Tuesday, July 31, 2018

NPR News: After Calf's Death, Orca Mother Carries It For Days In 'Tragic Tour Of Grief'

After Calf's Death, Orca Mother Carries It For Days In 'Tragic Tour Of Grief'
What began as a moment of joy ended in tragedy when the infant died last week. Since then its mother has refused to let go, holding her child tightly in what experts call a moving expression of grief.

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NPR News: To Combat Rhino Poaching, Dogs Are Giving South African Park Rangers A Crucial Assist

To Combat Rhino Poaching, Dogs Are Giving South African Park Rangers A Crucial Assist
Anti-poaching rangers have sophisticated resources at their command. But one of the most effective is strikingly low-tech. "Since we use dogs, the guys can't hide from us anymore," says a trainer.

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NPR News: After Calf's Death, Orca Mother Carries It For Days In 'Tragic Tour Of Grief'

After Calf's Death, Orca Mother Carries It For Days In 'Tragic Tour Of Grief'
What began as a moment of joy ended in tragedy when the infant died last week. Since then its mother has refused to let go, holding her child tightly in what experts call a moving expression of grief.

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NASA Selects US Firms to Provide Commercial Suborbital Flight Services

NASA’s Flight Opportunities Program has selected four companies to integrate and fly technology payloads on commercial suborbital reusable platforms that carry payloads near the boundary of space.

July 31, 2018
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NPR News: Wildfires Could Be The New Norm

Wildfires Could Be The New Norm
A century's worth of fire suppression in forests, drought and heat from climate change, and the "suburbanization" of the woods mean that fires like the Carr Fire in Redding are the new norm.

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NPR News: Wildfires Could Be The New Norm

Wildfires Could Be The New Norm
A century's worth of fire suppression in forests, drought and heat from climate change, and the "suburbanization" of the woods mean that fires like the Carr Fire in Redding are the new norm.

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NPR News: Grieving Mother Orca Carries Dead Calf For More Than A Week, Over Hundreds Of Miles

Grieving Mother Orca Carries Dead Calf For More Than A Week, Over Hundreds Of Miles
The calf was the first to be born in the endangered pod of Pacific Northwest killer whales in three years.

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NPR News: Grieving Mother Orca Carries Dead Calf For More Than A Week, Over Hundreds Of Miles

Grieving Mother Orca Carries Dead Calf For More Than A Week, Over Hundreds Of Miles
The calf was the first to be born in the endangered pod of Pacific Northwest killer whales in three years.

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NPR News: Uber Parks Its Self-Driving Truck Project, Saying It Will Push For Autonomous Cars

Uber Parks Its Self-Driving Truck Project, Saying It Will Push For Autonomous Cars
The move comes after Uber has spent roughly $925 million in recent years to jump-start its effort to create a viable line of self-driving freight trucks.

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NPR News: Heading May Be Riskier For Women Soccer Players Than Men

Heading May Be Riskier For Women Soccer Players Than Men
Female soccer players are more likely than males to suffer measurable impact on their brains as a result of heading the ball during soccer.

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NPR News: Heading May Be Riskier For Women Soccer Players Than Men

Heading May Be Riskier For Women Soccer Players Than Men
Female soccer players are more likely than males to suffer measurable impact on their brains as a result of heading the ball during soccer.

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NPR News: Gulf Of Alaska Cod Are Disappearing. Blame 'The Blob'

Gulf Of Alaska Cod Are Disappearing. Blame 'The Blob'
The cod population in the Gulf of Alaska is at its lowest level on record. Scientists say the culprit is a three year long warm water mass known as "the blob."

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NPR News: Gulf Of Alaska Cod Are Disappearing. Blame 'The Blob'

Gulf Of Alaska Cod Are Disappearing. Blame 'The Blob'
The cod population in the Gulf of Alaska is at its lowest level on record. Scientists say the culprit is a three year long warm water mass known as "the blob."

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NPR News: For Many College Students, Hunger 'Makes It Hard To Focus'

For Many College Students, Hunger 'Makes It Hard To Focus'
With rising school costs, as many as half of U.S. college students are feeling so stretched financially that they either aren't getting enough to eat or are they're worried about it, studies find.

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NPR News: For Many College Students, Hunger 'Makes It Hard To Focus'

For Many College Students, Hunger 'Makes It Hard To Focus'
With rising school costs, as many as half of U.S. college students are feeling so stretched financially that they either aren't getting enough to eat or are they're worried about it, studies find.

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NPR News: Attorneys General Sue Trump Administration To Block 3D-Printed Guns

Attorneys General Sue Trump Administration To Block 3D-Printed Guns
The lawsuit is seeking a temporary restraining order to bar the government from lifting export control restrictions, and stop a company from posting downloadable gun plans online later this week.

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NPR News: Homeland Security Officials Strategize To Thwart Cyberattacks

Homeland Security Officials Strategize To Thwart Cyberattacks
The department plans to protect the nation's infrastructure. Rachel Martin talks to DHS Under Secretary Christopher Krebs about the administration's strategy for confronting threats.

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NPR News: WATCH: How NASA's New Probe Will Stay Cool Near The Sun

WATCH: How NASA's New Probe Will Stay Cool Near The Sun
The sun is responsible for all life on Earth, but we still have a lot to learn about it. So this summer, NASA is sending the Parker Solar Probe closer to the sun than we have ever been before.

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NPR News: WATCH: How NASA's New Probe Will Stay Cool Near The Sun

WATCH: How NASA's New Probe Will Stay Cool Near The Sun
The sun is responsible for all life on Earth, but we still have a lot to learn about it. So this summer, NASA is sending the Parker Solar Probe closer to the sun than we have ever been before.

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NPR News: HHS Inspector General's Report Finds Flaws And Fraud In U.S. Hospice Care

HHS Inspector General's Report Finds Flaws And Fraud In U.S. Hospice Care
Medicare pays more than $16 billion a year for hospice services. But a new report from the Department of Health and Human Services says hospice patients don't always get the care they're promised.

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NPR News: WATCH: How NASA's New Probe Will Stay Cool Near The Sun

WATCH: How NASA's New Probe Will Stay Cool Near The Sun
The sun is responsible for all life on Earth, but we still have a lot to learn about it. So this summer, NASA is sending the Parker Solar Probe closer to the sun than we have ever been before.

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NPR News: HHS Inspector General's Report Finds Flaws And Fraud In U.S. Hospice Care

HHS Inspector General's Report Finds Flaws And Fraud In U.S. Hospice Care
Medicare pays more than $16 billion a year for hospice services. But a new report from the Department of Health and Human Services says hospice patients don't always get the care they're promised.

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Monday, July 30, 2018

NPR News: San Francisco Is Poised To Ban Plastic Straws. That's Got Bubble Tea Shops Worried

San Francisco Is Poised To Ban Plastic Straws. That's Got Bubble Tea Shops Worried
Over 200 city shops sell the drink, also known as boba tea, which features large tapioca balls meant to be sucked through a straw. Boba shops say paper straws are much pricier and don't work as well.

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NPR News: San Francisco Is Poised To Ban Plastic Straws. That's Got Bubble Tea Shops Worried

San Francisco Is Poised To Ban Plastic Straws. That's Got Bubble Tea Shops Worried
Over 200 city shops sell the drink, also known as boba tea, which features large tapioca balls meant to be sucked through a straw. Boba shops say paper straws are much pricier and don't work as well.

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NPR News: As Ban On Plastic Straws Spreads, Demand For Paper Alternatives Increases

As Ban On Plastic Straws Spreads, Demand For Paper Alternatives Increases
Orders for paper straws are skyrocketing as bans for the plastic ones multiply. David Rhodes of Aardvark Straws tells NPR's Ailsa Chang his paper straw business is booming.

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NPR News: California Allocates $3 Billion For New Water Storage Projects

California Allocates $3 Billion For New Water Storage Projects
California is putting almost $3 billion toward new water storage projects to help preserve its crops during droughts. Some say that money should go to dams and reservoirs, but others want a less environmentally problematic approach.

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NPR News: Deadly Carr Wildfire Testing Resources Of Local Officials In Northern California

Deadly Carr Wildfire Testing Resources Of Local Officials In Northern California
NPR's Audie Cornish speaks with Kristen Schreder, mayor of Redding, Calif., for the latest on the deadly Carr wildfire raging through Northern California.

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NPR News: Facebook, Fake News and Free Speech

Facebook, Fake News and Free Speech
The social media platform is balancing a belief in free expression with concerns about safety and security.

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NPR News: Offensive Tweets Remind Major Leaguers That On Social Media, The Past Is Never Past

Offensive Tweets Remind Major Leaguers That On Social Media, The Past Is Never Past
Sean Newcomb nearly pitched a no-hitter, but it was his years-old tweets that drew headlines. He's not alone: Several MLB players have seen past homophobic and racial slurs resurface recently.

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NPR News: Some Amazon Reviews Are Too Good To Be Believed. They're Paid For

Some Amazon Reviews Are Too Good To Be Believed. They're Paid For
In shadow marketplaces, positive reviews for Amazon products are bought and sold. The company says it's cracking down and that it estimates that less than 1 percent of reviews are fake.

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NPR News: Meet The Restaurateurs Fighting To Save The Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument

Meet The Restaurateurs Fighting To Save The Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument
Hell's Backbone Grill is an acclaimed restaurant founded nearly 20 years ago at the edge of the Utah monument. Now, amid controversy, its owners are battling Trump's plans to downsize the land.

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NPR News: Meet The Restaurateurs Fighting To Save The Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument

Meet The Restaurateurs Fighting To Save The Grand Staircase-Escalante Monument
Hell's Backbone Grill is an acclaimed restaurant founded nearly 20 years ago at the edge of the Utah monument. Now, amid controversy, its owners are battling Trump's plans to downsize the land.

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NPR News: Changing Climate Pushes Arid West Eastward Impacting Farming

Changing Climate Pushes Arid West Eastward Impacting Farming
The 100th meridian has long divided the U.S. into an arid West and more humid East. Research suggests a warming climate is pushing that boundary east, shaking up agricultural economies along the way.

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NPR News: Changing Climate Pushes Arid West Eastward Impacting Farming

Changing Climate Pushes Arid West Eastward Impacting Farming
The 100th meridian has long divided the U.S. into an arid West and more humid East. Research suggests a warming climate is pushing that boundary east, shaking up agricultural economies along the way.

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NPR News: Off Your Mental Game? You Could Be Mildly Dehydrated

Off Your Mental Game? You Could Be Mildly Dehydrated
Dehydration has long been known to slow physical performance. Now there's evidence that too little water can hurt cognitive performance, too, making complex thinking tasks harder.

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NPR News: Off Your Mental Game? You Could Be Mildly Dehydrated

Off Your Mental Game? You Could Be Mildly Dehydrated
Dehydration has long been known to slow physical performance. Now there's evidence that too little water can hurt cognitive performance, too, making complex thinking tasks harder.

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Sunday, July 29, 2018

NPR News: Polar Bear Shot And Killed 'In An Act Of Self Defense,' Cruise Ship Company Says

Polar Bear Shot And Killed 'In An Act Of Self Defense,' Cruise Ship Company Says
A polar bear is dead after an encounter that left an arctic cruise ship guard injured on the northernmost island of Svalbard archipelago, a region between mainland Norway and the North Pole.

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NPR News: When The Weather Is Extreme, Is Climate Change To Blame?

When The Weather Is Extreme, Is Climate Change To Blame?
While it's difficult to attribute individual events to climate change, scientists say global warming makes extreme weather more common.

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NPR News: When The Weather Is Extreme, Is Climate Change To Blame?

When The Weather Is Extreme, Is Climate Change To Blame?
While it's difficult to attribute individual events to climate change, scientists say global warming makes extreme weather more common.

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Saturday, July 28, 2018

NPR News: Death Toll In Northern California's Carr Fire Rises To 5

Death Toll In Northern California's Carr Fire Rises To 5
A massive wildfire in Northern California has claimed the lives of three more people, bringing the Carr Fire's death toll to five.

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NPR News: Scooters: Sidewalk Nuisances, Or The Future Of Public Transportation?

Scooters: Sidewalk Nuisances, Or The Future Of Public Transportation?
Electric scooters for rent are popping up in cities across America. Investors see a key role for them in getting from here to there. But many people find them downright annoying.

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NPR News: Questions Rise About Shortcomings Of DNA Tests For Dogs

Questions Rise About Shortcomings Of DNA Tests For Dogs
DNA testing of dogs has become a booming business. But critics say the pet genetics industry is running too wild, and they're calling for it to be reined in.

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NPR News: Russian Hackers Targeted The Most Vulnerable Part Of U.S. Elections. Again.

Russian Hackers Targeted The Most Vulnerable Part Of U.S. Elections. Again.
Campaigns are ripe targets for hackers, and this week a Democrat running for re-election in a deeply red state announced she was a recent target.

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Friday, July 27, 2018

NASA Gives $1.4 Million to Help Minority-Serving Colleges Develop New STEM Courses

The MUREP Innovations in Space Technology Curriculum (MISTC) awards align with the priorities of the agency’s Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD), which is responsible for developing the crosscutting, pioneering new technologies and capabilities the agency needs for current and future missions.

July 27, 2018
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NASA Awards Contract for Earth Science Data Archive Center Support

NASA has awarded a contract to the University of Colorado Boulder for the management and operations of the agency’s Earth Observing System Data and Information System Snow and Ice Distributed Active Archive Center (DAAC).

July 27, 2018
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NPR News: Wildfires In Western U.S. Could Affect Air Quality For Prolonged Period Of Time

Wildfires In Western U.S. Could Affect Air Quality For Prolonged Period Of Time
The smoke from nearly 100 large Western wildfires has public health officials worried. Air quality managers are warning this is the new norm for the region, given climate change.

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NPR News: Wildfires In Western U.S. Could Affect Air Quality For Prolonged Period Of Time

Wildfires In Western U.S. Could Affect Air Quality For Prolonged Period Of Time
The smoke from nearly 100 large Western wildfires has public health officials worried. Air quality managers are warning this is the new norm for the region, given climate change.

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NPR News: Report Shows Trump Administration Issued Permits For Lion Trophies To Republican Donors

Report Shows Trump Administration Issued Permits For Lion Trophies To Republican Donors
NPR's Audie Cornish speaks with Michael Harris, director of the Wildlife Law Program with Friends of Animals, about the recent findings about government-issued permits for imported lion trophies being given to Republican donors.

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NPR News: Twitter Shares Fall, Ending A Hard Week For Social Media Stock

Twitter Shares Fall, Ending A Hard Week For Social Media Stock
Twitter's stock tumbled 19 percent on Friday, despite the company's growing revenue. It mirrored Facebook's sharp drop earlier in the week, as investors worry that social media growth may be ebbing.

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NASA Invites Media to Meet Earth Science Innovators

From flooding in New Orleans to coffee cultivation in Guatemala and wildfires in Alaska, NASA Earth observations from space are being put to work helping address a wide range of real-world issues.

July 27, 2018
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NASA Interns, New Mexico Community, Virginia Students to Call Space Station

NASA interns, visitors at New Mexico’s City of Las Cruces Museum of Nature and Science, and NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility will speak with astronauts aboard the International Space Station as part of NASA’s Year of Education on Station next week.

July 27, 2018
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NPR News: Hot Weather Spells Trouble For Nuclear Power Plants

Hot Weather Spells Trouble For Nuclear Power Plants
Multiple nuclear power facilities in Europe have reduced their electricity production because seawater, which is used to keep the reactors cool, has been warmer than usual.

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NPR News: Hot Weather Spells Trouble For Nuclear Power Plants

Hot Weather Spells Trouble For Nuclear Power Plants
Multiple nuclear power facilities in Europe have reduced their electricity production because seawater, which is used to keep the reactors cool, has been warmer than usual.

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NPR News: How The Brain Helps You Sing Or Say What You Mean

How The Brain Helps You Sing Or Say What You Mean
The richness of human vocal communication turns partly on our ability to control pitch, scientists say. Consider the difference you hear between "Let's eat, Grandma" and "Let's eat Grandma."

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NPR News: How The Brain Helps You Sing Or Say What You Mean

How The Brain Helps You Sing Or Say What You Mean
The richness of human vocal communication turns partly on our ability to control pitch, scientists say. Consider the difference you hear between "Let's eat, Grandma" and "Let's eat Grandma."

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NPR News: Which Water Is Best For Health? Hint: Don't Discount The Tap

Which Water Is Best For Health? Hint: Don't Discount The Tap
Scientists weigh in on whether Americans really need to pay for alkalinized, mineralized, or purified water from filters or bottles.

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NPR News: Which Water Is Best For Health? Hint: Don't Discount The Tap

Which Water Is Best For Health? Hint: Don't Discount The Tap
Scientists weigh in on whether Americans really need to pay for alkalinized, mineralized, or purified water from filters or bottles.

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NPR News: Virgin Galactic Space Plane Reaches New Heights In Test Flight

Virgin Galactic Space Plane Reaches New Heights In Test Flight
Billionaire Richard Branson wants to be on the "first official flight" to see space as a tourist by the end of 2018. His company's latest test flight reached heights of more than 32 miles.

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NPR News: Virgin Galactic Space Plane Reaches New Heights In Test Flight

Virgin Galactic Space Plane Reaches New Heights In Test Flight
Billionaire Richard Branson wants to be on the "first official flight" to see space as a tourist by the end of 2018. His company's latest test flight reached heights of more than 32 miles.

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Thursday, July 26, 2018

NPR News: Wyoming Gives 22 Winners The Chance To Hunt Grizzlies — Or Not

Wyoming Gives 22 Winners The Chance To Hunt Grizzlies — Or Not
A whopping 7,000 people vied for the chance to hunt Wyoming grizzly bears for the first time in 44 years. Many entrants in the permit lottery said if they won, they would sit out the hunt.

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NPR News: Facebook Loses More Than $100 Billion In Value In Worst Stock Market Wipeout In History

Facebook Loses More Than $100 Billion In Value In Worst Stock Market Wipeout In History
Tech stock strength has fueled most of the market growth this past year, which is why so many people were shocked when Facebook's stock fell sharply. At the same time, Amazon is on track to become the world's first trillion-dollar company by market value.

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NPR News: Celestial Lineup Makes For A Very Bright Mars

Celestial Lineup Makes For A Very Bright Mars
Mars, Earth and the sun have lined up, a celestial orientation known as opposition. This is particular opposition occurs at a time when the orbit of Mars takes it closest to the sun.

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NPR News: Heavy Weapons Training May Cause Brain Injuries, But The VA Doesn't Cover It

Heavy Weapons Training May Cause Brain Injuries, But The VA Doesn't Cover It
The Department of Veterans Affairs is trying to figure out how to deal with veterans who may have brain damage from firing powerful weapons.

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NPR News: What The Trump Administration Has Proposed To Change In The Endangered Species Act

What The Trump Administration Has Proposed To Change In The Endangered Species Act
The Trump administration wants to roll back some rules for endangered species. Environmentalists say it could mean more species go extinct.

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NPR News: Netflix: Disruption On-Demand

Netflix: Disruption On-Demand
Attention binge-watchers.

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NPR News: Facebook's Big Growth Is Slowing, Sending Its Stock Tumbling

Facebook's Big Growth Is Slowing, Sending Its Stock Tumbling
Facebook's stock dropped nearly 20 percent — the day after reporting that its user growth has stalled and that it expects revenue growth to slow for the rest of the year.

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NPR News: Huge Flood From Failed Dam In Laos Has Now Spread To Cambodia

Huge Flood From Failed Dam In Laos Has Now Spread To Cambodia
The flood has killed at least 27 people in Laos. In Cambodia, the Sekong River rose to nearly 12 meters (almost 40 feet) on Thursday – a height that flooded 17 villages.

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NASA Administrator to Visit Langley Research Center July 31

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine will make his first official visit to NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, on Tuesday, July 31, to meet with employees and tour the facility.

July 26, 2018
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NPR News: Facebook Stock Drops After Missing Forecasts

Facebook Stock Drops After Missing Forecasts
Facebook's user growth and earnings fell short of expectations in a second quarter report, sending its stock prices plunging.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2018

NPR News: What Friday's Extra-Long Lunar Eclipse Can Tell Us About The Earth

What Friday's Extra-Long Lunar Eclipse Can Tell Us About The Earth
The moon will turn orange or even red. And the eclipse — expected to be the longest this century — will be best to see in eastern and southern Africa, the Middle East, eastern Europe and south Asia.

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NPR News: What Friday's Extra-Long Lunar Eclipse Can Tell Us About The Earth

What Friday's Extra-Long Lunar Eclipse Can Tell Us About The Earth
The moon will turn orange or even red. And the eclipse — expected to be the longest this century — will be best to see in eastern and southern Africa, the Middle East, eastern Europe and south Asia.

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NPR News: Walmart To Test Self-Driving Cars For Grocery Pickup Service

Walmart To Test Self-Driving Cars For Grocery Pickup Service
Some customers in the Phoenix metro area will be able to use a driverless shuttle service to pick up groceries at Walmart — if they purchase them online.

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NASA to Name Astronauts Assigned to First Boeing, SpaceX Flights

NASA will announce on Friday, Aug. 3, the astronauts assigned to crew the first flight tests and missions of the Boeing CST-100 Starliner and SpaceX Crew Dragon, and begin a new era in American spaceflight. NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine will preside over the event, which will begin at 11 a.m. EDT on NASA Television and the agency’s website.

July 25, 2018
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NPR News: Heat Waves: A Global Sweat

Heat Waves: A Global Sweat
Is this just a particularly hot summer? Or are we experiencing a natural disaster?

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NPR News: The Endangered Species Act: On The Brink Of Extinction?

The Endangered Species Act: On The Brink Of Extinction?
The law celebrates its 45th birthday this year.

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NPR News: Heat Waves: A Global Sweat

Heat Waves: A Global Sweat
Is this just a particularly hot summer? Or are we experiencing a natural disaster?

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NPR News: Marines Who Fired Rocket Launchers Now Worry About Their Brains

Marines Who Fired Rocket Launchers Now Worry About Their Brains
The military is trying to figure out whether troops can sustain brain injuries from firing certain powerful weapons. A pair of Marines who used to shoot these weapons think they already know.

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NPR News: Marines Who Fired Rocket Launchers Now Worry About Their Brains

Marines Who Fired Rocket Launchers Now Worry About Their Brains
The military is trying to figure out whether troops can sustain brain injuries from firing certain powerful weapons. A pair of Marines who used to shoot these weapons think they already know.

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NPR News: Underground Lake Found On Mars Beneath A Mile of Ice

Underground Lake Found On Mars Beneath A Mile of Ice
Scientists say they've found what appears to be a briny underground lake near the south pole on Mars a mile below the surface. It possible that some kind of microbial life once lived in the lake.

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Tuesday, July 24, 2018

NPR News: WATCH: Why It's Usually Hotter In A City

WATCH: Why It's Usually Hotter In A City
The way we design and inhabit cities is making them retain heat.

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Watch This Space: NASA Administrator Talks Webb Science with Nobel Laureate

NASA Television will air a conversation about the progress and promise of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope with Nobel Prize winner John Mather at 2 p.m. EDT Wednesday, July 25.

July 24, 2018
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NPR News: Food Writer Becomes A Butcher To Better Understand The Value Of Meat

Food Writer Becomes A Butcher To Better Understand The Value Of Meat
Camas Davis wanted to learn about conscientious farming, slaughtering and eating, so she moved to France and became an apprentice at a small, family-run slaughterhouse. Her memoir is Killing it.

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NPR News: 14,000-Year-Old Piece Of Bread Rewrites The History Of Baking And Farming

14,000-Year-Old Piece Of Bread Rewrites The History Of Baking And Farming
Breadcrumbs found at an excavation in Jordan reveal that humans were baking thousands of years earlier than previously believed. It may have even prompted them to settle down and plant cereals.

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NPR News: 14,000-Year-Old Piece Of Bread Rewrites The History Of Baking And Farming

14,000-Year-Old Piece Of Bread Rewrites The History Of Baking And Farming
Breadcrumbs found at an excavation in Jordan reveal that humans were baking thousands of years earlier than previously believed. It may have even prompted them to settle down and plant cereals.

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NPR News: Markets Punish Behavior That Reflects A CEO's Lack Of Integrity

Markets Punish Behavior That Reflects A CEO's Lack Of Integrity
A recent study finds companies whose CEOs committed a personal indiscretion — such as infidelity, substance abuse and dishonesty — experienced a decline in shareholder value.

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NPR News: Markets Punish Behavior That Reflects A CEO's Lack Of Integrity

Markets Punish Behavior That Reflects A CEO's Lack Of Integrity
A recent study finds companies whose CEOs committed a personal indiscretion — such as infidelity, substance abuse and dishonesty — experienced a decline in shareholder value.

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NPR News: We're Drowning In Plastic Trash. Jenna Jambeck Wants To Save Us

We're Drowning In Plastic Trash. Jenna Jambeck Wants To Save Us
The engineer views landfill as a living ecosystem, and the plastic that clogs it as a serious threat that crowds out life and never goes away. Can we eliminate the waste before it smothers us?

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NPR News: We're Drowning In Plastic Trash. Jenna Jambeck Wants To Save Us

We're Drowning In Plastic Trash. Jenna Jambeck Wants To Save Us
The engineer views landfill as a living ecosystem, and the plastic that clogs it as a serious threat that crowds out life and never goes away. Can we eliminate the waste before it smothers us?

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NPR News: We're Drowning In Plastic Trash. Jenna Jambeck Wants To Save Us

We're Drowning In Plastic Trash. Jenna Jambeck Wants To Save Us
The engineer views landfill as a living ecosystem, and the plastic that clogs it as a serious threat that crowds out life and never goes away. Can we eliminate the waste before it smothers us?

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Monday, July 23, 2018

NPR News: Diamond Company Plans To Move 200 Elephants From South Africa To Mozambique

Diamond Company Plans To Move 200 Elephants From South Africa To Mozambique
De Beers Group said Monday that it is transporting them from an overcrowded reserve to "help secure their future."

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NPR News: Shortage Of Large-Animal Vets Leaves Markets Vulnerable To Disease Outbreaks

Shortage Of Large-Animal Vets Leaves Markets Vulnerable To Disease Outbreaks
Large-animal vets ensure the health of cows, pigs and horses, but they're also the first line of defense against diseases that can spread from animals to humans — so a shortage leaves producers, and global markets, vulnerable to devastating outbreaks.

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NPR News: Encore: Many Look To Buddhism For Sanctuary From An Over-Connected World

Encore: Many Look To Buddhism For Sanctuary From An Over-Connected World
The amount of time people spend on digital devices is soaring — to the point that several countries treat internet addiction as a public health crisis. But some users are turning to ancient religious practices to be more mindful of their time online.

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NPR News: Why A Drop Of 4 Degrees Made A Big Difference For A Garment Maker's Bottom Line

Why A Drop Of 4 Degrees Made A Big Difference For A Garment Maker's Bottom Line
Clothing factories in India can get pretty hot. How does that affect worker productivity? Researchers looked to the lights and gained an unexpected insight.

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NASA Awards Facility Operations Support Contract

NASA has awarded a contract to COLSA Corporation of Huntsville, Alabama, to provide facility operations support services to the National Center for Critical Information Processing and Storage (NCCIPS).

July 23, 2018
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NPR News: Reclaim Your Data

Reclaim Your Data
Michael Chertoff, former Homeland Security Secretary and co-author of the Patriot Act, says data collection has gotten out of control.

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NPR News: Pizza Physics: Why Brick Ovens Bake The Perfect Italian-Style Pie

Pizza Physics: Why Brick Ovens Bake The Perfect Italian-Style Pie
Brick transfers heat to dough more slowly than steel, allowing both crust and toppings to simultaneously reach perfection. In a home oven, that balance is elusive — but you might be able to get close.

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NPR News: Pizza Physics: Why Brick Ovens Bake The Perfect Italian-Style Pie

Pizza Physics: Why Brick Ovens Bake The Perfect Italian-Style Pie
Brick transfers heat to dough more slowly than steel, allowing both crust and toppings to simultaneously reach perfection. In a home oven, that balance is elusive — but you might be able to get close.

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NPR News: Hormone Levels Likely Influence A Woman's Risk Of Alzheimer's. But Exactly How?

Hormone Levels Likely Influence A Woman's Risk Of Alzheimer's. But Exactly How?
Scientists are taking a second look at the idea that hormone replacement therapy could reduce a woman's risk of dementia. New research suggests the key may be in giving it at the right time.

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NPR News: Hormone Levels Likely Influence A Woman's Risk Of Alzheimer's. But Exactly How?

Hormone Levels Likely Influence A Woman's Risk Of Alzheimer's. But Exactly How?
Scientists are taking a second look at the idea that hormone replacement therapy could reduce a woman's risk of dementia. New research suggests the key may be in giving it at the right time.

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NPR News: Words Matter When Talking About Pain With Your Doctor

Words Matter When Talking About Pain With Your Doctor
When you go to the doctor in pain, you'll probably be asked to rate your discomfort on a scale of 0 to 10. But doctors say there may be a better way to assess pain.

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NPR News: Spring Is Springing Sooner, Throwing Nature's Rhythms Out Of Whack

Spring Is Springing Sooner, Throwing Nature's Rhythms Out Of Whack
A warming climate is knocking nature's rhythms out of sync. High in the Rocky Mountains, scientists have been tracking the impact for decades.

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NPR News: Spring Is Springing Sooner, Throwing Nature's Rhythms Out Of Whack

Spring Is Springing Sooner, Throwing Nature's Rhythms Out Of Whack
A warming climate is knocking nature's rhythms out of sync. High in the Rocky Mountains, scientists have been tracking the impact for decades.

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Sunday, July 22, 2018

NPR News: How Soon Is Soon Enough To Learn You Have Alzheimer's?

How Soon Is Soon Enough To Learn You Have Alzheimer's?
Only about half the people with Alzheimer's symptoms get a diagnosis, partly out of fear of an incurable decline, doctors suspect. But Jose Bolardo says facing the future allows him to plan for it.

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NPR News: Scientists Search For Causes Of Preterm Birth And Better Ways To Test For Risk

Scientists Search For Causes Of Preterm Birth And Better Ways To Test For Risk
Preterm birth, a leading cause of death in infants, remains stubbornly hard to prevent. Researchers are on the hunt for a better understanding of what causes it and better ways to diagnose risk.

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NPR News: Scientists Search For Causes Of Preterm Birth And Better Ways To Test For Risk

Scientists Search For Causes Of Preterm Birth And Better Ways To Test For Risk
Preterm birth, a leading cause of death in infants, remains stubbornly hard to prevent. Researchers are on the hunt for a better understanding of what causes it and better ways to diagnose risk.

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NPR News: How A Drone Helped Rescue A Climber

How A Drone Helped Rescue A Climber
High altitude searches are a risky business. So let us introduce the hero of our story, the DJI Mavic Pro drone.

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NPR News: One Child's Outsized Influence On The Debate Over Plastic Waste

One Child's Outsized Influence On The Debate Over Plastic Waste
One of the most common statistics that comes up when discussing plastic straw waste comes from a study conducted by a 9-year-old. NPR's Korva Coleman speaks with Milo Cress, now 17.

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NPR News: Rome's Subway Expansion Reveals Artifacts From The Ancient Past

Rome's Subway Expansion Reveals Artifacts From The Ancient Past
Construction on a new subway line has uncovered marble busts, frescoes, mosaics, even ancient peach pits, dating back nearly 2,000 years. Archaeologists have also found an ancient military barracks.

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NPR News: One Child's Outsized Influence On The Debate Over Plastic Waste

One Child's Outsized Influence On The Debate Over Plastic Waste
One of the most common statistics that comes up when discussing plastic straw waste comes from a study conducted by a 9-year-old. NPR's Korva Coleman speaks with Milo Cress, now 17.

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Saturday, July 21, 2018

NPR News: How West Virginia Is Approaching Election Security

How West Virginia Is Approaching Election Security
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with West Virginia Secretary of State Mac Warner about steps his state is taking to safeguard election systems ahead of the 2018 midterms.

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NPR News: Russian Influence Operations

Russian Influence Operations
NPR's Michel Martin asks cybersecurity expert Clint Watts whether Russians are using social media to influence the midterm elections as they did in the 2016 presidential vote.

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NPR News: 'Meddling' Vs. Information Warfare

'Meddling' Vs. Information Warfare
President Trump says the Russians "meddled" in the 2016 election. But Brian Klaas of the London School of Economics tells NPR's Michel Martin that word doesn't go far enough.

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NPR News: As Milk Production Cools In Summer, Farmers Try To Help Cows Take The Heat

As Milk Production Cools In Summer, Farmers Try To Help Cows Take The Heat
From fans and misting water to creating a whole new breed of cow, farmers and researchers are fighting rising temperatures to keep the dairy industry from losing millions of dollars to "heat stress."

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NPR News: As Milk Production Cools In Summer, Farmers Try To Help Cows Take The Heat

As Milk Production Cools In Summer, Farmers Try To Help Cows Take The Heat
From fans and misting water to creating a whole new breed of cow, farmers and researchers are fighting rising temperatures to keep the dairy industry from losing millions of dollars to "heat stress."

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NPR News: Looking At Russian Social

Looking At Russian Social
NPR's Scott Simon asks Alexander Malkevich of the website USA Really and The Daily Beast's Lachlan Markay about Russian social media efforts in the U.S.

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NPR News: Prize-Winning #iPhoneOnly Photos: From Dinos To Divers

Prize-Winning #iPhoneOnly Photos: From Dinos To Divers
A selection of the winning photos from the 2018 iPhone Photography Awards contest.

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NPR News: Masses Of Seaweed Threaten Fisheries And Foul Beaches

Masses Of Seaweed Threaten Fisheries And Foul Beaches
A floating, smelly mass of seaweed called sargassum is covering beaches in the Caribbean and along the Gulf of Mexico.

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NPR News: Masses Of Seaweed Threaten Fisheries And Foul Beaches

Masses Of Seaweed Threaten Fisheries And Foul Beaches
A floating, smelly mass of seaweed called sargassum is covering beaches in the Caribbean and along the Gulf of Mexico.

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Friday, July 20, 2018

NPR News: Replacing Vacant Lots With Green Spaces Can Ease Depression In Urban Communities

Replacing Vacant Lots With Green Spaces Can Ease Depression In Urban Communities
When researchers cleaned up vacant lots and planted grass and trees in poor neighborhoods in Philadelphia, residents' mental health improved.

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NPR News: Replacing Vacant Lots With Green Spaces Can Ease Depression In Urban Communities

Replacing Vacant Lots With Green Spaces Can Ease Depression In Urban Communities
When researchers cleaned up vacant lots and planted grass and trees in poor neighborhoods in Philadelphia, residents' mental health improved.

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NPR News: Why Heat Waves Are More Challenging For Pregnant Women

Why Heat Waves Are More Challenging For Pregnant Women
Forecasters say Friday should be the hottest July 20 ever in North Texas with temperatures reaching at least 107 degrees. Think you're hot? Think about if you were a pregnant mom.

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NPR News: Britain's Big Butterfly Count Begins, With David Attenborough Leading The Charge

Britain's Big Butterfly Count Begins, With David Attenborough Leading The Charge
For the next three weeks, citizen volunteers in the United Kingdom will be tallying the painted ladies, peacocks and brimstones they see, to help create a nationwide count — and sooth their souls.

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NPR News: Sleep Scientist Warns Against Walking Through Life 'In An Underslept State'

Sleep Scientist Warns Against Walking Through Life 'In An Underslept State'
"Human beings are the only species that deliberately deprive themselves of sleep for no apparent gain," says sleep scientist Matthew Walker, author of Why We Sleep. Originally broadcast Oct. 17, 2017.

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NASA Brings Latest Aerospace Technologies to AirVenture 2018

Visitors to AirVenture Oshkosh 2018 can get a close look at the latest in NASA aerospace technology during the Experimental Aircraft Association’s annual airshow Monday, July 23, through Sunday, July 29, at Wittman Regional Airport in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.

July 20, 2018
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NPR News: How Luxury Hotels And Restaurants In Developing Countries Fight Food Waste

How Luxury Hotels And Restaurants In Developing Countries Fight Food Waste
The United Nations says nearly one-fourth of food purchases in hotels and restaurants are thrown away. Luxury properties in Mexico, India, and elsewhere are trying programs to bring that figure down.

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NPR News: Week Of Trump Reversals Puts 2018 Election Security In The Spotlight

Week Of Trump Reversals Puts 2018 Election Security In The Spotlight
The security of the midterm vote is a question that's coming up again after President Trump's press conference with Russian leader Vladimir Putin, where Trump seemed to doubt Russia interference.

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NPR News: Doctors Raise Alarm About Shortages Of Pain Medications

Doctors Raise Alarm About Shortages Of Pain Medications
Hospitals across the country are reporting significant shortages of pain medication. A survey of anesthesiologists found that 95 percent say it is impacting patient care.

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NPR News: EPA Inspector General Blames 'Management Weakness' In Flint Response

EPA Inspector General Blames 'Management Weakness' In Flint Response
The EPA's internal watchdog says "management weakness" delayed the federal government's response to the Flint, Mich., water crisis.

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Thursday, July 19, 2018

NPR News: Washington, D.C., Is Counting All Its Cats. It Will Take 3 Years And $1.5 Million

Washington, D.C., Is Counting All Its Cats. It Will Take 3 Years And $1.5 Million
The nation's capital has a cat problem. And the first step toward fixing it, apparently, is to quantify it.

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NPR News: How The Campaign To Ban Plastic Straws Got Its Start

How The Campaign To Ban Plastic Straws Got Its Start
As more companies announce bans on plastic straws, NPR's Planet Money talks to one of the originators of the campaign against plastic straws to learn the strategic choices that made this campaign catch on.

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NPR News: How Video Games Can Help Us Explore Ideas About Race

How Video Games Can Help Us Explore Ideas About Race
Gaming conventions generate hype for one of the biggest media industries in the world. One convention in New York targets people of color with a theme of how they can create games that incorporate — and teach others — ideas of politics and race.

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NPR News: Fresh Facebook Controversy: Zuckerberg Defends Rights Of Holocaust Deniers

Fresh Facebook Controversy: Zuckerberg Defends Rights Of Holocaust Deniers
Mark Zuckerberg is seeking to clarify remarks in which he defended the rights of Holocaust deniers to publish falsehoods on Facebook. In an interview, he attempted to explain why Facebook is reluctant to censor posts that are both untrue and offensive as long as they are not intentionally misleading.

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NASA Launches Channel for Roku

There’s a new way for people to learn about NASA’s exciting missions and thought-provoking discoveries: The agency now has a channel for Roku digital media streaming devices.

July 19, 2018
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NPR News: Migrating Arctic Geese Are Confused, Exhausted By Rising Temperatures

Migrating Arctic Geese Are Confused, Exhausted By Rising Temperatures
Warmer weather means that barnacle geese fly faster to their breeding grounds, leaving them too tired to lay eggs right away. By the time they're ready, the babies have missed the best food.

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NPR News: Migrating Arctic Geese Are Confused, Exhausted By Rising Temperatures

Migrating Arctic Geese Are Confused, Exhausted By Rising Temperatures
Warmer weather means that barnacle geese fly faster to their breeding grounds, leaving them too tired to lay eggs right away. By the time they're ready, the babies have missed the best food.

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NPR News: Migrating Arctic Geese Are Confused, Exhausted By Rising Temperatures

Migrating Arctic Geese Are Confused, Exhausted By Rising Temperatures
Rising Arctic temperatures mean that barnacle geese fly faster to their breeding grounds but are too tired to lay eggs right away. By the time they're ready, the babies have missed the best food.

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NPR News: Three Dimensions, Endless Possibilities

Three Dimensions, Endless Possibilities
3-D printing isn't the future. It's changing the world we live in right now.

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NPR News: Three Dimensions, Endless Possibilities

Three Dimensions, Endless Possibilities
3-D printing isn't the future. It's changing the world we live in right now.

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NPR News: Zuckerberg Looks To 'Clear Up' Stance On Facebook, Fake News And The Holocaust

Zuckerberg Looks To 'Clear Up' Stance On Facebook, Fake News And The Holocaust
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg says he "didn't intend to defend the intent of people" who deny the Holocaust occurred, after his remarks on fake news and hoaxes were criticized this week.

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NPR News: Immigrant Rights Group Turns Down $250,000 From Tech Firm Over Ties To Border Patrol

Immigrant Rights Group Turns Down $250,000 From Tech Firm Over Ties To Border Patrol
Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff has been under mounting pressure for the company's contract with U.S. Customs and Border Patrol. A Texas nonprofit says it won't accept a contribution from the company.

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NPR News: Who Knew The World Bank And The U.N. Are Emoji Lovers?

Who Knew The World Bank And The U.N. Are Emoji Lovers?
Charities and nonprofit agencies are embracing the symbols to communicate about tough topics like global hunger, poverty and disease.

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NPR News: Physicists Go Small: Let's Put A Particle Accelerator On A Chip

Physicists Go Small: Let's Put A Particle Accelerator On A Chip
A tiny accelerator could be useful in medicine as well as basic science. Instead of speeding up beams of electrons through giant tunnels, the aim here is to build accelerators on semiconductor chips.

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NPR News: Photographer Captures The Contradictions Of Otherworldly Antarctica

Photographer Captures The Contradictions Of Otherworldly Antarctica
WAMU's Tyrone Turner was mesmerized by the majestic ice and surprised by how he felt in the presence of these massive structures.

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NPR News: iTeach: A Guide To The Most Useful Apps For The Classroom

iTeach: A Guide To The Most Useful Apps For The Classroom
Here are five educational apps — endorsed by an expert — that teachers love. Plus, what teachers can look for when choosing apps for the classroom.

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NASA Invites Media to Preview Briefing on Spacecraft that will “Touch” Sun

Media are invited to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida for a preview briefing on the agency’s Parker Solar Probe at 1 p.m. EDT Friday, July 20. The event will air live on NASA Television, the agency’s website and Facebook Live.

July 18, 2018
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Wednesday, July 18, 2018

NPR News: A Spike In Liver Disease Deaths Among Young Adults Fueled By Alcohol

A Spike In Liver Disease Deaths Among Young Adults Fueled By Alcohol
Deaths due to liver disease have increased among the young — and heavy drinking is to blame.

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NPR News: A Spike In Liver Disease Deaths Among Young Adults Fueled By Alcohol

A Spike In Liver Disease Deaths Among Young Adults Fueled By Alcohol
Deaths due to liver disease have increased among the young — and heavy drinking is to blame.

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NPR News: AI Innovators Take Pledge Against Autonomous Killer Weapons

AI Innovators Take Pledge Against Autonomous Killer Weapons
"We will neither participate in nor support the development, manufacture, trade, or use of" artificial intelligence that is used to kill people, leading AI researchers vowed.

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NPR News: AI Innovators Take Pledge Against Autonomous Killer Weapons

AI Innovators Take Pledge Against Autonomous Killer Weapons
"We will neither participate in nor support the development, manufacture, trade, or use of" artificial intelligence that is used to kill people, leading AI researchers vowed.

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NPR News: Google Fined $5 Billion By E.U. For Breaking Antitrust Rules

Google Fined $5 Billion By E.U. For Breaking Antitrust Rules
The European Commission alleges that by forcing device makers to install Google apps on Android devices it gains a significant advantage over competitors. Google plans to appeal.

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NPR News: Physicists Go Small: Let's Put A Particle Accelerator On A Chip

Physicists Go Small: Let's Put A Particle Accelerator On A Chip
A tiny accelerator could be useful in medicine as well as basic science. Instead of speeding up beams of electrons through giant tunnels, the aim here is to build accelerators on semiconductor chips.

Read more on NPR

NPR News: Physicists Go Small: Let's Put A Particle Accelerator On A Chip

Physicists Go Small: Let's Put A Particle Accelerator On A Chip
A tiny accelerator could be useful in medicine as well as basic science. Instead of speeding up beams of electrons through giant tunnels, the aim here is to build accelerators on semiconductor chips.

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NASA Debuts Online Toolkit to Promote Commercial Use of Satellite Data

While NASA’s policy of free and open remote-sensing data has long benefited the scientific community, other government agencies and nonprofit organizations, it has significant untapped potential for commercialization.

July 18, 2018
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NPR News: Glass Has Ancient Origins But A High-Tech Future

Glass Has Ancient Origins But A High-Tech Future
Where would the smartphone be without glass? Now glass may change the way you interact with data again — in everything from head-up displays on car windshields to augmented-reality glasses.

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NPR News: Elon Musk Apologizes To Diver In Cave Rescue For Words 'Spoken In Anger'

Elon Musk Apologizes To Diver In Cave Rescue For Words 'Spoken In Anger'
The tech entrepreneur apologized after tweeting a personal attack on Vern Unsworth — the diver who used a vulgar comment to dismiss Musk's offer of help in the Thai cave rescue.

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NPR News: Put Your Face In It: How Gaming Helped Me Understand My Dog

Put Your Face In It: How Gaming Helped Me Understand My Dog
If you want to know how a dog sees the world, ask yourself how you explore virtual spaces with your controller. No, really!

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NASA Television, Website to Air Critical Conversations on Science in Space

NASA will join counterparts from across government, industry, academia and international organizations for an indepth conversation about science on the International Space Station Monday, July 23, through Thursday, July 26, in San Francisco.

July 18, 2018
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NPR News: Marriott Follows Starbucks In Dropping Plastic Straws

Marriott Follows Starbucks In Dropping Plastic Straws
The giant hotel chain became the latest company to announce it will stop using plastic straws, saying it would remove them from its more than 6,500 properties by next July.

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NASA, French Aerospace Lab to Collaborate on Sonic Boom Prediction Research

NASA and France’s Office National d'Etudes et de Recherches Aerospatiales (ONERA), the French national aerospace research center, signed a research agreement Wednesday that could make supersonic passenger flights over land practical, dramatically reducing travel time in the United States or anywhere in the world.

July 18, 2018
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NPR News: Fake News Turns Deadly In India

Fake News Turns Deadly In India
In recent months, about two dozen people across India have been beaten to death by mobs driven to violence by what they've read on social media and messaging apps.

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NPR News: EU Hits Google With $5 Billion Fine For Pushing Apps On Android Users

EU Hits Google With $5 Billion Fine For Pushing Apps On Android Users
The European Commission found that the tech giant had broken EU antitrust rules by requiring manufacturers to pre-install the Google and Chrome apps. Google plans to appeal.

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NPR News: EU Fines Google $5 Billion

EU Fines Google $5 Billion
Officials in Europe say Google is violating antitrust laws. NPR's Noel King talks with Politico's Mark Scott.

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NPR News: Archaeologists Find 14,500-Year-Old Bread

Archaeologists Find 14,500-Year-Old Bread
Archaeologists in Jordan's Black Desert found the burnt remains of bread, baked more than 14,000 years ago. It proves people were making bread far earlier than originally known.

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Tuesday, July 17, 2018

NPR News: How To Be A Savvy Consumer Of Science News

How To Be A Savvy Consumer Of Science News
Astrophysicist Adam Frank has a cheat sheet for how to not get overwhelmed or snookered by science headlines.

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NPR News: Amazon's Jeff Bezos Became Richest Man In Modern History Just Ahead Of Prime Day

Amazon's Jeff Bezos Became Richest Man In Modern History Just Ahead Of Prime Day
Amazon's fourth Prime Day sale had a few hitches but is off to a strong start. The company's valuation increased so much that Jeff Bezos is now the richest man in modern history with his net worth topping $150 billion.

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NPR News: Scientists Hunt A Test To Diagnose Chronic Brain Injury In Living People

Scientists Hunt A Test To Diagnose Chronic Brain Injury In Living People
Doctors are closer to a test in live brains that could help diagnose chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a disease that's been linked to concussions and other repeated brain assaults.

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NPR News: More Screen Time For Teens Linked To ADHD Symptoms

More Screen Time For Teens Linked To ADHD Symptoms
A new study finds that teens who engage in frequent texting, social media use and other online activities daily are more likely to develop symptoms of ADHD.

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NPR News: Scientists Hunt A Test For Chronic Injury In Living Brains

Scientists Hunt A Test For Chronic Injury In Living Brains
Doctors are closer to a test in living people to help diagnose chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a disease that's been linked to concussions and other repeated brain assaults.

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NPR News: More Screen Time For Teens May Fuel ADHD Symptoms

More Screen Time For Teens May Fuel ADHD Symptoms
A new study finds that teens who engage in frequent texting, social media use and other online activities daily are more likely to develop symptoms of ADHD.

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NPR News: More Screen Time For Teens May Fuel ADHD Symptoms

More Screen Time For Teens May Fuel ADHD Symptoms
A new study finds that teens who engage in frequent texting, social media use and other online activities daily are more likely to develop symptoms of ADHD.

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NPR News: Galileo Would Be Stunned: Jupiter Now Has 79 Moons

Galileo Would Be Stunned: Jupiter Now Has 79 Moons
Astronomers have found 12 more moons orbiting the planet Jupiter. These moons are all small — just 5 kilometers or less across — and one of them behaves very strangely.

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NPR News: Health Insurers Are Vacuuming Up Details About You — And It Could Raise Your Rates

Health Insurers Are Vacuuming Up Details About You — And It Could Raise Your Rates
Without scrutiny, insurers and data brokers are predicting your health costs based on public data about things like race, marital status, your TV consumption and even if you buy plus-size clothing.

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NPR News: Insurers And Government Are Slow To Cover Expensive CAR-T Cancer Therapy

Insurers And Government Are Slow To Cover Expensive CAR-T Cancer Therapy
Treatment costs for the immunotherapy can run to more than $1 million. Some state Medicaid programs aren't paying for the treatment, and Medicare's complicated payment rates have hospitals worried.

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NPR News: Netflix Falls Short On Subscriber Target, Spooks Investors

Netflix Falls Short On Subscriber Target, Spooks Investors
The streaming service and production house fell short of its second-quarter target by more than a million subscribers, even as it posted better-than-expected earnings for the period.

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Monday, July 16, 2018

NPR News: Kilauea Lava Explosion Injures 23 Tourists

Kilauea Lava Explosion Injures 23 Tourists
A basketball-sized lava bomb slammed through the roof of a tour boat near an active fissure of the Hawaiian volcano early Monday morning, showering the vessel with debris.

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NPR News: Kilauea Lava Explosion Injures 23 Tourists

Kilauea Lava Explosion Injures 23 Tourists
A basketball-sized lava bomb slammed through the roof of a tour boat near an active fissure of the Hawaiian volcano early Monday morning, showering the vessel with debris.

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NPR News: Surfing For Science: A New Way To Gather Data For Ocean And Coastal Research

Surfing For Science: A New Way To Gather Data For Ocean And Coastal Research
Researchers at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography hope to turn surfers into citizen scientists by equipping them with a "smartfin" that gathers data as they surf.

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NPR News: Surfing For Science: A New Way To Gather Data For Ocean And Coastal Research

Surfing For Science: A New Way To Gather Data For Ocean And Coastal Research
Researchers at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography hope to turn surfers into citizen scientists by equipping them with a "smartfin" that gathers data as they surf.

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NPR News: Surfing For Science: A New Way To Gather Data For Ocean And Coastal Research

Surfing For Science: A New Way To Gather Data For Ocean And Coastal Research
Researchers at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography hope to turn surfers into citizen scientists by equipping them with a "smartfin" that gathers data as they surf.

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NPR News: Rising Seas Could Cause Problems For Internet Infrastructure

Rising Seas Could Cause Problems For Internet Infrastructure
The Internet relies on a network of cables, many buried underground along U.S. coastlines. A new analysis finds sea level rise could put thousands of miles of cable underwater in the next 15 years.

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NPR News: Rising Seas Could Cause Problems For Internet Infrastructure

Rising Seas Could Cause Problems For Internet Infrastructure
The Internet relies on a network of cables, many buried underground along U.S. coastlines. A new analysis finds sea level rise could put thousands of miles of cable underwater in the next 15 years.

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NPR News: Rising Seas Could Cause Problems For Internet Infrastructure

Rising Seas Could Cause Problems For Internet Infrastructure
The Internet relies on a network of cables, many buried underground along U.S. coastlines. A new analysis finds sea level rise could put thousands of miles of cable underwater in the next 15 years.

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NPR News: FCC Chairman Pai Cites 'Serious Concerns' About Sinclair-Tribune Deal

FCC Chairman Pai Cites 'Serious Concerns' About Sinclair-Tribune Deal
The news could put in jeopardy plans by Sinclair – already the nation's largest TV station owner – to grown even bigger.

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NPR News: Angered By Attack, Mob Slaughters Hundreds Of Crocodiles In Indonesia

Angered By Attack, Mob Slaughters Hundreds Of Crocodiles In Indonesia
Following the funeral of a local resident killed by a crocodile after apparently straying into a local wildlife sanctuary, the mob slaughtered nearly 300 of the reptiles.

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NPR News: Heat Making You Lethargic? Research Shows It Can Slow Your Brain, Too

Heat Making You Lethargic? Research Shows It Can Slow Your Brain, Too
Hot weather can influence cognitive performance, according to new research. Young adults living in non-air-conditioned dorms during a heat wave performed worse on math and attention tests.

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NPR News: Heat Making You Lethargic? Research Shows It Can Slow Your Brain, Too

Heat Making You Lethargic? Research Shows It Can Slow Your Brain, Too
Hot weather can influence cognitive performance, according to new research. Young adults living in non-air-conditioned dorms during a heat wave performed worse on math and attention tests.

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NPR News: Heat Making You Lethargic? Research Shows It Can Slow Your Brain, Too

Heat Making You Lethargic? Research Shows It Can Slow Your Brain, Too
Hot weather can influence cognitive performance, according to new research. Young adults living in non-air-conditioned dorms during a heat wave performed worse on math and attention tests.

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Sunday, July 15, 2018

NPR News: 'Buzz' Offers An Adoration For Bees Amid Continued Die-Offs

'Buzz' Offers An Adoration For Bees Amid Continued Die-Offs
The severity of the enormous reduction in bee numbers over the past decade is at the heart of a new book by conservation biologist Thor Hanson, whose appreciation for the pollinators shines through.

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NPR News: 'Buzz' Offers An Adoration For Bees Amid Continued Die-Offs

'Buzz' Offers An Adoration For Bees Amid Continued Die-Offs
The severity of the enormous reduction in bee numbers over the past decade is at the heart of a new book by conservation biologist Thor Hanson, whose appreciation for the pollinators shines through.

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NPR News: How Russia Uses Cyberwarfare Around The Globe

How Russia Uses Cyberwarfare Around The Globe
Misha Glenny, author of McMafia, joins NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro to talk about how Russia uses cyberwarfare to undermine and destabilize Western governments.

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Saturday, July 14, 2018

NPR News: Massive Iceberg Looms Over A Village In Greenland

Massive Iceberg Looms Over A Village In Greenland
The giant mountain of ice towers is threatening a tiny village, causing authorities to evacuate residents.

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NPR News: Massive Iceberg Looms Over A Village In Greenland

Massive Iceberg Looms Over A Village In Greenland
The giant mountain of ice towers is threatening a tiny village, causing authorities to evacuate residents.

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NPR News: Study Shows Red Spruce Trees In New England Are Recovering After Decades Of Damage

Study Shows Red Spruce Trees In New England Are Recovering After Decades Of Damage
Years after New Englanders saw that acid rain caused by coal plants was killing red spruce trees, the trees are better. Researchers say the red spruce shows the positive impact of air pollution laws.

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NPR News: Crop Marks Reveal Ancient Structures

Crop Marks Reveal Ancient Structures
A recent heatwave in the U.K. has revealed outlines of ancient structures previously unknown to archaeologists. NPR's Renee Montagne asks aerial archaeologist Toby Driver what he's been learning.

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NPR News: Tech Workers Demand CEOs Stop Doing Business With ICE, Other U.S. Agencies

Tech Workers Demand CEOs Stop Doing Business With ICE, Other U.S. Agencies
Workers from Salesforce, Microsoft and other firms have been putting pressure on the companies, arguing that they support immoral policies through their ties to the federal government.

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Friday, July 13, 2018

NPR News: In Ireland, Drought And A Drone Revealed The Outline Of An Ancient Henge

In Ireland, Drought And A Drone Revealed The Outline Of An Ancient Henge
As crops get thirsty in Ireland, some plants are faring better than others. Aerial photos show a pattern in crop growth near Newgrange, believed to be the footprint of a previously unknown henge.

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NPR News: In Ireland, Drought And A Drone Revealed The Outline Of An Ancient Henge

In Ireland, Drought And A Drone Revealed The Outline Of An Ancient Henge
As crops get thirsty in Ireland, some plants are faring better than others. Aerial photos show a pattern in crop growth near Newgrange, believed to be the footprint of a previously unknown henge.

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NPR News: What The Diet Of A 5,300-Year-Old 'Iceman' Says About Ancient Europeans

What The Diet Of A 5,300-Year-Old 'Iceman' Says About Ancient Europeans
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Frank Maixner about how scientists uncovered the last meal of a frozen hunter who died 5,300 years ago in the Alps. The stomach contents of the man show what ancient Europeans ate.

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Students from Missouri, Mississippi to Call Space Station

Students in St. Louis and southern Mississippi will get to ask questions of NASA astronauts on the International Space Station during two events next week as part of NASA’s Year of Education on Station.

July 13, 2018
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NPR News: Has Video Refereeing Ruined The World Cup?

Has Video Refereeing Ruined The World Cup?
This is the first time the World Cup has used video replay to make official calls. Some say it has made for a cleaner game, but soccer purists claim it's ruined the event.

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Thursday, July 12, 2018

NASA Statement on Nomination for Agency Deputy Administrator

The following is a statement from NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine on Thursday’s announcement of the intended nomination by President Donald Trump of James Morhard to serve as the agency’s deputy administrator:

July 12, 2018
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NPR News: Ireland Expected To Become World's First Country To Divest From Fossil Fuels

Ireland Expected To Become World's First Country To Divest From Fossil Fuels
The lower house of parliament OK'd the bill, which is likely to sail through the upper house too. "We are ready to think and act beyond narrow short-term and vested interests," one lawmaker vowed.

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NPR News: PayPal Letter To Deceased Customer: 'You Should Read This Notice Carefully'

PayPal Letter To Deceased Customer: 'You Should Read This Notice Carefully'
The online credit company wrote to a British woman who had died of cancer saying her death was a breach of contract. It has since apologized, cleared the debt and pledged to review its processes.

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NPR News: Twitter Is Removing Millions Of Fake Followers From Users' Lists

Twitter Is Removing Millions Of Fake Followers From Users' Lists
The platform will take tens of millions of locked accounts off follower lists in an attempt to crack down on fraud.

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NPR News: Researchers Study Thousands Of Ticks Collected By The People They Bit

Researchers Study Thousands Of Ticks Collected By The People They Bit
Researchers invited the public to help them study the geographic spread of ticks that carry pathogens that can sicken humans. People were eager to oblige by sending in the pesky bugs that bit them.

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NPR News: Researchers Study Thousands Of Ticks Collected By The People They Bit

Researchers Study Thousands Of Ticks Collected By The People They Bit
Researchers invited the public to help them study the geographic spread of ticks that carry pathogens that can sicken humans. People were eager to oblige by sending in the pesky bugs that bit them.

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NPR News: Watch Your Mouth

Watch Your Mouth
This week on the Hidden Brain radio show, we explore how the constantly evolving nature of languages can give us different ways of understanding ourselves as well as the world we live in.

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NASA’s Fermi Traces Source of Cosmic Neutrino to Monster Black Hole

For the first time ever, scientists using NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope have found the source of a high-energy neutrino from outside our galaxy.

July 12, 2018
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NPR News: A 4 Billion Light-Year Journey Ends At The South Pole

A 4 Billion Light-Year Journey Ends At The South Pole
Ghostly particles called neutrinos can travel nearly unimpeded across the universe. For the first time, physicists have been able to pinpoint the origin of a powerful neutrino.

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NPR News: Parenting In The Age Of Screens: Here's What The Experts Do

Parenting In The Age Of Screens: Here's What The Experts Do
Many experts on kids and technology are also parents — and they don't necessarily hold themselves up as paragons for parenting in a time when screens are everywhere.

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NPR News: Michael Chertoff On Privacy In The Digital Age

Michael Chertoff On Privacy In The Digital Age
How should we rethink the balance between privacy and security in the digital age? Former Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff joins NPR's Noel King to discuss his new book, Exploding Data.

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NPR News: Russian Influence Campaign Sought To Exploit Americans' Trust In Local News

Russian Influence Campaign Sought To Exploit Americans' Trust In Local News
Russian influence-mongers appear to have created a number of fake local news Twitter accounts — and spent years posting real headlines.

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NPR News: NASA Needs Backup Plan To Maintain U.S. Presence at Space Station, Watchdog Says

NASA Needs Backup Plan To Maintain U.S. Presence at Space Station, Watchdog Says
The Government Accountability Office released a report warning NASA that further delays in the space agency's commercial crew program could keep American astronauts from reaching the space station.

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NPR News: A New Look At An Old Way To Store Energy

A New Look At An Old Way To Store Energy
Solar power is growing fast, but there need to be ways to store that power for use at night. The biggest energy storage technology involves pumping water up a mountain.

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NPR News: A New Look At An Old Way To Store Energy

A New Look At An Old Way To Store Energy
Solar power is growing fast, but there need to be ways to store that power for use at night. The biggest energy storage technology involves pumping water up a mountain.

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Wednesday, July 11, 2018

Coverage Set for Departure of US Cargo Ship from International Space Station

Nearly two months after Orbital ATK, now part of Northrop Grumman, delivered several tons of supplies and scientific experiments to the International Space Station aboard its Cygnus cargo spacecraft, the spacecraft is set to depart the orbiting laboratory Sunday, July 15.

July 11, 2018
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NPR News: If You Spray Your Clothes With Permethrin, Be Careful Around The Cat

If You Spray Your Clothes With Permethrin, Be Careful Around The Cat
Quite a few cat people went ape over our story about permethrin. How risky is the pesticide for Kitty? By minimizing their pet's exposure, cat owners can use the chemical safely, veterinarians say.

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NPR News: Fresh Starts

Fresh Starts
Unpredictable things happen to us all the time. On this week's radio episode, we bring you two stories of loss and the change it brings.

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NPR News: Has Genetic Privacy Been Strained By Trump's Recent ACA Moves?

Has Genetic Privacy Been Strained By Trump's Recent ACA Moves?
As the Trump administration decides not to defend the Affordable Care Act's legal protections for people with pre-existing conditions, questions arise about health insurance and genetic information.

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NPR News: How Has Technology Affected Your Summer Vacations? Tell Us About It

How Has Technology Affected Your Summer Vacations? Tell Us About It
NPR is working on a series about how technology has changed our summers. We want to hear your stories about how your vacations have been affected, for better or worse, by tech.

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NPR News: Supreme Court Nominee Brett Kavanaugh's Record On The Environment

Supreme Court Nominee Brett Kavanaugh's Record On The Environment
Kavanaugh has a skeptical view of agencies that seek to expand their reach. Environmental groups worry he may be willing to strike down regulations designed to address issues such as climate change.

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NPR News: Experts Say Lawsuit Over Flint Water Crisis Is An Uphill Battle

Experts Say Lawsuit Over Flint Water Crisis Is An Uphill Battle
Michigan and the city of Flint will argue Wednesday that the lawsuit they face over the city's water crisis should be dismissed. States are generally shielded from lawsuits.

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Tuesday, July 10, 2018

NPR News: Many Paleontologists Today Are Part Of The 'Jurassic Park' Generation

Many Paleontologists Today Are Part Of The 'Jurassic Park' Generation
Paleontology is experiencing a golden age, with a new dinosaur species discovered every 10 days on average. Those inspired by the film Jurassic Park as children are now exiting Ph.D. programs and injecting the field with new talent.

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NPR News: Spotted Lanternfly Could Be Worst Invasive Species In 150 Years

Spotted Lanternfly Could Be Worst Invasive Species In 150 Years
International shipping sometimes brings unwanted guests: invasive species. The latest invader, the spotted lanternfly, threatens fruit and hardwoods. It's recently spread to Pennsylvania.

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NPR News: Spotted Lanternfly Could Be Worst Invasive Species In 150 Years

Spotted Lanternfly Could Be Worst Invasive Species In 150 Years
International shipping sometimes brings unwanted guests: invasive species. The latest invader, the spotted lanternfly, threatens fruit and hardwoods. It's recently spread to Pennsylvania.

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NASA Names Six New Flight Directors to Lead Mission Control

NASA has selected six women and men to join the elite corps of flight directors who will lead mission control for a variety of new operations at the agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.

July 10, 2018
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NPR News: Want A Creative Spark? Get To Know Someone From Another Culture

Want A Creative Spark? Get To Know Someone From Another Culture
We find comfort in the familiar, but do we find creativity? New research supports the claim that diverse teams are more innovative.

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Monday, July 9, 2018

NPR News: The Push For A Gender-Neutral Siri

The Push For A Gender-Neutral Siri
Siri, Alexa and Cortana all started out as female. Now a group of marketing executives, tech experts and academics are trying to make virtual assistants more egalitarian.

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NPR News: How Phoenix Is Trying To Keep People Cool As Temperatures Rise

How Phoenix Is Trying To Keep People Cool As Temperatures Rise
As the climate warms, temperatures are spiking and heat waves are more frequent. Phoenix — one of the country's hottest cities — aims to be a model in figuring out how to keep people cool.

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NPR News: How Phoenix Is Trying To Keep People Cool As Temperatures Rise

How Phoenix Is Trying To Keep People Cool As Temperatures Rise
As the climate warms, temperatures are spiking and heat waves are more frequent. Phoenix — one of the country's hottest cities — aims to be a model in figuring out how to keep people cool.

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