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Election 2012
3:24 am
Tue December 27, 2011

Rick Santorum Hunts For Iowa's Pheasants, Votes

With just a week until the Republican caucuses, presidential candidate Rick Santorum spent the day in Iowa hunting — for pheasants and votes. Although he's worked hard in Iowa, he's not won over the group he's targeted: social conservatives.

R&B/Soul
1:05 am
Tue December 27, 2011

Anthony Hamilton's Got Something To Prove

Credit Adrian Sidney / Courtesy of the artist.
Anthony Hamilton at the Los Angeles shoot for the video for "Woo" in November.

Originally published on Tue July 24, 2012 10:43 am

As 2011 winds down, Morning Edition is looking at music we missed over the past 12 months. R&B singer Anthony Hamilton is one artist that slipped under our noses; we just missed his album Back To Love, which came out earlier this month. Hamilton's been in the music business for two decades, during which he's had a mostly black audience. Now, with Back To Love, he's gaining even wider appeal.

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Presidential Race
12:01 am
Tue December 27, 2011

Early Florida Primary Could Sow Confusion, Not Clout

Credit Marc Serota / Getty Images
A woman votes in the Jan. 29, 2008, Florida primary in Miami Shores.

Four years ago, Florida played a key role choosing the Republican presidential nominee with a crucial early primary in violation of party rules. Next month, Florida Republicans are poised to do it again — once again breaking rules with an early primary. Only this time, their decision could confuse the race, rather than clarify it.

To understand why political parties set rules for presidential primaries, and why states break those rules, it's helpful to appreciate what it means for the campaigns to descend on a small state like Iowa or New Hampshire.

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Around the Nation
12:01 am
Tue December 27, 2011

Historic Ford Plant Site Likely A Tough Sell

Originally published on Wed May 23, 2012 11:11 am

The Ford Motor Co. recently closed its historic Twin Cities Assembly Plant on a scenic river bluff in St. Paul, Minn. In better times, the parcel of land might have made condo developers drool, but in today's real estate market, redevelopment of the old factory could be a long way off.

The industrial architect Albert Kahn was particularly skilled at making factories blend into their surroundings. The 2-million-square-foot plant has a classical stone facade that flows along the Mississippi River bluff. The red tile roof of its hydroelectric plant glows in the sunlight.

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It Was A Good Year For...
12:01 am
Tue December 27, 2011

In Vermont, Gravel And Road Business Is Up

Federal, state and local spending on roadways is down nearly 6 percent. That's made it a tough year for many in the road-building business — but not in Vermont. There, pavers, excavators and other companies have had one of their busiest years ever, thanks to a storm named Irene.

For the past several months, Steve Wilk and Doug Casella have spent a lot of time in and out of their pickup trucks, checking on their road crews. For a business meeting, they just pull off onto the rocky shoulder to talk about new guardrails and blacktop for a job they're working on.

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Iraq
12:01 am
Tue December 27, 2011

No U.S. Troops, But An Army Of Contractors In Iraq

Credit Lucas Jackson / Reuters/Landov
As many as 5,000 private security contractors will be protecting U.S. diplomats in Iraq. The U.S. Embassy compound (above) and several consulates will have about 15,000 workers, making it the largest diplomatic operation abroad.

The U.S. troops have left Iraq, and U.S. diplomats will now be the face of America in a country that remains extremely volatile.

The U.S. Embassy in Baghdad, along with several consulates, will have some 15,000 workers, making it the largest U.S. diplomatic operation abroad. Those diplomats will be protected by a private army consisting of as many as 5,000 security contractors who will carry assault weapons and fly armed helicopters.

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News
4:15 pm
Mon December 26, 2011

With 'Occupy' Protests, Police Aimed For Restraint

This fall American police were confronted with something they hadn't seen in 40 years: prolonged, simultaneous political protests across the country. In most cities, police showed restraint. But there have been exceptions — sometimes involving copious amounts of pepper spray. Those flashpoints have become a cause for concern.

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Economy
4:00 pm
Mon December 26, 2011

What's Holding Back One 'Job Creator'? Not Taxes

Credit Frank Morris / KCUR
"We've got the space, we have equipment, we've got the cash, we've got the customers, we have the product," says Tim O'Keefe, owner of G.L. Huyett. "We have everything we need — except the people."

There aren't many people on the broad Kansas prairie, but there is industry.

At G.L. Huyett, boxy machines jammed into a big metal building grind steel into heavy transmission parts.

"We're a supplier of last resort," says Tim O'Keefe, who owns the company. If you have disruptions in the supply chain and someone can't meet a shipping time, he says, G.L. Huyett can step in.

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The Record
3:31 pm
Mon December 26, 2011

It Was A Good Year For Swag

Credit Courtesy of the artist.
Lil B.

2011 was a good year for the word "swag". Not trinkets, or party favors, not an acronym for Stuff We All Get, "swag" comes from swagger. This year a term that hip-hop artists have been using for nearly a decade enjoyed a moment in the spotlight.

Copyright 2011 National Public Radio. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

NPR Story
3:00 pm
Mon December 26, 2011

Gingrich And Paul On The Stump

This week in Columbia, S.C., Republican candidate Newt Gingrich proposed what he would do to create jobs, while in Dubuque, Iowa, Ron Paul shared what he would do to fix Washington.

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