Search Query
Show Search
Sign In
News
Local News
State News
NPR News
Pekin Particulars
Washington Watch
Business & Economy
Education & Schools
Politics & Government
Harvest Public Media
Weather
Local News
State News
NPR News
Pekin Particulars
Washington Watch
Business & Economy
Education & Schools
Politics & Government
Harvest Public Media
Weather
Arts & Music
Out & About
Submit On-Air Community Announcement
Highway 309
Classical 24
Out & About
Submit On-Air Community Announcement
Highway 309
Classical 24
Shows & Podcasts
Schedule
WCBU Newscasts
Out & About Podcast
Programs A-Z
Schedule
WCBU Newscasts
Out & About Podcast
Programs A-Z
Support
Contribute Now
Ways to Donate
CPB Funding Updates
Corporate Support
NPR+ Podcast Bundle
Day Sponsors
Matching Gifts
Plan Your Legacy
Donate Your Vehicle
Contribute Now
Ways to Donate
CPB Funding Updates
Corporate Support
NPR+ Podcast Bundle
Day Sponsors
Matching Gifts
Plan Your Legacy
Donate Your Vehicle
About
Contact Us
Our Staff
Transparency and Public Files
WCBU Community Advisory Board
Awards
Scholarship
Station Announcements
History of WCBU
Contact Us
Our Staff
Transparency and Public Files
WCBU Community Advisory Board
Awards
Scholarship
Station Announcements
History of WCBU
Engage
Submit On-Air Community Announcement
Subscribe to Newsletter
NPR App
Smart Speakers
Social Media Guidelines
Supporter Spotlight
Sign in to WCBU.org
Submit On-Air Community Announcement
Subscribe to Newsletter
NPR App
Smart Speakers
Social Media Guidelines
Supporter Spotlight
Sign in to WCBU.org
© 2026 Peoria Public Radio
Menu
A joint service of Bradley University and Illinois State University
Show Search
Search Query
Sign In
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
NEWS WCBU 89.9
On Air
Now Playing
CLASSICAL WCBU HD2
All Streams
News
Local News
State News
NPR News
Pekin Particulars
Washington Watch
Business & Economy
Education & Schools
Politics & Government
Harvest Public Media
Weather
Local News
State News
NPR News
Pekin Particulars
Washington Watch
Business & Economy
Education & Schools
Politics & Government
Harvest Public Media
Weather
Arts & Music
Out & About
Submit On-Air Community Announcement
Highway 309
Classical 24
Out & About
Submit On-Air Community Announcement
Highway 309
Classical 24
Shows & Podcasts
Schedule
WCBU Newscasts
Out & About Podcast
Programs A-Z
Schedule
WCBU Newscasts
Out & About Podcast
Programs A-Z
Support
Contribute Now
Ways to Donate
CPB Funding Updates
Corporate Support
NPR+ Podcast Bundle
Day Sponsors
Matching Gifts
Plan Your Legacy
Donate Your Vehicle
Contribute Now
Ways to Donate
CPB Funding Updates
Corporate Support
NPR+ Podcast Bundle
Day Sponsors
Matching Gifts
Plan Your Legacy
Donate Your Vehicle
About
Contact Us
Our Staff
Transparency and Public Files
WCBU Community Advisory Board
Awards
Scholarship
Station Announcements
History of WCBU
Contact Us
Our Staff
Transparency and Public Files
WCBU Community Advisory Board
Awards
Scholarship
Station Announcements
History of WCBU
Engage
Submit On-Air Community Announcement
Subscribe to Newsletter
NPR App
Smart Speakers
Social Media Guidelines
Supporter Spotlight
Sign in to WCBU.org
Submit On-Air Community Announcement
Subscribe to Newsletter
NPR App
Smart Speakers
Social Media Guidelines
Supporter Spotlight
Sign in to WCBU.org
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
Opera 101
Daniel talks to Fred Plotkin, the author of "Opera 101" about father-daughter relationships in the operas of Verdi. Plotkin says that recent scholarship has revealed that Verdi had an illigetimate daughter, and that is probably the reason that he explored father/daughter conflicts so much in his work.
Lewis Hine
Daniels talks with Russell Freedman, author of "Kids at Work, Lewis Hine and the Crusade Against Child Labor". (Clarion
V
Day - Danny asks listeners to call the Weekend All Things Considered Valentine's Day Hotline in order to pass on the pet names they call their loved ones. The number is (202) 408-5183. Callers should leave at least their first names and where they're calling from...unless of course they're too embarrassed in which case just a location will do.
Dr./Paitent
David Baron of member station W-B-U-R in Boston reports on a woman who has spent her life in and around doctors. Now she's become a patient and is battling cancer. She is hoping to pass on her first hand experiences to other doctors.
Arts In Progress
Jacki Lyden visits several arts organizations in Baltimore and discusses the relationship between private and public funding. As politicans speak of defunding the National Endowment for the Arts, agencies which receive that money say they are responsibile to public tastes and make that money go further than ever before. But, without it, art in America will be damaged, they claim...even if the amounts they receive are really quite small.
2. Gjelten/Governors' Conference
NPR'S TOM GJELTEN REPORTS ON THE GOVERNORS' CONFERENCE, WHICH BEGINS TODAY. ONE ISSUE ON THE GOVERNORS' MINDS IS THE MOVE TO SHIFT POWERS AND RESPONSIBILITIES AWAY FROM THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT, AND TOWARD THE STATES.
2. Week In Review
SCOTT AND WEEKEND EDITION SENIOR NEWS ANALYST DANIEL SCHORR TALK ABOUT THE TOP NEWS STORIES OF THE WEEK.
1. Billboard + Simon/Samuelson
SCOTT TALKS WITH ROBERT SAMUELSON, ECONOMIC COLUMNIST WITH NEWSWEEK MAGAZINE AND THE WASHINGTON POST, ABOUT THE BALANCED BUDGET AMENDMENT, PASSED THIS WEEK BY THE HOUSE, AND WHY MANY POLITICIANS LIKE IT, BUT AN EQUALLY LARGE NUMBER OF ANALYSTS WHO DON'T HAVE TO FACE VOTERS DON'T.
Privatizing New Zealand
Daniel talks with freelance journalist Shane Cave who covers business and economics in New Zealand. Cave compares analyzes what's happend in New Zealand in the 10 years since a new political party was voted in and radically changed the way the government there did business. He also talks of how the political changes there are similar to what the Republican Party here wants to do.
Rescue Dogs
NPR's Mary Kay Magistead visits Kobe in Japan after a day's rain has further hampered efforts to rescue people trapped by Tuesday's devastating earthquake. Magistead reports that the only foreign assistance the Japanese government has accepted are Swiss army dogs which are trained to resuce people trapped by avalanches and earthquakes, but these dogs are not finding their task easy.
Previous
961 of 30,918
Next