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  • Chris and Nell’s first guest is Matt Pacer, a director of Heal Utah, a nonprofit which focuses on Utah environmental policy. The second guest on the…
  • The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot is extending the timetable for its public hearings into July.
  • Today on the program Tim and Lynn talk Parenting – in a way that teaches children to think for themselves. Education expert Heather Shumaker is the first…
  • Mountain Money hosts Doug Wells and Roger Goldman speak with (2:18) Vikram Mansharamani joins Mountain Money to talk about his new book, Think For…
  • On today’s show Chris Cherniak and guest host Katy Wang covered three types of harvesting activities. First, beekeeper Doug Fryer discussed how he…
  • On this episode, Lynn and Tim spoke with Dr. David Casarett, a physician and researcher who joined the show to talk about the new book Shocked: Adventures…
  • In this podcast of The Mountain Life, healthy living in the Wasatch. It’s the weekly program about health, fitness, nutrition and lifestyle. The first…
  • On the surface, certain academic pursuits may seem trivial, but sometimes odd courses can be instructive and illuminating.
  • According to numbers released Tuesday, Twitter's one-year-old video-sharing app Vine now has about 40 million registered users. The app lets users shoot a maximum of six seconds per Vine, so we wanted to know why the limit's set at six seconds and not a second longer.
  • Vote-trading scandals in the 1998 and 2002 Olympics forced the International Skating Union to make major changes to its judging system, including obscuring which judge issued which mark. Sports correspondent Mike Pesca discusses the issue of transparency and subjectivity in Olympics judging with NPR's Rachel Martin.
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