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Sep. 17th, 2016 04:15 pmBetween a rock and a hard place: Biologists unearth sandstone-excavating bees
The Screw Heads That Tried, But Failed, to Topple Phillips
Bird brain? Pigeons have quite a way with words
Birds choose spring neighbors based on winter 'friendships'
FDA okays 1st muscular dystrophy drug; awaits proof it works
Archaeologists Find Ancient Pot With Traces of 3,000-Year-Old Burnt Cheese
America's first wave-produced power goes online in Hawaii
Math study shows our brains are far more adaptable than we know
American Hippopotamus
Take That, Instagram: The Enduring Allure of Vintage Snapshots
A Caiman Wearing a Crown of Butterflies
From He to She in First Grade
A nose by any other name would sound the same
They're cowboys - and they're coming straight outta Compton
Miss America 1968: When civil rights and feminist activists converged on Atlantic City
In Zimbabwe, comedy thrives as country slowly falls apart
The Catkeeper of Aleppo
A Former Janitor Collects And Photographs The Items Seized From Immigrants And Thrown Away By U.S. Customs And Border Patrol
Banks focus more on new accounts _ and the fees they bring More
Our best shot at cooling the planet might be right under our feet
Climate change 'significant and direct' threat to U.S. military: reports
Poll: Americans favor slightly higher bills to fight warming
The Trouble With Double Jeopardy
Why Prisoners Across the Country Have Gone on Strike
California turns to civilians as inmate firefighters dwindle
Some 10 million children in the U.S. have parents who have been incarcerated. These innocent youngsters, studies show, face long odds of success in life. But slowly, efforts to help them are growing.
Pro-painkiller echo chamber shaped policy amid drug epidemic
Detroit civil rights lawsuit attempts to assert a constitutional right to literacy
In Connecticut, a Wealth Gap Divides Neighboring Schools
The strange history and ugly core of Donald Trump Jr.'s Skittles tweet, explained
My teen boys are blind to rape culture
'Children's cafeterias' combat poverty, neglect in Japan
The Secret History of Colombia’s Paramilitaries and the U.S. War on Drugs
The Screw Heads That Tried, But Failed, to Topple Phillips
Bird brain? Pigeons have quite a way with words
Birds choose spring neighbors based on winter 'friendships'
FDA okays 1st muscular dystrophy drug; awaits proof it works
Archaeologists Find Ancient Pot With Traces of 3,000-Year-Old Burnt Cheese
America's first wave-produced power goes online in Hawaii
Math study shows our brains are far more adaptable than we know
American Hippopotamus
Take That, Instagram: The Enduring Allure of Vintage Snapshots
A Caiman Wearing a Crown of Butterflies
From He to She in First Grade
A nose by any other name would sound the same
They're cowboys - and they're coming straight outta Compton
Miss America 1968: When civil rights and feminist activists converged on Atlantic City
In Zimbabwe, comedy thrives as country slowly falls apart
The Catkeeper of Aleppo
A Former Janitor Collects And Photographs The Items Seized From Immigrants And Thrown Away By U.S. Customs And Border Patrol
Banks focus more on new accounts _ and the fees they bring More
Our best shot at cooling the planet might be right under our feet
Climate change 'significant and direct' threat to U.S. military: reports
Poll: Americans favor slightly higher bills to fight warming
The Trouble With Double Jeopardy
Why Prisoners Across the Country Have Gone on Strike
California turns to civilians as inmate firefighters dwindle
Some 10 million children in the U.S. have parents who have been incarcerated. These innocent youngsters, studies show, face long odds of success in life. But slowly, efforts to help them are growing.
Pro-painkiller echo chamber shaped policy amid drug epidemic
Detroit civil rights lawsuit attempts to assert a constitutional right to literacy
In Connecticut, a Wealth Gap Divides Neighboring Schools
The strange history and ugly core of Donald Trump Jr.'s Skittles tweet, explained
My teen boys are blind to rape culture
'Children's cafeterias' combat poverty, neglect in Japan
The Secret History of Colombia’s Paramilitaries and the U.S. War on Drugs