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WMHT Live
No Ticket Required
Classical Student of the Month
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No Ticket Required
Classical Student of the Month
Women's History Month
Apps
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Announcers
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Schedule
Coverage Map
Classical WMHT Corporate Support
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Coverage Map
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This office was meant to bridge divides in government. Now it's empty
Congress created the Joint Office of Energy and Transportation to unite the expertise of two different agencies that work on electric vehicle charging. Now it seems to have turned into a ghost ship.
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•
4:14
Pentagon told trans troops to get diagnosed. It's using the paper trail to kick them out
During President Trump's first term, transgender troops were told they needed to be diagnosed with gender dysphoria to keep their jobs. Now, the military is using that to put them on administrative leave.
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•
7:54
The Framers wanted the House closest to the people. Redistricting may undermine that
Redistricting critics warn that efforts to redraw maps mid-decade risks fueling further gridlock in Congress, and ceding more power to the executive and judicial branches.
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•
4:00
20 years after Hurricane Katrina, St. Bernard Parish is still recovering
Hurricane Katrina flooded nearly every building in St. Bernard Parish near New Orleans in 2005. Twenty years later, the community is still rebuilding and flood protections encouraged some to return.
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•
4:35
Young men helped Trump retake the White House -- a trend years in the making
Where did Democrats go wrong with men this election? How did Republicans win them over, and how might Democrats work to win some of them back?NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Aaron Smith of the Young Men Research Initiative and John Della Volpe with the Harvard Kennedy School Institute of Politics.
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•
7:11
Did the 'L.A. Times' and other news outlets pull punches to appease Trump?
Inside the Los Angeles Times, MSNBC, and the Washington Post, journalists question whether news executives are making editorial decisions with an eye to appeasing former President Donald Trump.
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•
5:19
Thousands of new Americans opt for 'ultimate act of inclusion' despite obstacles
Three citizenship ceremonies NPR attended in the Washington, D.C. area in January were largely celebratory experiences, despite a year of hurdles and changes to the naturalization process.
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•
3:56
All eyes are on Harris at the DNC tonight
Vice President Harris takes center stage at the Democratic National Convention tonight. Here's what to expect.
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•
7:30
Lots of people love tennis. But do you know where it comes from?
Recent years have seen an upswing in people playing tennis (or at least dressing like it). But it's not just a phase. The sport — at least some version of it — has been around since medieval times.
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•
2:47
A survivor of abuse by a Catholic priest in Chicago shares his experience
NPR's Scott Simon speaks to journalist Dan Ronan, who was sexually abused as a child by a Catholic priest in Chicago. A recently released report details widespread misconduct by Illinois clergy.
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8:43
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