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  • Wholesale prices fell 1 percent in May from April thanks to an 8.9 percent plunge in the price of gasoline.
  • Those, and others such as ".sex," may be among suffixes such as ".com" at the end of Internet addresses.
  • JONES, Okla. (AP) — The U.S. Geological Survey has recorded two small earthquakes in Oklahoma.The survey reports a 3.3 magnitude earthquake struck near…
  • Some lesbians in South Africa are becoming victims of so-called "corrective rape." Men are raping women with the alleged intent to "cure" them of their sexual orientation. Host Michel Martin speaks to Johannesburg-based journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault. Advisory: This segment may not be comfortable for some listeners.
  • No strangers to natural beauty, the Icelanders were nevertheless stunned by the picturesque backdrop of the Gorge Amphitheater in Washington as they performed "Mountain Sound."
  • A meal in a Tripoli restaurant prompts questions about how to cook camel and its history as a food.
  • Self-described "fermentation revivalist" Sandor Katz says "the creative space" between fresh and rotten is the root of most of humanity's prized delicacies. His new book, The Art of Fermentation, explores the ancient culinary art form.
  • Charles was one of those rock 'n' roll figures whose work you're almost certainly familiar with, even if you've probably heard of him. He lived in isolation, recorded very little, didn't perform live and died in 2010. Rock historian Ed Ward looks at his memorable body of work.
  • New analysis of climate data reveals that much of the warming in the country is happening in the Southwest and upper Midwest.
  • Political scientists worldwide are watching the U.S. presidential race. Some wonder how a President Romney would change military policy. Some worry that the U.S. economy overseen by President Obama is hurting them. And some see Europe in the unusual position of affecting the election's outcome.
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