NATION | BLOG

Mile-Wide Tornado Leaves Wake of Destruction Outside Okla. City

A mile-wide tornado with up to 200 mph winds ripped through suburban Oklahoma City, less than a day after a first tornado hit the area. Homes and buildings were reduced to rubble, while vehicles littered roadways. Authorities also report that an elementary school in the area took a direct hit from the twister. Kwame Holman reports on the devastation. Jeffrey Brown talks to Gary Knight of the Oklahoma City Police Department and Bill Bunting of the National Severe Storm Prediction Center.

BUSINESS & ECONOMY | ANALYSIS

Yahoo Makes Bid for Reboot With $1.1 Billion Tumblr Purchase

Jeffrey Brown talks with Rebecca Lieb, a research analyst for the Altimeter Group, about the appeal of the image-centric and mobile-friendly blogging platform Tumblr for tech giant Yahoo.

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Global Health

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Patchwork Nation

Track how 12 different U.S. communities adapt to changing economic times.

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Making Sen$e

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the.News

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Science

Coverage of the critical issues in science and technology reporting.

Generation Next

Judy Woodruff explores how young people are handling the economic downturn.

 

WORLD | May 20

Assad Forces Try to Retake Town With Hezbollah Help

In Syria, Assad government troops pushed to retake a strategic town close to the Lebanese border. Hezbollah fighters joined the Syrian regime army in laying siege to Qusayr, home to an estimated 40,000 civilians. Judy Woodruff reports on the growing involvement of Hezbollah in the Syrian conflict.

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HEALTH | May 20

'This Is Not a Cookbook': Using DSM-5 to Diagnose Disorders

The American Psychiatric Association released a new edition of the DSM, which doctors use to diagnose and treat mental disorders. Judy Woodruff discusses the changes and implications for both patients and professionals with Dr. Michael First of Columbia University and Dr. Steven Hyman of the Broad Institute.

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MORNING LINE | May 20

Republicans Still Fired Up Over IRS Scandal Following Hearing

After a week of statements of outrage and a congressional hearing, there appears to be more heat than light when it comes to discussion of the Internal Revenue Service's singling out of conservative groups for extra scrutiny when applying for tax-exempt status.

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ASK LARRY | May 20

What About Social Security for Singles and the Divorced?

Fifty-two percent of women over 60 aren't married and nearly 70 percent of those over 75 are single. What Social Security benefits are they entitled to? And what about single or divorced men?

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SCIENCE | May 20

Life of Sally Ride Honored at Kennedy Center Tribute

On Monday, PBS NewsHour science correspondent Miles O'Brien will serve as master of ceremonies at an event honoring the legacy of astronaut Sally Ride at Washington, D.C.'s Kennedy Center. This is the column that O'Brien wrote immediately following Ride's death in July 2012, after a 17-month battle with pancreatic cancer.

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MAKING SEN$E | May 17

Is Inequality Worse Today Than a Century Ago?

Paul Solman looks back to the 1912 presidential election when economic disparity between the rich and poor was a key issue in debates between William Taft, Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson.

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LUNCH IN THE LAB | May 17

Cicada Sighting! Bug-Eyed Critters Emerging in Virginia

Although the brood II cicadas aren't expected to emerge en masse until late May or June, a nice crop of them nested in a batch of poison ivy in Virgina’s Bull Run Regional Park on Thursday. Their veiny wings and bright beady red eyes clung to grass, leaves and tree bark.

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ART BEAT | May 17

The Jazzed Up 'Gatsby'

It is another Gatsby/Fitzgerald moment. "The Great Gatsby" is on the big screen now directed by Baz Luhrmann. Jeff Brown talks to a F. Scott Fitzgerald scholar about what fascinates so many to continue to write books about the American author and reinterpret his classic novels on film.

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COPING WITH CLIMATE CHANGE | May 16

U.S. Drought Moving West

With small signs of relief in the Eastern U.S., the forecast now shows more trouble ahead as the drought is expected to intensify in the West and Central Plains this summer, according to NOAA.

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Public Media Resources

Dying to Get Back

While the number of illegal crossings at the border has plummeted dramatically, just as many people are dying. This means for those coming into the country illegally, it is now more deadly and more lethal, than at any time in recent U.S. immigration history.

[Need to Know]

State-level Nonprofits Fly Under the Radar

While much criticism has been lobbed at the federal system for failing to adequately identify who is spending money to influence campaigns, 35 states have independent spending disclosure laws that are less stringent than federal election law. See a state-by-state report card.

[Center for Public Integrity]

The Invisible War

The Invisible War is an investigative documentary about one of America’s most shameful and best kept secrets: the epidemic of rape within the U.S. military. The film, a 2013 Oscar nominee, paints a startling picture of the extent of the problem and the systemic cover-up by the military.

[The Invisible War]

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May 16, 2013

May Marks 40th Anniversary of Watergate Hearings

On June 17, 1972, five men were arrested for breaking into the Democratic National Committee (DNC) headquarters in the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C., setting off the political scandal that brought down President Richard Nixon.

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