The Two-Way
11:25 am
Tue January 3, 2012

Body Found On Queen Elizabeth II's Country Estate

Credit Christopher Furlong / Getty Images
Police guard the entrance to woods on Kings Avenue where human remains were found on New Year's Day in King's Lynn, England.

A dog walker found a body on Queen Elizabeth II's Sandringham estate in Norfolk, England. The royals spend the holidays every year on the sprawling, 20,000-acre estate.

The Norfolk Constabulary issued a statement saying the female body was found on Sunday, while the Royals were at home, and that the office has launched a murder investigation.

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The Salt
11:12 am
Tue January 3, 2012

Can We Expect An Organic Milk Shortage In 2012?

Credit Justin Sullivan / Getty Images
A Safeway customer shops for milk in Livermore, Calif.

It's been a tough few months for dairy, with Norway's butter shortage and now an ominous cloud looming over 2012 for some drinkers of organic milk.

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Law
11:00 am
Tue January 3, 2012

Falling Crime Rates Challenge Long-Held Beliefs

Crime rates dropped sharply in the past twenty years, according to FBI data, a trend that continues despite the recession and a recent decrease in prison populations. Criminologists see a clear trend, but can't fully explain what's driving the decline in violent and property crime rates.

From Our Listeners
11:00 am
Tue January 3, 2012

Letters: Lives Lost In 2011 And Farm Work

NPR's Neal Conan reads from Talk of the Nation listener comments on previous show topics, including our annual show remembering remarkable lives lost, and a recent proposal to change the laws governing what work children may do on farms.

Digital Life
11:00 am
Tue January 3, 2012

Facebook's Bejar Takes On Compassion Challenge

When Facebook engineer Arturo Bejar observed users were reporting pictures of themselves, not those with illegal content, he recognized the need for a better way for users to resolve internal conflicts. Bejar talks about how Facebook is trying to encourage compassion in online social interaction.

Your Health
11:00 am
Tue January 3, 2012

In 'The Fat Trap,' Our Bodies Work Against Us

Two-thirds of Americans are overweight. And when many of them try to take off the extra pounds, their bodies fight to stay fat. Tara Parker-Pope, who described "The Fat Trap" in The New York Times Magazine, and Dr. Arthur Frank talk about why some people appear more biologically prone to obesity.

Shots - Health Blog
10:33 am
Tue January 3, 2012

Should Doctors Be 'Parsimonious' About Health Care?

Credit George Peters / iStockphoto.com

A major medical group issued ethical guidelines on Monday that take the provocative position of urging doctors to consider cost-effectiveness when deciding how to treat their patients.

The American College of Physicians, the second-largest U.S. doctors' group after the American Medical Association, included the recommendation in the latest version of its ethics manual, which provides guidance for some 132,000 internists nationwide.

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The Two-Way
10:32 am
Tue January 3, 2012

Report: Panetta To Unveil Defense Cuts This Week

We knew defense cuts were coming, but The New York Times is reporting that Defense Secretary Leon Panetta will unveil $450 billion in cuts this week. With the announcement reports the Times, will also come a new philosophy for the Pentagon.

The Times reports:

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Book Reviews
9:59 am
Tue January 3, 2012

'Diaries' Reveals New York Through The Ages

Credit istockphoto.com
New York Diaries captures impressions of the city from Henry Hudson to the bloggers watching the events of Sept. 11.

Most everyone's spirits are a bit deflated after the holidays. So, as a literary antidote, I recommend a just-published anthology called New York Diaries: 1609 – 2009. Editor Teresa Carpenter has collected four centuries worth of diary excerpts written by people, great and small, who've lived in or just passed through one of the greatest cities in the world.

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It's All Politics
9:59 am
Tue January 3, 2012

Still Alone In New Hampshire, Huntsman Hopes To Pull A 'Santorum'

On the last day he'll have New Hampshire to himself, GOP presidential candidate Jon Huntsman, who bypassed the Iowa caucuses, plans to travel from Pembroke to Peterborough in search of enough votes to break into the top three in next week's Granite State primary.

With his presidential opponents scrambling for last-minute support in advance of Tuesday's Iowa caucuses, Huntsman has been methodically wooing New Hampshire voters in nearly 150 events over the past few weeks.

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