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Around the Nation
4:00 am
Mon February 6, 2012

Corn Storage Helps Farmers In Commodities Market

Across the corn belt, more farmers are putting up their own grain bins. In the past year alone, farmers nationwide have added some 300 million bushels of on-farm storage. By storing their own grain, farmers can choose when and at what price they want to sell, and that can translate into thousands of dollars in profit. And this has grain buyers — like grain elevators and ethanol plants --working to keep their edge in the market. Kathleen Masterson of Harvest Public Media reports.

Middle East
4:00 am
Mon February 6, 2012

Syrian Troops Strike Neighborhoods In Homs

Originally published on Mon February 6, 2012 6:56 am

Transcript

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

This is MORNING EDITION, from NPR News. I'm Renee Montagne.

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

And I'm Steve Inskeep. Good morning. Here's the latest on the crisis in Syria. The U.S. State Department says it has closed the U.S. Embassy in Damascus, and evacuated its diplomats. The U.S. also issued a warning for all American citizens to leave the country immediately. A State Department spokewoman says the embassy was shut because of concerns that it's not sufficiently protected from armed attack.

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Sports
4:00 am
Mon February 6, 2012

Giants Tower Over Patriots As Super Bowl Champs

The New York Giants came back with a last-minute score to beat the New England Patriots 21-17 Sunday night for New York's fourth Super Bowl title. It was a rematch of the 2008 NFL championship, when Eli Manning led New York past New England to ruin the Patriots' bid for a perfect season.

U.S.
3:25 am
Mon February 6, 2012

Unions Create TV Ad To Appeal To Young People

The Salt
12:01 am
Mon February 6, 2012

California's Stevia Growers Bet On Fast Track To Sweetener Success

Credit Dan Charles / NPR
The S&W Seed Co., in Five Points, Calif., will grow these seedlings of zero-calorie stevia in the fields of California's Central Valley.

Originally published on Mon February 6, 2012 3:23 am

It's stevia time!

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Shots - Health Blog
12:01 am
Mon February 6, 2012

The 'Morning After' Pill: How It Works And Who Uses It

Credit AP
Plan B is available over the counter for people 17 and older.

Originally published on Thu February 14, 2013 11:52 am

Access to emergency contraception has swirled at the center of a recent flurry of debate over insurance coverage. It's a pill women can take if their birth control fails or they forget to use it.

The most popular brand of emergency contraception is called "Plan B One-Step." You might better know it as the morning-after pill. Today, about 10 percent of sexually active women say they've used it.

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Your Money
12:01 am
Mon February 6, 2012

In Idaho, Two Workers Take Jobs, And Hope For Best

Credit Molly Messick / StateImpact Idaho
When he was laid off in 2008., Nathan Bussey had been working for Hewlett-Packard for just under 10 years. He's now hoping to advance in his new job at a call center.

Originally published on Mon February 6, 2012 1:11 pm

StateImpact Idaho's Molly Messick reports on two people coping with the lingering effects of an economic downturn.

Before the recession, Idaho had one of the fastest growing economies in the country. But last year, its jobless rate peaked at nearly 10 percent. That number has begun to creep downward – but many workers in the state are still struggling to replace the jobs they've lost.

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Shots - Health Blog
12:01 am
Mon February 6, 2012

What Spermicide Users Should Know, But Often Don't

Credit Gretchen Cuda Kroen / For NPR
Many over-the-counter contraceptives contain a spermicide known as nonoxynol-9.

When Lisa Rentz decided she'd had enough of birth control pills, she walked into her local drug store and picked up something different: a vaginal contraceptive film that contains the spermicide nonoxynol-9, or n-9.

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Music Interviews
12:01 am
Mon February 6, 2012

Songs To Spin To, From A Fitness Guru

For the latest installment of The Ultimate NPR Workout Mix, Morning Edition reached out to someone who makes workout mixes for a living.

Justin Rubin teaches spin classes at Equinox Fitness in Los Angeles, where dozens of riders fill a dark room, pedaling against varying resistance levels on stationary bikes. Riders reserve their bikes online 26 hours before a class, and the bikes for Rubin's class are gone within minutes. The key to his popularity: People love his music.

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Economy
5:39 pm
Sun February 5, 2012

Stopping The 'Brain Drain' Of The U.S. Economy

Credit Mary Altaffer / AP
Recent surveys show that a large percentage of graduates from the nation's top schools are taking jobs in consulting or financial sector.

Yale University student Marina Keegan received an email last May from Bridgewater Associates, one of the world's largest hedge funds, offering her $100 if she said why she didn't apply for a summer internship.

Keegan, an English major, decided to take Bridgewater up on its offer.

"It was only sort of once I was inside the room when I realized ... maybe I'm helping them perfect their recruiting machine, which is exactly what we were doing," Keegan tells weekends on All Things Considered host Guy Raz.

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