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Starting this year, publicly traded firms will be required to share their median employee pay, as well as CEO pay. NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks to Wall Street Journal reporter Theo Francis about the new disclosure rule.
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Liz Stepansky decided to become teacher to follow in the footsteps of her parents. But the profession was not what she had expected based on their experiences a generation earlier.
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United and Delta will retire the 747 this year, which means no North American passenger airlines will operate the "Queen of the Sky."
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The Senate version has some key differences from the House version. Here & Now's Jeremy Hobson takes a closer look with Michael Regan of Bloomberg News.
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President Trump addressed regional leaders Friday at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Danang, Vietnam.
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Few people can demand what kind of electricity they get. But Microsoft and Facebook, which operate huge, power-hungry data centers, are trying to green up the electricity grid with their buying power.
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A project called TransActive Grid is testing a new way to trade solar power among neighbors. For now only credits are being traded — not actual energy — using the technology that underpins bitcoin.
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The U.K. gives billions of pounds to the developing world. Will this continue in the wake of Brexit?
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The decision caps a public campaign asking for the change and months of deliberation by the Treasury.
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While the scandal seems to be limited to the Japanese domestic market, Mitsubishi Motors says it is now investigating vehicles it made for overseas markets as well.
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The $750 million deal means Sony now fully owns or administers the rights to 3 million songs, including hits by the Beatles, Sting, Lady Gaga and Alicia Keyes.
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Apple must now pay $400 million to e-book purchasers. The case's roots date back at least six years, when Apple sold its first iPad models and sought to compete with books giant Amazon.