NPR News

Pages

The Two-Way
2:49 pm
Fri February 10, 2012

U.S. Says Satellite Images Show Weaponry Syria Is Using Against Civilians

Credit U.S. State Department
A satellite image taken Feb. 6.

The United States has declassified a series of satellite images it says show the kinds of weaponry the Syrian regime is using against its own people.

The first image was released on the Facebook page of the U.S. Embassy in Damascus. It was accompanied by a note from Embassador Robert Ford, who in the past has taken to Facebook to criticize the regime of President Bashar Assad.

Read more
Music Interviews
2:02 pm
Fri February 10, 2012

An Understudy Turned Star Shines On The Met Stage

Credit Ken Howard / Metropolitan Opera
Jay Hunter Morris has received glowing reviews for his role as Siegfried in the Metropolitan Opera's most recent production of Wagner's Ring Cycle.

Siegfried is a Norse hero, and one of the most demanding roles in all of opera. He slays dragons and has to sing about it — in Gotterdammerung, The Twilight of the Gods, the last opera in Wagner's Ring Cycle.

Read more
Animals
1:53 pm
Fri February 10, 2012

Return Of Gray Wolves Renews Debate Over Hunting

Credit MacNeill Lyons/National Park Service / AP
File - This undated file image provided by Yellowstone National Park, Mont., shows a gray wolf in the wild. Yellowstone National Park officials say restrictions on hunting in portions of Montana has protected the park's wolves from a repeat of a 2009 hunt in which four Yellowstone wolves were shot.

Gray wolves were taken off the endangered species list in Idaho and Montana last year and put under state control. But they're still on the list in neighboring Wyoming. That's because Wyoming has been the most aggressive about wanting to kill wolves.

Wyoming has finally struck a deal with the federal government for how wolves will be treated once the state takes over. But environmentalists believe the agreement denies wolves an important refuge.

Read more
Politics
1:50 pm
Fri February 10, 2012

On The Trail, Romney Avoids His French Connection

Credit JH / AP
Mitt Romney with his then fiancee, Ann (right), and Romney's parents, in Washington, D.C., in 1969. Romney had returned from Mormon missionary work in France the previous year.

Mitt Romney waxed eloquent in French as he promoted the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, calling the two years he spent as a young man in France an "enriching experience."

But now that he's running for president of the United States, Romney doesn't talk a lot about his time as a Mormon missionary in France.

"Voilà," says Philippe Brillaut, as he points to the site of what would be France's first Mormon temple.

Read more
Business
1:49 pm
Fri February 10, 2012

Angel Investors And Startups Mingle In Milwaukee

Credit Jeff Fitzsimmons / HarQen
HarQen CEO Kelly Fitzsimmons delivers a presentation to Silicon Pastures, a Milwaukee-based angel investment group that has already put more than $1 million into her company.

Thirty-five well-dressed men and women are sipping wine and chatting in the lounge of one of Milwaukee's oldest and most exclusive social clubs. A century ago, this is where the city's beer and banking giants mixed and mingled. Tonight's crowd isn't all that different — many of these men and women are worth at least a million dollars. Once a month, they pool their money to invest in high-tech, fast-growth startups. They call themselves the Silicon Pastures Angel Investment Network.

Read more

Pages