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3:00 am
Mon November 14, 2011

Politics In The News

Originally published on Mon November 14, 2011 5:57 am

Transcript

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

And as Ari said just a moment ago, President Obama will be back in Washington just before that supercommittee's deadline. Before the president left for Hawaii, he picked up the phone and made calls to both the Democratic and Republican chairs of the group.

To talk about that and more, let's turn now to NPR's Cokie Roberts. Good morning.

COKIE ROBERTS, BYLINE: Hi, Renee.

MONTAGNE: Let's start with what those phone calls were about.

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Shots - Health Blog
2:26 am
Mon November 14, 2011

Why Doctors And Patients Talk Around Our Growing Waistlines

Originally published on Tue November 15, 2011 12:07 pm

Part of an ongoing series on obesity in America

OK, so you're overweight. So are two-thirds of all Americans. Maybe you need a nudge to get going on a diet and exercise plan. Maybe you've thought about talking with your doctor about weight-loss strategies. Well, a number of studies suggest you're probably not getting the advice you need.

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Monkey See
12:00 am
Mon November 14, 2011

Networks Add New Twists To Old Formulas, But Few Are Succeeding

Credit Scott Green / NBC
Russell Hornsby as Hank Griffin and David Giuntoli as Nick Burkhardt on NBC's Grimm.

Here's the problem with watching TV after 50 years of innovation in technology and storytelling: Sometimes, it takes an awful lot to get your attention.

How else to explain NBC's Grimm, which is a typical crime-of-the-week drama with a special twist: The hero cop can see fairy-tale villains disguised as ordinary people. Our hero, Det. Nick Burkhardt, learns about his new talent from his dying aunt, who tells him of "reapers," an organization that's dedicated to killing "Grimms" like him.

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Monkey See
11:01 pm
Sun November 13, 2011

Holiday Video Game Preview: Beyond 'Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 3'

Credit Sony

Earlier in the year when there was a paucity of great videogames, critics and players alike took time to savor games like L.A. Noire and Deus Ex: Human Revolution. That was then. In the fall, games come out with more alacrity than the speedy conveyor belt of chocolates in that iconic I Love Lucy Switching Jobs episode. More than two thirds of the year's games hit shelves between Labor Day and Thanksgiving. Here are some of the best.

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3
Activision for Nintendo DS, Xbox 360, PC, PlayStation 3, Wii
Rated M for Mature

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Conflict In Libya
11:01 pm
Sun November 13, 2011

Libya's Economy Faces New Tests After Gadhafi Era

Originally published on Mon November 14, 2011 2:24 am

Some Americans are old enough to remember pulling up to the pump at gas stations advertising fuel in cents per gallon, not dollars. For many Libyans, that's the way it has always been and should continue to be in this sparsely populated oil-producing country.

At a Tripoli gas station on a recent afternoon, popular opinion among local Libyans appears to be that the government would keep the prices low, around 60 cents a gallon, or bring them down even further.

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Europe
11:01 pm
Sun November 13, 2011

Carlos The Jackal: On Trial Again, And Still Defiant

Credit Michel Lipchitz / AP
Carlos the Jackal, whose real name is Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, sits in a Paris courtroom in 2000 with his French lawyer Isabelle Coutant-Peyre, who later became his wife. Carlos is already serving a life sentence, but is on trial again, charged with terrorist bombings in France in the 1980s.

Carlos the Jackal, the man who sowed fear during the Cold War with terrorist attacks in Europe and the Middle East, has now been in prison for close to two decades.

But he's once again on trial in France, and the case has riveted the country.

French television footage showed Carlos being taken to the Palais de Justice in an armored van guarded by policemen darting about with machine guns. In this case, Carlos is accused of masterminding four bomb attacks in France in the early 1980s that killed 11 people and wounded more than 100.

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Around the Nation
11:01 pm
Sun November 13, 2011

Rhode Island Struggles With Pension Overhaul

Rhode Island has dug its pension system into a big hole: It's $9 billion in the red.

The nation's smallest state doesn't even have half of the money it needs to pay future retirees. Lawmakers are debating a bill to overhaul the entire system. If they do nothing, it's predicted that in seven years, 20 percent of the state budget will be mailed out in pension checks.

There's a slate of reasons why the pension system is in such bad shape.

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The Impact of War
11:01 pm
Sun November 13, 2011

Veterans To Create World's Largest Medical Database

Credit Amy Standen for NPR
Carl Schuler is one of 10,000 vets to have donated blood samples to the Million Veteran Program.

What haunts Carl Schuler about his two tours in Iraq is the fact that he came out of them largely unscathed.

This was not the case for his best friend, who was badly injured when his truck was hit by a roadside bomb.

"You start thinking about, well, how fair is that? You know, here's my best friend, this is how he ends up, 80 percent burns, two members in the vehicle were killed, and here I am in a similar situation, and all of us ended up being OK," Schuler says. "It's a tough thing to deal with."

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Politics
11:01 pm
Sun November 13, 2011

On Capitol Hill, Rand's 'Atlas' Can't Be Shrugged Off

Credit Mark Wilson / Getty Images
The painting of Ayn Rand by Nicholas Gaetano that was used for a U.S. postage stamp.
Politics
5:04 pm
Sun November 13, 2011

Finding The Cure For Pendulum Politics

It should have been a quiet Election Day this year, but two states drew national attention at the polls.

The proposed personhood amendment in Mississippi that would have effectively outlawed abortion was struck down. In Ohio, voters rejected a measure that would have restricted the rights of unions.

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