Skip to main content
Search Query
Show Search
News
Arts & Culture
Crime
Education
Government
Industry
Regional
Science & Environment
Sports
Health
Arts & Culture
Crime
Education
Government
Industry
Regional
Science & Environment
Sports
Health
Community
Classifieds
Community Calendar
Obituaries
Opinion
Classifieds
Community Calendar
Obituaries
Opinion
About
Programs A-Z
Radio Schedule
TV Schedule
KUCB Staff & Volunteers
Programs A-Z
Radio Schedule
TV Schedule
KUCB Staff & Volunteers
Contribute
© 2026 KUCB
Menu
Your voice in the Aleutians.
Show Search
Search Query
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
KUCB
All Streams
News
Arts & Culture
Crime
Education
Government
Industry
Regional
Science & Environment
Sports
Health
Arts & Culture
Crime
Education
Government
Industry
Regional
Science & Environment
Sports
Health
Community
Classifieds
Community Calendar
Obituaries
Opinion
Classifieds
Community Calendar
Obituaries
Opinion
About
Programs A-Z
Radio Schedule
TV Schedule
KUCB Staff & Volunteers
Programs A-Z
Radio Schedule
TV Schedule
KUCB Staff & Volunteers
Contribute
Search results for
Sort By
Newest (Publish Date)
Relevance
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
U.S. politicians want to reshore manufacturing. But what makes it so special?
One hope for reshoring manufacturing is it could help revitalize the heartland. NPR's Planet Money team dives deep into the economic theory and evidence behind this idea.
Listen
•
3:19
Congress sends bill cutting public media and foreign aid funding to Trump
House Republicans delivered a major victory to President Trump early Friday, passing Trump's rescissions bill that claws back $9 billion in funds already approved for public media and foreign aid.
Listen
•
3:43
Filmmaker Ken Burns: Public broadcasting is a 'purely American expression'
Filmmaker Ken Burns tells NPR's Michel Martin about the role that federal funding has played in his documentary work and the potential impact of the loss of that funding on children's programming.
Listen
•
7:30
Two park rangers recall being the first to clean Mt. Rushmore
In this StoryCorps, two park rangers recall being part of a team specially trained to brave the heights and wash the four faces of the presidents on Mt. Rushmore — something no one had ever attempted.
Listen
•
2:32
White House says President Trump has a common circulatory condition
President Trump has been diagnosed with a relatively common medical condition called chronic venous insufficiency that is affecting the veins in his legs, according to the White House.
Listen
•
3:32
What to know about chronic venous insufficiency
NPR asks Dr. Thomas Maldonado, a vascular surgeon at NYU Langone Health, about President Trump's chronic venous insufficiency diagnosis and what the public can learn from it.
Listen
•
4:12
CBS will end 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' next year
CBS has announced that it plans to cancel Stephen Colbert's late night TV show next year, citing financial reasons. But at least two U.S. senators have questioned whether politics played a role.
Listen
•
3:47
ACA health insurance will cost the average person 75% more next year, research shows
A new analysis shows that health insurance premiums for Obamacare are set to soar next year, as financial help that subsidized the cost expires. Congress is not likely to extend the subsidies.
Listen
•
2:19
Trump files defamation suit over 'Wall Street Journal' story on his Epstein ties
President Trump filed a $10 billion defamation suit Friday against the The Wall Street Journal following reporting on his past ties to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Listen
•
3:31
Senate panel approves federal judge nomination for Emil Bove, who defended Trump
Bove's nomination to the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals now moves to the full Senate. Scores of former DOJ lawyers and retired judges say they fear his loyalty to Trump would carry over onto the bench.
Listen
•
3:44
Previous
666 of 13,103
Next