Officials announced Monday that they will focus on Class Day and school-level events instead of the main ceremony planned for May 15, following the arrest and suspension of pro-Palestinian protesters.
Washington Week is the longest-running prime time news and analysis program on television and was recognized for its journalism excellence with a 2008 Peabody Award, among other honors.
Stay in touch with the latest news and analysis from Springfield. CapitolView is the only weekly prime time broadcast television program covering the Illinois General Assembly. Thank you for supporting the best in public television.
-
Researchers say if state officials don’t curb utility spending, “Illinois is on course to maintain its entire gas system indefinitely.”
-
As legislative session nears its end, policy platform part of ongoing clean energy debate
-
Residents, particularly those who live in inland communities, can have a greater flood risk the closer they are to a river or stream.
-
Chancellor Lane says the takeover tour helped overcome some of the financial aid delays for prospective students.
-
Hunter Lincoln's vehicle left the road, collided with a ditch and overturned.
-
Petersen Health Care's properties could be sold off by end of July under company's proposed timelinePetersen Health Care is asking a federal bankruptcy judge to approve a sale timeline that would see its nursing homes divested to new ownership by the end of July.
-
Both lanes of US-51 are closed just north of DeSoto.
-
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the St Louis District continues to pay attention to water levels as precipitation increases in the Bi-State area.
-
A jury found Samuel Lewis guilty in the murder of Lafayette Woods.
-
Egyptian Electric Cooperative Association is issuing an alert to its members regarding out-of-state solar installers claiming false association with EECA.
-
Some doctors are promoting propellant-free inhalers over puff inhalers that emit greenhouse gases. Climate change can exacerbate respiratory ills because of more fires, air pollution and allergens.
-
Morning Edition spoke to migrants hoping to enter the U.S. and the border agents tasked with keeping them out.
-
In 1997, Apryle Oswald got in a car accident. The man who responded went on to help for three more days — driving her dog to the vet and Oswald's boyfriend back and forth to the hospital.
-
As Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi looks to win a third term, NPR visited some of his voter base in the north.
-
Veterans who helped test nuclear weapons are fighting to renew a 34-year-old law meant to help compensate for the long-term health effects of their work.
-
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson told NPR he sees the U.S. in an urgent race with China to find water on the moon, and that he trusts SpaceX, despite Elon Musk's increasingly controversial profile.
-
Griner's new memoir recounts being humiliated by guards, of the pain from squeezing her 6-foot-9 frame into cramped beds and cage, and cutting her locs because it was so cold that her hair froze.