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The Salt
3:33 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

Many Cups Of Tea: The Business Of Sipping In Western Sahara

Credit Eliza Barclay / NPR
A high-end tea set in a Saharawi home in Western Sahara.

Originally published on Thu December 13, 2012 5:16 pm

If you want to get anything done in Western Sahara, be prepared to drink tea — very, very sweet tea.

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Food
3:28 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

A Sweet Bread, A Wash Basin And A Shot Of Whiskey

Credit Andy Ryan
Cookbook author Marilynn Brass says eating Virginia Lima's traditional Portuguese Sweet Bread is like biting into a cloud.

Originally published on Tue March 26, 2013 6:45 pm

For the holidays, why not give a gift that tastes like a cloud? Portuguese Sweet Bread may be as close as you can get, according to Marilynn Brass, one-half of the cookbook duo the Brass Sisters.

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Books
3:02 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

'World On A String': John Pizzarelli Jazzes It Up

Originally published on Fri December 14, 2012 1:13 pm

Brothers John and Martin Pizzarelli were born into a family of musicians. Their father is the famed jazz guitarist, Bucky Pizzarelli, who, during the 1960s, performed in the Tonight Show Band and who worked as a session player for rock acts such as Dion and the Belmonts. Musical greats, too, were in and out of the Pizzarelli house in Paterson, New Jersey, as John and Martin were growing up. It makes perfect sense then that, eventually, Martin picked up the upright bass professionally and John found his calling with jazz guitar, singing and songwriting.

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Planet Money
3:01 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

Why Legos Are So Expensive — And So Popular

Credit Thomas Samson / Getty Images
Lego minifigures are displayed on October 18, 2012 in the newly-opened store of the Danish construction toys group at the "So Ouest" shopping center in Levallois-Perret, west of Paris.

Originally published on Fri January 11, 2013 10:26 am

I went to Toys R Us recently to buy my son a Lego set for Hanukkah. Did you know a small box of Legos costs $60? Sixty bucks for 102 plastic blocks!

In fact, I learned, Lego sets can sell for thousands of dollars. And despite these prices, Lego has about 70 percent of the construction-toy market. Why? Why doesn't some competitor sell plastic blocks for less? Lego's patents expired a while ago. How hard could it be to make a cheap knockoff?

Luke, a 9-year-old Lego expert, set me straight.

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Shots - Health News
2:33 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

We're Living Longer, But Not All That Healthier

Originally published on Thu December 13, 2012 4:52 pm

People around the world are living longer than they did two decades ago, but many people aren't very healthy during those extra years.

That's a key finding from a large-scale study estimating what makes people sick worldwide.

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Africa
2:04 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

Options For Intervention In Mali's Growing Crisis

Originally published on Thu December 13, 2012 2:13 pm

A military coup brought down Mali's prime minister in March, allowing radical Islamists from Mali and surrounding areas to take hold of an area the size of Texas. As al-Qaida-linked militants take over the northern part of the country, many wonder what the U.S. and other can do to intervene.

Environment
1:58 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

Drought Continues: Farmers, Shippers Feel Pressure

Originally published on Thu December 13, 2012 2:17 pm

Transcript

NEAL CONAN, HOST:

This is TALK OF THE NATION. I'm Neal Conan in Washington. We're in the worst drought since the 1950s, according to NOAA, and while we associated extended dry spells with summer, conditions out west have remained unchanged since the warm weather ended.

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Sports
1:58 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

NCAA Shake-Up: The Future Of College Athletics

Originally published on Thu December 13, 2012 2:15 pm

In 2013 and 2014, there will be a number of substantial realignments in the NCAA conferences. Some believe that the realignment process will ultimately result in the creation of four "super conferences." NPR's Mike Pesca talks about how conference shifts could effect the future of college athletics.

The Two-Way
1:17 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

Sales Soar In Gaza Of Fragrance Named For Rocket Fired At Israel

Credit Ashraf Amra / APA /Landov
Bottles of M75 on sale at a shop in Gaza City. The fragrance is named for the rockets fired from Gaza into Israel.

Originally published on Sun December 16, 2012 8:50 am

Before anyone else does, we'll make the "I love the smell of napalm in the morning" reference that comes to mind when you read this:

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Best Books Of 2012
1:06 pm
Thu December 13, 2012

10 Books To Help You Recover From A Tense 2012

Credit Nishant Choksi

Originally published on Thu December 13, 2012 2:48 pm

2012 has been a very jittery year — what with the presidential election, extreme weather events and the looming "fiscal cliff." In response to these tense times, some readers seek out escape; others look to literature that directly confronts the atmospheric uncertainty of the age. I guess I'm in the latter camp, because many of my favorite books this year told stories, imagined and real, about ordinary people who felt like they didn't have a clue what hit 'em.

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