Station Archive

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Jazz After Dark, April 28, 2026

Coming up tonight, some early jazz plus jazz themes from movies. We'll hear from George Gershwin, Ray Eberle, Benny Goodman, Louis Armstrong, Julie London, Gil Evans, Winifred Atwell, Boots Randolph, Kai Winding, Henry Mancini, Wes Montgomery, Frank Sinatra, Bruce Reitherman & Phil Harris, Louis Armstrong, Shirley Bassey, Vince Guaraldi, and the Claude Bolling Big Band.

UC Davis Balances Community Outreach and Budget Cuts

Today The News Cycle focuses on how UC Davis continues to serve the public through agricultural programs while facing federal funding cuts. We have a conversation with Albert Liu from the UC Davis Office of Research. Then, Magdalena Knettle covers a community mulberry tasting event, and Adeleine Glenn reports on how funding changes are impacting graduate students.

Hosted and produced by Maggie Lubell. Packages by Magdalena Knettle and Adeleine Glenn. Music by Daniel Ruiz Jimenez.

 

The Electric Compost Heap (2nd/4th week) for 6:00pm on Apr 24th, 2026

Tonight we'll throw the tarp off of The Electric Compost Heap and spin a pretty good chunk of new tunes, including songs from Wreckless Eric, Girl Trouble, Guided by Voices, Hayes Carll, and Terry Allen, Jo Harvey Allen, and their whole family under the moniker Blood Sucking Maniacs! It just came out today on Paradise of Bachelors records, so it's as fresh as you can get it. Lots of other musical compostables, too, so take a listen!

32. What Matters to You: A Simple Question That Transforms Care in Switzerland

In healthcare, we’re trained to move fast, to diagnose, treat, and fix. But what happens when we slow down just enough to ask a different question: What matters to you? In this episode, we reflect on how one simple question can transform not just clinical decisions, but relationships, trust, and meaning for patients, families, and clinicians. Christian von Plessen shares what happens when we stop asking “What’s the matter?” and start asking “What matters to you?”. Whether you're wearing a stethoscope or the hospital gown, this seemingly simple question is a reminder of why connection matters.

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