Today's talk shows on WMUB (http://www.wmub.org/Today)
Thursday, February 15, 2001
The Diane Rehm Show (10 am - noon)
Hour one: US-Mexico relations
Hour two: what will the computer of the future look like?
Fresh Air (noon - 1 pm)
The story of Madame C.J. Walker, a pioneering African
American businesswoman and philanthropist
Public Interest (1 - 2 pm)
Hot Spots: Haiti.
Talk of the Nation (2 - 4 pm)
Hour one: the President's visit to Mexico
Hour two: Eminem and the Grammys
All Things Considered (4 - 7 pm)
Wireless access to the Web is hot in Japan, but not in the U.S.
tomorrow on WMUB Forum (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Christianity in the 21st Century. How Christianity is
responding to and changing from America's push toward religious
pluralism.
Monday on Interconnect (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Unconscious racism
Wednesday on SoundHealth (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Pets and your health
DETAILS:
The Diane Rehm Show (10 am - noon)
Hour 1: U.S.-Mexico Relations: President George W. Bush,
former governor of Texas, has already signaled an interest in close
relations with the United States' neighbor to the south. A panel
talks about why this is so and how U.S. relations with Mexico may
continue to develop. Guests: Charles Krause, APCO Worldwide; Bernard
Aronsen, former Asst. Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs;
Roger Noriega, staff member, U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee
Hour 2: Michael Dertouzos: What will the computer of the
future look like? Michael Dertouzos, director of MIT's Lab for
Computer Science, thinks it ought to be a lot more "human-centric"
than the machines we have to deal with now. He talks about the
problems of today's computers and about what we might see ahead in a
new book, "The Unfinished Revolution" (Harper Collins).
Fresh Air (noon - 1 pm)
The story of Madame C.J. Walker: the daughter of slaves who
built a business empire creating hair products for African American
women, and then turned her wealth to philanthropy. Terry talks with
her biographer and great-great granddaughter A'LELIA (uh-LEE-eel-yuh)
BUNDLES.
Public Interest (1 - 2 pm)
Hot Spots: Haiti. AS JEAN BERTRAND (ZHON ber-TRAHN) ARISTIDE
BEGINS HIS SECOND ROUND AS HAITI'S PRESIDENT, WHAT DOES HIS POLITICAL
RESURRECTION MEAN FOR THE ISLAND NATION'S FUTURE? OUR HOT SPOTS
SERIES TAKES A LOOK AT HAITI. Guests: 1. (from Port Au Prince)
Rotchilz Francois, News Director, Radio Metropol; 2. James Morrell,
Research Director, Center for International Policy; 3. (1:20-1:35
from Port Au Prince) Anne Hastings, Director, Fonkoze
Talk of the Nation (2 - 4 pm)
Hour 1: BUSH'S VISIT TO MEXICO: President Bush heads to
Mexico Friday to meet with Mexican President Vicente Fox. Bush's
visit to Mexico and the new chapter it opens in U.S.-Mexico relations.
Hour 2: EMINEM AND THE GRAMMYS: Some say he's the poster boy
for vile entertainment --others claim he's a musical genius.
All Things Considered (4 - 7 pm)
Wireless access to the Web is hot in Japan. But phones packed
with Internet options aren't catching the eyes of U.S. consumers yet.
What Americans are waiting for.
tomorrow on WMUB Forum (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Christianity in the 21st Century. How Christianity is
responding to and changing from America's push toward religious
pluralism.
Monday on Interconnect (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Unconscious Racism. Guests: Ernest Britton of Cincinnati
Office of the National Conference for Community and Justice [Web
site: http://www.nccj.org]; Dr. Rodney Coates, Program Director and
professor of Sociology, Gerontology and Anthropology at Miami
University [log in to unmask]
Wednesday on SoundHealth (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Pets and your health
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Talk show pages: http://www.wmub.org/Today
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