Who needs a hug?
Hug full or hug empty? It’s a matter of perspective, I guess. In Tuscaloosa there’s love being dispensed for “the hugging preacher.” Reverend Lorenza James has been greeting students with a hug at school for the last five years. Yesterday, however, was his last day.
There’s still a golf team. Good? Bad? Who knows? But here’s the thing: Keep track of the cutbacks in extracurriculars in your local school district and pass them along. Let’s test the “prevailing wisdom” that schools value athletics over the arts.
Speaking of the arts. This doesn’t. Video battle: The Big East baseball “dance off” or Mary Lucia and cows? You decide. There appears to be some hugging in at least one of the videos.
WHAT WE’RE WORKING ON
Midmorning (9-11) – In the first hour: Terror cells in America. Second hour: Do we lose something when we move media from a “hard” to a digital format?
Midday (11-1) – They’ve bitten off a big bite in the first hour: Making sense of North Korea. In the second hour, another American RadioWorks documentary, Hard Times in Middletown. Here’s the Web site.
Talk of the Nation (1-3) – First hour: How the world uses cellphones. Second hour: Confessions of an international drug smuggler.
All Things Considered (3-6:30) – Fargo native Roxana Saberi spent three months in an Iranian prison, you may have heard. This afternoon she talks to NPR. Also: Jury deliberations are underway in the Fong Lee case. Brandt Williams is following that. Laura Yuen talks to a former gang member about efforts to prevent youth violence in the Cedar Riverside neighborhood Marty Moylan is in suburban Milwaukee where Bill Ackman is trying to get four upstarts on the Target board of directors. I’m interesting in finding out this morning whether Target’s cone of silence will hold.
Rep. Dean Urdahl has a news conference. He’s asking Congress to repeal an 1863 federal law that banished Dakota and Winnebago Indians from Minnesota. Here’s some background.
(Photo: Getty Images)