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Stay-At-Home Workers Defend Choice After Yahoo Ban
Yahoo's telecommuting ban may be just what that company needs in a time of crisis. But some stay-at-home workers resent the implication that they are slacking off when the boss can't see them. Should society resurrect all the barriers between work and home?
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4:15
Years After #MeToo Movement, Women Athletes Are Still Fighting Sexualization
At the Tokyo Olympics, some athletes on the German women's gymnastics team decided to compete in full-length unitards instead of high-cut bodysuits.
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•
10:19
Fire in a Bronx apartment building killed 17, many of them West African immigrants
Many of the people who died in a high-rise fire in New York City on Sunday were immigrants from West Africa. The Bronx building was the epicenter of a tight-knit community of people from Gambia.
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3:26
Sandy Pulls Curtain Over N.Y. Art Scene
Broadway may be up and running, but lower Manhattan is still without power, which means many of the city's art venues have been scrambling. Canceled performances, impromptu rehearsals and loss of revenue have plagued theaters and dance companies alike.
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3:56
FBI Reopens Very Cold Case of D.B. Cooper
The FBI launches a new effort to crack a case from 1971, when hijacker D.B. Cooper parachuted from a Seattle-bound plane, after extorting $200,000. An FBI agent, who was only 4 when Cooper jumped, hopes new DNA evidence and tips from the public will track down the mystery man.
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0:00
'Calls' Is A Suspenseful Audio Drama With An Effective Visual Boost
The nine-part series airing on Apple TV+ is a science fiction story that plays out as a series of phone calls between people confronted with a strange series of events.
Visiting (almost) every national park in a year
The pandemic added some complications, but Emily Pennington made it to all but two National Parks.
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8:12
MIT Professor Finds Fault with SAT Essay
Dr. Les Perelman, director of undergraduate writing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, tells Linda Wertheimer why he thinks the new SAT essay misses the mark. For one thing, he says, too much emphasis is placed on length.
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0:00
Richard Clarke On The Growing 'Cyberwar' Threat
Richard Clarke, the former anti-terrorism czar, has now turned his attention to a new national security threat: cyberwar. In a new book, Clarke details what a full-scale cyberattack could look like, how the United States is particularly vulnerable, and what measures can be taken to ensure our networks remain safe.
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45:03
Twitter will limit uses of SMS 2-factor authentication. What does this mean for users?
Users who don't pay a fee for Twitter Blue within the next 30 days will lose SMS two-factor authentication. But there are ways to work around this without signing up for a Twitter subscription.
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