© 2026 WOSU Public Media
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Search results for

  • An "unspoken alliance" between scientists and the military had been brewing for millennia prior to Hiroshima. Neil deGrasse Tyson and Avis Lang excel at detailing this union and its possible future.
  • The former world No. 1 Halep insists she didn't take a banned drug and is vowing to clear her name. Many in tennis are siding with her.
  • The Stoddard Avenue Pumpkin Glow has been a Dayton tradition for over 30 years. WYSO spent the week before Halloween in the Grafton Hill neighborhood, where a team of volunteers carve over 800 Jack-o-lanterns each year and display them on a hillside for the city to see.
  • For the first time in 22-years women are running the top organization responsible for electing Latino Democrats to Congress. They say they know how to win with abortiona as a driving force.
  • "The reality is, she's over there because of a gender issue ― pay inequity," the head of the WNBA's players union said this week about the basketball star who's been detained in Russia since February.
  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt's New Deal revived the economy and put the jobless back to work. Many of those agencies and the projects they created are still with us. We’ll look at the lasting impact the New Deal has had on America.
  • An Ohio bill that would ban any vaccine mandate, from measles to meningitis, and so-called vaccine passports is scheduled for a hearing tomorrow in the Ohio general assembly. We discuss how COVID continues to be a political football even as the number of cases in Ohio surges to the highest number in six months.
  • West Virginia’s Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin said he would vote against his own party and its sweeping voting rights bill called the For the People Act. We discuss what that means for Democrat’s ambitious legislative agenda and more with political journalist Ken Rudin.
  • Even before the pandemic, demand for teachers exceeded supply in the nation’s public schools by more than 100,000. We look at what’s keeping would-be teachers out of the classroom and causing current educators to consider leaving the profession.
  • The Ohio Redistricting Commission passed a second version of new legislative maps on Saturday night, however again the Republicans failed to attract the needed Democratic support for a ten-year map. We’ll catch up on this and more as a part of our Weekly Reporter Roundtable.
1,231 of 10,427