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  • As San Antonio enters a new industrial era, four frontier industries are driving opportunity and innovation: cybersecurity, bioscience, advanced manufacturing, and aerospace. How will San Antonio leverage its $44 billion innovation ecosystem, retain local talent and discoveries – to foster breakthrough bioscience research, technologies, and companies?
  • Patrick Strickland discusses his story collection "A History of Heartache." These are stories set in North Texas that chart the small moments of grace, and the almost insurmountable mistakes boys inherit. These are gritty, sometimes violent stories, but there is a tenderness, too, and the knife’s edge here bends toward a kind of hope.
  • The race is on to get humans to Mars. But what will they find? Not little green men, despite that’s what many believed about the red planet. In the early 1900s it was thought that Mars was inhabited and was home to a utopian society in the grip of a planet-wide drought. How did Mars mania grip the nation, influence pop culture and give us cause to stare into the night sky and wonder?
  • For 26 years, April Burrell was lost to a psychosis that defeated every treatment. Then a doctor asked a different question: what if her immune system was the problem? Dr. Anthony Zoghbi worked on the team that discovered Burrell's immune system was attacking her brain. Now he's searching for a blood test that could identify millions of others who may have been misdiagnosed and could be treated.
  • Poverty is big business in America. The federal government spends about $900 billion a year on programs that impact poor Americans, including antipoverty programs like Medicaid, affordable housing and subsidies. There is a vast web of entrenched companies that profit from regulating the lives of the poor with business models that depend on exploiting low-income Americans. The new book Poverty for Profit explains.
  • Local gas prices head toward record territorty; San Antonio Spurs fall short of a Game 1 win; Civil rights groups sue over Texas immigration law
  • Lawmakers call for release of family detained at bus stop; Texas invests millions into flood warning system; SA Phil announces two concerts this month amid legal and financial challenges
  • There has been a catastrophic decline in the population of North American birds. The continent has lost approximately one-third of all birds since 1970. But certain groups like raptors and waterfowl have recovered significantly due to targeted habitat restoration and dedicated conservation funding.
  • Spurs close out Blazers to advance in the NBA playoffs; Camp Mystic director testifies in July 4th flood hearing; Bexar County faces historic low property tax revenue
  • Because of the ongoing drought water levels in the Edwards Aquifer have been dipping to some of the lowest in history. Yet development growth continues, and big thirsty industry continues to move into the area. Meanwhile area agriculture is looking down the barrel of dropping wells and few options.
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