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photography
Thursday, December 25, 2008 at 10:00 am

Photographer Annie Leibovitz talks about the most important public - and personal - images of her celebrated career.

 
Wednesday, August 13, 2008 at 10:00 am

Americans are fighting and dying in Iraq and Afghanistan, but you almost never see the casualties in American newspapers. We’ll hear the debate over censorship and battlefield images.

Comments [33]
 
On Point Today
Hour 2
How Nukes Spread
Thursday, January 8, 2009 090108nukes225

Spies, lies and nukes. We’ll look at a new history of nuclear proliferation – and how the bomb really spread.

Comments [5]
 
Hour 1
The Stimulus Debate
Thursday, January 8, 2009 Obama

Barack Obama’s nearly $800 billion stimulus package outline is now front and center in Washington. What’s in it? And can it save the economy?

Comments [13]

Recent Shows
21st-Century Slavery
Wednesday, January 7, 2009 090107traffic225

New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof says global sex trafficking is 21st-century slavery — and he wants Barack Obama to abolish it.

Comments [33]
 
Gaza, Hamas, and the Arab World
Wednesday, January 7, 2009 APTOPIX MIDEAST EGYPT PALESTINIANS ISRAEL

As Israel presses its war on Hamas, we’ll look at the Arab world’s reaction to the dire situation in Gaza, and what it means for the Middle East.

Comments [35]
On Point Blog
Here, for the holidays…
By Eileen Imada

One of the great pleasures of directing On Point is that I hear just about every show we produce. And around the holidays, I listen back to some of our best shows to rebroadcast while the staff takes a well-deserved break.

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Canon Wars, Cont.
By John Wihbey

Jay Parini, Middlebury College professor and jack-of-all-literary trades, makes the case in our second hour today for America’s thirteen “representative” books in his new tome “The Promised Land.” Of course, the idea of a great list or “canon” of hallowed must-reads

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How Much to Pay the College Prez?
By John Wihbey

Today’s second hour looks at how the financial crisis is hitting higher education. And as belts tighten, it’s perhaps inevitable that executive compensation – the big payouts to people at the top – will come under scrutiny in academia as it has on Wall Street and in Detroit.

More » | Comments [6]