Search Query
Show Search
Programs
Program Schedule
Program Schedule
Community Calendar
News
WVAS Local
Jazz
Blues
WVAS Awards Entries
Archives
WVAS Local
Jazz
Blues
WVAS Awards Entries
Archives
People
Hosts
Staff
WVAS News Room
Hosts
Staff
WVAS News Room
Support WVAS
About Us
Contact Us
Contact Us
© 2026 WVAS
Menu
Show Search
Search Query
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
WVAS
Livestream
Programs
Program Schedule
Program Schedule
Community Calendar
News
WVAS Local
Jazz
Blues
WVAS Awards Entries
Archives
WVAS Local
Jazz
Blues
WVAS Awards Entries
Archives
People
Hosts
Staff
WVAS News Room
Hosts
Staff
WVAS News Room
Support WVAS
About Us
Contact Us
Contact Us
Follow us on Facebook!
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
2 Scientists Win 2015 Nobel Prize In Physics
Takaaki Kajita of Japan and Arthur McDonald of Canada won "for the discovery of neutrino oscillations, which shows that neutrinos have mass," the committee announced Tuesday morning in Stockholm.
Listen
•
3:27
Israel Steps Up Security After Deaths Of 8 Israelis, Palestinians
A significant increase in violence has led to the deaths of eight Israelis and Palestinians in recent days, highlighting tensions and prompting an Israeli security crackdown.
Listen
•
3:54
Climate Change Is Not Our Fault
Humans changed Earth's climate by mistake, says astrophysicist Adam Frank. But not doing everything we can now that we know it's happening — that would be our fault and our failure. COMMENTARY.
Listen
•
3:04
A Mixtape Of Russian History In 'Love And Techno'
Anthony Marra's new book, The Tsar of Love and Techno, is a collection of stories playing out over nearly a century of change in Russia. He tells NPR he wants the book to function like a mixtape.
Listen
•
7:01
Was Kunduz Attack A War Crime? Legal Analysts Say It's Difficult To Prove
A medical aid group says U.S. airstrikes on its hospital in Kunduz amount to a war crime. Analysts say an investigation is needed, but diplomatic fallout is more likely than a war-crime prosecution.
Listen
•
3:18
China Is Absent From Trans-Pacific Trade Deal
The TPP is a key part of the Obama administration's pivot to Asia, strapping together the economies of several Asian nations to the U.S. It's also a counter to China's growing influence in the region.
Listen
•
2:24
Physics Nobel Awarded For Work On Neutrinos' Metamorphosis
Working far apart, both Takaaki Kajita and Arthur B. McDonald found that neutrinos shift identities like chameleons in space — and that they have mass.
South Carolina Girds For Long Recovery From Record Rains
With the death toll at 13 in the Carolinas, rescue teams are fanning out, searching flooded homes and cars. George Kearns of South Carolina Public Radio talks with Renee Montagne.
Listen
•
3:39
FAA Proposes Nearly $2 Million Fine To Drone Operator For Restricted Flights
The Federal Aviation Administration charges the company, SkyPan International, conducted 65 flights in the skies over Chicago and New York, some of the nation's most restricted and congested airspace.
In 'Love And Techno,' The World Is Cruel — But The People Aren't (Mostly)
Anthony Marra's new short story collection is a hundred-year relay of Russian history, full of black, bone-dry humor and characters who are often (but not always) as awful as the worlds they live in.
Previous
1,057 of 25,219
Next