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Show archive for February, 2010

Germany's Maria Riesch speeds down the course during the first run of the Women's slalom, at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics(AP)

Toyota From Congress To Courts, Vancouverites Look To Olympic Legacy, Murder In Dubai… Who Done It?, Helping AIDS Orphans In Swaziland, Yuriko: A Dancer With Martha Graham

Full show rundown »
Dick Button

Dick Button’s free skate at the St. Moritz Olympics in 1948, during which he became the first skater to land a double axel jump in competition:

Dick Button’s free skate at the Oslo Olympics in 1952, during which he became the first skater to land a triple jump in competition:

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Dick Button skates during a practice session at the 1948 Winter Games in St. Moritz, Switzerland

What Will The Health Care Summit Produce?, Is Temple Grandin Changing How Animals Are Treated?, The Case Against Amy Bishop, Force Feeding and the Doctor’s Dilemma, Listener Letters, Dick Button on Olympic Skating

Full show rundown »

Seulewah Golf Course, after the tsunami

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Building homes that can withstand major hurricanes and earthquakes, as envisioned by Miami-based architect and urban planner Andres Duany.

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Toyota CEO Before Congress, Health Care Check-Up, Wyoming Considers A “Cowboy Code, Rebuilding In Haiti, Good Greens and Long Fairways

Full show rundown »

How Many Jobs Will The Jobs Bill Create?, Restitution For Victims Of Child Porn, Shadow Of Saddam, Cyber-spying In High School?, The Best Pictures Of 1943

Full show rundown »
Lay Low, 2007. (Arnar Ómarsson)

Health Care, Again, ‘Why We Love Dogs, Eat Pigs, and Wear Cows’, More Questions For Toyota, Olympics Update, Florida Woman Fights Court Order For Bed Rest While Pregnant, Iceland’s Patsy Cline Reflects On Finding Country Music

Full show rundown »
This early Dec. 2009 photo provided by the Illinois River Biological Station via the Detroit Free Press shows Illinois River silver carp jump out of the water after being disturbed by sounds of watercraft. Many fear that the Asian carp, which can reach 4 feet long and weigh up to 100 pounds, will wreak havoc, not by attacking native fish, but starving them out by gobbling up plankton. Michigan asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday, Dec. 21, 2009 to close shipping locks near Chicago to prevent the carp from invading the Great Lakes and endangering their $7 billion fishery. (AP Photo/Illinois River Biological Station via the Detroit free Press, Nerissa Michaels)

Plane Crash Pilot Had Decades-Long Fued with IRS, A Closer Look At Clergy Sex Abuse, Tiger Woods Emerges, Olympics Update, The Big Fish Swimming… To Chicago, Musician Matt Morris

Full show rundown »
Olympic Champion Shaun White of the USA, center, runner up Peetu Piiroinen of Finland, left and third placed Scott Lago of the USA celebrate at the flower ceremony after the men's snowboard halfpipe competition at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2010. (AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

President Appoints Deficit Panel, Terror Trials Trouble, Olympics Update, Operation Mostarak, Listeners Weigh In, There Are No Small Roles

Full show rundown »
President Barack Obama delivers remarks on the economy on the one year anniversary of the signing of the Recovery Act, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2010, in the South Court Auditorium in the Old Executive Office Building on the White House campus in Washington. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Stimulus Year One, Mayors Across America, The Skinny In Spain, President Obama To Meet The Dalai Lama, What Is Beauty?

Full show rundown »

Number Two Taliban Commander Arrested, N.I.H. Chief On Science, Health And Faith, Living In Boston With No Central Heat- By Choice, Alabama Shooting Raises Questions In Massachusetts, Violin Prodigy Sam Weiser

Full show rundown »
The Casa Dos Durasip House (Durasip.com)

U.S. Troops Facing Resistance in Marja, To Help Haiti, Expert Says Let Haitians Leave, Is The Solution To Haiti’s Housing Woes Fiberglass?, Winter Olympics Update, John McCain Is Feeling The Heat, Smelt Fishing In America

Full show rundown »
A drawing of William and Ellen Craft (New York Historical Society).

Incumbents Get Nervous, Brain Scientist’s Stroke Leads To Enlightenment, ‘Cyber Cyrano’ Plays Matchmaker, Mental Health Providers In Ethiopia Looks West, Listener Letters, The Messrs. Craft

Full show rundown »
French movie producer, Jacques Tati shoots a scene,  jumping in the role as camera man on the set producing his latest and third film "Mon Uncle" (My Uncle) in France, April 1958. (AP Photo)

Providing Shelter in Haiti, Is the U.S. Exporting Mental Illness?, Anniversary In Iran, Blizzard Heats Up Global Warming Debate, The Films Of Jacques Tati

Full show rundown »
A snowplow clears the snow along Pennsylvania Ave., in front of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 10, 2010. (AP)

Toyota Safety Problems: Where Were The Regulators?, Previewing U.S. Prospects In Vancouver, A Look At Polygamy In North America

Full show rundown »
President Obama with (from left) House Minority Leader John Boehner of Ohio; House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calf.; and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev Tuesday, Feb. 9, in the White House. (AP)

Looking for a Thaw in Washington, The Great American University- Is It Under Threat?, Argentina Finds Clues About ‘Disappeared’ Through DNA, Amy Bloom’s ‘Where the God of Love Hangs Out’

Full show rundown »
Waves pound the sandbagged seawall in Kivalina, Alaska, Sept., 2007. (AP)

Investigation Begins into Connecticut Gas Explosion, Sifting Through New Credit Card Rules, Alaskan Village Sues Oil Companies over Climate Change, Do Calories Count?

Full show rundown »
A protestor holds an American flag and sign during the tax-day rally on the Capitol steps in Frankfort, Ky., Wednesday, April 15, 2009. Protesters gathered at state Capitols and in neighborhoods and town squares across the country Wednesday to kick off a series of tax-day protests designed to echo the rebellion of the Boston Tea Party. (AP)

NY Town Vies for 9/11 Trial, Student’s Suicide Raises Concerns Over Bullying Prevention, Tea Party Convention Kicks Off, The Life and Times of the NFL’s Bert Bell, Music From ‘Who Dat’ Nation

Full show rundown »
A man drives a Toyota Motor Corp.'s "Prius Plug-in Hybrid" during a test drive event at a Toyota facility in Tokyo, Japan, Monday, Dec. 14, 2009.  (AP)

Scott Brown Jetting to Washington, Using the Airwaves for Political Force, Car Talk, Can Wikipedia Keep Growing?, ‘Love Letters and Some Not So Lovely Letters’

Full show rundown »
Imam Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen in Oct. 2008.  (AP Photo/Muhammad ud-Deen)

Yemeni Tankers Cleared for Boston, Al Qaeda, Anwar al-Awlaki, and the Internet, Iran Launches Research Rocket, Crisis Camps Help in Haiti, Author Wells Tower

Full show rundown »
Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Michael Mullen testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Feb. 2, 2010. (AP)

Scaling Back Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, Sifting Through the Tangled Process of Adopting from Haiti, Preserving Northern Forests, Navigating the Roads of Gaza, And the Nominees Are…

Full show rundown »
A Toyota dealer is seen in Kamp-Lintfort, western Germany, Friday Jan.29, 2010. Toyota's still-expanding recalls over faulty gas pedals and an unprecedented decision to stop selling and building some of its top-selling models in the U.S. are costing the carmaker dearly: industry analysts are already forecasting its market share will sink to its lowest since 2006. Japanese Trade Minister Masayuki Naoshima sounded a note of alarm Friday about the tarnished reputation of Toyota Motor Corp., the nation's iconic automaker. (AP Photo/Frank Augstein)

Toyota Announces Fix, Terrorism Trials, Maine Lawmaker Pushes for Cellphone Warning Label, GOP Targets President Obama’s Former Senate Seat, Contemplating fatherhood, family dysfunction, and Abu Ghraib

Full show rundown »
RECENT SHOWS
Jabbar Swaiyed, 72, and his wife look over a ballot before casting their vote in Basra, Iraq's second-largest city on March 7, 2010.  (AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani)

Pres. Obama Looks To Re-write No Child Left Behind, Political Fortunes May Shift In Iraqi Vote Count, Butte, Mt. Celebrates Luck Of The Irish, Northern Ireland Is Still A Land Divided, Psychologist Says Evolution Helps Make Us Fat

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Health Care Reform Comes Down To The Wire, Health Care Benefits Squeeze Cities, Who Owns Kafka, A Scientologist Speaks Out On Church Abuse, The States That Didn’t Make The Cut

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RECENT STORIES
Map of Texlahoma (Michael Trinklein)

Author Michael Trinklein’s maps of states that have been proposed over the years, but which never made it onto the official map of the United States.

Get Flash [...]

(Tuesday, March 16, 2010)
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The DIY movement is moving mainstream. Check out projects ranging from swimming pools made from dumpsters and bicycles built from bamboo.

(Friday, March 12, 2010)
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NOTES & UPDATES

Welcome to our newest listeners in Orlando, FL, Chicago, IL, Morris, IL and Chesterton, IN! In the past few months we’ve been joined by new stations in Alaska, Arkansas, California, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin.

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Some recent stories we thought you’d enjoy- from our conversation with oncologist Jerome Groopman about the status of the war on cancer, to accordion champion Cory Pesaturo.

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Here & Now producers share their favorite music, books and websites.

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Looking for a book for the young person in your life? We share our favorites.

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