WMUBTALK Archives

September 2001

WMUBTALK@LISTSERV.MIAMIOH.EDU

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Subject:
From:
Cleve Callison <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
WMUB Talk Shows <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 7 Sep 2001 08:01:49 -0400
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Today's Talk Shows on WMUB (http://www.wmub.org/today)

Satirist (and Miami grad) P.J. O'Rourke will visit Kojo Nnamdi on
Public Interest at 1 p.m.

The long-awaited Ohio Supreme Court decision on school funding was
announced yesterday. WMUB will carry a special state-wide call-in
from Ohio Public Radio Monday at noon.

Friday, September 7, 2001

WMUB Forum with Darrel Gray (9am - 10am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
        Privacy issues

The Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
        Hour One: weekly news roundup
        Hour two: Maryland Lieutenant Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend

Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
        Author Mary Karr, who has written about about her teenaged
years and her sexual coming of age

Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
        Satirist (and Miami alum) P.J. O'Rourke

Talk of the Nation/Science Friday with Ira Flatow (2pm - 4pm)
        Hour one: the safety and ethics of clinical trials
        Hour two: forensics: how can science help us catch a killer?

All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
        Recreating a landmark from Elizabethan England: Shakespeare's
Blackfriars Theatre


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

Sunday on Talk of the Week (a 4 pm re-broadcast of one of the
previous week's talk show)
        From Tuesday's Talk of the Nation: A discussion on the UN
World Conference Against Racism. The United States and Israel pulled
out of the Conference, being held in Durban, South Africa.

Monday on Interconnect with John Hingsbergen and Cheri Lawson
        Healthy Living with Essential Oils and Aromatherapy. Guest:
Mary Lee Patton, author and CEO and founder of  Earth Tribe
International; Kristen Caudill, clinical aromatherapist.
<[log in to unmask]>

Tuesday on Help Desk (NEW DAY)
        Mac and PC questions answered with Ted Beerman and Guy Moore.



DETAILS:

WMUB Forum with Darrel Gray (9am - 10am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
        Privacy issues

The Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
        Hour one: News Roundup: A panel of journalists joins Steve
for review and analysis of the week's top national, political, and
international news stories. Guests: David Brooks, The Weekly
Standard; E.J. Dionne, The Washington Post; Susan Page, USA Today
        Hour two: Maryland Lieutenant Governor Kathleen Kennedy
Townsend: Kathleen Kennedy Townsend is the lieutenant governor of
Maryland, and the oldest daughter of Ethel Kennedy and the late
Robert F. Kennedy. She joins Diane to talk about growing up in
America's most famous political family, and about her own interests
and ideas as she contemplates her future in public service.

Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
        Author MARY KARR. She wrote the "The Liars Club" about her
childhood, and "Cherry," about her teenaged years and her sexual
coming of age. That book has just been published in paperback.

Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
        AFTER TEN YEARS WITH THE NATIONAL LAMPOON, P.J. O'ROURKE (A
MIAMI UNIVERSITY ALUMNUS) REALIZED REAL-WORLD EVENTS WERE MORE
OUTLANDISH AND AMUSING THAN ANYTHING HE CREATED. AND EVER SINCE HE'S
BEEN COMMENTING ON OUR POLITICAL PROCESS. KOJO SITS DOWN WITH THE MAN
OFTEN CALLED "AMERICA'S PREMIER POLITICAL SATIRIST." Guest: P.J.
O'Rourke, author of "The C.E.O. of the Sofa"

Talk of the Nation/Science Friday with Ira Flatow (2pm - 4pm)
        Hour one: The safety and ethics of clinical trials: Earlier
this year the government temporarily shut down research involving
human subjects at Johns Hopkins. And last week, families of several
Nigerian children filed suit against the company Pfizer, saying
trials of an antibiotic were conducted unethically.
        Hour two: FORENSICS: How can science help us catch a killer?
A talk with former New York City medical examiner Michael Baden
(BAH-din).

All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
        The new home base for the Shenandoah Shakespeare Express. In
the heart of Virginia's Shenandoah Valley, carpenters are hard at
work on the inside of an old insurance building. They're working with
solid oak, recreating a landmark from Elizabethan England:
Shakespeare's Blackfriars Theatre.


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, Tuesdays 9-10 am, 7-8 pm EDT
listen to WMUB live at http://www.wmub.org

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