Skip to main content
Search Query
Show Search
Listen Live
News
Music
Programs
People
EEO
Schedule
CPB Info
ASU News
Donors
Contact Us
© 2026 WPRL
Menu
Show Search
Search Query
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Listen Live
News
Music
Programs
People
EEO
Schedule
CPB Info
ASU News
Donors
Contact Us
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
'Horrifying' mistake to take organs from a living person was averted, witnesses say
At a hospital in Kentucky, a man who had been declared dead after a drug overdose was moving and visibly crying as he was prepped for surgery to donate his vital organs. The surgery was stopped, and the man is alive three years later.
Listen
•
5:29
Glenn Loury, once a prominent Black intellectual, writes about his struggles
NPR's Michel Martin talks to Pulitzer Prize-winning economist Glenn Loury about his memoir: "Late Admissions: Confessions of a Black Conservative."
Listen
•
5:06
One of Ukraine's most celebrated poets is touring the United States
Marianna Kiyanovska, one of Ukraine's leading poets, has been speaking about writing in wartime. Her latest collection, "The Voices of Babyn Yar," is about victims of the Holocaust.
Listen
•
1:59
Ukraine's president will speak to EU leaders about his plan to end the war
Ukraine's president is in Brussels today to speak to European Union leaders about his plan to end the war in a year -- without ceding any territory to Russia.
Listen
•
3:46
Election workers in Arizona are facing slurs and death threats
NPR's Ailsa Chang and her team are reporting from Arizona, a key swing state that will help decide who becomes the next president.
Listen
•
3:35
Swing state map: Polls move in Trump's direction, but the race remains tight
The polling averages show Vice President Kamala Harris' lead has dropped in every swing state in recent weeks.
Listen
•
3:35
Israel's incursion into southern Lebanon creates a growing humanitarian disaster
Israel's attacks on Hezbollah have created problems for Lebanese people and the many Syrian refugees who live there. NPR's Leila Fadel talks to Tanya Evans of the International Rescue Committee.
Listen
•
4:47
The once extremely popular kiss lock handbag is making a comeback
Bags with fancy clasps, like those popular in the early 1900s, are back in style. A look at how fashion seems to always come back around.
Listen
•
2:24
Author argues American democracy has not been designed for use by Black people
Washington Post op–ed writer Theodore R. Johnson discusses his new book --- "If We Are Brave, Essay from Black Americana" -- an examination of democracy, race and Black voters in the United States.
Listen
•
6:59
In Nebraska, Democrats' push to win the 'blue dot' has GOP congressman under pressure
Democrats are hoping to pick up one Electoral College vote for Kamala Harris this year. Their spending is affecting Republican Rep. Don Bacon's campaign to keep his seat.
Listen
•
3:52
Previous
237 of 26,927
Next