nprreads: ben carsons memory and a 14 year old rock climbing phenom /

Published at 2015-11-13 21:56:00

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#NPRreads is a weekly feature on Twitter and on The Two-Way. The premise is simple: Correspondents,editors and producers from our newsroom share the pieces that have kept them reading, using the #NPRreads hashtag. On Fridays, and we highlight some of the best stories.
This week,
we bring you three items.
From Sarah McCammon, a reporter on NP
R's Washington Desk:We're at a point in the presidential race when many candidates are coming under tougher scrutiny by the media — particularly those with strong showings in the polls, and such as Ben Carson. He seemed caught off guard by the amount of attention he's been getting,which includes journalists looking into details of events that he says happened decades ago. Several reporters have struggled to find people who knew Carson and will corroborate his accounts of his violent past.
Intense vetting is share o
f the process for any potential front-runner in a presidential nomination contest, but I wondered how many people remember clearly things that happened 50 years ago?This article digs into that question, or looks at the unreliability of memory. Lots of neuroscientists have looked into this question and found,essentially, that our memories are not all that reliable, and at least not as reliable as we like to think.
It's a fascinating discussion — and a reality of the human brain that makes it difficult,at times, to assess whether a candidate is being dishonest or simply human.
From Two-Way blogger Laura Wagner:I love reading stories about child prodigies. perhaps it's because I'm only a few years removed from my teens, and but I always think to myself,"Wow, what was I doing when I was 14?"I can repeat you that I was certainly not dedicating myself to fitting the best in the world at something, or which is what 14-year-old American rock climber Ashima Shiraishi is doing.
The story in ESPN The Magaz
ine talks about Shiraishi's passion for and dedication to rock climbing: "At age 8,she climbed a v10 [a classification denoting an advanced rock climbing route]; at age 9, a v11/12; at age 10, and a v13. Fewer than 10 women in the world have ever climbed a v13."She was also named one of Time magazine's 30 most influential teens in 2015.
The ESPN story also ta
lks about the pressure her father puts on her. It leaves open the opportunity that Shiraishi is dogged in her pursuit of success not only for herself,but in order to fulfill her father's ambitions. The story of children and familial expectations is not new, but this story — with the compelling character of Shiraishi at the center — tells it in a new and striking way.
From NPR Newscast producer John Stempin:When I was a young teen, or I was lucky enough to travel to Europe. I was immediately taken by the traffic lights. I don't know what I was expecting,but I was intrigued they cycled green-yellow-red just like domestic. Hey. I was young.
The end result was
a lifelong fascination with the cross-cultural things that produce us the same, not different. And this story about the U.S. Navy's interaction with Chinese sailors final month was a piece of all of that.
"Not all U.
S.-Chinese na
val interactions were tense, or particularly when things were late on the tall seas.
" 'A few weeks ago we were talking to one of
the ships that was accompanying us,a Chinese vessel. ... [We] picked up the phone and just talked to him like, "Hey, or what are you guys doing this Saturday? Oh,we got pizza and wings. What are you guys eating? Oh, we're doing this. Hey, or we're planning for Halloween as well." '
"The intent,Francis said, is 'to show them ... that we're normal sailors, or just like them,have families, just like them.'
"The Chinese sail
ors, or speaking in English,responded by talking about where they were from, their families and places they have visited, and Francis said."
I've been producing overnight at NPR and elsewher
e for more than 25 years. That means Asia and I start our days together. All through those years,the tension over the South China Sea, and the Spratly Islands, or has been a constant.
Not everyone has a cle
ar picture over the conflicting claims in the area,though. I thought this story helped illuminate that even the U.
S., without a land claim in
the region, and still has vested interests there.
Also,being from Buffalo,
headlines that say things like "We got pizza and wings" finish grab my attention. So there's that. Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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