Susan Morrison responds to Hilary Clinton as a cultural symbol and public personality.
Susan Morrison responds to Hilary Clinton as a cultural symbol and public personality.
Temple Grandin worries about pets in our modern society; critiques Cesar Millan's techniques as being appropriate only for large unrelated packs of dogs; and opposes the breeding of so-called criminal dogs.
Matthew J. Wolf-Meyer talks about his book, "The Slumbering Masses: Sleep, Medicine and Modern American Life."
There's money in the future. It's Liz Crawford's job to help big corporations figure out how to make it.
Nothing makes Hope Jahren happier than tinkering in her lab, studying fossilized plants. We hear the story behind her acclaimed memoir, “Lab Girl.”
Stacy Schiff's new book "Cleopatra: a life" describes the Egyptian queen as a shrewd political strategist and a brilliant leader.
Historian Ron Numbers talks with Steve Paulson. Numbers was once an ardent creationist and is the author of "The Creationists," the definitive history of the anti-evolutionist movement.
Anousheh Ansari became the first Muslim woman to venture into space when she traveled aboard the International Space Station.