Tuesday, July 24, 2001
the Todd Mundt Show (9am - 10am, repeated 7pm -8pm) Jonathan Yardley,
book reviewer for the Washington Post.
The Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
Hour one: Living Donors
Hour two: Senator Paul Wellstone
Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
Singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright
Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
Tech Tuesday: Evaluating Technology
Talk of the Nation with Juan Williams (2pm - 4pm)
Hour One: Individual Black Identity
Hour Two: What energy crisis?
All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
The revival of Ska music
coming up soon in local talk
(live and interactive 9am - 10am, repeated 7pm - 8pm)
tomorrow on Sound Health with Marianne Russ
Our monthly FitTalk program, hosted by "Dr. Jay" Kimiecik, PhD,
Associate Professor in Health Promotion at Miami University. This month:
an encore presentation from March 28, 2001. "Girls on the Run." Guest:
Molly Barker, Founder and Executive Director of Girls on the Run
International, an organization that provides preadolescent girls,
through physical activity, with the enabling tools to embrace their
girlhood gifts as they enter middle and high school and then on into
adulthood.
Thursday on Help Desk with guest host John Hingsbergen Mac and PC
questions answered with Ted Beerman and Kevin Sizemore (Guy Moore is on
vacation.)
Friday on WMUB Forum with Darrel Gray 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
Re-evaluation counseling.
Tuesday, July 24, 2001
the Todd Mundt Show (9am - 10am, repeated 7pm -8pm)
Turning a childhood passion into full-time work might seem like a
fantasy, but Jonathan Yardley has done it. He talks with Todd about his
love of books when he was a kid, and how he's now a professional book
reviewer for the "Washington Post". He explains why it's not a
paradise, since reading is a chore when you're expected to do it as
work. He talks about how reading for pleasure is different from reading
for a book review.The
Diane Rehm Show (10am - Noon)
Hour one: Living Donors: Transplanting an organ from a living donor has
been an accepted medical practice for decades. But increasingly, donors
and recipients don't know each other. A panel talks about "stranger
donors," and new programs designed to increase the supply of organs to
people who need them. GUESTS: Lori Brigham, Washington Regional
Transplant Consortium; Dr. Jimmy Light, transplant surgeon at the
Washington Hospital Center; Alice Sullivan, kidney donor; Dr. Jeffrey
Kahn, director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of
Minnesota
Hour two: Sen. Paul Wellstone: In the 1990 Senate election, political
science professor Paul Wellstone was the only challenger to beat an
incumbent. In a new book, "The Conscience of a Liberal" (Random House),
he describes the roots of his political involvement in his 1960's
activist days, and talks about the state of the progressive movement in
American politics today.
Fresh Air with Terry Gross (Noon - 1pm)
An in-studio concert and interview with singer-songwriter RUFUS
WAINWRIGHT. It's not surprising that WAINWRIGHT would become a
musician and singer. He's the son of singer-songwriters Loudon
Wainwright III and Kate McGarrigle (of the McGarrigle sisters). He's
just released his second album, "Poses" (Dreamworks)
Public Interest with Kojo Nnamdi (1pm - 2pm)
Tech Tuesday: DO YOU WANT THAT PALM PILOT? SHOULD YOU BUY THAT E-BOOK?
MOST EVERYONE WILL AGREE -- IN THE WORLD OF TECHNOLOGY, WE OFTEN "LEAP
BEFORE WE LOOK." JOIN US FOR A "TECH TUESDAY" DISCUSSION ON EVALUATING
TECHNOLOGY, ANTICIPATING UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES, AND LEARNING TO
CHOOSE NEW MACHINES WISELY. (This is a re-broadcast of a
previously-aired program.)
Talk of the Nation with Juan Williams (2pm - 4pm)
Hour one: INDIVIDUAL BLACK IDENTITY GUESTS: ERIN AUBRY KAPLAN, Staff
Writer, "LA Weekly;" DR. PRICE COBBS, *Psychiatrist, CEO, Pacific
anagement Systems; HOUSTON BAKER, Professor of English and
Afro-American Studies, Duke niversity, Author, "Turning South Again"
(Duke University Press, 2001)
As more blacks enter the middle class, they're encountering a unique set
of problems. Many Blacks who've "made it" in today's society say they
find racial barriers still in place. And they often do not feel
accepted as individuals but always judged on the basis of their color.
Juan Williams talks with guests about the mental stress -- even the
rage -- that goes with being middle-class and African-American.
Hour two: WHAT ENERGY CRISIS? GUEST: PAUL GEORGIA *Environmental Policy
Analyst, Competitive Enterprise Institute OTHER GUESTS: TBA After a
big shortage of electricity, California is now selling its surplus
power. Nationwide, prices for electricity, natural gas and gasoline are
dropping. So what happened to the energy crisis? Juan Williams talks
with energy experts about the nation's shifting energy crisis.
All Things Considered (4pm - 7pm)
The revival of ska music, a genre with origins in late 1950s Jamaica.
Hear how one group of Generation X musicians joined the latest ska
revival when they formed their band, The Slackers.
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