2015년 3월 1일 일요일

Opposition Rally In Moscow To Mourn Boris Nemtsov Plus 12 More Stories

Your NPR stories for March 1, 2015
NPR
Daily Briefing
A look at the day's top stories
News
Opposition Rally In Moscow To Mourn Boris Nemtsov
The Russian opposition leader was gunned down in Moscow in Friday in what many of his supporters believe was a directed political assassination.
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ISS Spacewalkers Perform Tricky Cable, Antenna, Installation
Two American astronauts at the Space Station are outside the craft for the last of three jobs aimed at paving the way to receive a new generation of crew modules beginning in 2017.
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Teaching The Holocaust: New Approaches For A New Generation
Amid the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi death camps, a focus more on 'how Jews lived than about how they perished.'
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How A Group Of Lung Cancer Survivors Got Doctors To Listen
Lung cancer survivors who met online banded together to get an option they credited with helping them added to treatment guidelines used by cancer specialists.
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To Curb Bear Population, Florida Reinstates Hunting Season
In the past decade, the number of bear-related calls Florida wildlife officials have received has increased by 400 percent. To stop the rise in bear population, officials have agreed to start hunting.
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Most Popular
One Man's Race To Outrun Alzheimer's
Cape Cod journalist Greg O'Brien has always found solace in running, and a diagnosis of Alzheimer's hasn't stopped him. But making it work — for himself and his family — isn't always easy.
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'Whoa, Mama!': A Voice Actress's Road To Fame As A 10-Year-Old Boy
Back in 1987, Nancy Cartwright made a risky, last-minute decision during an audition: Instead of trying out for the part of mild-mannered Lisa Simpson, she went for the role of rebellious Bart.
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Teaching The Holocaust: New Approaches For A New Generation
Amid the 70th anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi death camps, a focus more on 'how Jews lived than about how they perished.'
Read this story
To Curb Bear Population, Florida Reinstates Hunting Season
In the past decade, the number of bear-related calls Florida wildlife officials have received has increased by 400 percent. To stop the rise in bear population, officials have agreed to start hunting.
Read this story
Diversity Sells — But Hollywood Remains Overwhelmingly White, Male
Women and minorities continue to be under-represented on TV and in film, both behind and in front of the camera, according to a new study — even though diverse films and shows make more money.
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Music
Recommended Dose: The Best Dance Tracks Of February
This month's selections include a youngster from Montreal, a veteran from Chicago, warehouse techno from Paris, a visionary from London, and footwork from Michael Jackson's hometown of Gary, Indiana.
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Alt.Latino: Mixing Genres With Chicano Batman, Los Cenzontles
What happens when Mexican folk music meets Cajun Zydeco? NPR's Rachel Martin talks to Felix Contreras and Jasmine Garsd of NPR Music's Alt.Latino about some musical mash-ups.
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'You Have To Be Bored': Dan Deacon On Creativity
The electronic artist's new album, Gliss Riffer, is his most accesible yet. In a conversation with Arun Rath, he waxes philosophic on stress, technology and the value of a wandering mind.
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