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Neanderthal Genome Offers Clues On Early Humans
{The European Union spearheaded a $1 trillion plan Monday to contain Europe's spreading debt crisis and keep it from tearing the euro currency apart and derailing the global economic recovery.|Risk-taking is a natural part of growing up. But sometimes teens take risks that are unhealthy, and often dangerous. NPR spoke to two experts about the role of risk-taking in growing up, and how parents can minimize dangerous behavior.|For millions of Americans, a major illness or family crisis means time off work with no pay. Several states have passed their own paid leave programs. A half-dozen more are trying but are largely stalled by the bad economy. The Obama administration aims to encourage states to move forward.|For many teens, their cell phones are an extension of themselves. They use their phones while they're at school, while they're in bed — even while they drive. And an increasing number of car crashes are caused by those distracted by cell phones. Experts are developing projects to stop teens and adults alike from texting in the car.|The Kit Kats you find in American stores offer layers of chocolate and crisp wafers. But in Japan, Kit Kats go far beyond chocolate, with flavors like ginger ale, soy sauce, creme brulee and banana. We asked a Tokyo-based reporter why that is — and asked NPR staff members to sample some of the flavors.|Christopher Choy was one of the youngest men on the crew of the Deepwater Horizon, the oil rig leased by BP and anchored in the Gulf of Mexico. When it exploded on April 20, Choy was convinced he wouldn't make it out alive. "This is it," he thought. "We're not gonna get out of here."|The decision to reopen a paper mill on the shores of Russia's Lake Baikal, a U.N. World Heritage site, pits environmental concerns against economic ones. Supporters say the mill is safe and the jobs are necessary, but environmentalists fear for the lake's ecosystem.|Singer Lena Horne, who broke racial barriers as a Hollywood and Broadway star famed for her velvety rendition of "Stormy Weather," has died at age 92. Hospital spokeswoman Gloria Chin says Horne died Sunday at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.|Solicitor General Elena Kagan is President Obama's choice to succeed retiring Justice John Paul Stevens on the Supreme Court.|The president has chosen the solicitor general and former Harvard Law School dean for the position, NPR's Nina Totenberg has learned. Elena Kagan, 50, has never served as a judge. If she is confirmed, the court will have three women serving for the first time in its history.|Under the three-year aid plan, the EU Commission will make $75 billion available while countries from the 16-nation eurozone would promise bilateral backing for euro440 billion $570 billion. The EU said the deal "proves that we shall defend the euro whatever it takes."|The state election in North Rhine-Westphalia the first electoral test since Merkel's second term started last October had loomed over European efforts to tackle the Greek debt crisis.|As the initial round of indirect talks ended Sunday, the State Department said both sides offered initial steps to help things along: Israel committed to no building in a housing project in disputed east Jerusalem, and the Palestinians said they would work against incitement. Talks had been set to start in March, but were thrown into disarray when Israel announced plans to build 1,600 homes in Ramat Shlomo in east Jerusalem, above.|Rescue workers scrambled Sunday to save 83 people trapped in Russia's largest underground coal mine after two explosions killed at least 12 people and injured dozens more, officials said. Among those trapped were rescue workers who had entered the Siberian mine after the first blast.|A fleet of ships maneuvered Sunday to deploy the latest stopgap plans hatched by BP engineers desperate to keep the Deepwater Horizon disaster from becoming the nation's worst spill. An estimated 3.5 million gallons has risen from the depths since the April 20 explosion that killed 11, a pace that would surpass the total spilled in the Exxon Valdez disaster by Father's Day.|The European Union spearheaded a $1 trillion plan Monday to contain Europe's spreading debt crisis and keep it from tearing the euro currency apart and derailing the global economic recovery.|Sensing that the 145 billion dollar bailout for Greece won't be enough, European finance ministers are considering fresh steps to keep the financial contagion from spreading. One thing under consideration — a faster way to get loans to struggling nations. |Renee Montagne has business news.|Renee Montagne has the Last Word in business.|The Kit Kats you find in American stores offer layers of chocolate and crisp wafers. But in Japan, Kit Kats go far beyond chocolate, with flavors like ginger ale, soy sauce, creme brulee and banana. We asked a Tokyo-based reporter why that is — and asked NPR staff members to sample some of the flavors.|For millions of Americans, a major illness or family crisis means time off work with no pay. Several states have passed their own paid leave programs. A half-dozen more are trying but are largely stalled by the bad economy. The Obama administration aims to encourage states to move forward.|Under the three-year aid plan, the EU Commission will make $75 billion available while countries from the 16-nation eurozone would promise bilateral backing for euro440 billion $570 billion. The EU said the deal "proves that we shall defend the euro whatever it takes."|There's been yet another setback with efforts to stop the hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil that have been leaking into the Gulf waters off the Louisiana coast. BP hoped that a 100-ton steel and concrete box lowered into the water would cover the broken well and stop the leak, but ice-like crystals clogged the top of the dome. |U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen is overseeing the federal government's response to the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Allen, who offers the latest updates on efforts to contain the spill before it does further damage to the Gulf Coast.|In Brussels, finance ministers from across Europe are meeting Sunday. Their goal is to find a way to keep Greece's worsening debt crisis from wreaking havoc in all the countries that use the euro as currency. Investors in the United States and Asia are paying close attention, since last week's brief stock market collapse showed the euro crisis is threatening the global economy. Host Liane Hansen talks with NPR's Tom Gjelten about the efforts to secure the stability of the euro amid the Greek debt crisis.|Ireland's long-held policy of low taxes has helped it lure the kinds of blue-chip foreign companies that bring plenty of white-collar jobs. But the economic collapse exposed the downside of this policy — skyrocketing unemployment and other woes.|Hundreds of flights between Europe and North America were either delayed or canceled on Saturday due to the spreading cloud of volcanic ash stretching across much of the northern Atlantic, the European flight control agency said. The prospects for Sunday flights were grim.|Europe has approved a $140 billion bailout deal for Greece. But markets have very little faith in the aid package, or the show of European unity. Investors are worried that a financial contagion is spreading throughout the continent. Host Scott Simon learns more from NPR's Jim Zarroli in Brussels.|The U.S. economy added 290,000 jobs in April, the biggest monthly total in four years. The jump means employers are more confident the recovery is underway. However, the overall unemployment rate rose from 9.7 to 9.9 percent because more people who had earlier given up looking are now back on the job market.|French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced early Saturday that the 16 eurozone nations will set up a financial defense plan by the time markets open next week to shield their shared currency against further attack.|A fleet of ships maneuvered Sunday to deploy the latest stopgap plans hatched by BP engineers desperate to keep the Deepwater Horizon disaster from becoming the nation's worst spill. An estimated 3.5 million gallons has risen from the depths since the April 20 explosion that killed 11, a pace that would surpass the total spilled in the Exxon Valdez disaster by Father's Day.|There's been yet another setback with efforts to stop the hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil that have been leaking into the Gulf waters off the Louisiana coast. BP hoped that a 100-ton steel and concrete box lowered into the water would cover the broken well and stop the leak, but ice-like crystals clogged the top of the dome. |U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen is overseeing the federal government's response to the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Allen, who offers the latest updates on efforts to contain the spill before it does further damage to the Gulf Coast.|It's been 50 years since the Food and Drug Administration approved the birth control pill for sale in the United States. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Time magazine's Nancy Gibbs about her article "The Pill at 50: Sex, Freedom and Paradox."|New research suggests Charles Darwin may have been a human example of this own theory about plants: that inbreeding has negative effects on the health of offspring. Darwin married and had 10 children with his first cousin Emma Wedgwood. Only seven children survived past age 10 and three of the survivors may have been infertile. Host Guy Raz speaks with Tim Berra, professor of evolution at Ohio State University, about the "inbreeding coefficient" theory that Darwin proved through his work and his own life.|Using ancient DNA and modern bacteria, researchers re-created the uniquely adapted blood that allowed mammoths to survive the ice age. Professor Kevin Campbell says unlike human hemoglobin, the mammoths' hemoglobin released oxygen even at very low temperatures, allowing them to avoid frostbite and save energy.|A 4-inch sliver of the tree from which an apple fell nearly 350 years ago and supposedly inspired Sir Isaac Newton to discover the law of gravity will fly aboard space shuttle Atlantis next week. Astronaut Piers Sellers is flying the piece of wood for The Royal Society of London.|Reporting in the journal Science, researchers write that hand washing seems to lower the amount of second-guessing and rationalization that occur after making a decision. Study author Spike W.S. Lee discusses the paper, and why the simple act of washing one's hands could ease the mind.|Researchers present a draft of the Neanderthal genome in the journal Science this week. Ira Flatow talks with researchers about the results of the genetic analyses, including a new finding that some modern humans have Neanderhtal DNA in their genomes.|Many forecasts for the 2010 hurricane season predict more named storms and major hurricanes than an average year. Phil Klotzbach, lead forecaster on the Hurricane Forecast Team at Colorado State University, discusses the climate factors that may stir up more Atlantic hurricanes this year.|Edith Widder, of the Ocean Research and Conservation Association, has been exploring the deep sea for 30 years. When Widder descended for the first time, she says she wasn't prepared for the light show she encountered and has been building tools to document bioluminescence ever since.|Oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico has begun to make landfall in Louisiana's Chandeleur Islands. Nancy Rabalais, director of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, says the spill's effects on the larger Gulf ecosystem could last for years.|Crews are lowering a 100-ton box over a portion of the gushing Deepwater Horizon oil platform in an attempt to capture some of the oil and funnel it to the surface. It's unclear whether the attempt will work, and engineers are examining other options.|BP began lowering a 100-ton concrete-and-steel vault onto a ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico on Friday. The quest took on added urgency as oil reached several barrier islands off the Louisiana coast.|A new study finds that hand washing can help relieve the stress from inner conflict. When forced to choose between two good options, people often stress out about the decision. In the study, those who washed their hands afterward didn't express signs of being conflicted. It seems they didn't feel pressured to justify their choice.|
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{The European Union spearheaded a $1 trillion plan Monday to contain Europe's spreading debt crisis and keep it from tearing the euro currency apart and derailing the global economic recovery.|Risk-taking is a natural part of growing up. But sometimes teens take risks that are unhealthy, and often dangerous. NPR spoke to two experts about the role of risk-taking in growing up, and how parents can minimize dangerous behavior.|For millions of Americans, a major illness or family crisis means time off work with no pay. Several states have passed their own paid leave programs. A half-dozen more are trying but are largely stalled by the bad economy. The Obama administration aims to encourage states to move forward.|For many teens, their cell phones are an extension of themselves. They use their phones while they're at school, while they're in bed — even while they drive. And an increasing number of car crashes are caused by those distracted by cell phones. Experts are developing projects to stop teens and adults alike from texting in the car.|The Kit Kats you find in American stores offer layers of chocolate and crisp wafers. But in Japan, Kit Kats go far beyond chocolate, with flavors like ginger ale, soy sauce, creme brulee and banana. We asked a Tokyo-based reporter why that is — and asked NPR staff members to sample some of the flavors.|Christopher Choy was one of the youngest men on the crew of the Deepwater Horizon, the oil rig leased by BP and anchored in the Gulf of Mexico. When it exploded on April 20, Choy was convinced he wouldn't make it out alive. "This is it," he thought. "We're not gonna get out of here."|The decision to reopen a paper mill on the shores of Russia's Lake Baikal, a U.N. World Heritage site, pits environmental concerns against economic ones. Supporters say the mill is safe and the jobs are necessary, but environmentalists fear for the lake's ecosystem.|Singer Lena Horne, who broke racial barriers as a Hollywood and Broadway star famed for her velvety rendition of "Stormy Weather," has died at age 92. Hospital spokeswoman Gloria Chin says Horne died Sunday at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital.|Solicitor General Elena Kagan is President Obama's choice to succeed retiring Justice John Paul Stevens on the Supreme Court.|The president has chosen the solicitor general and former Harvard Law School dean for the position, NPR's Nina Totenberg has learned. Elena Kagan, 50, has never served as a judge. If she is confirmed, the court will have three women serving for the first time in its history.|Under the three-year aid plan, the EU Commission will make $75 billion available while countries from the 16-nation eurozone would promise bilateral backing for euro440 billion $570 billion. The EU said the deal "proves that we shall defend the euro whatever it takes."|The state election in North Rhine-Westphalia the first electoral test since Merkel's second term started last October had loomed over European efforts to tackle the Greek debt crisis.|As the initial round of indirect talks ended Sunday, the State Department said both sides offered initial steps to help things along: Israel committed to no building in a housing project in disputed east Jerusalem, and the Palestinians said they would work against incitement. Talks had been set to start in March, but were thrown into disarray when Israel announced plans to build 1,600 homes in Ramat Shlomo in east Jerusalem, above.|Rescue workers scrambled Sunday to save 83 people trapped in Russia's largest underground coal mine after two explosions killed at least 12 people and injured dozens more, officials said. Among those trapped were rescue workers who had entered the Siberian mine after the first blast.|A fleet of ships maneuvered Sunday to deploy the latest stopgap plans hatched by BP engineers desperate to keep the Deepwater Horizon disaster from becoming the nation's worst spill. An estimated 3.5 million gallons has risen from the depths since the April 20 explosion that killed 11, a pace that would surpass the total spilled in the Exxon Valdez disaster by Father's Day.|The European Union spearheaded a $1 trillion plan Monday to contain Europe's spreading debt crisis and keep it from tearing the euro currency apart and derailing the global economic recovery.|Sensing that the 145 billion dollar bailout for Greece won't be enough, European finance ministers are considering fresh steps to keep the financial contagion from spreading. One thing under consideration — a faster way to get loans to struggling nations. |Renee Montagne has business news.|Renee Montagne has the Last Word in business.|The Kit Kats you find in American stores offer layers of chocolate and crisp wafers. But in Japan, Kit Kats go far beyond chocolate, with flavors like ginger ale, soy sauce, creme brulee and banana. We asked a Tokyo-based reporter why that is — and asked NPR staff members to sample some of the flavors.|For millions of Americans, a major illness or family crisis means time off work with no pay. Several states have passed their own paid leave programs. A half-dozen more are trying but are largely stalled by the bad economy. The Obama administration aims to encourage states to move forward.|Under the three-year aid plan, the EU Commission will make $75 billion available while countries from the 16-nation eurozone would promise bilateral backing for euro440 billion $570 billion. The EU said the deal "proves that we shall defend the euro whatever it takes."|There's been yet another setback with efforts to stop the hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil that have been leaking into the Gulf waters off the Louisiana coast. BP hoped that a 100-ton steel and concrete box lowered into the water would cover the broken well and stop the leak, but ice-like crystals clogged the top of the dome. |U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen is overseeing the federal government's response to the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Allen, who offers the latest updates on efforts to contain the spill before it does further damage to the Gulf Coast.|In Brussels, finance ministers from across Europe are meeting Sunday. Their goal is to find a way to keep Greece's worsening debt crisis from wreaking havoc in all the countries that use the euro as currency. Investors in the United States and Asia are paying close attention, since last week's brief stock market collapse showed the euro crisis is threatening the global economy. Host Liane Hansen talks with NPR's Tom Gjelten about the efforts to secure the stability of the euro amid the Greek debt crisis.|Ireland's long-held policy of low taxes has helped it lure the kinds of blue-chip foreign companies that bring plenty of white-collar jobs. But the economic collapse exposed the downside of this policy — skyrocketing unemployment and other woes.|Hundreds of flights between Europe and North America were either delayed or canceled on Saturday due to the spreading cloud of volcanic ash stretching across much of the northern Atlantic, the European flight control agency said. The prospects for Sunday flights were grim.|Europe has approved a $140 billion bailout deal for Greece. But markets have very little faith in the aid package, or the show of European unity. Investors are worried that a financial contagion is spreading throughout the continent. Host Scott Simon learns more from NPR's Jim Zarroli in Brussels.|The U.S. economy added 290,000 jobs in April, the biggest monthly total in four years. The jump means employers are more confident the recovery is underway. However, the overall unemployment rate rose from 9.7 to 9.9 percent because more people who had earlier given up looking are now back on the job market.|French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced early Saturday that the 16 eurozone nations will set up a financial defense plan by the time markets open next week to shield their shared currency against further attack.|A fleet of ships maneuvered Sunday to deploy the latest stopgap plans hatched by BP engineers desperate to keep the Deepwater Horizon disaster from becoming the nation's worst spill. An estimated 3.5 million gallons has risen from the depths since the April 20 explosion that killed 11, a pace that would surpass the total spilled in the Exxon Valdez disaster by Father's Day.|There's been yet another setback with efforts to stop the hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil that have been leaking into the Gulf waters off the Louisiana coast. BP hoped that a 100-ton steel and concrete box lowered into the water would cover the broken well and stop the leak, but ice-like crystals clogged the top of the dome. |U.S. Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen is overseeing the federal government's response to the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Allen, who offers the latest updates on efforts to contain the spill before it does further damage to the Gulf Coast.|It's been 50 years since the Food and Drug Administration approved the birth control pill for sale in the United States. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Time magazine's Nancy Gibbs about her article "The Pill at 50: Sex, Freedom and Paradox."|New research suggests Charles Darwin may have been a human example of this own theory about plants: that inbreeding has negative effects on the health of offspring. Darwin married and had 10 children with his first cousin Emma Wedgwood. Only seven children survived past age 10 and three of the survivors may have been infertile. Host Guy Raz speaks with Tim Berra, professor of evolution at Ohio State University, about the "inbreeding coefficient" theory that Darwin proved through his work and his own life.|Using ancient DNA and modern bacteria, researchers re-created the uniquely adapted blood that allowed mammoths to survive the ice age. Professor Kevin Campbell says unlike human hemoglobin, the mammoths' hemoglobin released oxygen even at very low temperatures, allowing them to avoid frostbite and save energy.|A 4-inch sliver of the tree from which an apple fell nearly 350 years ago and supposedly inspired Sir Isaac Newton to discover the law of gravity will fly aboard space shuttle Atlantis next week. Astronaut Piers Sellers is flying the piece of wood for The Royal Society of London.|Reporting in the journal Science, researchers write that hand washing seems to lower the amount of second-guessing and rationalization that occur after making a decision. Study author Spike W.S. Lee discusses the paper, and why the simple act of washing one's hands could ease the mind.|Researchers present a draft of the Neanderthal genome in the journal Science this week. Ira Flatow talks with researchers about the results of the genetic analyses, including a new finding that some modern humans have Neanderhtal DNA in their genomes.|Many forecasts for the 2010 hurricane season predict more named storms and major hurricanes than an average year. Phil Klotzbach, lead forecaster on the Hurricane Forecast Team at Colorado State University, discusses the climate factors that may stir up more Atlantic hurricanes this year.|Edith Widder, of the Ocean Research and Conservation Association, has been exploring the deep sea for 30 years. When Widder descended for the first time, she says she wasn't prepared for the light show she encountered and has been building tools to document bioluminescence ever since.|Oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill in the Gulf of Mexico has begun to make landfall in Louisiana's Chandeleur Islands. Nancy Rabalais, director of the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, says the spill's effects on the larger Gulf ecosystem could last for years.|Crews are lowering a 100-ton box over a portion of the gushing Deepwater Horizon oil platform in an attempt to capture some of the oil and funnel it to the surface. It's unclear whether the attempt will work, and engineers are examining other options.|BP began lowering a 100-ton concrete-and-steel vault onto a ruptured well in the Gulf of Mexico on Friday. The quest took on added urgency as oil reached several barrier islands off the Louisiana coast.|A new study finds that hand washing can help relieve the stress from inner conflict. When forced to choose between two good options, people often stress out about the decision. In the study, those who washed their hands afterward didn't express signs of being conflicted. It seems they didn't feel pressured to justify their choice.|
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