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Home
News
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News Ambassadors: Oglethorpe
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Local
National
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Schedule
Daily Schedule
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Weekly Schedule
All Programs
WUGA News & Info Programs
Athens News Matters
Wordland
The Georgia Health Report
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Remember the Ladies
Athens News Matters
Wordland
The Georgia Health Report
Museum Minute
Remember the Ladies
WUGA Music Programs
African Perspectives
Athens 441
Just Folks
Music From High Cotton
New South Showcase
UGA Presents
Sound of Athens
Search Playlists
African Perspectives
Athens 441
Just Folks
Music From High Cotton
New South Showcase
UGA Presents
Sound of Athens
Search Playlists
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Become an Underwriter
WUGA Mobile App
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Athens News Matters (Podcast)
Down In It
Aquathread
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Down In It
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FCC Set to Vote on Media Ownership Rules
The Federal Communications Commission will vote on whether to relax restrictions on the number of radio and TV stations media conglomerates can own. Protesters around the country take to the streets, speaking out against the proposal they say will lead to less diversity of content and viewpoints. Hear NPR's Susan Stone.
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Jazz Pianist and Singer Barbara Carroll
The 78-year-old singer is currently performing at Birdland in New York City. Previously, Carroll spent 25 years playing at Bemelmans Bar at the Carlyle Hotel. This year, she received three lifetime achievement awards; one of them was the Kennedy Center's Mary Lou Williams Women in Jazz Lifetime Achievement Award. Carroll has a number of albums to her credit; her latest is the new solo album Morning in May.
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Housing First: California Farm Workers, Part I
Many of the people who harvest the abundant crops in Southern California's Coachella Valley have no decent place to live. For the "Housing First" series, NPR's Ina Jaffe reports on one community's attempt to address the housing shortage for migrant workers.
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'The Ethicist': Read a Personal Blog?
What would you do if you stumbled across a friend's very personal Web log? Should you stop reading subsequent entries out of respect for her privacy? Randy Cohen, who writes "The Ethicist" column for The New York Times Magazine, discusses that ethical dilemma and others in his latest appearance on the show.
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Writer Marijane Meaker
Her new book, Highsmith: A Romance of the 1950's, is about her two-year affair with the writer Patricia Highsmith. They met at a Greenwich Village bar and were both writing lesbian pulp novels under pseudonyms. Meaker wrote Spring Fire (1952) under the pen name Vin Packer. It sold 1.5 million copies. She also wrote under the name Ann Aldrich. Meaker writes young adult novels under the name M.E. Kerr. Highsmith is known for her classic novels Strangers on a Train and The Talented Mr. Ripley.
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NFL quarterback Dwayne Haskins dies after being struck by a truck
The 24-year-old Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback died early Saturday after being struck by a dump truck while walking on a South Florida interstate, the Florida Highway Patrol said.
The First Civil Rights Bus Boycott
Fifty years ago -- and two years before the famed bus boycott in Montgomery, Ala. -- black citizens in Baton Rouge, La., staged what's believed to be the first-ever organized protest of Jim Crow laws in the South. NPR's Debbie Elliott reports on the anniversary of the Baton Rouge bus boycott.
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Winged Migration
NPR's Lynn Neary talks with Jacques Perrin, the director of the film Winged Migration, which tells the story of the seasonal migration of birds from a bird's eye view.
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U.S. to Probe Mass Graves in Iraq
The Bush administration drafts a plan to investigate mass murders allegedly committed by the Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq. The plan calls for an international effort to exhume mass graves and collect forensic evidence for possible prosecutions. NPR's Christopher Joyce reports.
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Intelligence Claims on Iraqi Arms Questioned
In a series of closed hearings, House and Senate committees examine whether U.S. intelligence about possible illegal weapons in Iraq were exaggerated to justify war. Meanwhile, U.S. officials say they expect 20,000 to 30,000 troops from other countries, including the Netherlands, Slovakia, Denmark and the Ukraine, will be in Iraq by August. Hear Dana Priest of The Washington Post and NPR's Michele Kelemen.
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