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Julie Leon died of hyperthermia in Seattle on June 28, 2021 — the hottest day in the city's history. A lawsuit claims she was a victim of oil companies' "misrepresentations" about climate change.
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If you weren't playing along at home during Thursday night's final, take our mini-Bee quiz, which uses words from the real thing.
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For more than 30 years, a group of friends gathered each week to play Dungeons & Dragons — until politics broke up their game in 2020. Two players talked about it with StoryCorps.
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Court rulings against President Trump's tariffs could spell relief for many American importers — if the decisions hold. For now, the uncertainty remains.
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This week, vaccines took a hit from the Trump administration, some reality TV stars got pardoned, and there was a media frenzy around a certain French interaction. Were you paying attention?
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You no longer need to be a software engineer to build software — you can "vibe code" it by prompting chatbots to build apps and websites. Could that put programmers out of a job?
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The Justice Department and Google have one final chance to convince a federal judge how the tech giant should change its practices so it can no longer monopolize the search market.
Essential, Independent, and Under Threat
A new Executive Order from the White House directs the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to stop funding NPR, PBS, and other public media services.
This goes far beyond a line item in the federal budget; it's part of a broader push that could dramatically weaken or dismantle the public media system, including Nevada Public Radio.
At a time when fact-based journalism and community storytelling are more essential than ever, we need your support to keep this vital service strong and independent.
It only takes a few seconds to support public media.