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  • Even though the body of ISU graduate student Jelani Day's body was in the Illinois River a long time, the coroner says some information about Day was not lost. Bloomington musician Brett Conlin shares his new album. There are lots of warning signs of domestic violence, a crime of control. Jealousy is one. Insults another. Countering Domestic Violence in Bloomington highlights domestic violence awareness month. Halloween is coming and for millennia people have looked to the night sky as the seasons turn. The director of the ISU planetarium tells you what to look for this time of year
  • ISU professor Intan Suwandi says disruptions in the supply chain began with the first signs of the pandemic
  • Congressman Darin LaHood says he'll focus on the economy in his next run for office in a district that has about half the places he has represented before. And even though he's in a very safe Republican District he's not too keen on how Democrats drew the boundaries. Universal pre-k might still make it into President Biden's infrastructure bill as it continues under negotiation. Find out what early childhood experts think of the notion. The exhaustive McLean County Board redistricting process is winding down and one of the work group heads says the words Democrat and Republican were never mentioned. Eight meetings and hearings might be just enough to do the job, But, can you really ever take politics out of the equation?
  • A new history of McLean County is coming. It's the first such comprehensive book in more than a hundred years. And it's the first to situate central Illinois residents amid broader global and national moments (other than the civil war). The history of Mclean County is more than just Abe Lincoln, Beer Nuts, and State Farm. There's this massacre of native Americans too which happened in 1730 when two French fur trading companies got into a competition and used different native tribes as proxies. Plus Historian Greg Koos chronicles labor, suffrage, and immigration in his new book Freedom, Land, And Community: a History of McLean County 1730-1900.
  • The FBI has said it doesn't have the power to take over the Jelani Day investigation from local authorities. That's not - quite - true. One scholar points to civil rights era murders as an exception. He also says the feds are really reluctant to do that! It used to be said no middle class no democracy. But as democracies have weakened in nations middle classes haven't kicked back much. ISU political scientist Ali Riaz says that's because in countries like Turkey, and Bangladesh, they have benefitted from the rise of the autocrats. And Arts Correspondent Lauren Warnecke dives into a rousing Rachmaninoff performance and the premiere of a new work by the Illinois Symphony Orchestra.
  • On today's episode, the Unit 5 referendum divides school board candidates, plus a preview of the Normal Town Council race.
  • On today's episode, a preview of the municipal and school board elections; Carlock's mayor discusses the Unit 5 tax referendum and the potential closure of the village's grade school; plus Bloomington city manager Tim Gleason discusses homelessness, the city's vehicle use tax and naming rights for the downtown arena.
  • On today's episode, Normal Mayor Chris Koos offers his analysis of the recent elections, a pro-LGBTQ church in Bloomington has to find a new home after the city determined its building is unsafe, plus a preview of the Illinois Symphony’s spring chamber concert called "“Inspiring Influences."
  • On today's episode, McLean County government explores how it may want to regulate carbon capture technology., plus an ISU scholar discuss concerns about banking instability in the U.S.
  • On today's episode, a recap of the Unit 5 tax referendum vote along with the Unit 5 school board and Normal Town Council elections, plus an ISU scholar discusses the criminal charges against former President Donald Trump and what it says about the future of U.S. democracy.
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