Search Query
Show Search
Contact
About
Staff
Board of Directors
Community Advisory Board
Volunteer DJs
Employment and volunteer opportunities
Transparency
Staff
Board of Directors
Community Advisory Board
Volunteer DJs
Employment and volunteer opportunities
Transparency
News
Local News
NPR News
Local News
NPR News
Radio Schedule
Programs
Community Calendar
Submit an Event
Submit an Event
Support KDLL
Contribute Online Now
Underwriting (advertising) on KDLL
Planned / Legacy Giving
Pick.Click.Give
Shop and Support
Contribute Online Now
Underwriting (advertising) on KDLL
Planned / Legacy Giving
Pick.Click.Give
Shop and Support
© 2026 KDLL
Menu
Public Radio for the Central Kenai Peninsula
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
KDLL
All Streams
Contact
About
Staff
Board of Directors
Community Advisory Board
Volunteer DJs
Employment and volunteer opportunities
Transparency
Staff
Board of Directors
Community Advisory Board
Volunteer DJs
Employment and volunteer opportunities
Transparency
News
Local News
NPR News
Local News
NPR News
Radio Schedule
Programs
Community Calendar
Submit an Event
Submit an Event
Support KDLL
Contribute Online Now
Underwriting (advertising) on KDLL
Planned / Legacy Giving
Pick.Click.Give
Shop and Support
Contribute Online Now
Underwriting (advertising) on KDLL
Planned / Legacy Giving
Pick.Click.Give
Shop and Support
Support public radio — donate today!
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
Polls: Americans Blasé About U.S. Claims on Iraqi Arms
As lawmakers question intelligence claims of Iraqi weapons of mass destruction, some surveys and analysts suggest that the public is largely unconcerned. While more Americans are willing to believe the administration may have overestimated Iraqi weapons, polls show the doubts have not caused large numbers of people to reconsider their support for the war itself. Hear NPR's Mara Liasson.
Listen
•
0:00
Encyclopedia Man
NPR's Scott Simon checks in again with writer A.J. Jacobs, who is reading the entire Encyclopaedia Britannica. Jacobs has made it through the letter P, where he has discovered that a Patch Box is the place where French people used to store their fake beauty marks.
Listen
•
0:00
Jazz Pianist and Singer Barbara Carroll
The 78-year-old singer is currently performing at Birdland in New York City. Previously, Carroll spent 25 years playing at Bemelmans Bar at the Carlyle Hotel. This year, she received three lifetime achievement awards; one of them was the Kennedy Center's Mary Lou Williams Women in Jazz Lifetime Achievement Award. Carroll has a number of albums to her credit; her latest is the new solo album Morning in May.
Listen
•
0:00
'Wait Wait' for April 9, 2022: With Not My Job guest Matt Walsh
Improv legend Matt Walsh is a founder of the Upright Citizens Brigade, and an Emmy nominee for Veep. With baseball starting again, we ask him three questions about legendarily bad announcers.
Listen
•
44:50
Making Sense Out of Baby Talk
Babies' babbling is the stuff of scientific study. Writing in the current issue of The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers have discovered that babies change and improve their babbling sounds in rapid response to affectionate behaviors from their mothers. NPR's Michelle Trudeau reports.
Listen
•
0:00
Summer Reading: Jeff Bezos
Our summer reading series continues this week with Jeff Bezos, the founder and CEO of Amazon.com. Bezos is a fan of science fiction, though he says his favorite novel of all time is Kazuo Ishiguro's The Remains of the Day (Vintage Books; ISBN: 0679731725).
Listen
•
0:00
Ethicist
What would you do if a colleague had the symbol of a white supremacist organization on his personal pickup truck? Are you obliged to share the information with your bosses? Randy Cohen, who writes "The Ethicist" column for The New York Times Magazine, discusses that ethical dilemma and others in his latest appearance on All Things Considered.
Listen
•
6:52
Indicted Stewart Gives Up Company Posts
Martha Stewart steps down as head of Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, hours after a federal grand jury indicts the home-decorating icon and her stockbroker on nine counts of obstruction of justice, making false statements and perjury. Stewart is accused of using insider information to dump shares of ImClone stock. Hear NPR's Snigdha Prakash.
Listen
•
0:00
Housing First: California Farm Workers, Part I
Many of the people who harvest the abundant crops in Southern California's Coachella Valley have no decent place to live. For the "Housing First" series, NPR's Ina Jaffe reports on one community's attempt to address the housing shortage for migrant workers.
Listen
•
0:00
Congress Plans Probe into Iraqi Arms Intelligence
Melissa Block talks with Sen. Carl Levin of Michigan, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Armed Services Committee, about plans for hearings on the intelligence presented by the Bush administration on Iraq's weapons of mass destruction in the run-up to the war.
Listen
•
0:00
Previous
890 of 21,711
Next