WMUBTALK Archives

April 2001

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Subject:
From:
Cleve Callison <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
WMUB Talk Shows <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 30 Apr 2001 07:43:27 -0500
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Today's Talk Shows on NPR@88-5, WMUB <http://www.wmub.org/today/>

Monday, April 30, 2001

Interconnect (9am - 10am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Why God Won't Go Away: A Neuropsychological Analysis of Religion.
Guests: Dr. Andrew B. Newberg, author, professor and researcher

The Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
Note: Diane is recovering from another treatment for spasmodic
dysphonia. Guest host: Susan Page of USA Today
Hour One: global AIDS strategy
Hour Two: what today's parents and kids need to know about sex

Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
Paul McCartney (that's Sir Paul McCartney now)

Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
"Just Six Numbers: The Deep Forces That Shape The Universe"

Talk of the Nation with Juan Williams (2pm - 4pm)
Hour One: Bush's first 100 days
Hour Two: space tourism

All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
A former residential hotel in New York goes upscale, and residents
don't like it


coming up soon in local talk
(live and interactive 9am - 10am, repeated 7pm - 8pm)

tomorrow on the Todd Mundt Show
Philosophy for everyday life. The ongoing frustrations of life --
misplacing the car keys, paying bills, getting stuck in traffic --
are daily, mundane annoyances, ones we all deal with. Keep them in
perspective with help from history's greatest thinkers.

Wednesday on Sound Health with Marianne Russ
Music Therapy. Guest: Mimi Sinclair, Music Therapy
Services, University of Dayton

Thursday on Help Desk
Mac and PC questions answered with Ted Beerman and Guy Moore

Friday on WMUB Forum with Darrel Gray
Middle East conflicts: the basics


DETAILS:

Interconnect (9am - 10am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Why God Won't Go Away: A Neuropsychological Analysis of Religion.
Guests: Dr. Andrew B. Newberg, author, professor and researcher

The Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
Note: Diane is recovering from another treatment for spasmodic
dysphonia. Guest host: Susan Page of USA Today.
Hour One: Global AIDS Strategy: Some health experts believe that
prevention should be the highest priority in the worldwide battle
against AIDS. Others believe that treatment should be at the top of
the list. A panel of experts talks about the latest news and issues
in the global public health care crisis that is AIDS. Guests: Anthony
Fauci, director, Natl. Inst. of Allergy & Infectious Diseases/NIH;
Barry Bloom, dean of the Harvard School of Public Health
Hour Two: Deborah Roffman, a sex education expert known as "The Sex
Lady" to her students in the Baltimore-Washington area, talks about
what today's parents and kids need to know about a subject that most
people are uncomfortable discussing. Her new book is "Sex and
Sensibility: The Thinking Parent's Guide to Talking Sense about Sex"
(Perseus).

Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
Terry is back for a conversation with SIR PAUL MCCARTNEY. The former
Beatle has a new book of poetry, "Blackbird Singing: Poems and
Lyrics, 1965 to 1999."

Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
"Just Six Numbers: The Deep Forces That Shape The Universe" THE BIG
BANG. THE FORMATION OF GALAXIES. THE ORIGIN OF LIFE ON EARTH. ALL BIG
QUESTIONS THAT DON'T HAVE SIMPLE ANSWERS. RENOWNED ASTROPHYSICIST SIR
MARTIN REES JOINS KOJO TO DEMYSTIFY THE UNIVERSE... AT LEAST A LITTLE
BIT. Guest: Sir Martin Rees, Britain's Astronomer Royal; also Royal
Society Research Professor at Cambridge University; and author "Just
Six Numbers: The Deep Forces That Shape The Universe"

Talk of the Nation with Juan Williams (2pm - 4pm); guest host Tom Gjelten
Hour One: 100 Days: yesterday, George W. Bush marked 100 days as
president. How's he doing? Juan Williams and NPR's Dan Schorr review
the President's first days
Hour Two: Space tourism: Businessman Dennis Tito is paying the
Russians 20 million dollars to be the first outer space tourist. Is
it a bad precedent or the way of the future?

All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
Life at the Hudson: In midtown Manhattan a residential hotel that
once provided affordable housing for working class people has been
transformed. There's a chic cocktail lounge. A candle-lit lobby.
Remodeled rooms go for $500 a night. Some old residents still live
there, but they say management doesn't want them seen by the new
clientele. They've been given a separate entrance and elevator.


WMUB talk show list administrator <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
http://www.wmub.org
Talk show pages: http://www.wmub.org/Today
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