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Friday      
May 22, 2009
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More Details in the New York Terror Plot

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James Gordon Meek of the New York Daily News tells us about the four men charged with attempting to blow up two Bronx synagogues and plotting to shoot down a military plane. They are being held without bail in New York.

Remembering Tiananmen Square

A lone man walks alongside red flags after the clearing Tiananmen square for security reasons ahead of  the opening session of the National People's Congress in  Beijing's Great Hall of the People Sunday, March 5, 2006. (AP

A lone man walks alongside red flags after the clearing Tiananmen square for security reasons ahead of the opening session of the National People's Congress in Beijing's Great Hall of the People Sunday, March 5, 2006. (AP

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20 years ago this week, martial law was in effect in Beijing, as the Communist Chinese Government tried to tamp down on student protests, eventually leading to a bloody crackdown by the Chinese Army that killed hundreds. We speak with Journalist John Pomfret was in the square during the protests.

Fleeing Chemotherapy

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13-year-old Daniel Hauser and his mother Colleen are still on the run, fleeing from what they fear will be a Minnesota judge’s ruling ordering chemotherapy to treat Daniel’s Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. Mrs. Hauser believes her son is an elder and a medicine man in the Nemenhah Band and Native American Traditional Organization, and the Hausers believe the group’s herbal supplements will cure him. We speak with Professor of Religious Studies and American Indian Native Studies Michelene Pesantubbee.

Search Engine Takes on Google and Listener Letters

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Wolfram Alpha is a new search engine that can compute Pi to the 1,000th digit, tell users the nutritional value of a tuna sandwich, or find the Hubble space telescope in the night sky. The engine’s founder wants to take all the world’s information and make it easy to pull apart and analyze. We put Wolfram Alpha to the test with David Weinberger of Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society.

James Isaacs

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Here and Now’s Jazz aficionado James Isaacs joins us with some new music for consideration, including Jane Monheit’s and Allen Toussaint’s takes on songs made famous by June Christy and Thelonious Monk.

Music from the show

  • The Lickets, “A Crowd of Pimps in the Rain”
  • The Benevento, “Sunny’s Song”
  • The Doors, “Peace Frog”
  • Thelonius Monk, “Caravan”
  • Theme from “2001: A Space Odyssey”.
  • Paul Potts, “Nessun Dorma” from the CD “One Chance”
  • Harry Secombe “Nessun Dorma” from the CD “My Favorite Carols”
  • Bobby Morganstein “Sex in the City” from the CD “The Complete TV Themes #23 Vol. 1”
  • June Christy “Something Cool” from the CD “Something Cool”
  • Jane Monheit “Something Cool” from the CD “The Lovers, the Dreamers and Me”.
  • Jane Monheit “Slow Like Honey” from the CD “The Lovers, the Dreamers and Me”.
  • Thelonious Monk “Bright Mississippi” from the CD “Monk’s Dream”.
  • Allen Toussaint “Bright Mississippi” from the CD “The Bright Mississippi”.
  • Martial Solal “On Green Dolphin Street” from the CD “Live at the Village Vanguard”.
Listener comments
  • u get Ten (10) points

    for finding

    Jane Monheit

    for me…

    I do love beautiful female

    jazzy type singer

    thanking you so very much

    kaly

    Posted by klay, on May 22nd, 2009 at 1:08 pm
  • Jane Monheit and Allen Tousaint drew me to your website.
    Thank you.
    and now. . .
    I would like to hear more about the FBI agent who “worked with” four men accused of plotting to blow up places for a year and then supplied them with the (albeit phoney) weapons.
    How does that work for the good?

    Thanks again

    Denton

    Posted by Denton, on May 22nd, 2009 at 2:46 pm
  • [...] And my all time favorite that was used in an NPR piece on Wolfram Alpha [...]

    Posted by It’s NOT a search engine - Wolfram Alpha - try it! – pafa.net, on May 22nd, 2009 at 4:24 pm
  • China has 5 thousand yrs old history, June 4th is a chapter of that history. Chinese people also rised up against western invasions, reclaiming their homeland from the western invaders, that is also an important part of china’s history:

    The NPR should also mark that as an important anniversary, to remind the public every year how the west used to loot, murder in china, fueling china’s civil war, causing millions lives lost, and how heroic chinese people are in the face of western invasion.

    By only emphasizing on June 4th, it shows NPR is just another left-wing media, NPR will never gain any recognitions from the chinese audience and any fair minded western listeners.

    Posted by westernerwitheasterneyes, on May 25th, 2009 at 8:30 pm
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