Scott Simon http://peoriapublicradio.org en Astronaut Chris Hadfield's Most Excellent Adventure http://peoriapublicradio.org/post/astronaut-chris-hadfields-most-excellent-adventure <p>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaOC9danxNo</p> Sat, 18 May 2013 12:50:13 +0000 Scott Simon 5817 at http://peoriapublicradio.org Astronaut Chris Hadfield's Most Excellent Adventure Mom's X-Ray Vision Also Sees The Best In Us http://peoriapublicradio.org/post/moms-x-ray-vision-also-sees-best-us Mothers have eyes in the back of their heads. They may not show up on X-rays, but they're there.<p>Like a lot of youngsters, I used to get my mother to turn her head so I could search through her hair for the eyeballs she claimed to have back there, telling her, "No you don't! No you don't!" But when I'd scamper off to another part of the apartment and pick up an ashtray or fiddle with the window blinds, I'd hear my mother's voice ring out, "I can see you! Sat, 11 May 2013 13:22:00 +0000 Scott Simon 5432 at http://peoriapublicradio.org Mom's X-Ray Vision Also Sees The Best In Us A 'Tough, Smart, Proud Town' Meets Terror With Determination http://peoriapublicradio.org/post/tough-smart-proud-town-meets-terror-determination People in Boston can speak for themselves. And do. Loudly, bluntly and often with humor that bites.<p>It's a city that speaks with both its own broad, homebrew, local accent — although no one really <em>pahks thea cah in Havahd Yahd</em> — and dialects from around the world. It is home to some of America's oldest founding families, and fathers, mothers and children who have just arrived from Jamaica, Ireland, Bangladesh and Ghana.<p>There are people in Boston who dress in pinstripes and tweeds, and tattoos and spiked hair. Sat, 20 Apr 2013 15:52:00 +0000 Scott Simon 4306 at http://peoriapublicradio.org A 'Tough, Smart, Proud Town' Meets Terror With Determination Roger Ebert: Elegance and Empathy http://peoriapublicradio.org/post/roger-ebert-elegance-and-empathy Roger Ebert was a critic, not a blowtorch. He could be sharp if he thought a movie insulted the audience, but had a champ's disdain for a cheap shot.<p>Many critics ridiculed the film <em>Deep Throat</em> when it came out in 1973. Who couldn't mock its absurdities? Sat, 06 Apr 2013 09:11:00 +0000 Scott Simon 3585 at http://peoriapublicradio.org Roger Ebert: Elegance and Empathy Back From Extinction: Brooding Frog Or Thank you Note? http://peoriapublicradio.org/post/back-extinction-brooding-frog-or-thank-you-note The gastric brooding frog may be coming back. Does that give us a lot to brood about, too?<p>This week scientists at the University of New South Wales' Lazarus Project announced they have reproduced the genome — that bit of biological material that carries our genetic structure — of a gastric brooding frog.<p>The gastric brooder once lived in the rainforests of Queensland, Australia, and was declared extinct in 1983. It was not so named because it had the temperament of a Russell Crowe character, but because it gave birth through its mouth. Sat, 23 Mar 2013 12:13:00 +0000 Scott Simon 2905 at http://peoriapublicradio.org Back From Extinction: Brooding Frog Or Thank you Note? Snowquester Fizzles, But We're Humbled Anyway http://peoriapublicradio.org/post/snowquester-fizzles-were-humbled-anyway Snowquester fizzled.<p>Wednesday was more or less canceled this week in official Washington, D.C. An enormous winter storm bore down on the region, threatening ice, a foot of snow in the city (more in the suburbs), and wind and misery throughout the region.<p>Most of the federal government was closed. I know, I know. How could they tell? Local governments and schools, too. Sat, 09 Mar 2013 13:16:00 +0000 Scott Simon 2224 at http://peoriapublicradio.org Snowquester Fizzles, But We're Humbled Anyway Pianist Van Cliburn, Warmed Russian Hearts During Cold War http://peoriapublicradio.org/post/pianist-van-cliburn-warmed-russian-hearts-during-cold-war Van Cliburn thawed out the Cold War.<p>He went to Moscow in 1958 for the first International Tchaikovsky Competition. When he sat down to play, Russians saw a tall, 23-year-old Texan, rail thin and tousle-haired, with great, gangly fingers that grew evocative and eloquent when he played the music of the true Russian masters — Rachmaninoff, Tchaikovsky, and Borodin.<p>Cliburn died Wednesday at his home in Fort Worth, Texas. He was 78.<p>"Van looked and played like some kind of angel," the Russian pianist Andrei Gavrilov told a Cliburn biographer. Sat, 02 Mar 2013 13:11:00 +0000 Scott Simon 1845 at http://peoriapublicradio.org Pianist Van Cliburn, Warmed Russian Hearts During Cold War Is Honest Abe's Stovepipe Hat A Fake? http://peoriapublicradio.org/post/honest-abes-stovepipe-hat-fake Abraham Lincoln's black stovepipe hat is an icon. It seemed to enhance his height, emphasize his dignity and, I suppose, keep his head warm.<p>There is a stovepipe hat at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield, Ill., soiled and slightly brown with age. Lincoln is said to have given it to William Waller, a farmer and political supporter in Jackson County, Ill., and kept by his family for decades.<p>But that veracity of Lincoln's hat has been questioned. Sat, 16 Feb 2013 10:20:00 +0000 Scott Simon 1083 at http://peoriapublicradio.org Is Honest Abe's Stovepipe Hat A Fake? Remembering New York's Larger-Than-Life Mayor, Ed Koch http://peoriapublicradio.org/post/remembering-new-yorks-larger-life-mayor-ed-koch Transcript <p>SCOTT SIMON, HOST: <p>This is WEEKEND EDITION, from NPR News. I'm Scott Simon.<p>(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)<p>ED KOCH: Hi, hi. How am I doing?<p>SIMON: Ed Koch, the former mayor of New York, died yesterday at the age of 88. He was as New York as a salt bagel with an extra schmear. I profiled him when he ran for re-election in 1981.<p>(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)<p>KOCH: Every time you go to, let's say, Yankee Stadium or Shea Stadium, to throw out the first ball - which the mayor does when the baseball season starts - so it's just automatic that they will boo you. Sat, 02 Feb 2013 20:07:00 +0000 Scott Simon 544 at http://peoriapublicradio.org