Housing Segregation, Moby Dick, Between War and Peace
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 102
- Jul 14, 2015 6:00 am
- 1:43:53 mins
New Rules on Housing Segregation (1:04) Guest: Jacob Rugh, BYU Sociology Housing and Segregation are Top of Mind today. In spite of fair housing laws passed during the Civil Rights-era, many US cities remain starkly divided by race. The Obama Administration last week unveiled stricter rules aimed at the broader goal of those fair housing laws. Yes, they prohibit discrimination based on race, but they also require local governments to actively foster integration in communities. That piece of the Fair Housing Act of 1968 has gone largely unenforced - and according to President Obama – the result includes the racial imbalances and lack of opportunity that have contributed to unrest in cities like Ferguson, Missouri and Baltimore. Mosquitos and Bacteria (22:37) Guest: Dr. Jeff Tomberlin, Texas A&M entomologist Mosquitos sometimes make the decision to sit outside and enjoy the summer a painful one. What makes mosquitos like us so much? Entomologist Jeff Tomberlin has recently found evidence that the bacteria on our skin have a way of sending a message to mosquitos that's pretty much like ringing a dinner bell. But now for the good news- Dr. Tomberlin and his colleagues think they might be able to mute that message so mosquitos steer clear. Apple Seed (39:04) Guest: Sam Payne, host and storyteller of The Apple Seed Sam Payne, host of BYU Radio's "The Apple Seed" joins us to tell a story by his friend who wrote a full story every day for 40 days. This one is called "All the Pleasures" Reenacting Ahab's Voyage (51:32) Guest: Dr. Mary Bercaw Edwards, University of Connecticut English Many of you are familiar with Captain Ahab, who searched for “the white whale” in “Moby Dick”. His ship – the Pequod – is a central character in the book, and a career-long obsession for University of Connecticut English professor Mary Bercaw Edwards. She’s an experienced sailor – even circumnavigated the world with her family at the age of 16. Last year, Bercaw Edwards set sail on the closest thing possible to Melville’s fa