NPR Story
10:56 am
Mon April 9, 2012

'Damn Yankees' Loved And Hated For More Than Sport

Credit Rob Carr / Getty Images
A New York Yankees hat and glove rest in the dugout before a game at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.

The New York Yankees may be the most polarizing team in the U.S. In a new collection, Damn Yankees: Twenty-Four Major League Writers on the World's Most Loved (and Hated) Team, writers share the stories behind their passions.

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The Salt
10:42 am
Mon April 9, 2012

Fast Food Chains In Cafeterias Put Hospitals In A Bind

Credit Tony Dejak / AP
The McDonald's inside the Cleveland Clinic, 2004, in Cleveland.

On one side of a wall inside the Truman Medical Center cafeteria in Kansas City, Missouri, the menu features low-calorie, low-fat and low-sodium meals. On the other side of the wall is a McDonald's, featuring hamburgers and french fries.

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The Two-Way
10:30 am
Mon April 9, 2012

Facebook Is Buying Instagram

"I'm excited to share the news that we've agreed to acquire Instagram and that their talented team will be joining Facebook," Mark Zuckerberg just announced.

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Asia
10:00 am
Mon April 9, 2012

Change Moves Quickly In Myanmar

Transcript

NEAL CONAN, HOST:

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Music For Special Occasions
10:00 am
Mon April 9, 2012

Music For Anniversaries

Opinion
10:00 am
Mon April 9, 2012

Op-Ed: Court's Ruling Enables Homeless People

In 2011, a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction banning Los Angeles police from confiscating and destroying the belongings of homeless people on Skid Row. In the Los Angeles Times, Carol Schatz argues that the ruling, intended to protect the homeless, puts them in greater danger.

Around the Nation
10:00 am
Mon April 9, 2012

What Makes Neighborhood Watches Work

There is some evidence to suggest that citizens monitoring their communities can reduce crime. But the Trayvon Martin shooting focused new attention on neighborhood watch programs. Many neighborhoods have them, but the Martin case has brought questions about what they can and can't do to the fore.

Music Interviews
9:44 am
Mon April 9, 2012

Adam Cohen: On Intimacy, Antagonism And Influence

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Adam Cohen says he's proud to be the son of singer Leonard Cohen.

During the course of his career, singer-songwriter Adam Cohen says he has twisted himself into creating commercially successful music — but not this record, not this song. "What Other Guy," from his third album Like A Man, didn't seem likely to generate mainstream popularity. And yet it did, more than any other song he has ever recorded.

The son of iconic singer Leonard Cohen, Adam Cohen says his latest record is a celebration and demonstration of his father's influence on his music.

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Music Reviews
9:28 am
Mon April 9, 2012

The Toure-Raichel Collective: A Collaboration By Accident

Credit Nitzan Treystman
Vieux Farka Toure (left) and Idan Raichel, collaborating as The Toure-Raichel Collective, released The Tel-Aviv Session on March 26.

Originally published on Mon April 9, 2012 2:14 pm

Idan Raichel is one of Israel's top-selling pop musicians. Vieux Farka Toure is a virtuoso guitarist from Mali. The two met by chance in a German airport, and when Toure played a concert in Tel Aviv, Raichel sat in. He enjoyed himself so much that he invited Toure and two other musicians to come to a studio the next day and jam. The music they created is now an album called The Tel Aviv Session.

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The Two-Way
9:18 am
Mon April 9, 2012

Trayvon Martin Prosecutor: Investigation Continues, No Grand Jury

Originally published on Mon April 9, 2012 10:53 am

The special prosecutor investigating the Feb. 26 shooting death of Florida teen Trayvon Martin announced this morning she will not be taking the case to a grand jury this week.

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