2:23pm

Mon February 6, 2012
It's All Politics

Fight For GOP Soul, SuperPACs Spur Negative Political Ad Explosion

Anyone already fatigued from the high rate of negative political ads on TV and radio may want to turn off all their electronics until after Election Day.

Because there's room for it to get significantly worse, Vanderbilt University political scientist John Geer told All Things Considered co-host Audie Cornish Monday.

Read more

1:46pm

Mon February 6, 2012
The Picture Show

'Boxing Is The Love Of My Life': A Woman Fights For A Shot At Gold

Originally published on Wed May 23, 2012 8:02 am

Credit Sue Jaye Johnson /
  • Hear Marianne McCune's Report On 'All Things Considered'

When she was 16, Tyrieshia Douglas was arrested for street fighting. As she remembers it, her juvenile court judge recommended she take up boxing. Now she's a 23-year-old living in Baltimore with her heart set on winning one of the first gold medals in women's boxing, a sport that will make its Olympic debut this summer.

Read more

1:40pm

Mon February 6, 2012
Middle East

U.S. Aid At Risk As Egypt Targets Democracy Groups

Credit Mohammed Asad / AP

In a rapidly escalating dispute between allies, 43 people, including 19 Americans, are to face trial in Egypt for their work in promoting democracy. They include the son of U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood.

Sam LaHood was running the Cairo office of the International Republican Institute. The case against him and others has caused a furious reaction in Washington — with lawmakers threatening to hold up U.S. aid to Egypt.

Read more

1:19pm

Mon February 6, 2012
All Tech Considered

Where Eye Care Is A Luxury, Technology Offers Access

For millions of people in the developing world, one thing stands between them and a job or an education: a good pair of glasses. Quality eye care is often a luxury in areas where health services are scarce. So researchers and entrepreneurs are looking for breakthrough technologies to bring the cost of glasses and eye exams way down.

Read more

1:13pm

Mon February 6, 2012
Latin America

U.S. Travel To Cuba Grows As Restrictions Are Eased

Credit Grand Circle Foundation / PRNewsFoto

Cuba is the only country in the world the U.S. government restricts its own citizens from visiting. Americans can go to Burma, Iran, even North Korea if those places give them a visa.

The Obama administration has now relaxed travel rules for Cuba, leading to a surge in U.S.-government approved tours to the island. But in the U.S., some lawmakers staunchly opposed to the Castro government say the travel programs are filled with heavy doses of propaganda.

Read more

1:10pm

Mon February 6, 2012
Around the Nation

Helicopter Parents Hover In The Workplace

Credit Images Bazaar / Getty Images

So-called helicopter parents first made headlines on college campuses a few years ago, when they began trying to direct everything from their children's course schedules to which roommate they were assigned.

With millennial children now in their 20s, more helicopter parents are showing up in the workplace, sometimes even phoning human resources managers to advocate on their child's behalf.

Megan Huffnagle, a former human resources manager at a Denver theme park, recalls being shocked several years ago when she received a call from a young job applicant's mother.

Read more

1:00pm

Mon February 6, 2012
The Salt

In Indianapolis, Super Bowl Leftovers Are All Gone (To The Hungry)

Credit JOHN BERRY / The Post-Standard /Landov

The Super Bowl party is over, and that means refrigerators around the country today are jammed with uneaten Frito pies, fried chicken, and seven-layer dips – remnants of one of the most gluttonous days of the year.

Read more

12:59pm

Mon February 6, 2012
The Two-Way

In New Book, Former White House Intern Details Her Alleged Affair With JFK

Originally published on Mon February 6, 2012 1:04 pm

Credit Screenshot / NBC News

The New York Post has gotten their hands on a new memoir from a woman called Mimi Alford in which the now 68-year-old grandmother details an 18-month affair with President John F. Kennedy.

Read more

12:33pm

Mon February 6, 2012
Shots - Health Blog

Quelling Violence Sparked By A Baby's Cry

Credit iStockphoto.com

No parent holds a new baby and thinks that within a year they will have seriously injured or even killed that child. Or that the violence could be sparked by something as common as a baby's cry.

But each year, more than 4,000 young children are hospitalized because they've been seriously injured, usually by a parent, and about 300 die. Babies under age 1 are the most likely victims, according to a study in the journal Pediatrics.

Read more

12:20pm

Mon February 6, 2012
Economy/Labor/Biz

Credit union serves Oakland's "unbanked" population

Credit www.pcpfcu.org

The main room of the People's Federal Credit Union (PFCU) is across the street from the West Oakland BART station. It's about the size of a modest living room. A few bank tellers are behind thick glass. A big sign on the wall announces “4,000 Members” in green lettering. This is where Sayala Eisner-Mix, the Community Programs Coordinator of PFCU works. She's about to begin a credit report review, her third one today.

Read more

Pages