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Yellowstone Officials Encounter Visitors Behaving Badly
Two incidents at Yellowstone National Park went viral this week, when visitors traipsed off of the boardwalk at the nation's largest hot spring and, in a separate incident, loaded a bison calf into the back of a car. Park officials are hoping the incidents are not indicative of what's in store for them this summer.
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2:36
Bernie Sanders Pushes For Overhaul Of Democratic Primary Process
Bernie Sanders is pushing for Democrats to do away with closed presidential primaries.
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3:20
Obama Visits Asia Pacific Nations Awaiting Action On TPP Trade Deal
President Obama heads to Japan and Vietnam, two nations waiting for the U.S. to act on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the long-stalled multilateral trade pact.
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3:54
Terrorist Groups Remain Unusually Quiet Following EgyptAir Crash
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Rukmini Callimachi, who covers terrorism for The New York Times, about the curious silence on the part of terrorist groups following the EgyptAir crash.
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3:55
Eric Fanning, First Openly Gay Army Secretary, Sworn In By Senate
NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with Eric Fanning, secretary of the U.S. Army, who was recently confirmed as the first openly gay leader of a U.S. military branch.
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4:51
Donald Trump Clarifies Position On Gun Control At National Rifle Association
Donald Trump addressed the National Rifle Association convention Friday. His past positions on guns have been far more liberal than the NRA.
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3:33
Poll Finds Most Native Americans Aren't Offended By Redskins Name
NPR's Audie Cornish talks to Washington Post reporter John Woodrow Cox about his paper's poll that shows 9 out of 10 Native Americans aren't offended by the name of the Washington football team.
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4:17
CDC: 157 Pregnant Women In The U.S. Have Tested Positive For Zika
The women being monitored now include those who had positive lab tests but no symptoms, according to the CDC. Also affected are 122 women in U.S. territories, almost all in Puerto Rico.
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1:59
After Factory Layoffs, The 'Skeleton Crew' Is Left Behind
Born and raised in Detroit, Dominique Morisseau has written three plays about her hometown. Her latest explores the lives of auto workers struggling to keep their jobs during the 2008 economic crisis.
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4:20
'What Can You Say?' An Egyptian Man Mourns The Loss Of 4 Loved Ones
At mosques across Egypt, worshippers prayed on Friday for those killed when an EgyptAir plane plunged into the Mediterranean a day earlier. The cause of the crash still isn't known.
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3:05
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