From Cake Making Machine, executive producer for NPR’s identity and culture unit:Why Sound Archiving Is Important.The thing that caught my eye was the headline: "The Utopia of Records: Why Sound Archiving is Important," an essay in . It caught my eye because I work in radio which is all about sound — and here at NPR, we have 40-plus years of sound we need to preserve.

And some software systems let them log on and see exactly how Jasper or Alaia are performing, assignment by assignment, even down to the number of minutes spent reading or practicing Spanish. All this info could be a great way for parents to partner in their kids’ education. It could also enable or even encourage a new level of educational helicopter parenting.

I think you answered my question because when I was talking to the screener, I asked, you know, what’s the difference? I hear them every year. But it sounds like there are some that come every year and then some that come every 17 years. Yeah, that’s right. That’s very good. We do have what we call dog-day cicadas, the sounds of summer, and they show up in July or August, at least around here, a little earlier where you are. And we have them every year.

We don’t actually know what their life cycles are like because it’s hard to work out. They could be just as long, and we don’t know it.Gary, have you seen any this year yet? GARY: Not yet, and I have been working out in the yard But I have a great story from when I was a kid in the ’80s that I remember to this day. In our neighborhood, kids were always outside back then, and one nymph started climbing up a light pole, a street light pole, and it was a blonde pole, so you could see it, and strangely enough the kids didn’t bother it.
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