Featured Stories
Come July and August, 50 percent of Bozeman’s treated drinking water will be used to water lawns. The city is holding six free webinars to help residents figure out more drought resistant landscaping.
Hosts Jennifer Corning and Corby Skinner bring listeners access to the creators who live in our communities and who tell our stories through their art.
New Program May 13th at 6:30 PM
New Program May 13th at 6:30 PM
Regional News
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Montanans that lease state land for agriculture asked the state Land Board Monday to weigh-in on an ongoing dispute over water rights.
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The first Earth Day was initiated in 1970. It is considered to be the birth of the modern environmental movement. Several communities in the state are offering a variety of ways for the public to mark the day and get involved.
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A voice professor offers some tips to singers preparing to perform The Star-Spangled Banner acapella
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The fentanyl crisis is deepening across the country, including in Montana, as overdose deaths and drug seizures are skyrocketing.
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Nursing educators say extra space will help boost both enrollment and Montana’s healthcare workforceMontana State University’s nursing college is adding new buildings to its campuses in Billings, Bozeman, Great Falls, Kalispell and Missoula.
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A campaign for a constitutional abortion rights amendment in Montana may soon begin collecting signatures to put the measure before voters this fall. But that process has been pushed back by Republican officials challenging the initiative’s content and by legal rulings.
National News
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The House voted overwhelmingly to set aside a motion by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., to remove Johnson as speaker
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Republicans tried for the kind of headline moments they've scored in similar hearings with elite college presidents. But the testimony from K-12 public school leaders offered few surprises.
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The White House wants a twenty-fold increase in geothermal energy production to fight climate change and it's counting on the oil and gas industry for help.
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President-elect Prabowo Subianto was once banned by the U.S. for rights violations. But the U.S. earlier gave him military training. How will both countries deal with each other once he takes office?
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Albini led the abrasive underground rock bands Big Black and Shellac and recorded — by his own estimate — thousands of albums, including classics like Nirvana's In Utero and Pixies' Surfer Rosa.
NPR Headlines
- Checking in on fast food workers and franchise owners after a month of wage increase
- A drug company will stop selling lucrative medicine to keep a promise to ALS patients
- Juli Min begins with the future to understand the past in her novel 'Shanghailanders'
- Trump's classified documents trial in Florida is delayed indefinitely
- Jane Schoenbrun tells story of two outcast teens in the 1990s in 'I Saw the TV Glow'
- Many Palestinians have fled Rafah, but many others have nowhere to go
- From tweet to three-book deal, this author wants to transform the fantasy genre
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