© 2026 KRCU Public Radio
90.9 Cape Girardeau | 88.9-HD Ste. Genevieve | 88.7 Poplar Bluff
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • The demand for “quarantine puppies” and other pets increased dramatically during the COVID-19 pandemic, bringing with it a spike in scams that has persisted even as virus-related lockdowns have abated.
  • The COVID-19 pandemic made us all more acutely aware of the need to wash our hands. However, washing our hands doesn’t only protect us from COVID, but many other types of respiratory and gastro-intestinal infections that are transmitted through our “t-zone”: eyes, nose, and mouth.
  • This would be an interesting book to discuss in a book discussion group...do you believe that God gives the power to heal to others? And what do you think the role of women in the church should be?
  • In 1894 a Leper Home was opened in Carville, Louisiana. In 1921, the United States Public Health Service took control of the site and it became the national leprosarium. People from all over the country who were diagnosed with leprosy, or Hansen’s Disease, were forced to quarantine there and many never left.
  • Job shadowing has become so valuable to both hiring and retaining talent that in 2019, it was named the "gold standard solution" in small business hiring trends by Monster.com.
  • “February 29, 1944. I have gone by many names. Some of them are real - but most are carefully constructed personas to get me through checkpoints and across borders. They are lies scribbled on forged travel documents. Typed neatly in government files, Splashed across wanted posters. My identity is an ever-shifting thing that adapts to the need at hand. Tonight, I am Hélène.”
  • For many Americans, giving to charities is almost as important during the holidays as celebrating with family. As a result, mailboxes often are stuffed with charitable solicitations as well as catalogs and shopping circulars this time of year.
  • A pair of Redhawk football student-athletes have been recognized nationally as All-Americans.
  • Birds and other wildlife can sometimes find their surroundings overripe for intoxication. Fruit can become alcoholic in several ways. Sometimes in the fall, fruit matures too much and ferments. In the winter, cold concentrates a fruit’s sugar, which then breaks down and produces alcohol.
  • This week we’re talking about holiday returns and exchanges. Holiday returns aren’t easy! And we don’t mean the part where you explain to your mother why you returned the sweater she gave you.
34 of 29,082