KRCC Newsroom
Image of a radio

Current News from NPR

September 3, 2010 | NPR · Are you really going to have to have a computer chip implanted in your head as part of the new health law? Will the law allow President Obama to create his own private army? While there are outrageous rumors circulating about the health law, some claims are grounded in truth.
 
September 3, 2010 | NPR · This was supposed to be the season the economy heated up, thanks to a wave of public works projects funded by the government's stimulus program. But summer is coming to an end and the recovery has not taken root. Forecasters are expecting another gloomy employment report on Friday.
 
September 3, 2010 | NPR · As a long Congo River barge journey ends, so, too, does a unique glimpse into the heart of a poor but potentially rich nation grappling with conflict. Despite the hardship, the people of the Democratic Republic of the Congo draw great inspiration from the inescapable and mighty river.
 
September 3, 2010 | NPR · The program didn't bring any new buyers into the market, a study found. But it encouraged people who would have bought a car anyway to make their purchase a few months sooner.
 
September 3, 2010 | CPR · Sales in the outdoor gear industry are up more than 8 percent this year, topping retail sales overall. The industry's strength may be due to its consumers' high incomes, but the recession also has more people heading out into the wilderness.
 

Art & Life from NPR

September 3, 2010 | NPR · George Clooney's latest outing showcases a more internal performance -- as an assassin whose personal life threatens to further complicate an already hard-to-manage career. Kenneth Turan says Anton Corbijn's drama is impeccably composed and beautifully shot -- if a little lacking on the emotional urgency front.
 
September 2, 2010 | NPR · Neither director Jean-Francois Richet's style nor star Vincent Cassel's swagger falters in Public Enemy Number One, the exhilarating follow-up to Mesrine: Killer Instinct. With its shootouts, prison breaks and wild flights of ego, the saga's second half was sure to be watchable. It's also smart, funny and incisive -- about the criminal and his era. (Recommended)
 
September 2, 2010 | NPR · Frequently moving and quietly enlightening, the documentary Last Train Home is about love and exploitation, sacrifice and endurance. Director Lixin Fan follows a single Chinese family from 2006 through the financial downturn of 2008. The parents work at garment factories in Guangzhou city; their teenage children live in an impoverished village and see their parents only once a year.
 
September 2, 2010 | NPR · Director Zhang Yimou takes on the Coen brothers, remaking Blood Simple and setting it in the 17th-century "Chinese outback." Adultery, bloody mishaps and Chinese superstition are just the appetizers in this colorful film.
 
September 2, 2010 | NPR · Robert Rodriguez directs Machete, featuring a character first introduced in a fake trailer that played during his 2007 exploitation flick Grindhouse..
 

May 31, 2006

COMMENTARY: LEAF BLOWERS

COMMENTARY: LEAF BLOWERS
Why not just use a broom? [LISTEN] [TRANSCRIPT]

Filed under: Commentary,Humor — ewhitney @ 9:43 am

SLEEP APNEA – WHEN SNORING DISTURBS THE PEACE

SLEEP APNEA – WHEN SNORING DISTURBS THE PEACE
A visit to the Colorado Sleep Disorders Center, where we learn about sleep apnea, and how to cure what can be a very disturbing condition. [LISTEN] [TRANSCRIPT]

Filed under: Health — ewhitney @ 9:42 am

IRAQI MAYOR VISITS COLORADO SPRINGS

IRAQI MAYOR VISITS COLORADO SPRINGS
An interview with Najim Abdulla al-Jibouri, mayor of the city of Tal Afar, Iraq. This is the city that troops from Ft. Carson spent much of last year liberating. Al-Jibouri talks about how and why that happened, and what the future of his city and Iraq looks like to him. [LISTEN] [TRANSCRIPT]

Filed under: Colorado Springs,Military,Politics — ewhitney @ 9:40 am

OWENS VETOES ETHANOL BILL

OWENS VETOES ETHANOL BILL
There are currently 5 ethanol fuel plants under construction in Colorado, two are already up and running. So why did Governor Owens veto a bill that would stimulate the market for the corn-based replacement for gasoline? [LISTEN] [TRANSCRIPT]

Filed under: Colorado,Environment,Politics — ewhitney @ 9:39 am

UNSEEN MESA VERDE OPENED FOR 100TH ANNIVERSARY

UNSEEN MESA VERDE OPENED FOR 100TH ANNIVERSARY
Mesa Verde National Park, near Cortez, is celebrating it’s 100th anniversary this year. Part of the ongoing celebrations is opening up rarely seen parts of the park to the public. From KSUT, Four Corners Public Radio, Victor Locke reports. [LISTEN] [TRANSCRIPT]

Filed under: History,Indoor/Outdoor Recreation — ewhitney @ 9:37 am

10TH MOUNTAIN DIVISION OBSERVES MEMORIAL DAY

10TH MOUNTAIN DIVISION OBSERVES MEMORIAL DAY
Ceremonies honoring veterans happened all over Colorado last weekend. One of the most distinctive was held near the summit of Tennessee Pass outside Leadville, where the World War 2 ski troopers of the 10th Mountain Division were remembered. When the war was over, members of the 10th Mountain Division went on to found the ski resorts of Aspen and Vail, and to head the Sierra Club and other environmental organizations. Josh Raulerson was at the ceremony for the Division, which is now based in New York, He says it is currently among the Army’s most frequently deployed units. [LISTEN] [TRANSCRIPT]

Filed under: History,Military,Regional — ewhitney @ 9:34 am

Older Posts »