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Current News from NPR

February 9, 2010 | NPR· Some companies have no traditional office at all — and they like it that way. At one multimillion-dollar company, all 40 employees telecommute. The firm weeds out job applicants who look down on working from home.
 
February 9, 2010 | NPR· Teams of American structural engineers are in Haiti looking into the integrity of the thousands of buildings still standing. U.N. officials say perhaps 20 percent of the structures in Port-au-Prince collapsed, and 80 percent of those still standing suffered serious damage. Some of these structures shouldn't be occupied.
 
February 9, 2010 | NPR· The crash of Continental Flight 3407 last February — in which 50 deaths were attributed to pilot error — sparked an inquiry that found safety problems. Among them: long hours and low pay at regional carriers, where some pilots become captains with less than a year of experience.
 
February 8, 2010 | NPR· Critics call the president's plan to hold a summit between Democrats and Republicans on Feb. 25 a purely political gambit designed to give the appearance of momentum for the health bill. Even supporters of the summit see room for common ground with Republicans on only a few narrow issues.
 
February 8, 2010 | NPR· The U.N.'s Goldstone Report accused both Israel and Hamas of war crimes during last winter's conflict in the Gaza Strip. Now, some say Israel needs to launch an offensive of a different kind: a public relations drive to disassociate itself from words like "occupation" or "conflict."
 

Art & Life from NPR

February 9, 2010 | NPR· teaser
 
February 8, 2010 | NPR· The U.S. population is expected to reach 400 million by mid-century. In his book, The Next Hundred Million: America in 2050, Joel Kotkin argues that future will be green, diverse and suburban. Kotkin explains how the nation's changing demographics will transform American life and communities.
 
February 8, 2010 | NPR· Attorney David Dow has spent his career representing inmates who have been sentenced to death. Despite his efforts, many of his clients have been executed — and most of them were guilty. In his new memoir, The Autobiography of an Execution, Dow details what it's like to become emotionally involved with the people living on death row.
 
February 8, 2010 | NPR· Out 'n' In, the latest album from Empirical, is a tribute to the late musician Eric Dolphy. The record contains six original pieces that adopt Dolphy's style and adaptations of two songs from his album Out to Lunch!
 
February 8, 2010 | NPR· The author's latest novel is Point Omega, the story of a man who aided in the planning of the Iraq war. Like many of the books in DeLillo's 40-year career, it connects real-life events with themes of isolation and inevitability.
 

October 22, 2009

Round-Up

Colorado Springs city officials hold their regular e-town hall meeting, and this time they’re talking about the 2010 budget…Another dairy farm files for bankruptcy…A Colorado lawmaker seeks to clarify laws surrounding medical marijuana…and, the University of Colorado says an initial test that determined remains as legendary adventurer Everett Ruess’ was wrong.

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Filed under: AP, Agriculture/Ranching, Andrea Chalfin, Colorado Springs, Economy, Health, History, Legal Affairs, Round-Up — Andrea Chalfin, News Dir. @ 5:32 pm

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