WDIY Headlines
Bill Dautremonth-Smith welcomes Kassie Hilgert, ArtsQuest President and CEO to the studio to pick out three songs and discuss the meaning they have to her.
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On the next Galactic Travels™, Bill Fox continues the month-long focus on Montreal, Québec-based ambient electronic artist Mutagénèse. The Featured CD at Midnight will be Exploration Spatiale by Mutagénèse.
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Margaret McConnell and co-hosts Becky Bradley and Matt Assad of the Lehigh Valley Planning Commission welcome Chris Kufro of PennDOT and Rick Molchany of the LV Transportation Study to talk about the regions Transportation Improvement Program.
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The film tells the story of 'For King & Country,' a gospel rock band made up by an Australian family, and their struggles on their way to stardom.
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A new bill sponsored by Representative Robert Freeman of Northampton County seeks to extend hours for breweries on certain days of the year. WDIY's Mike Flynn reports.
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Federal Reserves is holding its lending rate constant... Dr. Kamran Afshar takes a look at this and more in his synopsis of this week's economic news and trends across the Lehigh Valley and nation.
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The Biden administration is finally wrapping up its review of President Donald Trump's tariffs on Chinese imports. It will keep those tariffs, and add more on things like electric vehicles.
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Pomp and circumstance again fall victim to circumstance for some students in the graduating class of 2024, as protests over the war in Gaza threaten to disrupt commencement ceremonies.
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Because of the Israeli operation, hospitals lack basic supplies. And doctors must face the heartbreaking decision whether to let one patient die so they can use available resources to save another.
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Here's a summary of NPR's reporting about a purported flyer that was found in a portable toilet at a migrant encampment in Matamoros, Mexico that urged migrants to vote illegally for President Biden.
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The U.S. Treasury ran a surplus last month, thanks in part to the April 15th tax deadline. But the federal government is still expected to end the year more than $1.5 trillion in the red.