CBS News Roundup - 03/04/2024 | World News Roundup

Supreme Court expected to decide Trump's eligibility. Final campaign pitches before Super Tuesday. Snowbound in the Sierras. CBS News Correspondent Steve Kathan has today's World News Roundup.

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Reset with Sasha-Ann Simons - Chicago Now Home To Seven State-Designated Cultural Districts

Gov. JB Pritzker announced seven areas across Chicago as official cultural districts. This distinction will allow organizations located in those districts to apply for state funds to back efforts to preserve those communities. Reset hears from the leaders in two Chicago cultural districts and learns how state funding could support preservation efforts in Humboldt Park and Chinatown. For a full archive of Reset interviews, head over to wbez.org/reset.

NPR's Book of the Day - ‘The Achilles Trap’ analyzes the relationship between the U.S. and Saddam Hussein

Early in today's episode, NPR's Mary Louise Kelly asks Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Steve Coll why he felt the need to write The Achilles Trap about the Iraq War amidst so many ongoing world conflicts. Coll explains that he hoped enough time had passed to try to answer a lingering question: Why did Saddam Hussein allow the world to believe he harbored weapons of mass destruction when he didn't? Coll's reporting – which includes Hussein's own audio recordings – unravels decades of tension and miscommunication between the U.S. and Iraq, which ultimately cost hundreds of thousands of lives.

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Up First from NPR - Mideast Latest, Haiti State of Emergency, France Right to Abortion

Vice President Kamala Harris calls for an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, as the U.S. begins airdropping food into Gaza. In an apparent effort to depose Haiti's prime minister, armed gangs stormed two prisons and let thousands of inmates escape. And France moves to not just bolster the right to an abortion, in contrast to the U.S., but to enshrine that right into the country's constitution.

Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.

Today's episode was edited by Hannah Bloch, Mark Katkov, Miguel Macias and Ben Adler. It was produced by Julie Depenbrock, Ben Abrams and Kaity Kline. We get engineering support from Stacey Abbott. And our technical director is Zac Coleman.


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The Intelligence from The Economist - The Intelligence: Pressures for peace

The international push for a ceasefire in Gaza continues, but the tragedies keep coming; in many ways a resolution still seems as distant as it was early in the war. We consider the temptation to go all in on stocks, given just how flaming-hot the markets are (10:55). And a data-led look into which American cities are the most dog-obsessed (16:13).


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Start the Week - Mysterious Plants

The plant Rafflesia has the world’s largest flowers and gives off one of the worst scents; it’s also something of a biological enigma, a leafless parasite that lives off forest vines. For the botanist Chris Thorogood, an expert in parasitic and carnivorous plants at the Oxford Botanic Garden and Arboretum, Rafflesia is also an obsession. In his book, Pathless Forest, he goes in search of this mysterious plant in some of the last wildernesses in South East Asia.

Dr Kelsey Byers is an evolutionary chemical ecologist who specialises in floral scent and its influence on the evolution of flowering plants. In her laboratory at the John Innes Centre in Norwich she studies how flowers use different smells to attract their pollinator of choice. From sweet aromas to the stink of rotting flesh, she explores how plants use con-artistry and sexual deception to thrive.

The ethnobotanist William Milliken from Kew Gardens has spent much of his career working with indigenous people in the Amazon to preserve traditional plant knowledge. Now he’s focused on collecting folklore about the use of plants to treat ailments in animals in Britain. From wild garlic treating mastitis in cows, to cabbage for flatulence in dogs, he hopes to uncover a cornucopia of plant-based veterinary medicines.

Producer: Katy Hickman

The Daily Detail - The Daily Detail for 3.4.24

Alabama

  • US Attorney Garland comes to AL and blasts the use of Photo IDs in elections
  • State senator Orr says vote on CHOOSE Act likely by the end of this week
  • AG Marshall weighs in again on his opposition to gambling legislation
  • A 2nd child is killed by a dog attack in New Hope, the first was in Hartselle
  • Community in Lee county marks the 5 year since killer EF-4 Tornado

National

  • Federal court orders new sentence in one J6 case, rejects sentence enhancements
  • US House releases 5K hours of CCTV footage related to J6
  • Blaze TV reporter is arrested and charged for his reporting on J6 events
  • SCOTUS to issue ruling in case of Trump's name removed from primary ballot
  • Trump is victorious over Nikki Haley in primary voting  for ID, MO and MI
  • NY Times poll shows majority of Nikki Haley supporters were prior Biden voters
  • NY Times poll shows 73% of Americans believe Joe Biden now "too old to serve"
  • GA congressman offers new bill on illegal aliens, following murder of Laken Riley

Serious Inquiries Only - SIO432: How 13 Reasons Why Killed Kids

CW: Discussion of suicide; please skip this episode if it's better for your mental health

After a long hiatus, Dr. Alan Smerbeck AKA Stormy Decisis is back to cover a topic we've been talking about discussing for a while. What does the research tell us is the responsible way to cover death by suicide? What kind of impact can the media have on the greater population if they get it wrong? And how many different ways did 13 Reasons Why completely screw up?

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