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View Post

Trump To Nominate Stephen Moore To The Fed. Both Say It Raised Rates Too Much

By Jim Zarroli

Moore, a conservative commentator and former Trump campaign adviser, has joined the president in criticizing the central bank. “The Fed is sucking the oxygen out of the economy,” Moore has said.

View Post

Analysis: The End Of The ‘Caliphate’ Doesn’t Mean The End Of ISIS

By Larry Kaplow

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders announced Friday that ISIS’ territorial caliphate has been eliminated in Syria. Even so, its threats remain.

View Post

In Thailand’s First Nationwide Vote Since Coup, The Generals Hold Most Of The Cards

By Michael Sullivan

Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who ousted an elected government in 2014, is seeking to remain in power. But many analysts say the military has sought to silence opposition voices.

View Post

Warren Focuses On Policy, Which Looks Like A Tough Sell With Voters

By Anthony Brooks

While Sen. Elizabeth Warren may be dominating the policy debate, there is little evidence that voters are rewarding politicians who flesh out their plans over others with strong personal brands.

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Trump And Universities In Fight Over Free Speech, Federal Research Funding

By Matthew S. Schwartz

The president signed an executive order on Thursday conditioning research grants on “compliance with the First Amendment.”

View Post

‘My Heart Was Broken’: Mourners In New Zealand Bury Victims Of Mosque Shootings

By Rob Schmitz

A week after a gunman killed 50 people at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, friends and family have been gathering for funerals and to listen to the Muslim call to prayer.

View Post

President Trump Announces Halt To ‘Additional Sanctions’ On North Korea

By Dalia Mortada

The president said he was ordering the Treasury Department to withdraw “additional large scale sanctions” against North Korea on the same day Pyongyang quit a liaison office with South Korea.

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Controversial ‘Abortion Reversal’ Regimen Is Put To The Test

By Mara Gordon

Several states require doctors who perform medical abortions to tell their patients the procedure can be “reversed” with progesterone. There’s an absence of evidence to support that contention.

2 American Service Members Killed In Afghanistan

By James Doubek

About 14,000 U.S. troops are in Afghanistan. U.S. representatives have been negotiating a peace deal with the Taliban and President Trump has said he wants to cut down the U.S. presence there.

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U.K. Gets Brief Extension To Withdraw From EU As ‘Cliff-Edge’ Date Delayed

By Matthew S. Schwartz

European Union leaders gave the country two different deadlines, depending on whether U.K. lawmakers can agree on a path forward. One deadline is in two months; the other in two weeks.

View Post

It Will Take More Than Transparency To Reduce Drug Prices, Economists Say

By Alison Kodjak

The Trump administration wants to increase transparency in prescription drug pricing. But health economists say the administration’s call to tie prices to what other nations pay might work better.

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Facebook Stored Millions Of User Passwords In Plain, Readable Text

By Sasha Ingber

The information was held in a readable format within the company’s internal data storage systems. Facebook says it “found no evidence to date” of abuse.

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New Zealand Listens To Muslim Prayers A Week After Mosque Shootings

By Richard Gonzales

The island nation, still reeling from last Friday’s attacks, heard a message of healing amid plans to change gun laws in hopes of preventing future attacks.

President Trump Backs Israeli Sovereignty Claim Over Golan Heights

By Daniella Cheslow

In a tweeted announcement, the Commander in Chief appeared to overturn decades of U.S. policy just ahead of Israeli elections

Florida Man Pleads Guilty To Charges Of Mailing Bombs To Trump Critics

By Richard Gonzales

The Justice Department says Cesar Sayoc “rained terror” by mailing 16 bombs to 13 targets. The explosive devices were sent in the days before last fall’s midterm elections.

With Thousands Of Migrants Crossing The Border Daily, We Asked ‘Why Now?’

By Joel Rose

Three possible factors account for the surge of migrants at the border: economics, social media and the Trump administration’s own tougher immigration policies.

View Post

Kushner Used Private Email To Conduct Official Business, House Committee Says

By Tim Mak

Oversight Chairman Elijah Cummings, D-Md., is investigating alleged violations of federal records laws. Jared Kushner’s lawyer disputes some of Cummings’ assertions about what he told the committee.

View Post

Federal Court Ruling May Open The Door To More ‘Scam PACs’

By Jessica Taylor

The decision would allow super PACs to raise money by using a candidate’s name, even if none of the money ends up going to support that candidate.

View Post

Pregnant Behind Bars: What We Do And Don’t Know About Pregnancy And Incarceration

By Jonathan Lambert

Pregnant women in prison face difficult circumstances, and data on their pregnancies has been scarce. New research lays the groundwork for addressing this neglected public health issue.

View Post

The Student Strike That Changed Higher Ed Forever

By Shereen Marisol Meraji

Black students at San Francisco State College walked out in a protest that led to the rise of ethnic studies departments at colleges and universities around the country.

View Post

Former Murdoch Executive Says He Quit Over Fox’s Anti-Muslim Rhetoric

By David Folkenflik

A former top executive for Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. tells NPR he left his job because of relentlessly harsh depictions of Muslims and immigrants in Murdoch’s media properties, especially Fox News.

View Post

Potent But Unpredictable: How Special Counsels Have Posed A Special Threat

By Ron Elving

From Presidents Ulysses Grant to Richard Nixon to Bill Clinton and Trump, a number of independent investigators have looked into allegations too hot for normal processes.

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New Postpartum Depression Drug Could Be Hard To Access For Moms Most In Need

By Rhitu Chatterjee

Postpartum depression hits low-income women especially hard. Will a promising new drug, Zulresso, become affordable and accessible enough to help them?

Judge Restores Wisconsin Governor’s Powers, Strikes Down GOP Laws

By Shawn Johnson

A Wisconsin county judge ruled Thursday that laws passed in December by Republicans during a lame-duck session to limit the power of incoming Democratic Gov. Tony Evers are unconstitutional.

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‘Biggest Fight Is Against The Clock’ As Death Toll Rises From Cyclone Idai

By Dalia Mortada

More than 400 people have been killed from the storm and subsequent flooding across Mozambique, Zimbabwe and Malawi.

View Post

Boat Sinks In Iraq, Killing Dozens During New Year Celebration

By Sasha Ingber

The casualties included many children, as a vessel carrying Nowruz holiday revelers capsized in the Tigris River. Authorities said the boat appeared not to have had life vests on board.

View Post

Human Genomics Research Has A Diversity Problem

By Jonathan Lambert

Studies on the genetics of human diseases have focused largely on people of European descent. Researchers say this lack of diversity is bad science and exacerbates health inequities.

View Post

Why #ThisIsMyHustle Is Trending In Nigeria

By Esther Ngumbi

Across the country, young people are proudly sharing their side hustles and main gigs, from baking wedding cakes to growing ginger to laying tile.

View Post

‘I Can Exist Here’: On Gender Identity, Some Colleges Are Opening Up

By Jessica Yarmosky

A decade ago, one university started putting pronouns on course rosters. Today, it’s not alone.

View Post

Nicaragua Says It Will Release Hundreds Of Detained Opposition Protesters

By James Doubek

The protesters have been detained in the months since demonstrations against the government of President Daniel Ortega began nearly a year ago.

View Post

Guaidó Says Venezuelan Agents Detained His Chief Of Staff In Pre-Dawn Raid

By Bill Chappell

Describing what he called a kidnapping, Guaidó said weapons had been planted at Roberto Marrero’s house and that he should be freed immediately.

View Post

Nebraska Faces Over $1.3 Billion In Flood Losses

By Matthew S. Schwartz

Historic flooding in the Midwest has caused unprecedented damage and led to at least three deaths.

View Post

Harvard Profits From Photos Of Slaves, Lawsuit Claims

By Matthew S. Schwartz

Tamara Lanier, the descendant of an enslaved man known as Renty, is suing Harvard for damages. She wants the university to return the photos of her ancestor.

Can Inuit Moms Help Me Tame My 3-Year-Old’s Anger?

By Michaeleen Doucleff

After learning how parents in the Canadian Arctic address a child’s misbehavior, I changed my tactics when my toddler would slap my face in anger.

View Post

Museum Curator In Florida Races Against Time To Preserve Holocaust Items

By Caitie Switalski

Since Holocaust survivors are getting older and their stories are fading away, the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum is putting curators in regions where survivors live to preserve their memories.

Pay Raises, More Staff, Earmarks: Lawmakers Propose Ways To Overhaul Congress

By Susan Davis

A newly created bipartisan House committee is examining ways to change both the culture and the law-making structure on Capitol Hill.

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      • Jax PBS Kids 24/7Now you can watch your favorite Jax PBS KIDS shows online!
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