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March 1999

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Subject:
From:
Cleve Callison <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Cleve Callison <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 19 Mar 1999 04:59:28 -0500
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Today's talk 
shows on
WMUB (http://www.wmub.org/Today.html)


Friday, March 19, 1999

LIVE FROM BORDERS OF DAYTON: WMUB Forum: Oscar  preview

Diane Rehm: weekly news roundup; Readers' Review: Brave New World
Fresh Air: 'Simpsons 'creator Matt Groening; Tommy Smothers
Public Interest: white jazz pioneers
Talk of the Nation: a worldwide tuberculosis epidemic; preserving plant
diversity
All Things Considered: TBA



   WMUB Forum,
9-10 a.m.,
repeated 7-8 p.m.

                       News Director Darrel Gray hosts an hour of
conversations with guests, and your e-mail comments and  questions
(http://www.wmub.org/forumcomment.html)

                             Friday, March 19: Oscar preview

                                   Guest: Ron Rollins, Entertainment
Editor, Dayton Daily News


   The Diane
Rehm Show,
10-12 noon
(*2 FULL HOURS
on WMUB)

                       10-11: News Roundup: A panel of journalists joins
Diane for her regular Friday roundtable discussion of the  week's top news
stories, from Kosovo and Medicare reform to the ongoing controversy about
security in top  nuclear labs.

                             Guests: David Brooks, The Weekly Standard;
Susan Page, USA Today; Daniel Schorr, NPR

                       11-12: Readers' Review "Brave New World": The March
Readers' Review panel discusses Aldous Huxley's  novel "Brave New World,"
written in 1932. It's a chilling portrait of a nightmarish society of the
future. As  we approach the end of the 20th century, Diane and her guests
will take a look at one man's ideas of what  might lie ahead.

                             Guests: Patti Griffiths, novelist &
playwright; Ron Goldfarb, author, attorney and literary agent;  Jackson
Bryer, University of Md. English Dept.; Lisa Page, freelance writer


   Fresh Air
with Terry Gross,
12:06-1 p.m.

                       Guest host David Bianculi talks with the creator of
the Simpsons, MATT GROENING ("GRAIN-ing"). Next  week he premieres his new
animated series on FOX. It's called "Futurama" and is set in the year 3000
in New  York City. Also -- TOMMY SMOTHERS of the Smothers Brothers on their
pioneering comedy show.



   Public Interest,
1-2 p.m.

                       Host: Kojo Nnamdi

                       MANY HIGHLY RESPECTED HISTORIES OF JAZZ AND ITS
LEGENDARY PERFORMERS HAVE BEEN  WRITTEN. BUT ALMOST ALWAYS, JAZZ'S ROOTS
ARE PLACED ALMOST EXCLUSIVELY IN THE  AFRICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY. JOIN KOJO
AND A PANEL OF GUESTS TO DISCUSS THE UNIQUE  CONTRIBUTIONS OF THE
OFTEN-FORGOTTEN GENERATION OF WHITE JAZZ PIONEERS.

                             Guests: 1. Richard Sudhalter, author of"Lost
Chords" 2. Willard Jenkins



   Talk of
the Nation/
Science Friday
2-4 p.m. (*LIVE)

                       Host: Joanne Silberner

                       HOUR ONE: Tuberculosis...a rising epidemic worldwide.

                       HOUR TWO: Preserving plant diversity in agricultural
crops and backyard gardens.



   on today's
All Things
Considered,
4-7 p.m.

                       TBA

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