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See-through pants brought Lululemon (and some of its customers) unwanted attention back in March, as we reported at the time. They were pulled from shelves.

Now the yoga and running clothier says that thanks to "more fabric across the bum" and other design changes, the black pants are coming back to stores this month.

Lululemon cautions though, that customers need to "get real about sheerness. ... Luon is a knit fabric — if you stretch a knit fabric far enough, it will go sheer. That's why the right fit is key."

Related post:

Product Chief Is Out At See-Through-Pants-Plagued Lululemon

This summer, NPR is taking a closer look at media for kids, taking it as seriously as what's offered to adults. Our first piece looks at a new show starting Monday night on ABC Family.

The Fosters could not be more literally named. It's about a foster family with two moms: one black, one white. They're parenting a houseful of teenagers— biological, adopted and fostered, from different cultural and ethic backgrounds. The first episode begins with a new kid, Callie, stumbling into the family, bruised physically and emotionally by the foster care system's inadequacies.

Hadi is skinny with a scruffy beard and a wad of tobacco wedged in his lower lip. Two months ago, his quick action helped save the lives of Americans and Afghans. An Afghan national policeman had opened fire, killing two American Green Berets and two Afghans. Hadi ran to a nearby truck, grabbed a machine gun and shot him dead.

Hadi stops next to a river, just before the patrol crosses into the village.

He seems undisturbed about the U.S. leaving, noting that his men have the same weapons as the Americans.

"We are good in here," he says.

Hadi is among the most highly skilled Afghan soldiers. He serves on one of two-dozen Afghan special forces teams in eastern Afghanistan. The Americans want to train six more teams.

"I'm lucky because the guys I work with are doing the right thing, but there may be other areas that aren't as lucky as me, for sure," says the American Green Beret captain whose job it is to advise the Afghan forces.

For security reasons, we can't use his name.

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The Internal Revenue Service must earn the trust of the American people, the tax agency's new leader said on Capitol Hill Monday, as he promised to hold employees accountable for targeting the tax-exempt applications of conservative groups for extra scrutiny.

A recent report by the Treasury Department's Inspector General faulted the IRS for using "inappropriate criteria" to identify groups for further review.

"In my first few days, I have initiated a comprehensive review of the agency," acting IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel said, "and have taken immediate actions to begin to address the significant and alarming problems identified in the report."

Another audit from the inspector general's office, to be released Tuesday, details how the IRS spent nearly $50 million on employee conferences in three years. The list of expenses includes videos with silly themes and dances.

In his first congressional appearance since being named to lead the agency, Werfel told members of the House Appropriations subcommittee that the IRS doesn't need more money to deal with its problems right now. Instead, he said, the agency first needs to develop a detailed plan.

When asked about a possible special prosecutor to investigate the IRS, Werfel said he felt the current inquiries are sufficient.

Here are a few more highlights of Monday's oversight hearing:

Asked by House Financial Services and General Government subcommittee chairman Rep. Ander Crenshaw (R-Fla.) if he believes the IRS has betrayed the public's trust, Werfel answered, "I do, Mr. Chairman. I think that's why — thinking about this in terms of my primary mission — is to restore that trust," The Daily Caller reports.

Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration J. Russell George "said no IRS employees, during his audit, acknowledged who gave the directive to target conservative groups," according to The Washington Post.

Saying that "it's hard to shock and awe someone who's from Chicago, Illinois about scandals," Rep. Mike Quigley (D-Ill.) noted that he's recently seen governors and congressmen sent to jail. "So I get it," he said. "But this is getting there." That's according to The Chicago Sun-Times.

"We may want to consider putting conditions on your funding that allow us to monitor your agency's compliance with proper practices," House Appropriations Committee Chairman Hal Rogers (R., Ky.) said, according to The Wall Street Journal.

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