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Only 1 in 5 people with opioid addiction get the medications to treat it, study finds
Overdose deaths from fentanyl and other opioids have surged but medications that could save thousands of lives "are sitting on the shelf unused," according to new research.
You Bug Me. Now Science Explains Why.
In their new book, Annoying: The Science Of What Bugs Us, NPR Science Correspondent Joe Palca and Science Friday's Flora Lichtman set out to examine why certain things — and people — drive us bananas.
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5:23
The 9th Women's World Cup has kicked off – and it's on track to set records.
The FIFA Women's World Cup has started, this year with new countries and more teams than ever.
Ice-Pop Biz: Cool And Fresh, But Will It Be Hot?
Friends Brian Sykora and Roger Horowitz create fruit ice pops inspired by the traditional Mexican frozen treat paletas. Though they're not making a living from it yet, the entrepreneurs are selling Pleasant Pops from a bicycle cart at a weekly farmers market. Their best seller? Cucumber chili.
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4:10
Lingua Globa: How English Became 'Globish'
English rose from humble beginnings to become a language that's spoken by people from every corner of the Earth. In Globish, Robert McCrum tells the story of how a mongrel language slowly took the world by storm.
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5:21
Reimagining The 'Tragic Mulatto'
Heidi Durrow's debut novel, The Girl Who Fell From The Sky, explores biracial identity in young adulthood. The book has received critical acclaim as well as the Bellwether Prize for fiction that addresses issues of social justice.
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8:20
Simone Biles returns to competition this weekend for the first time since Tokyo
Biles' return is great news for USA Gymnastics, which just announced a new sponsorship deal with Nike. Also returning is Suni Lee, who took home the Olympic all-around gold after Biles dropped out.
Reviving A Grand Tradition Of 'Black Prophetic Fire'
African-American philosopher Cornel West's new book laments the decline of "prophetic" black leadership, lifting up examples of people who were willing to risk their lives in the service of the truth.
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6:22
Markets May Stumble Or Skyrocket, But This Economist Says Hold On Tight
It's been more than four decades since Burton Malkiel published A Random Walk Down Wall Street. Eleven editions later, Malkiel hasn't wavered in his mantra of patience and broad investing.
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6:29
'Ghosts' Is An Eerie, Edgy Tale Of Perception And Possession
Paul Tremblay's new novel is, on the surface, a story about a book about a reality show about a real-life event, but reviewer Jason Heller says it becomes an "unsettling conversation about the truth."
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