Tuesday      
January 29, 2008

FLORIDA PRIMARY

It’s the largest and most diverse state to vote so far. We’ll discuss today’s Florida primary with Juan Vasquez, deputy editorial page editor at the Miami Herald.

VOTING MACHINES

Listen
Voters in some Florida counties will be casting their ballots on electronic voting machines that caused problems in a 2006 election. And voters in all or part of 20 states will be using computer touchscreen machines that don’t generate a paper record of each vote cast. We speak with elections expert, Doug Chapin of the Pew Center’s Electionline.org, about the state of election reform, six years after Congress passed the Help America Vote Act.

FUTURE TELEVISION

Listen
Holy technology, Batman! Remember rabbit ears and when color television was the state of the art for home viewing? Then came cable television, satellite dishes, and flat screens, plasmas and LCD sets invaded our homes with screens so big that you had to have a separate room just to set them up. Now television technology is about to change again with the coming of high definition signals that will redefine how and what we watch on television. Our guest is Dylan Tweney, senior editor at Wired+.

NEWBERY WINNER

Listen
We speak with Laura Amy Schlitz, a Baltimore school librarian who was just named the Newbery Medal Winner for her book: “Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voices from a Medieval Village.” Laura originally wrote the collection of monologues and dialogues to teach the children at her school about life in the Middle Ages.

With Sponsorship from:
Accelerating the pace of engineering and science
Underwriting:
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.

2 Comments | more »
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.

5 Comments | more »
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.

5 Comments | more »
From Twitter