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View Post

As Spain’s Immigration Rises, More Women Arrive With Experiences Of Sex Abuse

By Lucia Benavides

Experts say nearly every woman migrating to Spain from Africa is sexually abused along the way. They sometimes arrive pregnant or with infants conceived on their journey, often a result of rape.

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She Chose To ‘Go Flat’ And Wants Other Breast Cancer Survivors To Know They Can Too

By Rachel D. Cohen

After her double mastectomy, writer Catherine Guthrie came to embrace her new body, without breast reconstruction. But, she has learned, women have to push the medical system to support this choice.

Protesters Delay Release Of Pakistani Woman Acquitted For Blasphemy

By Diaa Hadid

Asia Bibi’s sentence was overturned this week, prompting protests by hard-line religious groups. They are calling for Bibi to be killed, along with the three judges who issued the verdict.

Jamal Khashoggi’s Fiancee Calls For Saudis To Return His Body At Memorial In D.C.

By Bill Chappell

Jamal Khashoggi’s fiancée, Hatice Cengiz, was the main speaker at the memorial, which ended with a prayer for the slain Washington Post columnist.

View Post

When Boys Can’t Be Boys

By Gene Demby

Black men don’t get seen as adults. Black boys don’t get treated like kids. Meanwhile, a certain class of men can float in and out of either category as the need arises.

View Post

Mario Segale, Inspiration For Nintendo’s Hero Plumber, Has Died

By Bill Chappell

Mario Segale never sought the spotlight, despite inspiring one of the most recognizable characters in the world: Super Mario.

View Post

How A Dog Could Stop The Global Spread Of Malaria

By Michaeleen Doucleff

One scientist is training the ultimate disease watchdogs — canines that can smell the disease’s parasites living inside a person’s blood.

View Post

Chinese Bus Plunged Into River After Passenger Assaulted Driver

By Emily Sullivan

State media says a brawl between a passenger and driver in Chongqing caused the bus to crash into the Yangtze River, killing 15 people.

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Harvard Discrimination Trial Is Ending, But Lawsuit Is Far From Over

By Carrie Jung

An opinion could come in early 2019. Both sides say they plan to appeal, which means the fate of affirmative action policies could once again end up in the hands of the Supreme Court.

Democrats Say House Majority Would Mean Investigative Barrage, Not Impeachment

By Ryan Lucas

The leadership of key committees, including those on intelligence, the judiciary and oversight, might flip from Trump-friendly Republicans to Democrats less sympathetic to the president.

View Post

In Governors’ Elections This Year, Republicans Have A Lot To Lose

We tapped our network of political reporters and editors across the country to bring you an analysis of every one of the 36 gubernatorial races in 2018. Here’s what they said.

View Post

Big Tobacco Spends Big To Block A Tax And Medicaid Expansion In Montana

By Eric Whitney

If the state’s ballot initiative to fund Medicaid’s expansion passes, it will mean a $2-per-pack increase in taxes on cigarettes and a new tax on electronic cigarettes.

View Post

Tennessee Inmate Executed After Choosing The Electric Chair

By Richard Gonzales

The inmate had challenged the constitutionality of lethal injection execution. His lawyer said he chose electrocution because he expected it to be less painful than the drug method.

View Post

U. Of Maryland Board Of Regents Chair Resigns, Fallout Continues From Athlete’s Death

By Vanessa Romo

“My continued presence on the board will inhibit its ability to move Maryland’s higher education agenda forward,” James Brady said, after outrage over the decision not to fire the football coach.

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Citizenship Question May Be ‘Major Barrier’ To 2020 Census Participation

By Hansi Lo Wang

In focus groups for the U.S. census, some participants identified the citizenship question as a significant reason why they would avoid taking part in the head count.

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GOP Closing Arguments For 2018: Four Ways To Handle Trump

By Scott Detrow

President Trump is not on the ballot but the midterm elections are a referendum on him. GOP candidates are using four strategies to discuss their close, not so close or nonexistent ties to Trump.

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Trump Escalates Immigration Issue Days Ahead Of Elections With White House Remarks

By Scott Horsley

President Trump addressed what the White House called a “crisis” of illegal immigration on Thursday, underscoring what has become the central focus of his midterm election campaign.

View Post

How Long Should Older Moms Wait Before Getting Pregnant Again?

By Carey Goldberg

As a woman ages, choosing when to try for a second or third child means weighing fertility odds against the risks of getting pregnant again too soon. A new study provides more data to help decide.

View Post

What To Look For In The Last Jobs Report Before The Elections

By John Ydstie

The midterm elections are days away, and Friday’s jobs report will give voters a final glimpse of the strength of the economy. A key recurring question: Is wage growth finally picking up?

View Post

Waiting For Opportunity To Get In Touch

By Joe Palca

NASA mission managers haven’t heard from the Martian rover Opportunity since June. A dust storm interfered with communication but the storm is over now and engineers hope to hear from the rover soon.

View Post

A Call For A Cease-Fire In Yemen Makes News. Its Catastrophe Doesn’t

By Joanne Lu

Observers offer three key reasons why the world isn’t paying heed to what a UNICEF official calls a “living hell for its citizens and their children”

View Post

Ethiopia Swears In First Woman Supreme Court Chief

By Shannon Van Sant

Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has appointed several women to senior government posts, part of a wave of reforms since he came into office last April.

View Post

Oregon Voters To Decide Fate Of Sanctuary Law

By Conrad Wilson

A bipartisan sanctuary law that Oregon lawmakers passed easily in 1987 is now subject to a repeal vote.

View Post

‘Combative, Tribal, Angry’: Newt Gingrich Set The Stage For Trump, Journalist Says

By Terry Gross

Atlantic journalist McKay Coppins says Gingrich “set a model for future Republican leaders” by engaging in extreme partisanship while serving as speaker of the House.

View Post

The EPA Says Farmers Can Keep Using Weedkiller Blamed For Vast Crop Damage

By Dan Charles

The Environmental Protection Agency has given farmers the OK to continue to spray the controversial weedkiller dicamba. The chemical is prone to blowing in the wind and damaging other vegetation.

View Post

Immigrating To The U.S.? Get Ready For A New Gut Microbiome (And Maybe More Pounds)

By Maanvi Singh

Hmong immigrants began losing native bacteria in their guts soon after arriving in the U.S., a change associated with more obesity. Eating an American diet plays a role but doesn’t explain everything.

View Post

Suspect Pleads Not Guilty In Deadly Pittsburgh Synagogue Attack

By Amy Held

Setting up the case for a jury trial, Robert Bowers pleaded not guilty to all 44 counts against him in connection with Saturday’s massacre at the Tree of Life Synagogue that resulted in 11 deaths.

N.Y. Police Seeking Answers In Deaths Of Saudi Sisters Found In River

By Amy Held

Police identified them as Rotana and Tala Farea, who had moved to the U.S. from Saudi Arabia. Investigators want to know how and why they wound up bound together in the water.

View Post

How Americans Feel About Affirmative Action In Higher Education

By Courtney Rozen

Polls show that Americans broadly support the concept of affirmative action but oppose preferential treatment for minorities in college admissions.

Hear The Beatles In Rehearsal, Looking Through A ‘Glass Onion’

By Bob Boilen

Hear an early, behind-the-scenes recording of The Beatles working on “Glass Onion,” the third track from what would become the band’s 1968, self-titled “White Album.”

View Post

Merck Pulls Out Of Agreement To Supply Life-Saving Vaccine To Millions Of Kids

By Michaeleen Doucleff

The pharmaceutical giant will stop delivering its rotavirus vaccine to four West African countries and will begin to sell it in China for likely more than 10 times the cost.

View Post

Google Employees Walk Out To Protest Company’s Treatment Of Women

By Laurel Wamsley

Many at Google have been simmering since The New York Times reported the company gave generous exit packages to alleged harassers. Thousands of employees walked out of its offices around the world.

View Post

Poll: Nearly 4 In 5 Voters Concerned Incivility Will Lead To Violence

By Domenico Montanaro

A new NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist poll finds that voters are worried that the lack of a civil tone and negativity in Washington will lead to violence, but they don’t agree on who to blame.

View Post

Here’s Why Democrats Are Confident They’ll Win The House

By Jessica Taylor

They’re running strong in suburban districts, where independents and women want to send a message to President Trump. It’s also a year when historical trends and a GOP exodus could boost Democrats.

View Post

Divers In Indonesia Find Crashed Airliner’s ‘Black Box’

By Emily Sullivan

The flight data recorder from Lion Air flight JT610, which crashed on Monday with 189 people aboard, could provide insight into the cause of the disaster.

View Post

Groundskeeper Accepts Reduced $78 Million Award In Monsanto Cancer Suit

By Emily Sullivan

Dewayne “Lee” Johnson, 46, says the company’s Roundup weedkiller caused his illness. He will accept the award after a judge reduced a jury’s original figure of $289 million.

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