-
JPR reporters review news events in Southern Oregon and Northern California for week of April 28, 2024.
-
As AI increasingly permeates all facets of modern life, we will be bombarded with new challenges at the same time we’re reeling from the challenges that have resulted from widespread adoption of smartphones and the proliferation of social media and online gaming that have, collectively, handicapped our youth.
-
The Eugene Weekly is planning to return to print Feb. 8, as it continues its recovery following an alleged embezzlement.
-
Bogus pornographic images purporting to show pop superstar Taylor Swift have emerged on social media, highlighting a growing challenge to privacy rights.
-
JPR news department reviews the events of the week of January 22, 2024
-
The city of Portland has filed a lawsuit against a local journalist and news outlet in an attempt to block the public release of information about which businesses were required to pay into a voter-approved climate program, records show.
-
JPR news staff gathers to review the week of Jan. 14, 2024
-
-
JPR reporters discuss major regional news events of the week.
-
Ashton Applewhite on ageism.
-
The local alt-weekly paper in Eugene has been publishing community and regional news since 1982. Many readers consider Eugene Weekly an institution. So when editor Camilla Mortensen wrote a letter explaining that the paper had suffered a huge blow from alleged theft and mismanagement by a longtime employee, the community responded.
-
Week of Jan. 1, 2024 news review.
-
The Eugene Weekly says an insider's embezzlement scheme has dealt it a "massive financial blow," and it doesn’t have the funds it needs to stay in print.
-
News Director Erik Neumann and reporters Roman Battaglia and Jane Vaughan to nominate some of their own best feature stories for inclusion in a year-end wrap