Today's talk shows on WMUB
Veterans Day (Armistice Day)
Thursday, November 11, 1999
WMUB'S fall "Mount Pledgemore" fund-raising campaign ended yesterday
with a new WMUB record total of pledges: $48,620. This amount is 54%
higher than our campaign one year ago. Our sincere thanks go to
everyone who participated.
Even if you couldn't participate, you can still make a pledge at
http://www.wmub.org/pledge2.html.
Diane Rehm: the future of anittrust law; John Glenn
Fresh Air: singers and songwriters Buddy and Julie Miller; a Norman
Rockwell exhibition
Public Interest: John Feinstein (Fine-steen) on the upcoming basketball season
Talk of the Nation: the real costs of war; a profile of Nevada
All Things Considered: for Veterans Day, a remembrance of the Bataan
Death March
today on The Sound of Faith: Hinduism (7:35 am and 4:50 pm)
Friday on WMUB Forum: Beyond Survival: a former POW speaks out
For questions about Morning Edition, Talk of the Nation, or All
Things Considered, call NPR's Audience Services at (202) 414-3232.
For tapes and transcripts call toll-free 1-877-NPR-TEXT
(1-877-677-8398).
The Diane Rehm Show, 10-12 noon (*2 full hours on WMUB)
10-11 The Future of Antitrust Law: In the wake of a major courtroom
ruling in the Justice Department's case against Microsoft, Diane and
her guests discuss antitrust law and how it could evolve in the
increasing globalization of the economy. They'll take a look at the
history of antitrust law in the U.S., and at how laws function
internationally when the jurisdictions of two or more countries
overlap.
Guests: Charles James, antitrust attorney; Bob Lande, U. of
Baltimore Law School; American Antitrust Inst.; Richard Parker,
director of the Bureau of Competition, Federal Trade Commission;
Andrew Gavil, Howard University Law School
11-12 John Glenn: Former Senator John Glenn joins Diane to discuss
his life story, from his years as a fighter pilot and one of NASA's
first groundbreaking astronauts, through his political career, to his
return to space last year on the Discovery shuttle mission. ("John
Glenn: A Memoir" is published by Bantam.)
Fresh Air with Terry Gross, 12:06-1 p.m.
Guests are singer and songwriters BUDDY & JULIE MILLER. Their songs
have been recorded by many others. Now each has new albums of their
own. Also, the postponed interview with art critic DAVE HICKEY about
the Norman Rockwell retrospective currently on exhibition.
For tapes and transcripts of Fresh Air, call Toll-Free 1-(877)-21-FRESH.
Public Interest
Host: Kojo Nnamdi
SPORTS-WRITER, AUTHOR, AND NATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO COMMENTATOR JOHN
FEINSTEIN (FINE-steen) JOINS KOJO TO DISCUSS THE UPCOMING COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SEASON AND OTHER HAPPENINGS IN THE WORLD OF SPORTS.
Guests: John Feinstein
Talk of the Nation, 2-4 p.m. (*live on WMUB)
Host: Melinda Penkava
HOUR ONE: CASUALTY AVERSION: the human costs of war-- what are
Americans willing to accept?
HOUR TWO: NEVADA: the vast state of Nevada, stretching from desert to decadence
All Things Considered, 4-7 p.m.
Veteran's Day... a trip back to Bataan, with the men who survived the
World War Two death march. The surrender of an American force to the
Japanese on the Phillipine Island of Luzon is one of the true
nightmares of American military history.
WMUB Forum, 9-10 a.m., repeated 7-8 p.m.
News Director Darrel Gray with an hour of conversations with guests,
and listener e-mail comments and questions
(http://www.wmub.org/forumcomment.html).
Friday, November 12: Beyond Survival
Former prisoner of war Gerald Coffee (USN-Ret.) Captain Coffee spent
seven years in a POW camp in North Vietnam. He will be speaking at
100 Laws hall on Miami University's Oxford campus Friday at 5 p.m.
Cleve Callison <mailto:[log in to unmask]>
General Manager, WMUB Public Radio
Williams Hall, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056
513-529-5958, 513-529-6048 FAX
http://www.wmub.org
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