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
NASA has been studying a planet called 55 Cancri e
The planet is sort of Earth-like but much closer to its star. It has temperatures hot enough to melt and vaporize rocks — and possibly oceans of lava with clouds that rain molten rock.
Listen
•
0:28
In Uvalde, a woman in clown colors makes kids smile
A few yards from the central memorial for the shooting victims, a clown hands out snow cones and toys for free to all. She says it's her way to give back — and she wants the gun violence to stop.
Listen
•
2:30
Encore: Beach grass could be key to protecting the Aquinnah Wampanoag homeland
Climate change threatens a tribal homeland off the Massachusetts coast. Volunteers are planting beach grass to make it more resilient. (Story first aired on Weekend Edition Saturday on May 28, 2022.)
Listen
•
3:29
Tribal leaders sound the alarm after fentanyl overdoses spike at Blackfeet Nation
After 17 overdoses — including four deaths — this spring, Indigenous leaders in Montana and surrounding states look for ways to stop the fentanyl crisis and provide more treatment and care.
Listen
•
6:36
Along with the U.S., Europe is hit with extraordinarily high inflation numbers
NPR's Leila Fadel talks to Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Berenberg Bank in Berlin, Germany, about high inflation across the Eurozone.
Listen
•
4:58
Philly's Pride March returns this week with new organizers and focus
A new group of mostly Black and brown LGBTQ organizers are throwing the Pride March in Philadelphia on June 5, trying to rebuild the event into something more welcoming — and more revolutionary.
Listen
•
3:54
'Who Will Clean Out The Desks' — A crowdsourced poem in praise of teachers
As part of teacher appreciation month, Morning Edition asked NPR's audience to write a poem about teachers who have had an impact on their lives.
Listen
•
7:15
Progressives take a leaf out of the conservative playbook to target school boards
There has been a groundswell of conservative enthusiasm around school politics in the last few years. Progressives are hoping to have their own source of organization to counter that enthusiasm.
Listen
•
6:30
Biden visits Uvalde seeking to comfort the community after last week's shooting
While President Biden honored the 19 children and two teachers killed in the massacre at Robb Elementary School, residents want to know why the police were slow to respond to the shooting.
Listen
•
4:28
Colombia's presidential race heads to a runoff
Sunday's first round produced two top vote-getters from very different backgrounds. The June 19 runoff will be a contest between a left-wing former guerrilla and a populist real-estate mogul.
Listen
•
3:25
Previous
812 of 3,174
Next