Demolition of the reactor building at the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station is scheduled to begin in 2031, but that timeline assumes two big things.
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The public sculpture will be located at the Seamen’s Bethel.
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I’ve always thought Nantucket was rather flat — elevation-wise, that is. Our highest point is the Madaket Landfill, and after that is Altar Rock in the moors.
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The young female — who researchers called 5120 — was initially caught in a firestorm of misinformation, with many claiming offshore wind contributed to her death.
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CAI’s John Basile talks with Fernando Huergo, a Boston-based composer, bandleader, arranger teacher and bassist. His latest album on New Bedford-based Whaling City Sounds Records is called “Relentless.”
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A few years ago, a Philadelphia arborist named Max Paschall read an article about a man named John Hershey. Hershey ran a tree nursery and experimental farm in Pennsylvania in the 1930s.
The Point
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Improvoing help at the Emergency Room for patience who have overdosed.
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This week: The state loses out on two $634 million grants to replace the Bourne bridge. Funding for the arts is drying up across the region with cuts coming from the Trump administration. And the Cape needs foster homes for children.
NPR Stories
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Stereolab returns. Ganavya comes in peace. Marc Ribot sings. Robert Moore of 90.9 The Bridge joins Stephen Thompson to share the best albums out this week.
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The academy in Emmitsburg, Md., is often described as the national war college for firefighting. It offers training that ranges from leadership to how to conduct fire, arson and blast investigations.
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President Trump is expected to sign the Take It Down Act, a bill that addresses the rise of revenge porn and harmful deep-fake images. Some fear it's too vague and could be used to censor critics.
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More than two dozen are dead across Kentucky, Missouri and Virginia after severe storms brought tornadoes through those states. NPR hears about the devastation in the small city of London in Kentucky.
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With a war in Ukraine and the U.S. rethinking alliances, Britain and the European Union may need each other more than they thought. Here's what happened at Monday's summit — and what didn't.