The Story on WUNC

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Composer ID: 
5187f7dce1c872f9d0bc2b92|5187f7d9e1c872f9d0bc2b8e

Playlist

December 24, 2012

1:38 PM
Scenes from Childhood, Op. 15: VII. Tr¿umerei
Artist : Peter Schmalfuss
Album : 111 Classical Masterpieces
Composer : Robert Schumann
Label : Menuetto Classics

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The Story
6:02 pm
Tue May 7, 2013

Cracks In The Building

Credit Credit: Musée Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, BelgiumMusée Royaux des Beaux-Arts, Brussels, Belgium
Poster: The center of textile workers in Belgium (to reduce working hours)

Bangladesh’s garment factory collapse at Rana Plaza has put pressure on U.S. companies to respond.

Charles Kernaghan has been working for years to push companies and governments to prioritize the rights of workers in Bangladesh and elsewhere.

On this edition of The Story, he talks with host Dick Gordon about the string of recent tragedies and the complex web of forces that make change so difficult.

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The Story
11:59 am
Mon May 6, 2013

High School Valedictorian Gets Reprieve From Deportation, Lobbies ‘Gang of 8’ For Reform

Credit State Impact Florida
Daniela Pelaez met with Florida Sen. Bill Nelson

Late this March, Daniela Pelaez, 19, traveled from her college in New Hampshire to Washington D.C. to sit down with senators and representatives and remind them of something she’s become known for: she’s in the country illegally, there are millions like her, and they want to ask for help.

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The Story
2:10 pm
Fri May 3, 2013

The Only Cultural Org. Still Operating In A War Zone

Host Dick Gordon calls Issa Touma in the city of Aleppo, where he has reached him several times over the past year. He says sometimes the electricity is cut for days and there are bombings and firefights. In these times, the sounds of Aleppo intensify and he is hearing families fight and begin to fray.

This is a video from a workshop organized by Le Pont, the only cultural organization still operating in Aleppo:
 

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The Story
11:52 am
Thu May 2, 2013

Driven By Despair, More Guantánamo Detainees Join Hunger Strike

Credit Shane T. McCoy, U.S. Navy
Camp X-Ray in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba

Last Friday, Carlos Warner called one of his 11 clients in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and offered to help negotiate the end of a hunger strike that detainees are holding. But the client, Fayiz al Kandari, declined his offer, and asked why the U.S. Army will not talk directly to them.

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The Story
6:41 pm
Wed May 1, 2013

How To Catch A Killer (Using The Crowds)

Credit Flickr user Vince Alongi

From 1976 to 1986, a violent criminal terrorized communities across California. He became known as the Golden State Killer, and was linked to at least 50 rapes and 10 murders. For years, his whereabouts were hazy.

Then, the writer Michelle McNamara started the blog True Crime Diary, where she and a community of fellow obsessives started piecing together clues that had long been passed over by authorities.

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The Story
10:16 am
Wed May 1, 2013

Locked Up In A Modern-Day Debtors’ Prison

Credit Pushkin Museum of Fine Art, Moscow, Russia
Prisoners Exercising by Vincent van Gogh

Most of us don’t expect to be sent to jail for failure to pay our parking tickets. But in several counties across Ohio, courts are jailing men and women who cannot afford to pay their fines.

Dick Gordon, host of The Story, speaks with Jack Dawley, who’s been to jail three times for failure to pay. He says he’s never seen a judge or been given any opportunity to explain to a judge that he simply cannot afford to pay.

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The Story
1:21 pm
Mon April 29, 2013

A Soldier's Eye: Rediscovered Photos From Vietnam

Charlie Haughey returned home from Vietnam with almost 2,000 photo negatives of his fellow soldiers.  He put them in a box and left them there for 45 years, untouched, until a friend encouraged him to digitize them.

In this edition of The Story, Charlie says seeing them brings back the war, and "things I did not take pictures of. And there are some that are, to me, just the scariest pictures in the world."

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The Story
1:10 pm
Mon April 29, 2013

The Real-Life Analysts Who Led The ‘Manhunt’ For bin Laden

Two years ago, when members of an elite Navy SEAL team stormed Osama bin Laden’s compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, and took out the leader of al-Qaeda, they ended one of the biggest manhunts in American history.

But for a small group of analysts at the CIA, bin Laden's capture was the culmination of a two-decade search that began long before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

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The Story
3:04 pm
Thu April 25, 2013

The Tigris, The Euphrates And The Dictator

Credit Goldman Environmental Prize
Azzam Alwash
The Story
2:50 pm
Wed April 24, 2013

For Chechen Refugee, Bombings Open Wounds Of War

Magomed Imakaev planted a medlar tree in his back yard outside of Boston to remind him of his native Chechnya.

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