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Business
2:38 am
Tue January 17, 2012

Move Over Delta, Southwest To Fly Out Of Atlanta

Credit Karen Bleier / AFP/Getty Images
Delta Airlines planes line up at the terminal at Atlanta's Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport. Southwest Airlines will begin serving the city next month, and hope to lure passengers away from hometown airline, Delta.
Author Interviews
12:01 am
Tue January 17, 2012

The Charmed and Charming Life of Rosamond Bernier

Originally published on Tue January 17, 2012 10:48 am

In 1947, Vogue magazine sent Rosamond Bernier to Paris to cover European cultural life as it recovered after World War II. She met everyone who was anybody — Pablo Picasso befriended her, Henri Matisse gave her fashion tips, Alice B. Toklas baked for her. Bernier's memoir Some of My Lives is a lively compendium of this movable feast of art and genius — and of the author's own considerable charm.

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Europe
12:01 am
Tue January 17, 2012

Italy's Bad Economy Leaves Immigrants Vulnerable

The Italian city of Florence prides itself on welcoming foreign migrants. But the killing of two Africans last month has raised new questions about racism in Italy.

With the economic crisis worsening, there are signs xenophobia could increase as Italians start to compete with immigrants for a slice of the shrinking economic pie.

On Dec. 13, a known right-wing extremist opened fire in two separate marketplaces, leaving two Senegalese dead and seriously injuring three others. The killer then shot himself.

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Newt Gingrich
12:01 am
Tue January 17, 2012

Newt's 'Food Stamp President': Racial Or Just Politics?

All of the Republican presidential hopefuls take on President Obama in their stump speeches, attacking his health care plan, his jobs record and more.

But the shorthand former House Speaker Newt Gingrich uses, calling the nation's first black president the "food stamp president," is raising questions.

It's a theme Gingrich has used since Iowa, and he returned to it during a forum in Charleston, S.C., over the weekend.

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Asia
12:01 am
Tue January 17, 2012

China's Rich Consider Leaving Growing Nation

Last fall, wealthy Chinese gathered at a Beijing hotel to hear a pitch by Patrick Quinn, the governor of Illinois. He wanted them to invest in a convention center project at Chicago's O'Hare International Airport.

"You can't have capitalism without capital," Quinn said to the group of potential investors. "So we really are interested in encouraging people from everywhere, particularly here in China ... to consider the state of Illinois as a place to make investments."

The required minimum investment: half a million dollars.

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Politics
12:01 am
Tue January 17, 2012

Wis. Elections Board To Validate Recall Petitions

Opponents of Wis. Gov. Scott Walker will deliver a truckload of petitions to the state's elections board Tuesday in an effort to force a recall election. Thousands of volunteers have spent the past two months canvassing the state collecting signatures.

Organizers are confident Walker will need to face an election this year in order to keep his job. Talk of recalling the governor began nearly a year ago, after he signed a bill into law that strips most public unions of collective bargaining rights.

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Latin America
12:01 am
Tue January 17, 2012

The Challenge Of Measuring Relief Aid To Haiti

Originally published on Tue January 17, 2012 9:13 am

After Haiti's devastating earthquake two years ago, Americans donated large sums of money. This helped charities and aid groups save lives immediately after the disaster. But it's been much harder for them to help Haitians rebuild their devastated country. In the second of two stories, NPR's Carrie Kahn and Marisa Penaloza report that its difficult to get detailed information about how organizations spend their money.

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Education
4:02 pm
Mon January 16, 2012

Do Law Schools Cook Their Employment Numbers?

Credit Dan Kite / iStockPhoto.com
Many law school students say they were lured in by juicy job numbers upon graduation, but when they got out, all they ended up with is massive debt.

Originally published on Tue January 17, 2012 8:01 am

It's often assumed that even in tough times, lawyers can find good jobs. But that proposition is being overturned by a tight legal market, and by a glut of graduates.

The nation's law schools are facing growing pressure to be more upfront about their graduates' job prospects. Many students say they were lured in by juicy job numbers, but when they got out, all they ended up with is massive debt.

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Around the Nation
4:01 pm
Mon January 16, 2012

'The Prison Show' Helps Texas Inmates Find Escape

Originally published on Wed April 17, 2013 2:26 pm

Every Friday at 9 p.m., thousands of prisoners across East Texas settle into their bunks, pull out their hand-held radios and tune in to The Prison Show, the only radio show in the country that caters to prisoners and the families they've left behind.

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Three Books...
3:39 pm
Mon January 16, 2012

Rebel Memoirs: Three Confessions From The Edge

Credit istockphoto.com

These days, memoirs are often the target of contempt. A scathing slam in New York Times Book Review this year inveighed against "oversharing"; and in the New Yorker, the memoirist was likened to "a drunken guest at a wedding... motivated by an overpowering need to be the center of attention." If the narrative deals with socially unacceptable matters like abuse, addiction, family dysfunction, or even poverty, the scorn gets even thicker.

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