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  • For 20 years the stadium was called Heinz Field and giant Heinz Ketchup bottles framed the scoreboard. But naming rights expired, and those bottles loved by Steelers fans are being removed.
  • Some folks who planned to buy a home this spring have changed their plans, citing political and economic uncertainty.
  • The body of Massachusetts Democratic Sen. Edward Kennedy made its way Thursday from Hyannis to Boston. It will lie in repose at the JFK Library in Boston until a weekend funeral.
  • On average, single-family house prices have risen 50 percent nationwide over the past five years. That's meant record profits for homebuilders, even as some economists warn that price increases are not sustainable.
  • If you sit too much during middle age — at work and at home — your ability to exercise or even walk in late decades is at risk, research hints. And, of course, your risk of heart disease climbs, too.
  • Two days after India orders five Pakistani officials out of the country, Pakistan retaliates and expels five Indian diplomats. India accuses the Pakistani officials of funneling money to separatists in Indian Kashmir, but Pakistan denies the accusations. Hear NPR's Michael Sullivan.
  • Correction: A previous version of this story incorrectly named Kenzie House as Sober Beginning's third sober home. Kacy Keith and Traci Jordan recently…
  • Grand Isle, a narrow island south of New Orleans, is under constant threat from hurricanes. And like Louisiana's other barrier islands, it will eventually erode away. But longtime resident Ambrose Besson says he'll never leave. Journalist Jake Halpern talks to Besson in the last of his Braving Home series.
  • In a StoryCorps conversation recorded in 2018, Roman Coley Davis tells a friend about how a surprise package brought him comfort when the loneliness of war began to seep in.
  • Ballet dancer Carlos Acosta is known for powerful leaps that make him seem to fly. Those leaps have earned him comparisons with Nureyev and Baryshnikov. He grew up in a poor neighborhood outside Havana. How that boy became a man who dances with grace and power is the subject of Acosta's memoir, No Way Home.
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