Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • New Yorker journalist Andrew Marantz says Prime Minister Viktor Orbán's administration has rewritten Hungary's constitution to consolidate his power. U.S. conservatives are taking note.
  • Trump made a fateful choice in the early morning hours of Dec. 19, 2020, days after the Electoral College voted, to choose a path that led to the insurrection on Jan. 6.
  • FlowerSong Press presents a lineup of ten authors from California! These writers will be sharing and performing poetry at Centro Cultural de la Raza. Collectively, these poets and writers have performed their poetry all around the world, sold thousands of copies of their books, had their work published in hundreds of literary journals and newspapers, performed at hundreds of colleges and universities, been taught at dozens of colleges and universities and have also engaged in powerful work to uplift and transform their communities. FlowerSong Press nurtures essential verse from, about, and through the borderlands. The voices of those from Latin America, the U.S.A. and all over the world. We are literary, lyrical, boundless, and we welcome allies that understand and join in the voice of people of color and our struggle, truth, and hope. Featured autors: • Matt Sedillo, "Mowing Leaves of Grass" • Sonia Gutiérrez, "Dreaming with Mariposas" • Briana Munoz, "Everything is Returned to the Soil/Todo Vuelve a la Tierra" • David A. Romero, "My Name Is Romero" • Gina Duran, "...and So the Wind Was Born" • Fernando Albert Salinas, "Toxic Masculinity" • Angelina Sáenz, "Edgecliff" • Luivette Resto, "Promises Are Coffee" • Iris De Anda, "Roots of Redemption: You Have No Right to Remain Silent" • Natalie Sierra, "Charlie Forever and Ever" This event will take place on Saturday, December 4 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at Centro Cultural de la Raza. This event is free and open to the public. For more information, please visit centrodelaraza.com or flowersongpress.com.
  • NPR's Ari Shapiro speaks with Ayoade Alakija, co-chair of the Africa Vaccine Delivery Alliance, about the ongoing challenges of addressing COVID-19.
  • The Tops Friendly Markets grocery store opened on Jefferson Avenue on the East Side of Buffalo in 2003. The newly remodeled store will reopen to the public on July 15.
  • The band Animal Collective performs a transfixing, unpredictable concert at MASS MoCA.
  • Canceled concerts, lawsuits, existential turmoil. As Russia has cracked down on anti-war speech, the country's music scene reaches a particularly high pitch.
  • The pope has been insistent about the importance and urgency of climate action. But a new study finds Catholic bishops in the U.S. have generally been mum or misleading about climate change.
  • The victory may be propelled by what is seen as a wave of sympathy votes in a country still reeling from the shock of the former prime minister's assassination.
  • Dos Santos died at 79 after a long illness. Under his watch, Angola became sub-Saharan Africa's second-largest oil producer — but the wealth didn't reach the people.
194 of 715