
Cole del Charco
Producer, "Due South"Cole del Charco is an audio producer and writer based in Durham. He's made stories for public radio's All Things Considered, Morning Edition and Marketplace. Before ing Due South, he spent time as a freelance journalist, an education and daily news reporter for WUNC, and a podcast producer for WFAE in Charlotte.
- A of reporters s Jeff Tiberii to dive into the week's North Carolina news.
- Politicians, parents, and pundits have lots of opinions about how to solve mental health problems affecting nearly every campus. In this conversation, students themselves share their perspective of what they and their classmates are facing.
- The Trump istration is ing the battle over voter registrations in NC.
- Historians and curators in Georgia unveiled an exhibit of oil paintings at one of many events scheduled for what would have been the author’s one hundredth birthday.
- Roberts talks Harvard, campus protests, hiring a high-profile football coach, and more with Leoneda Inge.
- A budget proposal ed by the state senate would end the state-funded commission, which has helped exonerate 16 people since 2007. The commission is the only state-backed innocence commission in the U.S., though representatives in the state of Texas are considering creating one.
- May 20, 1775, is a date you may recognize from the North Carolina state flag. It represents what was supposedly the first declaration of independence made by any of the 13 colonies involved in the American Revolution.
- A Raleigh post office is renamed in honor of Millie Dunn Veasey, a NC-born "Six Triple Eight" memberIn January 2025, President Joe Biden signed a bill into law, renaming a Raleigh post office on Brentwood Road as Millie Dunn Veasey Post Office.
- Feng was a foreign correspondent based in China for seven years, but was kicked out following her reporting on protests in Hong Kong.
- The prices of imported goods are almost certain to go up, as tariffs from the U.S. take effect. While President Trump has instated a 90-day pause, it doesn’t apply to a 145% tariff on China, as Eli Chen reports.