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CDC director is out after less than a month; other agency leaders resign
"Susan Monarez is no longer director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention," the Department of Health and Human Services wrote in a social media post. Her lawyers said she had neither resigned nor been told she was fired.
Cyclist's Olympic Dream Becomes $200,000 Medical Bill Nightmare
Cyclist Phil Gaimon was competing in a race that could have won him a spot in the Tokyo Olympics. Instead, a crash landed him in two hospitals where his out-of-network surgeries garnered huge bills.
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6:18
YouTube Guitar Lessons Pulled in Copyright Spat
Thousands of guitar students lost a valuable resource last week. The most popular guitar teacher on YouTube saw his more than 100 videos yanked from the site. The reason: a music company accused him of copyright infringement for an instructional video on how to play a Rolling Stones song.
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0:00
Residents Want Answers Regarding The Future Of Two Mile Pond
A capacity crowd filled a conference room on Tuesday at the Santa Fe Convention Center to hear a presentation by city's water department.
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1:45
New, Returning Santa Fe City Councilors Get Back To Work
The city held its inauguration ceremony on Friday.
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2:25
Lawyer for fired FBI agents who knelt during 2020 protest says firings were partisan
Twelve FBI agents are suing after being fired for kneeling during 2020 protests in Washington D.C. Their attorney told Morning Edition the firings reflect a pattern of partisan leadership.
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4:38
How AI is getting better at finding security holes
Anthropic announced this week that its new model found security flaws in "every major operating system and web browser." Even before the news, AI models had gotten dramatically better at finding bugs.
A new poll finds major warning signs for Biden and fellow Democrats
The NPR/Marist survey has President Biden with a 42% approval rating. Americans also don't feel the direct payments or expanded child tax credits Democrats doled out helped them much.
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6:48
Treasury, Fed Outline Rules To Limit Exec Pay
The Treasury and Federal Reserve both announced new rules Thursday that seek to curb soaring pay at U.S. financial institutions. U.S. pay czar Kenneth Feignberg laid out the details of his plan to slash pay for top executives at seven firms that received government bailout money. The Fed intends to reduce "systemic risk" by monitoring compensation practices for the first time.
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3:17
He was the head of Mexico's FBI. Now he's on trial for accepting cartel bribes
Guilty or innocent, the drug-corruption trial in New York of high-ranking former Mexican government official, Genaro Garcia Luna, shows the limits of the U.S. to win its decades-long "war on drugs."
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6:31
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