WMUBTALK Archives

July 2001

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Subject:
From:
John Hingsbergen <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
WMUB Talk Shows <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 31 Jul 2001 08:19:48 -0400
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Tuesday, July 31, 2001
the Todd Mundt Show (9am - 10am, repeated 7pm -8pm)
The Thomas Jefferson Bible
The Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
Hour one: Estrogen Hormone Replacement Therapy
Hour two:  Novelist Sarah Bird
Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
He was once called the "maddest writer in the U.S.A." by Truman Capote.
. .a talk with Mississippi native and writer BARRY HANNAH.   His new
novel "Yonder Stands Your Orphan" is his first in ten years.
Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
Tech Tuesday: Video Games
Talk of the Nation with Juan Williams (2pm - 4pm)
Hour One: FREE SPEECH AND CHILD PORNOGRAPHY
Hour Two: FUEL EMISSION STANDARDS
All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
TBA


coming up soon in local talk
(live and interactive 9am - 10am, repeated 7pm - 8pm)
tomorrow on Sound Health with Marianne Russ
Sleep Disorders
Thursday on Help Desk
Answers to your PC and Mac questions with guest experts Ted Beerman and
Kevin Sizemore (Guy Moore is on vacation).
Friday on WMUB Forum with guest host Cleve Callison
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
Sexual addictions with Ed Laniers and author Sue Silverman

Tuesday, July 31, 2001
the Todd Mundt Show (9am - 10am, repeated 7pm -8pm)
Thomas Jefferson studied the Bible when he was in the White House.
Forrest Church, Unitarian Universalist minister, talks about the text
that Thomas Jefferson compiled, which includes the morality teachings of
the Bible but omits the miracles. Church has written the introduction to
the printing of Jefferson's book, called "The Jefferson Bible: The Life
And Morals Of Jesus of Nazareth".

Our tech writer Heather Newman returns to the studio to talk about the
new computer virus called "SirCam". She also talks about screen
captures, the online services that will replace Napster, and Mpeg 4
technology. Newman is a columnist at the "Detroit Free Press".
The Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
Hour one: Estrogen Hormone Replacement Therapy: The American Heart
Association recently reversed its position on estrogen hormone
replacement therapy, saying there's no evidence that HRT can have a
protective effect in women with heart disease. A panel talks about this
report, and the very latest information on the pros and cons of taking
estrogen. Guests: Dr. Jacques Roussouw, Women's Health Initiative,
National Heart, Lung & Blood Inst. Dr. Donna Hurlock, gynecologist Dr.
Rosemary Robertson, past president, American Heart Assn.Hour two:  Sarah
Bird: Novelist Sarah Bird joins Diane to discuss "The Yokota Officers'
Club" (Knopf), a fictional take on the life of a "military brat."
Set on an Air Force base in Okinawa in the late 1960s, it's the story
of a young woman who's just beginning to understand the effect the
military lifestyle has
had on her family.
Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
Writer BARRY HANNAH. A native of Mississippi, HANNAH has been writing
for over thirty years - short stories, and novels set in the South. His
writing is described as intensely personal, frenetic and comic. Truman
Capote once called him "the maddest writer in the U.S.A." His first
book, the autobiographical novel "Geronimo Rex" (published in 1972) won
the William Faulkner Prize for writing. He followed that with "Airships"
a collection of  short stories now considered a classic. He continued to
publish more short story collections and novels, though his new novel
"Yonder Stands Your Orphan"  (Grove/Atlantic) is his first in ten years.
HANNAH teaches creative writing at the University of Mississippi..
Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
Tech Tuesday: We've come along way from Pac-man.  Within the next five
years, the video game industry will bring in eighty-six billion dollars.
A Tech Tuesday discussion of video games -- The growing female audience,
the role of Hollywood, and the new consoles arriving this fall.
Guests:  1. (by studio KQED San Francisco) Chris Taylor, San Francisco
bureau chief,  Time magazine, and video game reviewer for On magazine 2.
(by phone from London) Ernest Adams, [www.designersnotebook.com]
freelance game designer 3. Doug Lowenstein, (STEEN) president of
Interactive Digital Software Association (the video game industry
association).Talk of the Nation with Juan Williams (2pm - 4pm)
Hour one:  FREE SPEECH AND CHILD PORNOGRAPHY: guest host Melinda
Penkava and guests will discuss a case in Ohio involving a man who was
convicted of child pornography based on what he wrote in his personal
diary. How far free speech goes when it comes to child pornography?
Hour two: FUEL EMISSION STANDARDS: A new study recommends that car
manufacturers make cars that get more miles to the gallon. While this
may satisfy environmentalists, it could make cars more expensive for
consumers.
All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
TBA

John E. Hingsbergen
Program Director
[log in to unmask],  WMUB
Miami University
Oxford, OH

office: 513-529-5894
cell:    513-255-0094
http://www.wmub.org

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