Today's talk shows on WMUB (http://www.wmub.org/Today)
Tuesday, January 9, 2001
The Diane Rehm Show (10 am - noon)
Hour one: Census Director Kenneth Prewitt
Hour two: Jimmy Carter
Fresh Air (noon - 1 pm)
Taking on the tobacco industry
Public Interest (1 - 2 pm)
Monthly visit from The Computer Guys
Talk of the Nation (2 - 4 pm)
Hour one: forest protection
Hour two: census redistricting
All Things Considered (4 - 7 pm)
tba
tomorrow on SoundHealth (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Seasonal Affective Disorder
Friday on WMUB Forum (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Poets Jim Reiss and David Schloss
Monday on Interconnect (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
The Spirituality of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The Rev. Peter
Matthews and Walt "Baby" Love
The Diane Rehm Show (10 am - noon)
1: Census Director Kenneth Prewitt: Every ten years, as
mandated by law, the U.S. counts its citizens and gathers information
about them. Kenneth Prewitt, the Census director, presents the
findings of the 2000 census and talks about how the new information
will be used by the government and by others.
2: Jimmy Carter: Former president Jimmy Carter joins Diane to
describe the world in which he grew up, his family's rural farm near
Plains, Georgia. In his new memoir "An Hour Before Daylight" (Random
House), he relates the lessons he learned about faith, work, and race
relations during his depression-era childhood.
Fresh Air (noon - 1 pm)
Taking on the powerful tobacco industry. . . DAVID KESSLER is
the former Commissioner of the U.S. food and Drug Administration who
led the battle to regulate the industry. He's written a new memoir.
Public Interest (1 - 2 pm)
Monthly visit from The Computer Guys.
Talk of the Nation (2 - 4 pm)
1: FOREST PROTECTION: President Clinton signed off on the
biggest forest protection plan ever, declaring nearly 60 million
acres of national forest off limits to road building and most
logging. Although praised by environmentalists the plan brought sharp
criticism from some on Capitol Hill. Why the last minute rush to pass
new legislation? And can the plan survive the Bush administration?
2: CENSUS REDISTRICTING: The census numbers are in and states
are gearing up for Congressional redistricting battles later this
year. Southern states like Texas and Florida are gaining seats...some
northern states like New York and Pennsylvania are losing them. How
redrawing Congressional districts will change the balance of power on
Capitol Hill.
All Things Considered (4 - 7 pm)
tba
Wednesday on SoundHealth (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Seasonal Affective Disorder. Dr. Marisue Naber, Professor of
Nursing, University of Cincinnati; Dr. Rick Robertson, Psychiatrist,
Whitewater Valley Care Pavilion
Friday on WMUB Forum (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
Poets Jim Reiss and David Schloss. Darrel will be joined in
studio by these two contemporary poets. Schloss is a Professor of
English at Miami University; Reiss is Director of the Miami
University Press and is nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for his latest
book of poetry.
Monday on Interconnect (9 - 10 am, repeated 7 - 8 pm)
The Spirituality of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The Rev. Peter
Matthews and Walt "Baby" Love
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