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  • The FDA might give its approval for kids age 12 to 15 to get a vaccine, but that doesn't mean their parents will. Pediatricians say they're working to help overcome hesitancy and logistical barriers.
  • The Advanced Placement U.S. government and politics exam included a question about the singer encouraging voters to register on Instagram. CNN reports the surprise put a smile on some students' faces.
  • NPR's Tom Goldman reports that after lumbering along for over six months, the labor dispute between National Basketball Association players and owners suddenly has a sense of urgency.
  • The Environmental Protection Agency is considering what the state of California has already done--requiring gasoline refiners to make low-sulfur gas.
  • The violent exchange followed intense clashes between Israeli police and Palestinians in Jerusalem, prompting Jewish organizers to cancel the annual Jerusalem Day march.
  • All Things Considered hosts Noah Adams and Robert Siegel announce this year's inductees into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.
  • The announcement, which effectively reverses a Trump-era rule, springs from last summer's landmark Supreme Court decision banning employment discrimination against LGBTQ people.
  • The massive pipeline, which supplies 45% of the East Coast's gasoline and jet fuel, was forced to shut down over the weekend. The company says it has one line operating under manual control.
  • Robert talks with Karen Overall, a professor of Behavioral Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine. They discuss the approval of a drug called Clomicalm.
  • David Weinberger says that in business, rewards are given to workers who rise to the level of everybody else's incompetence. If you're real good, you end up becoming what you really detest - the boss.
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