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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..
 

November 30, 2007

Capitol Conversation

Lawmakers are gearing up for the upcoming legislative session which starts in January. They’ll debate hundreds of bills between then and early May when the session ends. To get some perspective, Rocky Mountain Community Radio’s Capitol Reporter, Bente Birkeland talks with a couple of fellow political reporters about some of the key issues they expect to come up.

[LISTEN]

Filed under: Capitol Coverage,Colorado,Politics — ewhitney @ 5:44 pm

November 29, 2007

Governor’s “Health Dialogue” Soaks up Valuable Data



Graph appears in “Governor’s Dialogue on Health Care Vision and Values”

Governor Ritter has described the American healthcare system as “broken,” and now he’s asking hundreds of Coloradoans some very difficult and specific questions about how to fix it. We take you to one of his “Dialogs on Health Care Vision and Values” held in Colorado Springs Wednesday.

[LISTEN]

Filed under: Business,Colorado,Colorado Springs,Health,Politics,Regional — ewhitney @ 5:23 pm

Colorado Hospital Report Card Now Online

Colorado’s new online hospital report card is now up and running. It allows people to compare different hospitals to see how well they measure up when it comes to mortality rates and patient safety. Bente Birkeland reports from Denver

[LISTEN]

To View the Hospital Report Card CLICK HERE

Filed under: Business,Capitol Coverage,Colorado,Health,Politics — ewhitney @ 8:39 am

November 28, 2007

City Drops Charges Against Last of St. Patrick’s Day Protesters


Photo by Mark Lewis, CSAction.org

This press release was issued by the City of Colorado Springs at about 2:30pm.

City Attorney Patricia K. Kelly said:

“The City Attorney’s Office has just concluded a comprehensive review of evidence regarding further prosecution of Eric Verlo and Elizabeth Fineron. Based upon that review, we have decided that it is not in the public interest to continue the further prosecutions. We have decided to seek a dismissal of charges against the two defendants.”

“The comprehensive review revealed police actions were appropriate during the St. Patrick’s Day parade and there was probable cause to arrest the defendants. Further, the review found ample and sufficient evidence, along with multiple witnesses to continue with the prosecution. However, a second trial would require a significant time commitment from police officers, citizen witnesses and prosecutors, and, in this case, it would appear that the public has already spoken when the first trial ended in a hung jury.”

Filed under: Colorado Springs,Crime,Holiday,Legal Affairs,Military,Politics — ewhitney @ 2:32 pm

November 26, 2007

Healthcare Reform In Colorado Part Two: Individual Mandates

After more than a year of input and analysis, Colorado’s bi-partisan Blue Ribbon Commission on Healthcare Reform has recommended the state adopt a Massachusetts-style “individual mandate.” That means everybody has to buy health insurance, or face a fine. The state subsidizes the cost for those with low incomes. KCFR had reporter Martha Bebinger see how the idea is working out in Massachusetts.
[LISTEN]

PART ONE: Employer Mandate
In just over a month, Colorado’s legislative session will convene. One of hottest topics will be health care reform. This week on KRCC, we’re going to dig in to some leading reform ideas. One of those ideas is the so-called “employer mandate,” that’s where businesses have to provide insurance for their employees, or face a fine. KCFR’s Andrea Dukakis has more.

[LISTEN]

Andrea’s report is part of a larger series on health care reform produced at Colorado Public Radio. It includes other stories, and interviews with leaders in Colorado’s reform efforts. To hear more, click HERE.

Filed under: Business,Business/Labor,Health,Religion — ewhitney @ 5:14 pm

November 23, 2007

Ft. Carson Families Talk About Multiple Deployments, Part III


Cannons are fired in honor of deploying troops at Ft. Carson Nov. 20, 2007

The third of three stories in which members of Ft. Carson’s 3rd Brigade and their families talk about deploying to Iraq, many for the third time. The brigade has just begun to deploy, and all 3,800 members should be on the ground in Iraq by mid-December.

[LISTEN]

To hear part two, CLICK HERE

To hear part one, CLICK HERE

Filed under: Children & Youth,Colorado,Colorado Springs,Ft. Carson,Military — ewhitney @ 4:01 pm

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