NPR News

Pages

Shots - Health News
3:04 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

How A Superbug Traveled The World

Originally published on Wed December 12, 2012 8:06 am

Just as the name implies, Clostridium difficile is a difficult pathogen to beat. It causes a nasty infection in your gut, and it's often resistant to many antibiotics.

But C. difficile got even more troublesome about 10 years ago when a particularly virulent form of the bug cropped up in hospitals across the U.S and was no longer vulnerable to one of the most common classes of antibiotics.

Read more
Sports
2:45 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

Russia's Hockey League Glad To Have NHL-Lockout Orphans

Credit Petr David Josek / AP
Erik Christensen, right, from Lev Praha challenges Alexander Ovechkin from Dynamo Moscow during their KHL ice hockey match in Prague, Czech Republic, Tuesday, Oct. 9. Ovechkin is among those NHL players who were signed by European clubs because of the NHL lockout.

Originally published on Tue December 11, 2012 3:43 am

As the National Hockey League lockout drags into its 86th day, which featured news that more games have been cancelled including the All-Star game, some of the league's biggest stars are getting plenty of action back in their home countries.

In Russia, major NHL players such as Alex Ovechkin and Evgeni Malkin are giving a boost to the fledgling KHL—the Kontinental Hockey League.

Russian NHL players are scattered throughout the KHL teams that still carry names from the Soviet era when Russia dominated world hockey.

Read more
Asia
2:41 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

Hunger Still Haunts North Korea, Citizens Say

Originally published on Mon December 10, 2012 8:44 pm

While North Korea has long struggled with dire food shortages, the United Nations now assesses its food situation as being the best in many years. But NPR has had unusual access to five North Koreans in China, who paint a dramatically different, and alarming, picture.

Even as North Korea mourned its leader Kim Jong Il last December, one surprising thing was on people's minds: fish. State-run television showed people lining up in shops; the dear leader's last wish, apparently, was to provide fish to his people.

Read more
The Two-Way
2:20 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

Navy SEAL Killed During Afghan Rescue Is Identified

Originally published on Mon December 10, 2012 8:44 pm

The member of Navy SEAL Team 6 killed during this weekend's rescue in Afghanistan of an American doctor was Petty Officer 1st Class Nicholas Checque, 28, of Monroeville, Pa.

Read more
Tiny Desk Concerts
2:03 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

Lyle Lovett: Tiny Desk Concert

Credit Ryan Smith / NPR
Lyle Lovett performs a Tiny Desk Concert on Nov. 13, 2012.

Originally published on Mon December 10, 2012 10:15 pm

For all of Lyle Lovett's considerable artistic gifts — a distinctive voice, easygoing charisma, rare talent for wordplay — his greatest attribute may be the way he radiates infectious calm. He's a one-time tabloid fixture who writes wry, bittersweet songs of longing, but Lovett in person is like a vortex into which stress and drama disappear.

Read more
The Picture Show
1:35 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

A Black And White 1860s Fundraiser

Originally published on Mon December 10, 2012 5:05 pm

They look like any other 19th century vignettes and portraits of children kneeling in prayer or cloaked in the U.S. flag.

But these cartes de visite (a calling card with a portrait mounted on it that was all the rage during the 1860s) featured Charles, Rebecca and Rosa — former slave children who looked white.

Read more
The Salt
1:31 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

Sandwich Monday: The Latke Double Down

We all remember the KFC Double Down: the sandwich that replaced bread with fried chicken and changed our lives for the fatter. Just in time for Hanukkah, the Jewish Journal has created the Latke Double Down, which replaces the bread with latkes, aka fried potato pancakes. They fill theirs with lox.

Read more
Behind Closed Doors
12:46 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

Transgender Woman Finds Acceptance In South Korea

Transcript

MICHEL MARTIN, HOST:

I'm Michel Martin, and this is TELL ME MORE, from NPR News. Now we go behind closed doors. That's where we talk about issues people usually keep private.

Read more
The Two-Way
12:27 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

Many Apps For Children Still Raise Privacy Concerns, FTC Says

Credit Peggy Turbett / The Plain Dealer /Landov
Who's collecting information about her?

Originally published on Mon December 10, 2012 8:44 pm

Developers of smartphone and tablet apps aimed at children have done little in the past year to give parents "the information they need to determine what data is being collected from their children, how it is being shared, or who will have access to it," the Federal Trade Commission reports.

Read more
Author Interviews
12:09 pm
Mon December 10, 2012

Lemony Snicket Dons A Trenchcoat

Originally published on Mon December 10, 2012 1:53 pm

It's been more than six years since Daniel Handler, aka Lemony Snicket, concluded his enormously popular 13-volume young adult series, A Series of Unfortunate Events. Now Handler has revived the Snicket narrator in his YA novel Who Could That Be at This Hour?

The book is the first of a series — All the Wrong Questions — and a prequel to A Series of Unfortunate Events. It tracks the young Snicket's adventures during his apprenticeship at the V.F.D., a mysterious organization that readers familiar with the Snicket stories will recognize.

Read more

Pages