TED Radio Hour

Dan Pallotta: Do We Have The Wrong Idea About Charity?()  

May 17, 2013 Activist and fundraiser Dan Pallotta calls out the double standard that drives our broken relationship to charities. Instead of equating frugality with morality, he asks us to start rewarding charities for their big goals and accomplishments.

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On TED Radio HourPlaylist

The Two-Way

Book News: Amazon May Be Called Before Parliament Over Taxes ()  

Amazon's U.K. unit racked up sales of $6.5 billion last year, but only paid $3.7 million in corporate taxes.

May 17, 2013 Also: AARP and The Nation join a growing list of ebook publishers; Hilary Mantel on Jane Austen; Anne Applebaum on Sheryl Sandberg.

Summary

Planet Money

Demand For Ammunition Is Up. Why Aren't Prices?()  

"We're going to keep prices as fair as we possibly can," says Bob Viden of Bob's Little Sport Shop in southern New Jersey.

May 17, 2013 Demand increased recently, leading to widespread shortages. An economics textbook would say ammo sellers should have raised prices rather than have empty shelves. But that hasn't happened.

Transcript

On Morning EditionPlaylist

The Salt

Congress: Where Food Reforms Go To Die?()  

The U.S. Capitol building

May 16, 2013 As Congress gets to work on the farm bill, two common-sense, bipartisan reform measures seem to have gotten run over somewhere along the way. The first would set minimum standards for housing egg-laying chickens. The second sought to change how the U.S. provides food aid to people in foreign nations.

Summary

The Salt

No More Smuggling: Many Cured Italian Meats Coming To America()  

Even Sophia Loren felt compelled to smuggle mortadella, despite a U.S. ban — well, her character did, anyway, in the 1971 film Lady Liberty.

May 16, 2013 Culatello. Capocollo. Sopressata. It will soon be legal to import a whole new world of Italian cured pork products, thanks to the USDA's decision to end a decades-long ban. Every Italian region and province, and even many towns have their own distinctive salumi.

Summary

A 'Wake-Up Call' To Protect Vulnerable Workers From Abuse()  

For decades, Hill County Farms, also known as Henry's Turkey Service, housed a group of mentally disabled men in squalor in this former schoolhouse in Atalissa, Iowa. The EEOC won a judgment against the company for exploiting the men.

May 16, 2013 For decades, a turkey-processing company housed intellectually disabled men in squalid conditions, subjecting them to physical and emotional abuse while paying them $2 per day. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission recently won a huge judgment against the company.

Transcript

On All Things ConsideredPlaylist

Parallels

Underground Tunnels Feed Gaza's Hankering For KFC()  

KFC is delivered in one of the many underground smuggling tunnels connecting Egypt to the Gaza Strip city of Rafah.

May 16, 2013 Gaza Strip residents rely heavily on smuggling tunnels to Egypt. Among many other goods, the passageways are reportedly bringing regular deliveries of fast food.

Summary

The Two-Way

U.S. Airlines Forecast A Sunnier Summer()  

More passengers are expected to fly on U.S. airlines this summer, an industry group said Thursday.

May 16, 2013 The number of passengers planning to fly this summer will rise 1 percent from 2012, climbing back to the highest level since 2008, an industry group said Thursday. After years of instability, airlines welcome an easing in jet fuel prices. Even customers' complaints are quieting down.

Summary

Your Money

The Tricky Business Of Retirement: Hidden 401(K) Fees ()  

Retirement savings

May 16, 2013 You could end up with a lot less savings at 65 than you ever anticipated because of fees charged by the financial institutions managing your retirement accounts. Robert Hiltonsmith, who researches retirement security, says those fees were disclosed to 401(k) plan participants until only recently.

Transcript

On Fresh Air from WHYYPlaylist

All Tech Considered

Google's Privacy Shift Powers New Customized Maps()  

The new Google Maps features tailor-made results based on users' habits and search histories.

May 16, 2013 The new Google Maps features tailor-made results based on users' habits and search histories. The features were made possible by the revisions Google made to its privacy policies last year, a change that removed most of the barriers between its various services.

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