
Emily Cureton
Oregon Public BroadcastingEmily Cureton Cook is a JPR content partner from Oregon Public Broadcasting. Emily is the former producer of the ÀÏ·ò×Ó´«Ã½ Exchange on JPR and has contributed award-winning programming to Georgia Public Broadcasting. She began her career as a journalist reporting for community newspapers, including the Del Norte Triplicate in Crescent City, California, and the Big Bend Sentinel in Marfa, Texas. Emily graduated from the University of Texas in Austin with degrees in history, studio art and Russian.
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One difference under a revised plan is veterinarians would not operate on pregnant mares.
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Environmentalists have sued to prevent Dwight and Steven Hammond from getting their grazing rights back.
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Oregon effectively bans a chemical it once sprayed along roads, as the EPA signals potential opposition to more state control.
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The Malheur National Wildlife Refuge became a household name in 2016, not for its beautiful scenery or because 300 bird species flock there, but because a militant, anti-government group had taken over headquarters for 41 days, leading to a fatal shooting. Three years later, an Oregon symphony offers music as healing.
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Local and tribal officials in eastern Oregon are pushing for Gov. Kate Brown to declare a state of emergency to help pay for the aftermath of extensive flooding.
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Dead pines nears Sisters set off a state investigation and a proposed ban, but chemical giant Bayer claims this unfairly singles out its product.
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An attorney for Western Communications says the goal is to sell all but two of the company's seven newspapers serving rural Oregon and California.
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Delivering water in a pipe isn’t a radical idea. Unless you’re talking about modernizing irrigation in Central Oregon.
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Federal lawmakers say the U.S. defrauded the Tribes 154 years ago, illegally revoking hunting and fishing rights off-reservation.
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The Bend campus announced a $2.97 million grant through the U.S. Department of Energy to develop technology for treating the wastewater from fracking.
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The Bureau of Land Management has too many horses, too little grass, and grazing contracts ready for outsourcing.
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A frolicking good snow week for some Oregonians means surviving blackouts and dangerous roads for others.