All Things Considered
All Things Considered
Wednesday, September 20, 2006

Minnesota Public Radio Stories

  • "Roadless Rule" impacts Minnesota forests
    MPR's Tom Crann spoke with John Roth, executive director of Friends of the Boundary Waters Wilderness about the decision of a federal judge to reinstate the "Roadless Rule," a Clinton-era ban on road construction in nearly a third of national forests. Roth says thousands of acres of Minnesota forest are affected.4:24 p.m.
  • Penalty deliberations begin in Rodriguez trial
    Attorneys in the penalty phase of the trial of Alfonso Rodriguez Jr. offered their closing arguments today and jurors began deliberation earlier this afternoon. The eight jurors have convicted Rodriguez of kidnapping and killing Dru Sjodin, and now must decide whether Rodriguez gets life in prison without parole or is sentenced to death for his crime. MPR's Bob Reha has been in the courtroom during this trial and offers this update.5:19 p.m.
  • Trapped eagleGroup files suit to block Minnesota trapping
    An animal rights group has filed suit to stop Minnesota trappers from catching and often killing endangered species. The California-based Animal Protection Institute says it filed papers in federal court in Minneapolis.5:24 p.m.
  • Minnesota Liberians may lose protected status
    A period of relative peace in Liberia has prompted U.S. immigration officials to change the status of Libreian refugees in the U.S.5:55 p.m.

National Public Radio Stories

  • Court Report Slams U.S., Canada on False Suspect
    Maher Arar is a Syrian-born Canadian computer engineer who was falsely accused of having terrorist ties. Canadian investigators deported him to the United States in 2002, where he was arrested at JFK Airport. He was then sent to Syria for a year, where, according to a report released by a Canadian judge Tuesday, he was tortured.
  • Congress Nibbles at Larger Immigration Issue
    Congress turns its attention to immigration, but not to the larger national policy bills that are stuck between the House and Senate. Instead, with midterm elections looming, Republican leaders in both chambers are focusing strictly on enforcement measures.
  • Boeing Wins Contract to Secure Southern Border
    The Department of Homeland Security says that Boeing Corp. is the winner of a contract for new border-surveillance technology. Boeing proposes to develop a system of video and heat- and motion-sensors that would feed information about border activity into a central database.
  • Bone-Marrow Cell Injections May Aid Heart Patients
    German scientists have promising results from an experimental treatment to mend ailing hearts. The treatment involves taking a heart-attack patient's bone-marrow cells and injecting them into their heart. The injections, proven in animal tests, show promise for humans.
  • House Intel Panel's Al-Qaida Report Draws Fire
    The House Intelligence Committee releases a report on al-Qaida that immediately drew fire from committee Democrats, none of whom endorsed it. They say the report is designed to frighten Americans in an effort to build support for Republicans in the November elections.
  • Chavez Calls Bush 'Devil,' Assails U.S. Policies
    Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez took the podium at the United Nations, where he launched his latest verbal salvo against President Bush and U.S. world influence. Making the sign of the cross, Chavez described Bush as "the devil" and decried Washington's misuse of its far-reaching power.
  • Chavez's 'Devil' Remark and Global Protocol
    Melissa Block talks with Jeffrey Laurenti, a senior fellow at the Century Foundation and longtime United Nations expert. He'll talk about what the protocols are for world leaders speaking at the U.N., and just how far away from them the Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez reached with his speech Wednesday morning, in which he called President Bush "the devil."
  • 'Streets with Memories' in Lhasa
    Melissa Block talks with Robert Barnett, professor of Contemporary Tibetan Studies at Columbia University and author of Lhasa: Streets with Memories, about the relationship between China and Tibet, and how the Tibetan community views the railway, and development in Tibet.
  • NASA Clears Shuttle for Thursday Landing
    The space shuttle has been cleared to return to Earth on Thursday after NASA experts determined that unidentified material seen near the shuttle came was most likely insignificant bits of the shuttle itself. While debris as small as four inches can be tracked from earth, hundreds of thousands of smaller particles are orbiting earth, often the scattered remnants of jettisoned launch vehicles whose left over fuel exploded. These tiny bits traveling at high speeds relative to manned and unmanned vehicles in different orbits can do serious damage if the two orbits intersect. Robert Siegel talks with Dr. Mark Matney, Space Debris scientist at NASA Johnson Space Center.
  • Mayor Caught in Weapons, Profiling Controversies
    Mayor Frank Melton of Jackson, Miss., swept into office in 2005 promising to take a hard line on criminals and make the city safe. But more than a year later, the gun-toting mayor has everyone from the local district attorney to the FBI looking into his practices. The ACLU, NAACP and others have accused the mayor, who is black, of racial profiling. He's been indicted on charges that he directed a sledgehammer attack. And now there are calls for his resignation.
  • Throwing In the Towel on Florida's Tire Reef
    A growing number of researchers say that the tire reef off the coast of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., created to stimulate new marine growth, has become an environmental disaster. William Nuckols, project coordinator and military liaison for Coastal America, is working with the Navy to remove the tires. NPR's Robert Siegel talks with Nuckols.
  • Shades of a New Nuclear Race: Iran, N. Korea
    NPR Senior News Analyst Daniel Schorr says that Iran and North Korea are ushering in a new era of nuclear proliferation.
  • Judge Chides U.S. on Roadless Forest Protections
    A federal judge throws out Bush administration rules on road construction in untouched areas of national forests. The judge reinstated a ban on new roads in so-called roadless areas imposed by President Bill Clinton. But the decision won't end a long-running environmental controversy.
  • Thai King Throws Support to Coup Leaders
    As military leaders who ousted Thailand's president promise a return to democracy, Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej expressed support for the coup. Because the king is revered in Thailand, his endorsement is expected to dissuade those who might try to reinstall the president. Bangkok was calm Wednesday and traffic was minimal; most schools and businesses were closed. Residents of the capital expressed hope that the coup will resolve the paralysis that has gripped the national government for nearly a year.
  • Saddam Trial Sees Exits of Judge, and the Accused
    The new chief judge in Saddam Hussein's trial expels the ousted leader from a Baghdad courtroom after an angry exchange. Earlier, Saddam's lawyers walked out in protest of the former chief judge's dismissal.

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