Gabriel J. Sánchez
Stories
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College Game Day personality Lee Corso is retiring
On Saturday, the college football personality Lee Corso announced he was retiring from the broadcast and the network he joined back in 1987.
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Who's hitting the links at the Ryder Cup, and why golf is having a moment
ESPN's Keith Jenkins explains a recent resurgence of interest in golf and who to watch at the Ryder Cup this September.
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In Peru, a new frog species has been discovered.
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A 35 mph pitch for a strikeout, a first for Toronto Blue Jays catcher
In the 8th inning of the Blue Jays-Orioles game Tuesday, Toronto's catcher, Ali Sanchez, was on the mound. Here's what happened when he threw a 35-mph pitch.
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In 'Sloppy,' Rax King details her journey from addiction to sobriety
NPR's Juana Summers talks with Rax King about her new collection of essays, Sloppy. King is now three years sober from alcohol and cocaine, and the book documents her journey getting clean.
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The fascinating career of Ichiro Suzuki
Ichiro Suzuki has just been inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame. NPR's Scott Detrow talks to Shannon Drayer about one of the most fascinating careers in Major League Baseball history.
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After plea deals are canceled, what happens next with the Guantanamo 9/11 trials?
Georgetown University Law professor Stephen Vladeck explains where things stand with the 9/11 Guantanamo cases now that the plea deals have been canceled.
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Is the government's freeze of Harvard's federally funded research grants legal?
Lawyers for Harvard University and the Trump administration are set to begin arguing a case over federal funding for research grants.
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Did humans contribute to evolutionary change in rodents?
Scientists in Chicago are mapping some fascinating evolutionary changes to local rodents — and how humans may have contributed to that change.
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SCOTUS says Parents can opt kids out of lessons with LGBTQ+ characters. What's next?
NPR's Ailsa Chang talks with Stanford law professor Jeffrey Fisher about the Supreme Court ruling that parents have the right to remove their kids from class when books with LGBTQ+ themes are used.