Your Source for NPR News & Music
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
We are operating on low power due to some issues at our transmitter site. Our engineering staff is working on the issue.

Search results for

  • HIV has been declining in many parts of the world over the past decade. Today the U.S. unveiled an ambitious plan to stop most new HIV infections around the world. But some health leaders question whether their goals are realistic, especially with impending budget cuts.
  • Ron Hufstader, Music Director and Conductor of the El Paso Wind Symphony, and Ali Sanders, Operations Manager, preview the upcoming “No Strings Attached”…
  • Conductor: Juraj ValčuhaSoloist: André Watts, PianoWeber: Oberon Overture Rachmaninoff: Piano Concerto No. 2 R. Strauss: Fantasie from Die Frau ohne…
  • The South African film Otelo Burning tells the story of black teenagers who escape the world of apartheid by learning to surf. Critic Joel Arnold says the film presents its characters with a choice between hoping for the impossible and accepting the unfortunate.
  • Robert Siegel talks to Republican Dave Camp, chairman of the House Committee on Ways and Means, about the fiscal cliff and tax reform.
  • The Great Lakes drought is affecting the survival of some of the small harbor towns located on North Michigan's shore. Melissa Block speaks with Russell Dzuba, the harbormaster in Leland, Mich., where a line of sand is cutting through his harbor.
  • Painter Alberto Escamilla, his wife Rachel Escamilla, and Connie Lichlyter, chairperson for the ChristKindel Market in San Elizario, preview this year’s…
  • Conductor: David ZinmanSoloist: Jan Lisiecki, PianoSibelius: Symphony No. 3 Schumann: Piano Concerto Sibelius: Symphony No. 7
  • Conductor: Andrey BoreykoSoloist: Frank Peter Zimmerman, violinMendelssohn: Overture to Die Heimkehr aus der FremdeShostakovich: Violin Concerto No.…
  • An eight month investigation into phone hacking and other abuses by British newspapers has concluded that the industry needs a powerful new watchdog with some legal powers to wield carrots and sticks. Judge Brian Leveson, who led the inquiry, says the watchdog would be independent and insists that it "cannot reasonably or fairly be be characterized as statutory regulation of the press." But Prime Minister David Cameron, who commissioned the investigation, voiced doubts about that, saying "I think it would be a dereliction of our duty in this House of Commons that has stood up for freedom and for free press year after year, century after century, to cross a Rubicon of legislating about the press without thinking about it very carefully, first." Cameron's stance angered victims of tabloid hacking. Said one "I think he's gone back on his word and I feel betrayed."
2,096 of 33,825