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  • World music critic MILO MILES reviews the music of African reggae star Alpha Blondy. Blondy''s new albums are Masada (World Pacific label) and The Best of Alpha Blondy. (Shan
  • 2: Writer THULANI (pronounced "tah-lawn-nee") DAVIS. Her novel, "1959," is the story of a young black girl coming of age at the dawn of the civil rights movement. Previously, Davis worked for The New York Times and The Washington Post, and wrote the libretto for the opera "X: The Life and Times of Malcom X." ("1959" is published by Grove Weidenfeld). REBROADCAST. Originally aired 2/13/92.
  • 2: ZE'EV-CHAFETS (SHAY-fetz) editor of "The Jerusalem Report," a news magazine published in Israel. Chafets is an Israeli who grew up in Pontiac, Michigan. He was the director of the government press office under prime minister Menacham Begin. He's also the author of "Inherit the Mob," a comic novel about a journalist lured into the Jewish Mafia, baited by a large inheritance.
  • Blossom Dearie — that's her real name — has been a fixture on the New York nightclub scene for decades. The singer and pianist is known for her quiet voice, unusual choice of material and jazz-influenced style of singing.
  • Terry speaks with ADMIRAL GENE LA ROQUE (la- ROCK), director of the Center for Defense Information in Washington, D.C. They discuss the future of the American military: Is the American military becoming a world police force in the post-Cold War era?. General La Roque offers an analysis of yesterday's allied air strike on missile bases in southern Iraq and also sheds light on question of military invervention in Bosnia-Herzegovina and the Balkans. They also talk about the American military and the U.N. and how the military may fare during the transition between the Bush and Clinton presidencies
  • Author LORENZO CARCATERRA (Car-CA-terra). He is managing editor of the CBS weekly series "Top Cops." He's written a memoir, "A Safe Place," (Villard Books) about growing up, the son of a violent, loving, murderous, and generous father. They lived in New York's Hell's Kitchen during the 50s and 60s. Lorenzo found out at the age of 14 that his father had murdered his first wife when she threatened to leave him. Lorenzo's father went on to terrorize his second wife, beating her and Lorenzo. Yet his father also could be warm and affectionate, taking Lorenzo to the ballpark, or showering him with kisses. His father would cry at the sound of a beautiful aria, but he could also be extremely violent at even the midest affront to his ego.
  • FRESHMAN CONGRESSMAN BOBBY RUSH (D-Illinois), who in the late 60's and early 70's was a leader of the Black Panther Party. At one time he served as minister of Defense for the Panthers. From 1983 till his election to Congress last year he served as an Alderman in Chicago.
  • 2: One of Britian's most radical and uncompromising film and television directors, KEN LOACH. He was a member of the British "Free Cinema Movement" of the '50s (committed to dealing with issues of the working class and lower-class of British society), and he was a pioneer of the docu-drama of the '60s. His socially-conscious film "Cathy Come Home," (1966) about a homeless mother, aired over the BBC, created a scandal, and forced a public debate about the homeless in London. He's produced many features for BBC television. His latest film "Riff-Raff," about construction workers is his first comedy, but it doesn't depart from what LOACH tries to do with his films. The London "Times" calls it, "an abrasive front-line report from the bottom of society's ladder." A retrospective of LOACH's work will be presented by The Film Society of Lincoln Center, February 2 - 13, 1993.
  • Some reactions to the inauguration and thoughts about the new administration:1) Satirist HARRY SHEARER, creator/host of Public Radio's "Le Show," on which he often satirizes American politics, culture and social conventions. He's also the voice for a number of characters on "The Simpson's." Terry will talk with him about his reactions to Clinton's inauguration.2) Language Commentator GEOFFRY NUNBERG. Terry will talk with him about the language of Clinton's inauguration speech. 3) Senior Associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, GEOFFRY KEMP. He's also an expert on the Middle-East. Terry will talk with him about how he thinks the new administration will affect our relations with Iraq
  • 2: Novelist and short-story writer CHARLES BAXTER. He has a new novel, Shadow Play," (W.W. Norton & Co.) about a Faustian contract a man makes with a former classmate. BAXTER has written several volumes of short stories. His stories have appeared in "The New Yorker," "Harper's Magazine," "The Atlantic Monthly,." One reviewer writes, "Baxter is a master at creating loopy, poetic, and meaningfully unhinged psyches."
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