Ruby Bridges, Thanksgiving Evolution, Turkey Vaccine
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 184
- Nov 23, 2015 7:00 am
- 1:43:35 mins
Ruby Bridges (1:03) Guest: Ruby Bridges, a Civil Rights icon since the age of six, when she was among the first African American children to integrate an all-white school in the South Norman Rockwell’s iconic painting of a tiny African American girl flanked by four federal marshals is called, “The Problem We All Live With” and it’s a provocative invitation to consider the ugliness of racism. The girl’s dress and sneakers and the little bow in her braided hair are impossibly white. She looks calm and resolute, even though the wall she’s walking by is marred with a racial slur and the splatter of tomatoes. She’s Ruby Bridges and November 14, 1960 was her first day of first grade as one of the first African American children to integrate an all-white school in the South. Evolution of Thanksgiving (24:20) Guest: Bruce Forbes, PhD, Chair of the Philosophy and Religious Studies department at Morningside College and Author of the new book “America’s Favorite Holidays” Bruce Forbes’ writes in his book, “America’s Favorite Holidays” that pretty much everything we think we know about Thanksgiving is wrong. The Extinction of Mammoths (39:52) Guest: Todd Surovell, PhD, Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wyoming Why aren’t there any mammoths wandering the earth today? The ancient, elephant-like beasts have been extinct for tens of thousands of years. Theoretical explanations include a meteor, an earthquake or a heatwave. Research coming out of the University of Wyoming claims to prove that we humans are the culprit. Environmental Thanks (51:49) Guest: Peter Kareiva, PhD, Director of the Institute of the Environment and Sustainability at UCLA Doom and gloom is the standard approach these days when it comes to talking about climate change. We’ve certainly heard a fair amount of it from experts on this show. But with Thanksgiving upon us, Peter Kareiva of UCLA’s Institute of the Environment and Sustainability is proposing a different angle. He says negativity isn’t that effective in gettin