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Apr. 23rd, 2018 12:00 amHere’s what you get when you cross dinosaurs and flowers with deep learning
The Modern Lives of Cuba’s Old Movie Theaters
Kyrgyz mayor dons fake beard to tour city in disguise
Is Killing Giants Ever Justified? The Evolving Tale of “Jack and the Beanstalk”
How the world made macro strides in curbing microbeads
To Curb Ocean Pollution, U.K. May Ban Plastic Straws, Stirrers And Cotton Swabs
California leads the nation in sending former inmates to college. Will other states follow?
Istanbul Closes the Books on Its Public Scribes
Parents in poorer countries devote more time to their kids' homework
Illinois plan: Replace armed school officers with therapists
Antidepressants and Withdrawal: Readers Tell Their Stories
Today’s anti-trans rhetoric looks a lot like old-school homophobia
Memoir of secretly baptized Jewish boy under new scrutiny
How Chinese overseas students are learning harsh life lessons
Rising temperatures are opening new territories for venomous creatures—including your backyard
Facebook moves 1.5bn users out of reach of new European privacy law
25-Year-Old Textbooks and Holes in the Ceiling: Inside America’s Public Schools
Used Cars Full Of Used Electronics Set Sail For Nigeria
‘She has nerves of steel’: The story of the pilot who calmly landed the Southwest Airlines flight
North Korea drops withdrawal of US forces as condition of denuclearization, Moon says
China’s border with North Korea is one of the few ways for outsiders to see life in the world’s most isolated country. As photographer Damir Sagolj and reporter Sue-Lin Wong discovered on a week-long drive along the Chinese side, it also reveals how people on both sides connect to each other.
Party before people: Republicans keep blocking bills that could help suffering Americans
Republicans Protecting Trump? Actually, It's Worse
'This is my real life': Where Trump's travel ban hits home
As New Border Wall Breaks Ground, Environmental and Immigrant Advocates Push Back
Even at Starbucks? A conversation grows about hidden racial bias.
Trump of the tropics: the 'dangerous' candidate leading Brazil's presidential race
Framed for Murder By His Own DNA
Black crime victims too frequently slighted by justice system
South Carolina’s Prison Riot: The Questions That Should Be Asked
Churches struggle with their #MeToo moment
Anti-abortion politicians push efforts to prosecute women
India’s Vicious Patriarchy
Killing renews concerns for homeless Native Americans
The Modern Lives of Cuba’s Old Movie Theaters
Kyrgyz mayor dons fake beard to tour city in disguise
Is Killing Giants Ever Justified? The Evolving Tale of “Jack and the Beanstalk”
How the world made macro strides in curbing microbeads
To Curb Ocean Pollution, U.K. May Ban Plastic Straws, Stirrers And Cotton Swabs
California leads the nation in sending former inmates to college. Will other states follow?
Istanbul Closes the Books on Its Public Scribes
Parents in poorer countries devote more time to their kids' homework
Illinois plan: Replace armed school officers with therapists
Antidepressants and Withdrawal: Readers Tell Their Stories
Today’s anti-trans rhetoric looks a lot like old-school homophobia
Memoir of secretly baptized Jewish boy under new scrutiny
How Chinese overseas students are learning harsh life lessons
Rising temperatures are opening new territories for venomous creatures—including your backyard
Facebook moves 1.5bn users out of reach of new European privacy law
25-Year-Old Textbooks and Holes in the Ceiling: Inside America’s Public Schools
Used Cars Full Of Used Electronics Set Sail For Nigeria
‘She has nerves of steel’: The story of the pilot who calmly landed the Southwest Airlines flight
North Korea drops withdrawal of US forces as condition of denuclearization, Moon says
China’s border with North Korea is one of the few ways for outsiders to see life in the world’s most isolated country. As photographer Damir Sagolj and reporter Sue-Lin Wong discovered on a week-long drive along the Chinese side, it also reveals how people on both sides connect to each other.
Party before people: Republicans keep blocking bills that could help suffering Americans
Republicans Protecting Trump? Actually, It's Worse
'This is my real life': Where Trump's travel ban hits home
As New Border Wall Breaks Ground, Environmental and Immigrant Advocates Push Back
Even at Starbucks? A conversation grows about hidden racial bias.
Trump of the tropics: the 'dangerous' candidate leading Brazil's presidential race
Framed for Murder By His Own DNA
Black crime victims too frequently slighted by justice system
South Carolina’s Prison Riot: The Questions That Should Be Asked
Churches struggle with their #MeToo moment
Anti-abortion politicians push efforts to prosecute women
India’s Vicious Patriarchy
Killing renews concerns for homeless Native Americans