NPR News

Pages

Youth Radio
10:01 pm
Wed December 14, 2011

An Early College Economics Lesson For One Student

Credit Courtesy of Youth Radio
Youth Radio's Sayre Quevedo, 19, attends community college and lives in Oakland, Calif.

One day last year I skipped school to wait for acceptances from colleges. It was the final day that letters or emails were supposed to be sent out.

I sat in front of my laptop by the front door for at least three hours, listening for the mailman while eagerly pressing the refresh button on my inbox. I admit, at one point, I checked my neighbor's mail. Getting my house skipped on the mail route was one of the less crazy hypotheticals I imagined while waiting.

Read more
The Two-Way
4:46 pm
Wed December 14, 2011

Look Up! There's Still A Chance To Catch Geminid Meteor Shower

Music
4:44 pm
Wed December 14, 2011

Listeners Pick Their Favorite Albums Of 2011

Credit Mito Habe-Evans / NPR
All Tech Considered
4:01 pm
Wed December 14, 2011

Who's Opposed To .XXX Domain Names? Not Exactly Who You'd Think

Education has .edu, .gov belongs to the government, and now, adult entertainment has .xxx.

Starting last week, anyone can go online and buy a domain name ending in .xxx, but it's not all adult entertainment companies that are rushing to purchase the new addresses.

Colleges and other institutions have purchased .xxx domains preemptively to prevent others from doing so and associating their names with adult content. And many big names in the adult entertainment industry are opposed to the possibility of censorship by places that could block the entire .xxx domain.

Read more
Energy
3:42 pm
Wed December 14, 2011

U.S. Nuclear Agency Suffers Leadership Meltdown

Credit Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images
Nuclear Regulatory Commission Chairman Chairman Gregory Jaczko, right, testifies with fellow commissioners, from left to right: William Magwood IV, Kristine Svinicki and William Ostendorff before the House Oversight And Government Reform Committee in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday.

The government organization charged with keeping nuclear power safe is having a meltdown. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission consists of five commissioners who direct the work of hundreds of nuclear engineers and other experts. They write the rules for how nuclear reactors operate.

Now four of those commissioners say the chairman of the NRC is a bully who's destroying their ability to do their job.

Read more

Pages