Today's talk shows on WMUB
Friday, March 27, 1998
The Diane Rehm Show, 10-12 noon
(note: Diane Rehm is still recovering from a bout of laryngitis. At
this time we are not sure when she will return as host of the show)
Guest Host Steve Roberts
10-11: Weekly news roundup: A panel of journalists discuss the week's
top news stories, from President Clinton's trip to Africa and Kenneth
Starr's continuing investigations in Washington and Little Rock, to gun
safety and the Russian government shakeup.
Guests: Jodie Allen, Slate; David Brooks, Weekly Standard; Eleanor
Clift, Newsweek
11-12: In anticipation of the year 2000, author James Reston talks
about the political and cultural upheaval in Europe that marked the last
turn of the millennium. His book is called "The Last Apocalypse"
(Doubleday).
Fresh Air with Terry Gross, 12-1 p.m.
This month, the Smithsonian opens its exhibit honoring Ella
Fitzgerald, who died in 1996. We'll hear from her biographer STUART
NICHOLSON who has written about her career from a would-be dancer to
becoming "The First Lady of Jazz."
Public Interest, 1-2 p.m.
NOVELIST ISABEL ALLENDE (ah-YEN-day), KNOWN FOR HER RICH, LYRICAL
STYLE OF WHAT'S OFTEN CALLED "MAGICAL REALISM" TALKS WITH HOST KATHY
MERRITT ABOUT HER FASCINATING LIFE, RECENT MOMENTOUS POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTS
IN HER NATIVE COUNTRY OF CHILE AND HER NEWEST NOVEL CALLED "APHRODITE".
ALLENDE'S EARLIER BOOKS, INCLUDING "THE HOUSE OF SPIRITS" AND "PAULA",
HAVE EARNED HER NUMEROUS AWARDS AND A DEVOTED INTERNATIONAL READERSHIP.
Guest: 1. Isabel Allende, author
Talk of the Nation/Science Friday, 2-4 p.m.
This week, Secretary of Health and Human Services Donna Shalala
announced new federal regulations that would revise the way donor organs
are allocated... Join Ira Flatow for a look at the new organ allocation
policy, and what it means for people on the waiting list...And in the
second hour...Think science is nothing more than lab coats, test tubes, and
notebooks? Then tune in to find out just how funny science can be...
Hour 1: Organ Transplant Regulations
Hour 2: Funny Science
and on today's All Things Considered, 4-7 p.m.
not everyone can know what Jonesboro, Arkansas is going through...but
in Paducah (puh-DOO-kuh) Kentucky, they do know. Residents there said they
got a sick feeling upon hearing the news of the Westside Middle School
shootings.
It's been four months since three students were shot at a high school
in Paducah...we'll hear from people there.
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