90.9 WBUR - Boston's NPR news station
Top Stories:
PLEDGE NOW
Wednesday      
October 20, 2010

Clarence Thomas’ Wife Asks For Apology From Anita Hill

The wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas is asking Anita Hill to consider apologizing for accusing the justice of sexually harassing her. Virginia, or Ginni, Thomas made the request in a voicemail message left over the weekend, some 19 years after Hill made the accusation during the justice’s confirmation hearing. This comes as Virginia Thomas has made headlines for launching a conservative nonprofit group called Liberty Central. We take a look at Virginia Thomas and her political activism with Ken Vogel of Politico.

Where’s My Ballot, Dude?

Medical marijuana patient Ezekiel Muses, who uses the drug for back pain, checks out a jar of medical marijuana at a legal dispensary. (AP)

Medical marijuana patient Ezekiel Muses, who uses the drug for back pain, checks out a jar of medical marijuana at a legal dispensary. (AP)

People in California are voting on whether to legalize the recreational use of marijuana in next Tuesday’s election. Proposition 19 also allows local government to impose and collect marijuana-related fees and taxes. If passed, legal recreational marijuana use would be added to medical marijuana use, which was approved by California voters in 1996. Peter Hecht writes the Weed Wars blog for the Sacramento Bee and joins us to talk about the implications of Prop 19.

Thousands Of Workers Face ‘Axe Wednesday’ In Britain

After spending billions of dollars bailing out indebted banks and suffering a squeeze on tax revenue and a hike in welfare bills, the British government is putting on the brakes. Treasury chief George Osborne announced about $128 billion in spending cuts today, which could lead to the loss of 500,000 jobs. It’s the biggest British spending such cut since World War II. The BBC’s political correspondent Rob Watson joins us from Westminister.

Judge Considers Case Of Sickened National Guard Vets Suing Contractor

A federal judge is hearing the case of 26 National Guard veterans from Oregon who claim that military contractor Kellogg, Brown and Root exposed them to a cancer-causing chemical at a water treatment plant in Iraq in 2003. The veterans say that a rust inhibitor used there contained the well-documented carcinogen hexavalent chromium, the same chemical that Erin Brockovich made infamous in the 1990s. KBR has said it’s not responsible for the illnesses. We speak with Julie Sullivan, staff writer at The Oregonian newspaper. Her reports on hexavalent chromium helped lead to the creation of a state fund and national V.A. registry for affected vets.

The Books Make Their Mark In The Music World

The Books. (Nino P./Courtesy photo)

Paul de Jong and Nick Zammuto of The Books. (Nino P./Courtesy photo)

Here & Now’s Andrea Shea profiles the music duo, The Books.  Cellist Paul de Jong and singer-guitarist Nick Zammuto create ear bending collages of sound blending electronica, with their own instruments, voices and tons of obscure “found” audio. The Books are currently on tour supporting their new release “The Way Out.”

Music From The Show

  • Calexico, “Crumble”
  • Ken Vandermark, “New Acrylic”
  • Moby, “Inside”
  • The Funk Brothers, “Keep Me Hangin’ On”
  • Massive Attack, “Saturday Come Slow”
  • Joe Jackson, “Steppin’ Out”
  • Ron L.

    Another great story on Here & Now, Oct 20, about “The Books” duo. I was dissapointed that the “band” seemed to consider all audio recordings (from video to vinyl) they found as ready source material for their sampling. Since no mention of royalties or credits was made, I ask: Do “The Books” compensate the copyright holders of the instruction videos or spoken-word records that they sample (and profit) from? Finding something in a thrift store does not make it copyright-free. Admittedly, copyright was not the crux of the Here & Now story, but it does seem to be at the crux of The Book’s “creativity” and deserved mention. No matter where one stands on the legality of sampling, does Here & Now have an obligation to mention the existence of the debate itself, as well as the possible illegal or fully-legal sampling/copyright issues of “The Books” recordings? A more complete story would have provided this to its listeners.

With Sponsorship from:
Accelerating the pace of engineering and science
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Donzell Minz is pictured at Curt's Cafe in Chicago. (Jeremy Hobson/Here & Now)

We first spoke with Donzell Mintz when he was a teenager, before he was sentenced to three years behind bars. Fresh out of prison, he’s working at a cafe that trains young ex-offenders.

14 Comments | more »
Monday, June 17, 2013
Joan Parker sitting on her late husband's desk. Behind Joan is a teddy bear that her husband, author Robert Parker, had since childhood. (Anna Miller/Here & Now)

Joan Parker, longtime philanthropist and the widow of mystery writer Robert B. Parker, died last Tuesday. Joan was the inspiration for the character loved by Robert’s protagonist, detective Spenser.

4 Comments | more »
Monday, June 17, 2013
Cancer patient Lynne Lobel, 47, watches a television program as she gets chemotherapy treatment at Nevada Cancer Institute in Las Vegas, September 2005. (Jae C. Hong/AP)

The sequester budget cuts mean lower reimbursements for chemotherapy drugs for Medicare patients — a change that’s forcing some cancer clinics to turn away patients, in order to make ends meet.

4 Comments | more »