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Animals
10:01 pm
Thu December 22, 2011

Myth Busting: The Truth About Animals And Tools

Credit Ben Cranke / Getty Images
A tufted capuchin uses a stone hammer to crack open a nut in Brazil's Parnaiba Headwaters National Park.

Originally published on Fri December 23, 2011 11:28 am

The Record
10:01 pm
Thu December 22, 2011

Austin: The Brooklyn Of The South

Sixth Street in downtown Austin, Texas, is one of the city's premiere live music districts. Guitar-shaped Christmas decorations hang on light poles, and the street is alive with bands and bars. Tonight you can hear ­­­­­­­­Austin Heat at the Thirsty Nickel, Mike Milligan and the Altar Boys at Maggie Mae's, or you could catch Misbehavin' at the Dizzy Rooster.

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Chompsgiving To Chew Year's: Holiday Dishes
10:01 pm
Thu December 22, 2011

When Ambrosia Salad Spells Dread

Part of an ongoing series on unique holiday dishes

Daniel Davis, a tall, thin birch tree of a man, is willing to eat almost anything. Indeed, cooking and eating are two unadulterated pleasures in Dan's life. But he recently revealed to me, his wife, that there is one dish that, as a kid, he actually feared as Christmas drew near: ambrosia salad.

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StoryCorps
8:00 pm
Thu December 22, 2011

A Bowlful Of Memories About A Mama Named Sugar

Everybody loved Cora Lee Collins — known to all, including her children, as Sug.

"Oh, I called her Mama, too, but I called her Sug," her daughter, Penelope Simmons, tells her own daughter, Suzanne Wayne. "When she was a little kid, she would climb up on the kitchen table and eat sugar out of the sugar bowl, and so they started calling her Sugar."

Simmons grew up in Lake Charles, La., with two brothers, Otis and Jamie. "Sug loved us, but she was nowhere near a hovering mother. I mean, we did run wild."

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The Two-Way
4:39 pm
Thu December 22, 2011

Need A Hug? Go To 'The Nicest Place On The Internet'

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