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Why solar flares are way hotter than researchers thought
The hottest parts of the sun are its solar flares, and a new study suggests these flares could be more than six times hotter than scientists used to believe.
Remembering the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest — a contest for bad writing
For four decades, an English professor at San Jose State University has run a fiction contest for a single opening sentence to "the worst of all possible novels." He has decided to retire the contest.
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4:12
A clash of the comebacks: Anisimova outlasts Osaka in the U.S. Open semifinals
Amanda Anisimova beat Naomi Osaka in the U.S. Open semifinals early Friday in a tense, three-set match. Both players have been climbing up the rankings after taking mental health breaks from the sport.
D.C. has been under tighter federal control before. Here's what it looked like
Trump's expansion of federal authority over Washington, D.C., is in many ways unprecedented, but calls to mind other times the city has been under tighter federal control.
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3:54
In Alabama, a dredging project in Mobile Bay brings together unlikely allies
Dredging waterways for navigation is a centuries-old practice, but this project is controversial because the mud being dug out of the channel is put into other parts of Mobile Bay.
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7:35
Sheila Jordan, one of the great underappreciated voices in jazz, dies at age 96
She recorded a magical debut album on Blue Note and was later named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts.
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2:22
How the Secret Service arranges a short notice trip like Trump's meeting in Alaska
The president will meet with Putin on Friday in Alaska. A former secret service agent shares how the service plans last minute trips like this, especially one with major geopolitical implications.
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4:23
This music project uses bluegrass to bring people on the autism spectrum together
A new effort led by Hollywood composer John Frizzell seeks to connect people with autism to each other through bluegrass.
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3:50
State Department slashes its annual reports on human rights
Required by Congress, the reports no longer single out things like rigged elections or sexual violence against children as human rights violations.
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3:41
The world's oldest and largest iceberg will soon be no more
The iceberg, known as A23a, has been on a journey following the current into warmer waters for months. Now, it has begun the predicted and natural process of breaking apart, and eventually melting.
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