Rams staff, alumni are expressing lingering concerns over nixed programs, offices.
Spotlight on VPM Original Content
Virginia News
NPR News
Virginia News
-
The county’s finance committee reviewed pay for similar positions in other locales.
-
The Richmond protest was one of many that took place across the country on April 19.
-
Take a look at this week's top VPM News stories.
-
At least 35 students have had visas terminated across the commonwealth.
-
Experts say solving the staffing crisis is just the start.
-
Issues at the city’s treatment plant include failing battery backups and “a faulty culture.”
NPR News
-
The meetings between top U.S. and Chinese officials in Geneva represent the first potential efforts to end a trade war that has frazzled financial markets.
-
U.K. Prime Minister says Europe and the U.S. are "calling out" Putin, by proposing a 30-day unconditional ceasefire starting Monday.
-
News of an American pope, and a Chicagoan, causes NPR's Scott Simon to remember what it was like attending Mass in his hometown.
-
Since North Carolina passed a "bathroom" law in 2016, the number of bills has grown and Republicans have used the issue in campaigns. Democrats are still working out how to respond.
-
In 1989, Trump took out full-page newspaper ads demanding the death penalty "for roving bands of wild criminals." The Detroit Opera decided to program this work long before the presidential election.
Arts & Culture
- Tara Roberts helps scuba divers uncover slave shipwrecks
- New Burying Ground honors enslaved labor at University of Richmond
- Museums, libraries and cultural groups grapple with federal humanities cuts
- ‘Idleness and boredom’: Virginia juvenile justice system strained by staffing shortages