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  • Oregon On The Record discusses the controversy surrounding book bans, particularly those targeting LGBTQ+ authors and subjects. State Representative Travis Nelson sponsors Senate Bill 1098, which aims to prevent book bans based on author or character identity, aligning with federal and state laws.
  • Mirror-touch synesthesia is a rare neurological trait causing an unusual crossing of senses. Amy van der Linde, piano teacher and parenting educator,…
  • Host Lisa Simeone talks to Ruth Albrecht of Eugene, Oregon. Her short poem won the NPR Online Presidential Acceptance Speech Haiku contest. Her poem and those of our finalists are on our web site at www.npr.org
  • Johannes Brahms was stymied by the shadow of Beethoven. It took him over 20 years to write his first symphony, but conductor Marin Alsop says it was worth the wait. Her personal connection to Brahms led her to record all four of his symphonies with the London Philharmonic.
  • The genius of Franz Schubert is so great that conductor Nikolaus Harnoncourt feels he was "thrown down from the moon." Harnoncourt discusses and conducts Schubert's Second Symphony with the Concertgebouw Orchestra.
  • Can you draw a line through the brutal Siege of Leningrad, to the war in Ukraine, to a recent special performance of Shostakovich in South Dakota?
  • Several organizations are advising drivers to drive safely as K-12 students begin their school year.
  • A $500-thousand grant from the U.S. Department of Commerce will help entrepreneurs and startup companies in Eugene. The initiative is aimed at helping the…
  • Work has begun at the Civic Stadium site on Amazon Parkway in South Eugene. The historic stadium, destroyed by fire in 2015, will become Civic Park, a…
  • The City of Eugene unveiled three options to revitalize Kesey Square, Friday. The Register Guard reports the future of the public space area located on…
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