Thursday,  June 19, 2014 • Vol. 16--No. 335 • 28 of 33

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draulic fracturing, leaders here have temporarily halted all fracking as they consider an ordinance that could make theirs the first city in the state to permanently ban the practice.
• "I think the people of Denton really want to keep the livability of the town," said Taylor Schrang, a 28-year-old personal trainer. "And fracking is pretty obtrusive."
• If the city council rejects the ban, it will go to voters in November.
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Google teams with nonprofits to encourage girls to write computer code

• MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (AP) -- Diana Navarro loves to code, and she's not afraid to admit it. But the 18-year-old Rutgers University computer science major knows she's an anomaly: Writing software to run computer programs in 2014 is -- more than ever -- a man's world.
• "We live in a culture where we're dissuaded to do things that are technical," Navarro said. "Younger girls see men, not women, doing all the techie stuff, programming and computer science."
• Less than one percent of high school girls think of computer science as part of their future, even though it's one of the fastest-growing fields in the U.S. today with a projected 4.2 million jobs by 2020, according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics.
• This week Google, with a driverless car and Web-surfing eyeglasses under its belt, has given The Associated Press an early look at how it's trying to change the gender disparity in its own workforce, and in the pipeline of potential workers, by launching a campaign Thursday called "Made with Code."
• The initiative begins with an introductory video of girls-- silly, serious and brave -- meeting President Obama, painting over graffiti and goofing around. The narrator says: "You are a girl who understands bits exist to be assembled. When you learn to code, you can assemble anything that you see missing. And in so doing, you will fix something, or change something, or invent something, or run something, and maybe that's how you will play your bit in this world."
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Bosnians divided over legacy of Gavrilo Princip, the Serb nationalist who ignited World War I

• SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina (AP) -- A century after Gavrilo Princip ignited

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