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Current News from NPR

March 15, 2010 | NPR· President Obama's stem cell policy, announced a year ago this month, opened up federal funding for more stem cell lines created from human embryos. But now, scientists are facing a bitter irony — a few popular stem cell lines that could be studied with federal money under President Bush are suddenly off-limits.
 
March 15, 2010 | NPR· The Obama administration wants to completely change the No Child Left Behind Act. Officials are sending Congress a plan Monday that they say will give states and local school districts more flexibility to revitalize primary and secondary schools. A draft released over the weekend would eliminate many of the law's most controversial features, including its name.
 
March 15, 2010 | NPR· Bad behavior in childhood is associated with chronic pain in adult life, according to the findings of a study following people from birth in 1958 to the present day. In the study, children with severe behavior disturbances had approximately double the risk of chronic widespread pain by the time they reached the age of 45 than children who did not have behavior problems.
 
March 15, 2010 | NPR· Scientists have gained new insight into how the brain develops. It turns out, relatively short-term hearing deprivation during childhood can lead to persistent changes in the way the brain understands sound, long after hearing is restored to normal.
 
March 15, 2010 | NPR· Kansas, Kentucky, Syracuse and Duke have earned the No. 1 seeds for the men's NCAA basketball tournament. The Jayhawks were selected as the top seed overall for this year's version of March Madness. The 65-team bracket was announced Sunday and the tourney gets under way Tuesday night.
 

Art & Life from NPR

March 15, 2010 | NPR· The Federal Communications Commission says the plan, set to be unveiled Tuesday, will help make Internet access faster, cheaper and more pervasive. But some critics are already calling it a missed opportunity.
 
March 14, 2010 | NPR· Not much good has come out of the recession from which we seem to be slowly emerging. But at least it's left us with some new lingo, like "staycation." The Christian Science Monitor has compiled a list of its favorites, and guest host Audie Cornish explains a few of them.
 
March 14, 2010 | NPR· In the late '70s and early '80s, Enjoli perfume commercials extolled the era's ideal Superwoman — a perfectly coiffed working mom who could "bring home the bacon" and still be sexy for her man. Three decades later, that ideal remains elusive for millions of women — including reporter Jennifer Ludden.
 
March 13, 2010 | NPR· The tiny, no-frills automobile imported from communist Yugoslavia during the 1980s is known to most Americans as the butt of many car jokes. Author Jason Vuic's book The Yugo: The Rise and Fall of the Worst Car in History reveals why it's the most famous lemon in automotive history.
 
March 13, 2010 | NPR· He's best known for his work with the great New Orleans funk band The Meters, so we're asking George Porter, Jr. three questions about parking meters.
 

October 7, 2008

Presidential Candidate Debate Tonight, Oct. 7th, 2008

KRCC will air NPR’s Coverage of the Second Presidential Candidate Debate Tuesday, October 7th from Belmont University, Nashville, Tenn. Tonight’s debate will be presented in a town meeting format.

NBC News Special Correspondent Tom Brokaw will moderate the debate. The debate begins at 7pm, and will be followed by a Listening Party from NPR.

Talk of the Nation’s Neal Conan will host a call-in special from 9pm-10pm MT.

We will preempt Democracy Now! and In the Groove to bring you the debate. You can listen to today’s Democracy Now! by clicking the play button.

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Filed under: Elections, Politics — Delaney Utterback @ 1:08 pm

1 Comment »

  1. I would like to know the reason the moderator insists on a time constraint. Isn’t the future of this country and the rest of the world more important than a football game that goes beyond the alloted time?

    Comment by Sarah — October 7, 2008 @ 8:24 pm

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