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Author Interviews
1:38 pm
Sun October 7, 2012

The Wild Adventure Continues in 'Under Wildwood'

Originally published on Tue October 9, 2012 1:04 pm

Colin Meloy is best known as the front man for the band the Decemberists. His music is praised for its lyrical quality and the stories the songs tell, so it may not be a surprise to learn Meloy is also a writer.

His newest book is a collaboration with his wife, illustrator Carson Ellis. The book is intended for young readers, the second in a series called Wildwood Chronicles.

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Music Interviews
1:36 pm
Sun October 7, 2012

Anat Cohen Bends The Spectrum On 'Claroscuro'

Credit Courtesy of the artist
Anat Cohen's new album, her sixth as a bandleader, is called Claroscuro.

Originally published on Sun October 7, 2012 3:58 pm

Born in Tel Aviv, Anat Cohen came to New York two decades ago to study the masters of jazz. In so doing, the clarinetist and saxophonist started a bit of a stampede: Today, Israel is exporting some of the most vital jazz out there.

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World
1:22 pm
Sun October 7, 2012

Stateless And Stranded On American Samoa

Credit Courtesy Mikhail Sebastian
Mikhail Sebastian lived in Los Angeles before his fateful trip to American Samoa.

Originally published on Sun October 14, 2012 9:14 am

For many of us, no matter where we go, we'll always have a home. We'll always be from somewhere. But what if that somewhere no longer existed?

That is the strange position in which Mikhail Sebastian finds himself. Officially, he is from nowhere and has nowhere to go. The 39-year-old is stateless and stranded on American Samoa, a U.S. territory in the South Pacific.

Sebastian is an ethnic Armenian born in what is now Azerbaijan, but back then was part of the Soviet Union. When war broke out in the late 1980s, Sebastian says his aunt was stoned to death and he fled.

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It's All Politics
11:35 am
Sun October 7, 2012

What If They Held A Debate And Nobody Won?

Credit Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
President Obama and Republican challenger Mitt Romney greet one another before Wednesday's debate in Denver.

Originally published on Sun October 7, 2012 1:06 pm

For most people reacting to last week's presidential debate, their first thought was probably not about who made the best arguments or told the most truths. Rather it was likely deciding who won.

The answer this time around was unusually definitive: Mitt Romney, by virtually every account and measure.

But in presidential debates — and the vice presidential version, which takes place on Thursday — does there need to be a winner?

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Shots - Health Blog
10:22 am
Sun October 7, 2012

Spinal Surgery Company To Give Tissue Proceeds To Charity

Credit Spinal Elements
The maker of a new product for spine surgeons wants to make a splash by donating proceeds to two charities.

When a California company developed a product to be used in spinal fusion surgeries, the firm's president said he knew it faced a new "ethical dilemma," even noting a recent NPR news investigation questioning the high profits some firms were making from donated human tissue.

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