Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • Ukraine's bookstores have expanded despite the war, fueled by interest in works by Ukrainian writers, some who have been killed by Russian forces. But a Russian missile struck a top printing plant.
  • Across the country, including in swing states, people have been priced out of buying homes. Record numbers are finding rent unaffordable. Biden and Trump have very different ideas for how to fix it.
  • Tuesday's surprise hearing of the Jan. 6 committee came with some explosive testimony from Cassidy Hutchinson. She was an aide to former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows.
  • Officials involved in Jan. 6 prosecutions say the Trump administration isn't protecting them from threats. "We don't think they'll care — unless and until one of us gets killed," an official told NPR.
  • Montana's top Republicans react to former president Donald Trump's felony convictions, Sen. Steve Daines blocks the Senate hearing of a Montana federal judge appointee, Flathead Lake levels are healthy, and the Beartooth Highway will open June 1.
  • A Montana congressman claims a Missoula research lab helped spread Covid 19, the drama continues for Great Falls election office, and we meet a Montana woman who is one of CNN’s Top Ten Heroes.
  • A school administrator in southwest Montana placed on paid leave, the Attorney General caught on tape admitting to skirting the state’s election rules, and our interviews with Montanans on top-of-mind issues going into the election season begin today.
  • NorthWestern Energy customers get relief with lower bills, a Montana ski resort recognized for pollution prevention, and we fact check Monday’s U. S. senate debate between the two top contenders for the job.
  • We hear highlights from the debate between Montana’s top two candidates for the U.S. Senate and from the candidates competing for two open seats on the Montana Supreme Court, plus Wyoming officials vote to allow wolves to be killed by vehicles.
  • "All I Want For Christmas Is You" is the first song to ever have four separate runs at No. 1 on the chart, beginning in 2019. It's become a holiday hallmark in the years since its 1994 release.
155 of 5,256