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WJCT Public Media
View Post

The Birthplace Of Country Music’s First Hit Is Being Threatened By Modern Construction

By Debbie Elliott

A grassroots drive to preserve a historic building in downtown Atlanta is highlighting the city’s somewhat forgotten role in early country music.

View Post

‘Prayer Can’t Be Our Only Form Of Defense’: Mosques Eye Security For Ramadan

By Ali Budner

Mosques around the U.S. are taking security seriously in the aftermath of the New Zealand massacres and other attacks on houses of worship.

View Post

This Woman Fought To End Minnesota’s ‘Marital Rape’ Exception, And Won

By Briana Bierschbach

This week, Minnesota’s Gov. Tim Walz signed a bill removing protections for individuals who rape their spouses. About a dozen states still shield spouses from prosecution in sexual assault cases.

View Post

Barr Standoff Escalates Confrontation Between White House And Congress

By Susan Davis

Attorney General William Barr’s refusal to appear before a House committee is forcing Democrats to rethink their oversight strategy for the Trump administration.

View Post

Boeing 737 Plane With 143 On Board Skids Into St. Johns River In Jacksonville

By Serena McMahon

All 136 passengers and seven flight crew members on board are accounted for, officials say.

View Post

New Jersey Governor Signs Public Beach Access Law

By Richard Gonzales

As summer months approach, the state is trying to codify the principle that shorelines and waterways are a public trust. But some environmentalists say the new law isn’t strong enough.

View Post

The Mississippi River Has Been Flooding For 41 Days Now

By Merrit Kennedy

The record-breaking flooding is threatening communities and farmland along the upper Mississippi. Davenport, Iowa, is experiencing downtown flooding. The high water is continuing to move downriver.

View Post

Scientology Cruise Ship Heads To Curaçao After St. Lucia Quarantines It For Measles

By Laurel Wamsley

It’s unclear what will happen when the vessel arrives at its home port on the island. The ship was quarantined by St. Lucia after a crew member was confirmed to have the highly contagious disease.

View Post

Opinion: Here’s Why ISIS And Al-Qaida Will Lose Their War Of Attrition

By Aki Peritz

“America sees this as an existential fight,” writes former CIA analyst Aki Peritz, who argues in this case, the classic insurgent strategy of bleeding a better-resourced adversary is doomed to fail.

View Post

FBI Awards Partners, Anti-Drug Campaigners And Difference-Makers Across U.S.

By Carrie Johnson

“Your mission is a commitment to serving your communities,” FBI Director Christopher Wray told awardees. “You’re showing people kindness when they need it most.”

View Post

Rush To Produce, Sell Vaccine Put Kids In Philippines At Risk

By Michaeleen Doucleff

A dengue vaccine put thousands of kids at risk for a deadly condition. Some scientists say the manufacturer and health officials did too little to warn parents in the Philippines.

View Post

After A Big Failure, Scientists And Patients Hunt For A New Type Of Alzheimer’s Drug

By Jon Hamilton

Now that so many experimental drugs targeting amyloid-beta have bombed, scientists are looking for different approaches for treating Alzheimer’s, including a drug that failed as a cancer treatment.

View Post

Cyclone Fani Slams Indian Coast, Forcing Millions To Evacuate

By Merrit Kennedy

Authorities predicted “total destruction” of many homes. The cyclone made landfall early Friday morning, and at least two people have reportedly been killed by the powerful storm.

View Post

Federal Court Throws Out Ohio’s Congressional Map

By Gabe Rosenberg

The court says the state’s map is an “unconstitutional partisan gerrymander” and must be redrawn by the 2020 election.

View Post

Trump Administration Moves To Roll Back Offshore Drilling Safety Regulations

By Laurel Wamsley

The Interior secretary touted the revised rules as eliminating “unnecessary regulatory burdens while maintaining safety.” But environmental groups said the move demonstrates oil industry influence.

View Post

Inside Texas’ New Migrant Tent Facility

By Reynaldo Leaños Jr.

The Department of Homeland Security is expanding its detention facilities in response to an influx of migrants from Central America arriving at the southern border.

View Post

2020 Census To Be Hand-Delivered In Disaster Recovery Areas

By Hansi Lo Wang

The Census Bureau is planning to send workers to personally visit every household in Paradise, Calif.; Mexico Beach, Fla.; and Puerto Rico, which are still recovering from wildfire and hurricanes.

View Post

Café Tacvba Robbed On Tour: Two Crew Members Beaten, Instruments And Gear Stolen

By Anastasia Tsioulcas

Two members of the pioneering Mexican rock band’s crew were beaten and briefly kidnapped on Thursday on a highway in Mexico. Its instruments and gear were also stolen.

View Post

Classes Take Trips Around The World Through This Game

By Amanda Morris

Teachers are using a game called Mystery Skype to teach geography and connect with classes around the country and world.

View Post

Facebook Bans Alex Jones, Louis Farrakhan And Other ‘Dangerous’ Individuals

By Matthew S. Schwartz

The social media platform said it was banning the high-profile individuals for engaging in hate. Jones called it an “authoritarian” move.

View Post

2020 Democrats Aim High With Climate Change Proposals

By Scott Detrow

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee is centering his presidential campaign on combating climate change. On Friday, he rolled out his plan to shift the country to carbon-free energy.

View Post

Vampire Weekend Is Looking For The Cool Within The Uncool

By Dave Blanchard

Vampire Weekend frontman Ezra Koenig talks about Father of the Bride, the band’s first album in six years, along with all the changes that time has brought.

View Post

Teachers Begin To See Unfair Student Loans Disappear

By Cory Turner

The Department of Education is expanding a fix to its troubled TEACH Grant program, giving millions of dollars of grant money back to public school teachers working in the country’s neediest schools.

View Post

Unemployment Drops To 3.6%, 263,000 Jobs Added, Showing Economy Remains Strong

By Scott Horsley

Employers added far more jobs than expected in April — another sign the U.S. economy is chugging along as the expansion nears the 10-year mark. The unemployment rate was the lowest since 1969.

View Post

Employees Start To Feel The Squeeze Of High-Deductible Health Plans

By Rachel Martin

The average deductible for employer-sponsored health insurance has quadrupled in the last 12 years. A Los Angeles Times investigation finds even insured workers are going without needed medical care.

View Post

Army Soldier Falls Into Hawaii’s Kilauea Volcano After Straining For Better View

By Matthew S. Schwartz

A soldier visiting the active volcano on the Big Island hopped a guardrail and fell in when the ground collapsed. Airlifted out of the crater, he is in stable condition.

Peter Mayhew, Portrayed Chewbacca The Wookiee In ‘Star Wars’ Movies, Dies At 74

By Richard Gonzales

Mayhew was a part-time actor working as a hospital orderly when he was cast to play Chewbacca. A fan favorite, he used his fame to promote charities.

View Post

Traces Of Cocaine, Pesticides Detected In U.K. Shrimp

By Merrit Kennedy

Scientists collected freshwater shrimp at 15 locations in Suffolk. Shrimp from all of the sites were found to have detectable amounts of cocaine, and many had other drugs or pesticides.

200 Female Pro Hockey Players Lay Down Their Sticks Demanding Better Conditions

By Amy Held

Citing low pay and lack of resources, the women said they would refuse to play in professional games in North America until the situation is addressed.

View Post

Pro-Maduro Court Orders Arrest Of Prominent Opposition Leader Leopoldo López

By Vanessa Romo

López had escaped house arrest after two years and has been living at the Spanish embassy in Caracas. President Nicolás Maduro’s military forces fired rubber bullets and tear gas at demonstrators

View Post

Julian Assange Vows To Fight Extradition To The United States

By Sasha Ingber

The WikiLeaks founder said he did not wish to surrender himself “for doing journalism that has won many awards and protected many people.” The extradition case could take many months, the judge said.

View Post

U.S. Soccer Unveils Roster For Women’s World Cup, As Team Looks To Defend Title

By Laurel Wamsley

The roster includes many of the stars who are familiar from previous high-profile international competition, along with a number of younger players. The tournament kicks off June 7 in Paris.

View Post

Why Making A ‘Designer Baby’ Would Be Easier Said Than Done

By Richard Harris

Ethical concerns aside, the genetic ingredients for human traits are so complex that editing a few embryonic genes is unlikely to have much effect — or achieve the fantasy of enhancing humans.

View Post

Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh Resigns In Aftermath Of Children’s Book Scandal

By Brakkton Booker

Pugh, a Democrat, is being investigated for an alleged “self-dealing” scheme in which she sold thousands of copies of a self-published children’s book series to entities with business before the city.

View Post

Opioid Executive John Kapoor Found Guilty In Landmark Bribery Case

By Gabrielle Emanuel

The federal government accused John Kapoor, the founder of Insys Therapeutics, and his co-defendants of running a nationwide bribery scheme that contributed to the opioid crisis.

Third Child Dies In U.S. Government Custody Since December

By Sasha Ingber

The 16-year-old Guatemalan boy died at a hospital in Texas. Guatemala’s government said he had an infection in the frontal lobe of his brain.

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