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The Two-Way
9:16 am
Fri May 24, 2013

British Soldier Hacked To Death Was 'Our Hero,' Family Says

Credit Dave Thompson / Reuters /Landov
As Ian Rigby spoke Friday about his stepson Lee, a British soldier who was murdered on a south London street this week, the young man's widow Rebecca (right) and his mother Lyn (left) reached out.
The Two-Way
8:34 am
Fri May 24, 2013

Developing: Explosion, Gunfire In Kabul

Credit Omar Sobhani / Reuters /Landov
A wounded Afghan police officer is helped from the scene of Friday's explosion and gunfire in Kabul.

Originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 9:53 am

  • NPR's Sean Carberry, reporting from Kabul

There's been an explosion followed by the sound of gunfire in Kabul, NPR's Sean Carberry and other journalists report from the Afghan capital.

Reuters reports that the explosion occurred "at about 4 p.m. local time in a downtown district. ... There was no word on any casualties." The BBC says gunfire can be heard near the headquarters of the Afghan intelligence service.

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The Two-Way
8:13 am
Fri May 24, 2013

Assad Regime Agrees To Attend Peace Conference, Russia Says

Originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 10:05 am

Representatives of President Bashar Assad's regime have agreed "in principle" to attend an international peace conference aimed at ending more than two years of brutal warfare in Syria, Russia's foreign ministry said Friday.

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The Deadly Tornado In Moore, Okla.
8:01 am
Fri May 24, 2013

Community Surprised Okla. Tornado Death Toll Wasn't Higher

Credit Katie Hayes Luke for NPR
Marc Austin monitors radar and issues warnings at the National Weather Center in Norman, Okla., on Thursday.

Originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 9:58 am

Monday's tornado in Moore, Okla., killed 24 people and caused an estimated $2.2 billion worth of damage. As the community reflects on what happened, one question is: How did so many manage to survive such devastating destruction?

Lifelong Oklahoman Kristi Freeman has seen her share of tornadoes, but she says the twister that tore through her neighborhood Monday was something else.

"This tornado was like a monster. It was like something that was alive. It destroyed your peace, your comfort," she says.

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The Two-Way
7:39 am
Fri May 24, 2013

Tornado In Moore, Okla.: Friday's Developments

Credit Lucas Jackson / Reuters /Landov
Rita Green carried a plastic bin of items as she helped a family friend salvage things from a home Thursday in Moore, Okla.

Originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 9:28 am

As the residents of Moore, Okla., and surrounding communities continue to recover from Monday's devastating tornado that killed at least 24 people and injured more than 375, we're keeping an eye on the news from there:

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The Two-Way
7:32 am
Fri May 24, 2013

Book News: Judge's Comments Bruising To Apple's Price-Fixing Case

Credit Justin Sullivan / Getty Images
A person walks by an Apple Store on April 23, 2013 in San Francisco, California.

The daily lowdown on books, publishing, and the occasional author behaving badly.

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The Two-Way
7:03 am
Fri May 24, 2013

'White Flash And Cold Water' After Bridge Collapse In Wash.

Credit Dan Levine / EPA /LANDOV
The scene near Mount Vernon, Wash., Thursday evening after part of an Interstate-5 bridge collapsed into the Skagit River.

Originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 8:55 am

Miracle is the word that comes to Dan Sligh's mind after he and his wife, Sally, survived a plunge off a highway bridge in Washington State on Thursday evening.

Sligh tells The Seattle Times that they were driving on Interstate 5 near Mount Vernon, Wash., around 7 p.m. local time when he saw a truck carrying a heavy load strike the southbound side of a bridge over the Skagit River. Moments later, a long chunk of the bridge collapsed into the river.

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Parallels
4:11 am
Fri May 24, 2013

China's Air Pollution: Is The Government Willing To Act?

Originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 8:40 am

Denise Mauzerall arrived in Beijing this year at a time that was both horrifying and illuminating. The capital was facing some of its worst pollution in recent memory, and Mauzerall, a Princeton environmental engineering professor, was passing through on her way to a university forum on the future of cities.

"I took the fast train from Beijing to Shanghai, and looking out the window for large sections of that trip, you couldn't see more than 20 feet," Mauzerall recalled.

To Mauzerall, the lesson was both surprising and inescapable.

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Planet Money
3:18 am
Fri May 24, 2013

Can This Man Bring Silicon Valley To Yangon?

Originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 9:29 am

Like a proud father, Nay Aung opens up his MacBook Air to show me the Myanmar travel website he has built. But we wait 30 seconds for the site to load, and nothing happens.

"Today is a particularly bad day for Internet," he says. This is life in Myanmar today: Even an Internet entrepreneur can't always get online.

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StoryCorps
2:46 am
Fri May 24, 2013

Military Moms: A Bond Borne From Shared Loss

Originally published on Fri May 24, 2013 8:22 am

In 1991, Kentucky residents Sally Edwards and Lue Hutchinson had sons serving in the Gulf War. Sally's son, Jack, was a Marine captain. Lue's son, Tom Butts, was a staff sergeant in the Army. The two men never knew each other, but today, their mothers are best friends.

Both soldiers were killed in February of 1991. Jack was 34. "They were the cover for a medical mission. The helicopter lost its top rotor blade, and they didn't make it back," Sally says.

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