Chicago Public Radio
Now Playing

9:00pm Radio M
11:00pm The Vinyl Cafe
  View Schedule


Robert Feder
Pledge Now

There are many ways to support public radio.
Submit
Pledge Now
Events
11.20.2009 Poem Present: Discussion on Poetics with Mary Ruefle
11.20.2009 Chicago Public Radio Board Executive Committee Meeting
View full calendar
revolution in access
Feder Blog
Submit
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • unknown
About Us
Mission | People | Performance Studio | Public Files | Careers | Internships
People
Staff | Leadership | Board of Directors | Community Advisory Council
Gabriel Spitzer

Science Reporter

As a reporter at Chicago Public Radio, Gabriel covers science, health care and the environment.

From August, 2007 to July, 2008, Gabriel stepped in as co-host of Eight Forty-Eight Monday-Thursday. He can still be heard filling in as host here and there on Chicago Public Radio.

Gabriel won a regional Edward R. Murrow award for his piece “Transit Race.” He also received a Public Radio News Directors, Inc. (PRNDI) Award for “Best Documentary,” and for two years in a row, “Best News and Public Affairs Show” for the program AK. He’s been a finalist for the Livingston Awards for Young Journalists.

Prior to joining the staff of Chicago Public Radio in April 2006, Gabriel worked as a reporter, host and associate producer at the Alaska Public Radio Network, where he covered everything from sled dog races to Senate races, from thawing Eskimo villages to demolition derbies. He has contributed stories to Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Marketplace, Living on Earth and Latino USA. His print work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the Sacramento Bee and the Anchorage Daily News in Alaska.

Gabriel has an M.J. in Journalism from the University of California, Berkeley and a B.A. in English Literature from Cornell University. He is a member of the Association of Independents in Radio, and the Society of Professional Journalists.

Originally from Canton, Ohio, Gabriel resides in the Edgewater neighborhood of Chicago along with his wife, Ashley Gross, and his new son, Ezra.

Recent Stories
12345678910111213...>>
 
Quinn, Hynes Struggle to Distinguish Health Care Policies

The two candidates agree on much when it comes to health care, but they still got their digs in.

Posted on 11.18.2009
Midwest Quakes Are Faint Echoes, Not Warning Signs

New reserach says small earthquakes in the middle of continents are usually aftershocks of centuries-old major quakes.

Posted on 11.4.2009
Illinois Expands Drug Benefits

Lawmakers move to fill the "doughnut hole," over governor's veto.

Posted on 11.2.2009
Cook Suburbs Get Vaccine Influx, Still Lag Chicago

Suburban Cook County got a big infusion of vaccine, but some say they're still getting shortchanged.

Posted on 10.30.2009
Cook County Backs Off from Cuts at Hospitals

Cook County's health chief says he wants to take another look at potential cuts at Provident and Oak Forest.

Posted on 10.29.2009
Chicago's Swine Flu Vaccination Effort Evolving

As the city prepares to stage its second round of mass vaccinations, officials say they're learning lessons

Posted on 10.27.2009
Another Year, Another Tumor

How a college kid from Chicago lost her breasts, her glands and parts of her brain -- but managed to keep her perspective.

Posted on 10.20.2009
Patient Navigators Work to Close the Breast Cancer Race Gap

Black women in Chicago are more likely than whites to have gaps and interruptions in their care. Patient navigators are trying to correct that, in hopes of tackling Chicago's health disparities.

Posted on 10.20.2009
Links to Research

Further research about the racial disparity in breast cancer survival rates.

Posted on 10.20.2009
Researchers Look to Explain Race Gap in Cancer Deaths

Black women in Chicago are less likley to get breast cancer than white women, but more likely to die of it. Access to quality screenings could help explain why.

Posted on 10.20.2009
Graph: Chicago Community Areas with the Highest 2000-2005 Average Annual Breast Cancer Mortality Rates



Posted on 10.19.2009
Graph: Breast Cancer Death Rates Among White and Black Females in Chicago



Posted on 10.19.2009
Links to Resources

More resources about the racial disparity in breast cancer survival rates.

Posted on 10.19.2009
First Swine Flu Shots Arriving in Chicago

Chicago is getting about 55,000 doses of swine flu vaccine this week, including the injectable variety.

Posted on 10.13.2009
T-Rex Named Sue No Match for Microscopic Parasite

Paleontologists think Sue and other dinosaurs may have been felled by a single-celled parasite that still affects modern-day birds.

Posted on 9.29.2009
12345678910111213...>>
Support Provided By


Become a Sponsor
Support Provided By


Become a Sponsor
Local News
School Gives Special Ed Kids A Different Test, and Scores Soar

Oprah Counts Down to the End

Asian Carp Breach Barrier

Latest Unemployment Numbers Bad for Chicago Area, But There May Be Reason for Hope

Quinn Talks Price for Thomson Prison

Senate Panel Rebukes Burris

Chicagoans Talk About the End of Oprah's Show



National News
Moderate Dems pivotal in Saturday health care vote

Levin: May be more troubling emails from Hasan

US to drop shooting case against Blackwater guard

GOP: Health test recommendations could affect care

Police: NC girl raped, killed on day she was taken

Calif. launches probe into scam targeting churches

Army relents, will allow media at Palin book event



International News
6 world powers press Iran on nuclear issue

China says 15 dead, 114 trapped in mine explosion

Campaigner against hate crimes killed in Moscow

Researcher: Faint writing seen on Shroud of Turin

Museum: Galileo's fingers, tooth are found

Fight is on between pro-fish camp, mine defenders

Argentina forces dirty war orphans to provide DNA

The new EU chiefs: Rompuy-pumpy and Cathy Who?

Kidnapped Britons say Somali pirates may kill them

Resort island reels after deadly attack by gunman