Friday      
June 8, 2007

Day One of CIA Extraordinary Rendition Trial

The first trial involving the CIA’s extraordinary rendition program opens without the presence of any of the 26 U.S. defendants, who are accused of kidnapping an Egyptian terrorist suspect in Milan in 2003. Ian Fisher of The New York Times joins us.

New Heights: Skycrapers

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New supertall skyscrapers are going up in the Middle East; they are also rising in East Asia. But high can they go? To find out, we speak to Carol Willis of the Skyscraper Museum in New York and Philip Nobel, who writes about the lust for height in American.com.

Murdoch to Buy Wall Street Journal?

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New York Times Business columnist Joe Nocera says the Wall Street Journal is ripe for a buyout and it will be hard to match Rupert Murdoch’s 5-billion-dollar takeover bid.

Bridging Anthropology and Engineering at MIT

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Kathleen Allard, a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology gives us a tour of a sixty foot long, Inca style rope bridge she and her fellow students at MIT built as part of a course that integrates anthropology and engineering.

Mrs. Goose Goes to Washington

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Political satirist and a reporter for the Syracuse Standard, Hart Seely, attacks all members of the political sphere in his new book of updated nursery rhymes, Mrs. Goose Goes to Washington. We talk to him about writing the book, and his poems lampooning the top tier presidential candidates.

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Friday, May 18, 2012
The Appian Road, in the Monti Aurunci area of Italy. (Robert Kaster/University of Chicago Press)

For many people, this time of year is an occasion for road trips — up and down the coasts, across the U.S., through Europe. For Robert Kaster, it was a time to venture along the most ancient roads of all time: the Appian Way in Italy.

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Friday, May 18, 2012
(Michael M. Phillips/Wall Street Journal)

It was supposed to be a calm ride for marines travelling in Zaranj, along Afghanistan’s border with Iran, but a suicide bomb changed that. Photographer Michael Phillips witnessed the scene unfold and joins us.

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Thursday, May 17, 2012
Musician John Fullbright at Here & Now studios at WBUR in Boston. (Jesse Costa/Here & Now)

Okemah, Okla., is the birthplace of folk legend Woody Guthrie. It’s also the hometown of singer-songwriter John Fullbright, who at just 24, is already being compared with folk great Townes Van Zandt.

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