Stephen George
President and CEOStephen George is President and CEO of Louisville Public Media. A Louisville native, he has spent most of his career in journalism. He previously served as executive editor of LPM, where he led a growing, multiplatform and collaborative newsroom. George has also been editor-in-chief of the Nashville City Paper and LEO Weekly. His writing has appeared in a variety of local, state and national media. He is a member of the NPR Board of Directors. He is also active in the local nonprofit community, serving on the boards of the Center for Nonprofit Excellence and the Young Authors Greenhouse.
Email Stephen at sgeorge@lpm.org.
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Many are surprised to learn that the NRA of generations past worked with the federal government to limit the traffic in guns, for example where ex-convicts or mental patients were involved.
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President Trump is scheduled to visit the U.S. territory on Tuesday. Many there are without food, water and gas shortages following Hurricane Maria — a situation Trump has tweeted about frequently.
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A response -- and potentially major fallout -- is expected on campus at the University of Louisville today.
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Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg was in West Virginia and Kentucky over the weekend to see some innovative ways that schools are using new technology.
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Chenery died Saturday in her Boulder, Colorado, home following complications from a stroke, according to her children.
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Manning is a lyrical writer who explores themes of permanence, empathy and our relationship to our most important memories.
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In upcoming elections, the labor movement has among its challenges reaching every union member in a personal way about what's at stake and what the facts are, the head of the AFL-CIO told NPR.
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In its lawsuit, the clinic says it has had agreements with a hospital and an ambulance company on file with state regulators for years.
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Already this year 12 miners have died on the job in the U.S., compared with eight fatalities in all of 2016. Two miners were killed in Kentucky and six in West Virginia.
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The Labor Department also cut previous estimates for job growth in June and July by 41,000.