Search Query
Show Search
Home
Programs
Program Schedule
Propose A Program
Shows A-Z
Program Schedule
Propose A Program
Shows A-Z
News
Arts & Culture
Business
Community
Criminal Justice
Education
Environment
Government
Health
Housing
NPR (National) News
Arts & Culture
Business
Community
Criminal Justice
Education
Environment
Government
Health
Housing
NPR (National) News
Support Us
Donate Now
Donate a Vehicle
Our Underwriters
Studio Rental
Transfer Securities
Underwriting
Volunteer
Donate Now
Donate a Vehicle
Our Underwriters
Studio Rental
Transfer Securities
Underwriting
Volunteer
About Us
Contact Us
Staff
Governance
History
Jobs
Privacy Policy
Contact Us
Staff
Governance
History
Jobs
Privacy Policy
Coverage Map
Community Calendar
Podcasts
PSA Policy
© 2026
Menu
A Public Service of Santa Fe Community College
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
KSFR
All Streams
Home
Programs
Program Schedule
Propose A Program
Shows A-Z
Program Schedule
Propose A Program
Shows A-Z
News
Arts & Culture
Business
Community
Criminal Justice
Education
Environment
Government
Health
Housing
NPR (National) News
Arts & Culture
Business
Community
Criminal Justice
Education
Environment
Government
Health
Housing
NPR (National) News
Support Us
Donate Now
Donate a Vehicle
Our Underwriters
Studio Rental
Transfer Securities
Underwriting
Volunteer
Donate Now
Donate a Vehicle
Our Underwriters
Studio Rental
Transfer Securities
Underwriting
Volunteer
About Us
Contact Us
Staff
Governance
History
Jobs
Privacy Policy
Contact Us
Staff
Governance
History
Jobs
Privacy Policy
Coverage Map
Community Calendar
Podcasts
PSA Policy
Support KSFR today!
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
When Your Polling Place Runs Out Of 'I Voted' Stickers — Elect To Customize Your Own
What do you do if your polling place runs out of those coveted polling souvenirs? Print your own.
Listen
•
0:45
Many in Michigan don't know how — or whether — they'll vote in the general election
NPR spoke to autoworkers, college students and Black churchgoers in the Detroit area about the general election. Many aren't excited about their likely choices, with some unsure they'll vote at all.
Six-man football is more than touchdowns and wins in Texas: 'It's like an identity'
In the state's rural pockets, schools with fewer than 105 students can opt to play six-man football, a version of the game that takes fewer players and has its own special set of rules.
Listen
•
3:52
What to know about the F-35 fighter jet that Trump is selling to Saudi Arabia
President Donald Trump says he has agreed to sell the nation's most advanced fighter jet to Saudi Arabia despite concerns that China could gain access to the plane's vaunted American technology.
Bridgeport detectives suspended over handling of probes into deaths of 2 Black women
The officers are facing an internal investigation into "lack of sensitivity to the public and failure to follow police policy" in the separate, active cases of Lauren Smith-Fields and Brenda Rawls.
States are slow to make Juneteenth a paid holiday
Although almost every state recognizes Juneteenth in some fashion, many have been slow to do more than issue a proclamation or resolution.
A record amount of seaweed is choking shores in the Caribbean
Seaweed is smothering Caribbean coasts from Puerto Rico to Barbados as tons of brown algae kill wildlife, choke the tourism industry and release toxic gases.
5 things we learned from the Senate hearing on the Silicon Valley Bank collapse
A top federal regulator called the failure of Silicon Valley Bank a "textbook case of bank mismanagement" during a Senate hearing about what led to its spectacular collapse
Listen
•
4:25
(Cabbage) Heads Will Roll: How To Make A Food Network 'From Scratch'
The Food Network was intended for cooks, but it wasn't run by them. In a new tell-all book, Allen Salkin takes an unsparing look at the channel's progression from struggling cable startup to global powerhouse, and the people who rose and fell along the way.
Listen
•
7:24
The Future Of The President's Authorization For Use Of Military Force
The ambush in Niger that left four U.S. troops dead has boosted calls on Capitol Hill for a new legal basis to carry out such actions overseas. An architect of the AUMF, John Bellinger III, weighs in.
Listen
•
7:14
Previous
162 of 402
Next