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WJCT Public Media
View Post

A Rare Sight At Brigham Young University As Students Protest The Honor Code Office

By Daysha Eaton

Students allege that the university is mistreating victims of sexual assault and harassment, especially women and LGBTQ students.

David Brion Davis, Who Helped Remake The Study Of Slavery, Dies At 92

By Colin Dwyer

The historian’s trilogy, The Problem of Slavery, won the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, among others. More than that, though, a colleague says Davis’ work “shook up the field of history.”

View Post

Paris Holds Vigil To Mourn Notre Dame Fire Damage, Macron Vows Swift Reconstruction

By Vanessa Romo

The French president set a goal of completing the work in five years. Hundreds of millions of dollars were raised toward the effort one day after a fire at the cathedral.

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Dog Saved By Workers On Oil Rig, 135 Miles Off Thai Coast

By Merrit Kennedy

It’s not clear how the animal ended up stranded in the middle of the Gulf of Thailand. But the pup, now named Boonrod, is gaining strength and looks happy and well-fed.

View Post

Georgia Engel, Sweet-Voiced Star Of ‘Mary Tyler Moore Show,’ Dies At 70

By Laurel Wamsley

Engel played Georgette, the wide-eyed girlfriend of anchorman Ted Baxter. She had a long career on television, including roles on Everybody Loves Raymond, Coach and Hot In Cleveland.

View Post

Paradise, Calif., Water Is Contaminated But Residents Are Moving Back Anyway

By Kirk Siegler

Despite public health warnings about benzene contamination in the town’s water supply, some Paradise residents say they have no choice but to return.

View Post

How Well Do Workplace Wellness Programs Work?

By Julie Appleby

These job-based programs can motivate employees to make some changes in behavior, research finds, but they don’t seem to move the dial on workers’ health status or employer spending on health care.

View Post

First U.S. Patients Treated With CRISPR As Human Gene-Editing Trials Get Underway

By Rob Stein

This could be a crucial year for the powerful gene-editing technique CRISPR as researchers start testing it in patients to treat diseases such as cancer, blindness and sickle cell disease.

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Colorado’s Oil And Gas Regulators Must Now Consider Public Health And Safety

By Grace Hood

After years of tension over expanded oil and gas drilling, including a deadly explosion that galvanized critics, the state is moving to tighten regulations on the booming industry.

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Red Cross Releases Name Of Nurse Taken Hostage; New Zealand Fears For Her Safety

By Francesca Paris

For years, New Zealand’s government and international media worked to keep Louisa Akavi’s name secret. Now the Red Cross hopes that revealing her identity will lead to information on her whereabouts.

View Post

Boeing Slow To ‘Own’ Recent Air Disasters, Analysts Say

By Daniella Cheslow

After a second 737 Max jet crashed in less than five months, it took Boeing weeks to speak openly about the role its flight control software may have played. Critics say that’s too long.

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Supreme Court Dances Around The F-Word With Real Potential Financial Consequences

By Nina Totenberg

Is a clothing line called “FUCT” entitled to trademark protection? The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office said no. Now the Supreme Court must decide.

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Trump Begins Effort To Flip Minnesota, Which Was A Democratic Holdout In 2016

By Brian Bakst

No Republican presidential candidate has claimed the state’s 10 Electoral College votes since Richard Nixon in 1972 — the longest blue streak of a state in the country.

View Post

What Does Julian Assange’s Arrest Mean For WikiLeaks And U.S. Elections?

By Miles Parks

Julian Assange probably won’t have access to his laptop computer for a while, but that may not mean that the organization he created won’t still release secrets and, potentially, affect elections.

View Post

An Unusual Family Of Bald Eagles Adds 3 Eaglets

By Francesca Paris

Valor I, Valor II and Starr, a trio of bald eagles in Illinois, hatched three eaglets this year. No such luck for the closely watched eagle couples of Washington, D.C.

View Post

Tracking The Money Race Behind The Presidential Campaign

By Alyson Hurt

See which 2020 presidential candidate has raised the most money, who has spent the most, where the candidates’ funding comes from — and how the Democrats stack up against President Trump.

View Post

Images: Notre Dame Cathedral

By Richard Gonzales

Notre Dame Cathedral of Paris burned on Monday. Its spire fell. But the French Gothic structure was not fully lost, especially in memories of the beloved national symbol.

View Post

Bernie Sanders Releases A Decade Of Tax Returns

By Jessica Taylor

The returns show that in both 2016 and 2017, Sanders and his wife jointly earned more than $1 million in each of those years. On Monday evening, Beto O’Rourke also released a decade of returns.

View Post

Microplastic Found Even In The Air In France’s Pyrenees Mountains

By Christopher Joyce

Tiny fragments broken down from larger pieces of plastic have already been found in rivers, lakes, oceans and in agricultural soil. But very few studies of wind-borne microplastic have ever been done.

View Post

‘Our Planet’ Nature Documentary Addresses The 800-Pound Gorilla — Human Impact

By Ari Shapiro

The new Netflix series takes a hard look at the effects of our behavior on the natural world. Series producer Alastair Fothergill says that this is a different, more urgent type of show.

View Post

Lori Loughlin, Mossimo Giannulli Plead Not Guilty In College Cheating Scandal

By Laurel Wamsley

Giannulli and Loughlin are accused of paying $500,000 in bribes arranged by admissions consultant Rick Singer to get their daughters admitted to USC as crew recruits, despite not being rowers.

View Post

Tiger Woods Rises Again — And Sponsors Are Celebrating His Resilience

By Merrit Kennedy

Woods’ historic victory Sunday at the golf Masters Tournament shows the continued earning power of a player who was dropped by many of his sponsors over the course of a tumultuous decade.

View Post

Biographer Robert Caro On Fame, Power And ‘Working’ To Uncover The Truth

By Dave Davies

The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist was never interested in only telling the stories of famous men. Instead, he says, “I wanted to use their lives to show how political power worked.”

View Post

My New Diet Is An App: Weight Loss Goes Digital

By Yuki Noguchi

The popularity of weight loss apps, especially among younger people, has forced the traditional weight loss programs to revamp their models to include online, on-demand support.

View Post

Pulitzer Prizes Honor Journalists Under Threat With New Crop Of Winners

By Colin Dwyer

Judges sought to support the media “even if some wrongly degrade [it] as the enemy of the very democracy it serves.” Honors went to The Advocate in Baton Rouge, La., Florida’s Sun-Sentinel and others.

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Arizona Teachers Can Now Discuss LGBTQ Issues Without Worrying About The Law

By Mariana Dale

Lawmakers in Arizona have repealed a law that banned teachers from portraying “homosexuality as a positive alternative life-style” during HIV/AIDS instruction.

View Post

President Trump Called Former President Jimmy Carter To Talk About China

By Emma Hurt

Trump called Carter on Saturday, the first time the two had spoken, Carter said. He said Trump told him that he is particularly concerned about how China is “getting ahead of us.”

Bashir May Be Out, But Sudanese Protesters With ‘Eye On The Prize’ Won’t Budge

By Amy Held

Protesters are demanding that a military council give up power to civilians. Four days after longtime president Omar al-Bashir was removed in a coup, protesters faced off against troops in Khartoum.

View Post

Teen Dating Violence Can Lead To Homicide — And Girls Are The Most Common Victims

By Rhitu Chatterjee

A study finds that about 7 percent of all teen homicides between 2003 and 2016 were committed by a romantic partner. The majority of victims were teen girls.

View Post

No Fake Drugs, More Jobs For Youth, End Child Sexual Abuse Online: A Vision For 2030

By Marc Silver

The 5 recipients of the Skoll Awards for Social Entrepreneurship predict how their projects will make the world a better place.

View Post

Bangladesh Struggles To Cope With Pressures Of Hosting 1 Million Rohingya Refugees

By Jason Beaubien

“We’re being outnumbered by the sheer number of the refugee population,” says Mohammad Abul Kalam, the head of Bangladesh’s Refugee Relief and Repatriation Commission in Cox’s Bazar.

View Post

On Tax Day, The IRS Is Short Of Money

By Scott Horsley

The agency’s budget has been cut sharply over the past decade. That means fewer audits. The Trump administration says those cuts may have gone too far and it’s seeking more money for tax enforcement.

View Post

Mueller Report Release Will Likely Escalate Tensions Between Trump And Congress

By Ron Elving

And unlike the attorney general’s predecessors who were caught between warring branches of government, William Barr seems intent on being at the center of the conflict.

View Post

Robert Mueller’s Russia Report Is Coming Thursday. Here’s What You Need To Know

By Philip Ewing

The questions and answers you need in order to prepare for the arrival of the hottest new 400-page document in Washington.

View Post

For Kids With Anxiety, Parents Learn To Let Them Face Their Fears

By Angus Chen

For some kids with anxiety disorders, a new study suggests the best treatment might be teaching their parents new parenting skills.

View Post

‘Women’s Work’ Delves Into Gender Roles At Home And Relationships With Domestic Help

By Rachel Martin

Former L.A. Times foreign correspondent Megan Stack talks with NPR about her new book, her relationships with her nannies, and the need to further involve men in conversations about work in the home.

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      • Jax PBS Kids 24/7Now you can watch your favorite Jax PBS KIDS shows online!
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