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View Post

Jenny Graham Cycles Around The World In Under 125 Days, Shattering Record

By Bill Chappell

It took just over one-third of a year for the Scottish cyclist to cover some 18,000 miles on her bike, enduring everything from flat tires and worn-out gear to being wary of bears in Canada.

View Post

Travis Scott And Drake Head To ‘Sicko Mode’ Houston, Where It’s Always Nighttime

By Rodney Carmichael

The Dave Meyers-directed visual is a kaleidoscopic view into Scott’s psychedelic, whiplashing Astroworld, with an assist from Drake — and the entire city he’s from.

View Post

U.N. Calls For End To Virginity Tests

By Malaka Gharib

The tests are traumatic and unreliable, the United Nations said in a statement this week. In Afghanistan, there’s a campaign to bring the practice to a halt.

VIDEO: Watch The Sea Forager Sustainably Harvest The Ocean’s Bounty

By Maia Stern

In sun, sea and sand, Kirk Lombard teaches people how to responsibly fish and forage for dinner along the Northern California coast.

Spain Plans To Remove Franco’s Remains From A Memorial, Angering His Supporters

By Lucia Benavides

More than four decades after his death, the dictator Francisco Franco remains a divisive figure. His tomb is situated at a memorial outside Madrid that has become a pilgrimage site of sorts.

View Post

Afghanistan Delays Election In Kandahar After Attack That Killed Police Chief

By Bill Chappell

The rest of the country will vote Saturday. But one journalist says that after a gunman pulled off a surprise attack in Kandahar, “there’s a huge security vacuum, people are very nervous and worried.”

View Post

After ICE Raid, A Shortage Of Welders In Tigertown, Texas

By John Burnett

In August, immigration officials hauled off 150 workers from a northeast Texas plant — one of ICE’s largest operations in a decade. Now the employer is pushing back.

View Post

Detained American Graduate Student Allowed To Study In Israel, Court Rules

By James Doubek

Israel’s Supreme Court said Lara Alqasem should be allowed to study in the country despite her past association with a student group that supports boycotting Israel.

View Post

How Does A Red Seat Turn Blue? Utah Race Tests Democrats’ Strategy To Take The House

By Scott Detrow

As the national Democratic party shifts to the left, control of the House in November likely rests on moderate Democrats beating Republicans in red districts Trump carried handily in 2016.

View Post

StarKist Pleads Guilty To Price Fixing In Alleged Collusion In Canned Tuna Industry

By Emily Sullivan

Three companies — StarKist, Chicken of the Sea and Bumble Bee — are accused by the government of conspiring to keep their canned tuna prices high.

View Post

Feds Launch Sex Abuse Investigation Of Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic Church

By Bobby Allyn

The Justice Department issued subpoenas to at least six of the state’s eight dioceses seeking private files and records following revelations that more than 1,000 minors were abused, NPR has learned.

View Post

Boston Red Sox Stifle Houston Astros’ Bats, Return To The World Series

By Christopher Dean Hopkins

Boston’s pitchers held the Astros to just five hits, and Red Sox third baseman Rafael Devers continued his surprising postseason with a three-run home run as the Red Sox won the ALCS.

View Post

As Caravan Of Migrants Heads North, Trump Threatens To Close Southern U.S. Border

By Laurel Wamsley

Hundreds of people have arrived at a Guatemalan town just across the border from Mexico. It’s uncertain how Trump would block the group from crossing at a legal port of entry.

Kobe Bryant Removed As Animation Festival Juror After Protest Over Past Allegations

By Vanessa Romo

A petition launched by “women and allies in the animation community” demanded “that accused rapist and sexual predator Kobe Bryant be removed” from the Animation Is Us festival.

View Post

What’s Scarier Than Zombies And Ghosts? Government Corruption And Running Out Of Cash

By Vanessa Romo

The Survey of American Fears reveals most Americans are preoccupied with the fear of corrupt government officials, for the fourth year running. Other anxieties include pollution and global warming.

View Post

Jamal Khashoggi’s Last Column Before Disappearance Calls For Free Expression

By Merrit Kennedy

The column’s publication is “kind of an acknowledgement to ourselves … that we don’t have much hope that we’re going to be able to edit this one with him,” the Post editorial page editor told NPR.

View Post

Quake Insurance? California Wants People To Say Yes To Coverage

By Eric Westervelt

Almost 90 percent of Californians do not have earthquake insurance. That worries state officials and quake experts, who are renewing the push to boost insurance coverage.

View Post

‘I Am Heartbroken’: Your Letters About Public Service Loan Forgiveness

By Cory Turner

NPR reported on the troubled Public Service Loan Forgiveness program, and dozens of aggrieved student borrowers wrote in to share their stories.

View Post

Why Stay During A Hurricane? Because It’s Not As Simple As ‘Get Out’

By Adrian Florido

As rescues continue after Hurricane Michael, officials expressed frustration at people who didn’t evacuate. But experts say people’s decisions to stay are almost always carefully considered.

View Post

In Japan, A Strange Sight: Cherry Blossoms Blooming In The Fall

By Laurel Wamsley

“I have never seen anything like this,” said tree surgeon Hiroyuki Wada. Two typhoons that recently struck the country are a likely cause of the sudden flowering.

View Post

Poll Finds Wide Partisan Gaps On America’s Biggest Problems

By Danielle Kurtzleben

A new Pew poll shows that there are few issues that Democrats and Republicans agree need to be fixed — and even then, they often don’t agree on how to fix them.

View Post

Trump Intervened In FBI HQ Project To Protect His Hotel, Democrats Allege

By Peter Overby

The president has been personally involved with the future of the FBI’s Pennsylvania Avenue headquarters building, and Democrats say it is an abuse of power intended to help his hotel up the street.

View Post

They Call Her ‘Queen Of Dung’ — And She Doesn’t Mind

By Shannon Loelius

Millions of people burn animal dung for heating and cooking. To find out if the smoke can cause lung issues, researcher Claire McCarthy used some unorthodox methods.

View Post

U.N. Syria Envoy Staffan De Mistura Is Stepping Down

By Merrit Kennedy

De Mistura told the U.N. Security Council he was leaving for “purely personal reasons.” In his final month, he plans to make a major push to try to lay the groundwork for a new constitution in Syria.

View Post

Key Afghan Police Chief Dies in Kandahar Shooting; Top U.S. General Escapes Uninjured

By Bill Chappell

Shooting broke out at the end of a meeting at the governor’s palace in Kandahar on how to maintain security during in in Afghanistan’s upcoming parliamentary elections.

View Post

Grandma Was Right: Sunshine Helps Kill Germs Indoors

By Kathleen O'Neil

All kinds of bacteria live with us indoors, and some can make us sick. A new study shows that rooms exposed to light had about half the live bacteria found in rooms that were kept in darkness.

View Post

As Brexit Deadlines Loom, May Says U.K. Considering A Longer Transition Period

By Bill Chappell

EU leaders have called off a planned November summit on the next phase of Brexit discussions because of a lack of progress.

View Post

Bye-Bye, Beer? Brewers Say They’ve Got A Plan On Climate Change

By Alastair Bland

A scientific paper published this week predicts climate change will send beer prices skyrocketing and drastically reduce the barley crop. It got tons of media attention. But is beer really doomed?

View Post

Amy Winehouse Hologram Expected To ‘Tour’ With A Backing Band

By Emily Sullivan

Proceeds from the concerts, featuring a holographic image of the deceased artist, would go to the Winehouse Foundation, which works to prevent drug and alcohol abuse in young people.

View Post

‘Ruth Bader Ginsburg’ Reminds Us Why The Justice Is A True Legal Icon

By Michelle Olsen

Jane Sherron De Hart’s biography sheds light on personal and professional challenges Ginsburg faced on the way to the top and puts the Supreme Court justice’s life in context.

View Post

Norway Apologizes To Women Who Faced Reprisals For Wartime Relations With Nazis

By Emily Sullivan

Women who had relationships with occupying German soldiers faced official retaliation after the war. “For many, this was just a teenage love,” Prime Minister Erna Solberg said.

View Post

VA Struggles To Reach Other-Than-Honorable-Discharge Vets In Need Of Help

By Steve Walsh

VA says 115 vets with other-than-honorable discharges received mental health care last year under a new program. Veterans advocates say it’s a tiny fraction of such vets who need help.

View Post

After Hurricane Michael, A Call For Stricter Building Codes In Florida’s Panhandle

By Greg Allen

Florida has some of the nation’s toughest building codes. But the rules are looser in the Panhandle, allowing construction that couldn’t stand up to the storm’s 155 mph winds.

View Post

In Iowa, A Commitment To Make Prison Work Better For Women

By Joseph Shapiro

Prison rules created to control men often don’t work well for women, who come with different histories and experiences. “Gender-responsive corrections” aims to treat women based on these differences.

View Post

In Syria, A School Helps Children Traumatized By War

By Tom Bowman

“What we found is children had been so traumatized, they couldn’t even recognize numbers or letters,” says a U.S. official. “We had to work through that before we could start educating them again.”

View Post

Geologists Question ‘Evidence Of Ancient Life’ In 3.7 Billion-Year-Old Rocks

By Nell Greenfieldboyce

A new analysis of what were initially thought to be microbial fossils in Greenland suggests they might instead just be mineral structures created when ancient tectonic forces squeezed stone.

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