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JEA Board Vice Chair Lisa Weatherby Resigns
JEA Board Vice Chairwoman Lisa Weatherby resigned a week after Jacksonville Mayor Lenny Curry first demanded it.Weatherby announced her resignation in a…
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0:52
How Will The New Crop Of First-Time Voters Lean In 2016?
The "kids" who came of age during the Obama years are all grown up and are getting their first chance to vote for president. What issues are influencing this new batch of voters?
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4:12
Unregulated Fantasy Sports Industry Rocked By Insider Trading Scandal
NPR's Robert Siegel talks with John Ourand of Sports Business Daily about the scandal in the multi-billion dollar industry of fantasy sports after two major companies were accused of insider trading.
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3:43
Rep. Sandy Levin: Fight Over Pacific Trade Deal Is About Setting Standards
NPR's Robert Siegel interviews Democratic Rep. Sandy Levin, ranking minority member of the Ways and Means Committee, who monitored Trans-Pacific Partnership talks and advocated changes to the deal.
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4:15
Freezing Ovaries Before Cancer Treatment May Preserve Fertility
One-third of women who froze ovarian tissue before undergoing cancer treatment and later had it transplanted back ended up having babies, according to a study of women in Denmark.
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3:50
3 Scientists Win 2015 Nobel Chemistry Prize
The work of Tomas Lindahl, Paul Modrich and Aziz Sancar details how cells repair damaged DNA and preserve genes.
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3:31
Hungarian Ambassador Clarifies Hungary's Migrant Policy
As Hungary threatens to close its border with Croatia and seal itself off from the migration crisis that is consuming Europe, Steve Inskeep talks to Hungary's Ambassador to the U.S. Réka Szemerkényi.
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5:26
Hungary Provides Trains For Migrants To Travel To The Border With Austria
Hungary put up border fences to keep migrants out. But in a limited way, it's helping some migrants transit through Hungary, getting them to Austria and closer to their Northern European destinations.
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1:48
Renoir Haters Protest In Boston
The protesters do not think Boston's Museum of Fine Arts should be showing paintings by Renoir. The deliberately ironic protest was organized by a guy who says he dislikes impressionism.
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0:29
Despite Sweeping Aid-In-Dying Law, Few Will Have That Option
People with uncertain prognoses or dementia can't end their lives under California's new medical aid in dying law. Proponents say those limits reflect the uncertainties of death, and of politics.
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