Today's talk shows on WMUB (http://www.wmub.org/Today.html)
Monday, March 27, 2000
You can win an iMac computer during our 50th Anniversary fund drive,
which ends March 29. Want to make pledge through the web? Go to our
online pledge form (http://www.wmub.org/pledge2.html)
Diane Rehm: the nature of heroism; Doctor Jerome Groopman, author of
"Second Opinions"
Fresh Air: how patients act on medical advice
Public Interest: a conservative approach to environmentalism
Talk of the Nation: Russian elections; are family-owned newspapers on
the way out?
All Things Considered: illegal immigrants held in prisons after their
sentences are over
For questions about Morning Edition, Talk of the Nation, or All
Things Considered, call NPR's Audience Services at (202) 414-3232.
For tapes and transcripts call toll-free 1-877-NPR-TEXT
(1-877-677-8398).
The Diane Rehm Show, 10-12 noon (*2 full hours on WMUB)
10-11: The Nature of Heroism
Guests: TBA
11-12: Doctor Jerome Groopman, author of "Second Opinions"
Fresh Air with Terry Gross, 12:06-1 p.m.
Doctor Jerome Groopman. His new book, "Second Opinions," explores how
patients evaluate, and act upon, conflicting medical advice.
For tapes and transcripts of Fresh Air, call Toll-Free 1-(877)-21-FRESH.
Public Interest
Host: Kojo Nnamdi
ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES ARE OFTEN THE SUBJECT OF POLARIZING DEBATES
BETWEEN THE POLITICAL RIGHT AND LEFT. KOJO SPEAKS WITH COLUMNIST
PETER HUBER, WHO HAS AUTHORED A NEW BOOK THAT INDICTS
ENVIRONMENTALISM AS WE KNOW IT TODAY, PUTTING FORTH A CONSERVATIVE
ALTERNATIVE FOR PRESERVING THE NATION'S FORESTS, OCEANS, LAKES, AND
STREAMS.
Guest: Peter Huber, author of "Hard Green: Saving the
Environment From the Environomentalists: A Conservative Manifesto;
also Senior Fellow at the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research;
and an attorney. (Pub: Basic Books/Perseus, NY)
Talk of the Nation/Science Friday, 2-4 p.m. (*live on WMUB)
Host: Juan Williams
HOUR ONE: RUSSIAN ELECTION: the results of the Russian presidential
election, and what may lie ahead for Russia's relations with the
United States
HOUR TWO: ARE FAMILY NEWSPAPERS DYING?: In today's multimedia world,
old-fashioned, family-owned newspapers are a thing of the past?
All Things Considered, 4-7 p.m.
Across the country, thousands of immigrants languish in prison for
years after they've served their sentences. They can't be deported,
and the government won't let them out.
WMUB Forum, 9-10 a.m., repeated 7-8 p.m.
News Director Darrel Gray with an hour of conversations with guests,
and listener e-mail comments and questions
(http://www.wmub.org/forumcomment.html).
Friday, March 31: TBA
Cleve Callison <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
General Manager, WMUB Public Radio
**Celebrating 50 years of WMUB * 1950 * 2000**
Williams Hall, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056
513-529-5958, 513-529-6048 FAX
http://www.wmub.org
|