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  • De Blasio Looks Toward Sweden for Road Safety

    The rate of roadway deaths in Sweden is at an international low due to an approach called Vision Zero. Now the country’s approach faces perhaps its stiffest test: the streets of New York City.

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  • A first in Minnesota, cities launch system to treat, stash water underground

    Capturing water during times of plenty, storing it underground, and pulling it out later when it's needed—it's a strategy used in the western and southeastern parts of the country, and now, for the first time, in Minnesota.

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  • From fish to pipes, Minnesota firms see opportunity in growing water challenge

    Creating an indoor aquaculture operation in an old brewery is, oddly enough, using surprisingly little water.

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  • Even in region with abundant water, residents turn to bottles and try to conserve

    Some communities are being forced to take steps—sometimes costly ones, like digging deeper wells—to both tap and protect their groundwater.

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  • How One Teacher Achieved Insane Reading Growth Last Year

    Tracy Fischetti's high school students improved their reading level scores about three times as much as expected last year, thanks to her innovative approach of heavy content integration into collective class activities, plus an emphasis on students tracking their own Lexile level reading growth.

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  • Twenty Buses a Day: The High Stakes Race to Create a Global Cholera Early Warning System

    Though individual treatments are cheap, cholera is costing the third world countless lives. Using modern technology, researchers work to exterminate it and other curable diseases.

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  • Can Cell Phones Improve Latinas' Health?

    When many Latina immigrant women arrive in the United States, they don't have access to the internet to learn about the resources available to them. Únete Latina, a program run by Latinas, sends mobile phone texts to women with supportive messages in Spanish and with information about relevant news items and public services.

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  • Scientists search Palau's coral reefs for new anti-cancer drugs

    Often it is faster and easier to harvest molecules for medical purposes from nature than to make them in a laboratory. A scientist is looking for cancer-fighting molecules in coral and sponges in the tropical Pacific.

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  • Big rise in irrigation pumping draws DNR attention to Minnesota's 'Bonanza Valley'

    Minnesotans are being prodded to take a different look at how they use water and how to make sure an apparent abundance can be made to last.

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  • Cities in motion: how slime mould can redraw our rail and road maps

    The twenty-first century city is a complex organism, and simulating it to anticipate traffic and transportation congestions can be problematic for urban planning. Researchers around the world from Japan to England have used slime models to simulate traffic and transportation patterns, observing realistic growths, congestions, and re-routing opportunities. Biomimicry demonstrates an unconventional but useful process to understand the pulse of the urban environment.

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