NPR News

Pages

Music Interviews
3:17 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

Steady Diet Of Everything: The Fugazi Live Vault

Credit Mito Habe-Evans / NPR
Fugazi's Ian MacKaye is releasing every performance his band ever did, and listeners can name their price.

Originally published on Fri August 31, 2012 2:52 pm

When the iconic American punk band Fugazi started playing back in 1987, it started taping, too.

"Our friend Joey Picuri, who was a local sound man — or a fellow who helped do sound for bands — he recorded the shows," Fugazi frontman Ian MacKaye tells NPR's Guy Raz. "He just gave us tapes of our first show, and he gave us a tape of our second show."

Read more
Europe
3:00 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

Sarkozy Lays Foundation For Reshaping The Eurozone

Credit Claude Paris / AP
During a speech delivered Thursday in Toulon, France, French President Nicolas Sarkozy says that he and German Chancellor Angela Merkel will be announcing new measures to guarantee the future of Europe.

In a highly anticipated speech Thursday night, French President Nicolas Sarkozy laid the groundwork for tighter French-German cooperation.

He made an ambitious call for a re-write of European treaties, but his speech — billed as his last-ditch plan to save the euro — offered no concrete emergency measures to contain Europe's debt crisis.

Read more
The Two-Way
2:55 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

Senator Seeks Answers About Phone Logging Software

Credit screenshot / YouTube
A screenshot showing CarrierIQ in action.

Yesterday, we reported about the tempest brewing about Carrier IQ, a secret software a researcher says has been installed on millions of phones and is capable of logging websites a user visits, the contents of voice and text messages and even the content of online searches.

Today Sen. Al Franken, a Democrat for Minnesotta, sent a letter to the company asking for a detailed explanation of the kind of information the company's software logs.

Read more
Asia
2:52 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

In South Korea, Old Law Leads To New Crackdown

Park Jong-kun's Twitter profile picture shows him inspecting a bottle of Johnnie Walker whisky against a backdrop of the North Korean flag.

The 24-year-old South Korean photographer thought it would be funny, a visual parody of North Korea's news programs. But it turns out this profile picture could violate South Korea's strict six-decade-old National Security Law, which punishes those who "praise, disseminate or cooperate with anti-state groups" if such acts endanger democracy and national security.

Read more
NPR Story
2:49 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

Branson: It's Time To Re-Think 'Business As Usual'

Credit Clare Brown /
Richard Branson has attempted to break several world records for sailing and ballooning.

Originally published on Thu December 1, 2011 2:31 pm

Richard Branson built a global business empire with the philosophy "have fun and the money will come."

As the founder of Virgin Group, he built a mail-order record company into a major record label and a chain of record stores, started an airline, created a space tourism company, and has been actively involved in humanitarian efforts.

Read more
Opinion
2:32 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

Not Quite Norman: Living Up To A Literary Legacy

Alex Gilvarry is the author of the forthcoming novel, From the Memoirs of a Non-Enemy Combatant.

Read more
Planet Money
2:12 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

A European Solution Germany Can Feel Good About

Credit Chris Ratcliffe / Getty Images
German Chancellor Angela Merkel speaks with Mario Draghi, president of the European Central Bank, on the second day of the G20 Summit in France.

There are basically two solutions to the European debt crisis. One, someone can show up with really deep pockets and bail out all the countries. Or, two, the European Central Bank can create a bunch of money and loan it to the countries who need it. The problem is there's a barrier blocking both these potential solutions — a certain European country known for its beer and brats: Germany.

Read more
The Two-Way
2:05 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

Dog Shoots Man: Butt, And Pride, Injured

Credit Sandra Mu / Getty Images
It's best to keep this out of Rover's paws.

We're a day late, but some stories just beg to be passed along:

"Utah Duck Hunter Shot In Buttocks By His Dog." (The Salt Lake Tribune)

It seems two guys and a dog were out hunting on Sunday. One man was in their boat with the canine. A loaded shotgun was lying across the bow pointed toward the other guy, who was in the water. Fido got excited, stepped on the gun and ... a little while later doctors were plucking 27 pieces of birdshot out of a butt.

Read more
The Two-Way
1:27 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

U.N. Says Death Toll In Syria Has Surpassed 4,000

Despite international condemnation and tough sanctions from the Arab League, the government of Syrian President Bashar Assad has continued clashing with protesters.

The United Nation's top human rights official said today that the death toll during the eight-month conflict has reached at least 4,000 and he characterized the conflict as a civil war.

The AP reports:

Read more
The Two-Way
1:25 pm
Thu December 1, 2011

Afghan Rape Victim Pardoned After Agreeing To Marry Her Attacker

Credit Shah Marai / AFP/Getty Images
For many women in Afghanistan, life has not changed significantly in the 10 years since the fall of the Taliban.

An Afghan woman who was sentenced to prison after being raped by a relative — because in the eyes of authorities she had committed adultery — has been pardoned by President Hamid Karzai.

But her freedom comes with a price, according to news reports: She must become the second wife of the man who attacked her. Karzai's office says the woman and her attacker both have agreed to the marriage.

Read more

Pages