© 2026 Peoria Public Radio
A joint service of Bradley University and Illinois State University
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • ENTERTAINMENT CRITIC ELVIS MITCHELL TALKS ABOUT THE MOVIE "MONEY TRAIN" AND THE RECENT ATTACKS ON NEW YORK CITY SUBWAY TELLERS. THE ATTACKS RESEMBLE AN INCIDENT THAT OCCURRED IN THE FILM.
  • Alan Cheuse reviews the recently re-printed historical novel "The Keepers of the House" by Shirley Ann Grau. Grau was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1965 for this novel. The book is published by Louisiana State University and is part of the Voices of The South Series.
  • N-P-R's David Molpus reports on the mechanisms and machinations that exist in offices to decide who -- if anyone -- has to work on holidays. It used to be a simple system of seniority. That doesn't work anymore.
  • WITH BUDGET NEGOTIATIONS ON CAPITOL HILL AT A STANDSTILL, NPR'S JON GREENBERG REPORTS THAT ONE PROPOSAL, WHICH WOULD OVERHAUL THE FEDERAL BUDGET PROCESS, IS GETTING A LOT OF ATTENTION.
  • Federal forces say that Chechen rebels must release a group of hostages before they will be permitted to cross the frontier from the republic of Dagestan into Chechnya.
  • In the aftermath of the plane that crashed into an open marketplace in Zaire, scavengers have descended upon the wreckage to take anything they can sell or trade. Washington Post correspondent Lynne Duke is in Kinshasa, Zaire, and talks to Robert about the possible mysterious destination of the plane and why a marketplace was alongside an airport.
  • NPR's Elizabeth Arnold reports on Texas Senator Phil Gramm, who has been campaigning for the Republican nomination for president for well over a year and the first big test comes Feb. 12 in the Iowa caucuses. That will be his chance to see if he can close the gap between himself and Senator Bob Dole, who is presumed to be well ahead of all the other GOP contenders. Gramm is confident he can show his candidacy gaining strength. With a message designed to win over fiscal and social conservatives, Gramm says he's the candidate best able to carry out the Republican agenda, and that the key to his viability is carrying out the promises his party made in 1994.
  • of the south the rise of the Republican party.
  • SCOTT HAS SOME THOUGHTS ON THE UPCOMING QUEBEC REFERENDUM
  • to return as a pre-condition for a lasting peace. But after nearly three decades of Israeli occupation, thousands of Israeli civilians now live on the Heights, and they don't want to leave.
1,004 of 31,458