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Whether from an antique shop or discount store, toxic lead items are easy to buy
Lead is regularly found in vintage items more than 40 years old, but also in many new, cheaply made dollar-store goods. Children are especially susceptible to lead-poisoning even at low levels.
Morning news brief
Israel presses its military operation in Gaza. Ex-President Trump to testify in fraud trial. Epic Games will be in federal court in San Francisco for the start of an anti-trust case against Google.
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10:57
The U.S. Paid Billions To Get Enough COVID Vaccines Last Fall. What Went Wrong?
Immediately after the Food and Drug Administration authorized Pfizer's vaccine, the company delivered fewer doses than its government contract projected. Federal officials say they didn't know why.
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3:51
Fed Will Continue To Taper Its Stimulus Program
The Federal Reserve said the economy continues to improve, so it is slowing its purchase of bonds by $10 billion a month.
Tech Week: Facebook's Bet, Streaming Fight, Google Maps Indoors
What a week in technology news: Facebook made a $19 billion purchase, Verizon and Netflix are feuding and Google's trying impressive new projects.
Austrian Government Will Try To Seize The House Where Hitler Was Born
The state rents the property now, and has tried for years to purchase it from the current owner. Officials say their aim is to prevent the property from falling into the hands of neo-Nazis.
Austrian Government Will Try To Seize The House Where Hitler Was Born
The state rents the property now, and has tried for years to purchase it from the current owner. Officials say their aim is to prevent the property from falling into the hands of neo-Nazis.
Army Bans Non-Military Issued Body Armor
The U.S. Army says it has banned the use of body armor that is not issued by the military. Army officials say any soldier wearing commercially purchased body armor will have to turn it in and have it replaced by authorized gear. Military officials said they cannot guarantee the commercial gear's safety.
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0:00
Why Summer Jobs Don't Pay
The minimum wage is flat, college tuition is up and students are broke: Summer jobs just don't have the purchasing power they used to, especially when you look at the cost of college.
Here's why Zillow won't be buying any more homes to renovate and resell this year
Supply and labor shortages, and a backlog of work already underway, are to blame, the company says. But it will complete purchases that are already under contract in its program to flip properties.
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