Today's Talk Shows on WMUB (http://www.wmub.org/today)
Tuesday, June 26, 2001
the Todd Mundt Show (9am - 10am, repeated 7pm -8pm)
The history of American Music. It started in churches, cotton
fields, and Minstrel Shows. It came of age in Tin Pan Alley, on
Broadway and in concert halls. Now in Nashville, Detroit, New York,
Seattle and Los Angeles, it's an industry that's worth several
billion dollars a year.
The Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
Hour One: the steel industry
Hour Two: singer/songwriter Mary Chapin Carpenter
Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
Country musician Steve Earle
Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
Tech Tuesday: Tunnels
Talk of the Nation with Juan Williams (2pm - 4pm); guest host Mara Liasson
Hour One: stem-cell politics
Hour Two: postpartum depression
All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
Anti-discrimination suits against the Waffle House chain
coming up soon in local talk
(live and interactive 9am - 10am, repeated 7pm - 8pm)
tomorrow on Sound Health with Marianne Russ
Our monthly FitTalk program, hosted by "Dr. Jay" Kimiecik,
PhD, Associate Professor in Health Promotion at Miami University.
Guest: Dr. Kathleen Hutchinson, Chair & Professor of Speech
Pathology, Miami University and Dr. Louise Van Vliet, Associate
Professor of Speech Pathology and Audiology
Thursday on Help Desk
Mac and PC questions answered with Ted Beerman and Guy Moore
Friday on WMUB Forum with Darrel Gray
tba
Sunday on Talk of the Week (a 4 pm re-broadcast of one of the
previous week's talk show)
tba
Monday on Interconnect with John Hingsbergen and Cheri Lawson
Reconnecting with your natural sensuality. Guest: Jacqueline
Lapa Sussman
DETAILS:
the Todd Mundt Show (9am - 10am, repeated 7pm -8pm)
The history of American Music. It started in churches, cotton
fields, and Minstrel Shows. It came of age in Tin Pan Alley, on
Broadway and in concert halls. Now in Nashville, Detroit, New York,
Seattle and Los Angeles, it's an industry that's worth several
billion dollars a year.
The Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
Hour One: Steel Industry: President Bush last week announced
the federal government would file a trade case that could reduce
foreign imports of steel. This and other of the president's actions
related to the steel industry have struck some observers as
inconsistent with his professed free-trade stance. A panel talks
about how the American steel industry is changing, and the role the
U.S. government plays in managing its challenges. Guests: John
Jensen, chairman, Consumer Industry Trade Action Coalition; Bill
Kleinfelter, United Steelworkers of America.
Hour Two: Mary Chapin Carpenter: Singer/songwriter Mary
Chapin Carpenter presents "Time*Sex*Love," her first new studio album
in five years. She joins Diane to talk about how she broke through a
bout of writer's block, and about her album's title -- an abbreviated
version of her producer's comment, "Time is the great gift; sex is
the great equalizer; love is the great mystery."
Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
Country musician STEVE EARLE -- on writing songs and writing
fiction. The singer-songwriter has just published his first book, a
collection of short stories called, "Doghouse Roses."
Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
Tech Tuesday: Tunnels. FROM BOSTON'S "BIG DIG" TO EUROPE'S
"CHUNNEL" (CHUN-ul), TUNNELS ARE RAPIDLY CHANGING THE WAY WE GET
AROUND IN THE WORLD. A TECH TUESDAY DISCUSSION OF TUNNEL TECHNOLOGY
WHAT HAS CHANGED AND WHAT HASN'T SINCE THE DAYS OF THE ROMAN
AQUEDUCT. Guests: 1. Dan McNichol, author of "The Big Dig" (Pub:
Silver Lining Books); Former Deputy Director of Public Affairs for
the Big Dig Project; 2. (From KBSU in Boise, Idaho) Jack Lemley,
Chairman of the American Ecology Corporation; and Former Chief
Executive of Transmanch-Link, the European consortium which Designed
and built the Channel Tunnel; 3. Lou Viner, Senior Manager,
Washington Metro
Talk of the Nation with Juan Williams (2pm - 4pm); guest host Mara Liasson
Hour One: STEM CELL POLITICS
Hour Two: POST-PARTUM DEPRESSION.
All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
Across the American southeast, thirteen-hundred Waffle House
restaurants dot the landscape, their yellow signs beckoning. And
since 1995, African-American customers across the southeast have been
filing civil rights lawsuits against the chain. The number of cases
is now close to 100. Hear the allegations of discrimination, and the
company's response.
Cleve Callison <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
General Manager, WMUB Public Radio
Williams Hall, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056
513-529-5958, 513-255-1201 cell, 513-529-6048 FAX
"Help Desk" host, Thursdays 9-10 am, 7-8 pm EDT
listen to WMUB live at http://www.wmub.org
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