the Moon, Mars and destinations beyond.

May 02, 2018
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NPR News: Iowa 'Fetal Heartbeat' Bill To Ban Abortions After 6 Weeks Poised For Passage

Iowa 'Fetal Heartbeat' Bill To Ban Abortions After 6 Weeks Poised For Passage
The bill, which would ban most abortions illegal after a fetal heartbeat bill can be detected. The Republican-majority state Senate fast-tracked the bill early Wednesday.

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Tuesday, May 1, 2018

@CleanStreamsDE: The final results will be posted soon! Thank you to all who participated! Working together, we can keep our pipes clog free and our streams clean!

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NPR News: Experimental Lung Treatment Could Make Breathing Easier

Experimental Lung Treatment Could Make Breathing Easier
Lung surfactant coats tiny air sacs in the lung. Without it, every breath is a struggle, like blowing up millions of little balloons. With surfactant, breathing is as easy as blowing soap bubbles.

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NPR News: Experimental Lung Treatment Could Make Breathing Easier

Experimental Lung Treatment Could Make Breathing Easier
Lung surfactant coats tiny air sacs in the lung. Without it, every breath is a struggle, like blowing up millions of little balloons. With surfactant, breathing is as easy as blowing soap bubbles.

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NPR News: World's Oldest Spider Dies At 43

World's Oldest Spider Dies At 43
Australian scientists have reported that a spider — assumed to be the world's oldest — has died at 43, outliving its nearest rival by 15 years. The arachnid is believed to have survived for so long by sticking to one protected burrow its entire life and expending minimal energy.

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NPR News: 'On Fire For God's Work': How Scott Pruitt's Faith Drives His Politics

'On Fire For God's Work': How Scott Pruitt's Faith Drives His Politics
Before Scott Pruitt became the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, his political career was guided in large part by his Southern Baptist faith and a faith-based agenda.

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NPR News: This Is What That 'Salmon-Safe' Label Says About Your Wine Or Eggs

This Is What That 'Salmon-Safe' Label Says About Your Wine Or Eggs
Many consumers don't yet understand the label, but grocery stores are now buying from "salmon-safe" farms, which help protect fish by banning pesticides and keeping manure out of the land's waterways.

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NPR News: In Gerrymandered Districts, Constituents Likely To Lose Economic Security

In Gerrymandered Districts, Constituents Likely To Lose Economic Security
The researchers believe this is because politicians in gerrymandered districts are less likely to advocate for goods on behalf of their constituents.

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