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To The Best Of Our Knowledge

The stereotype of photojournalists is that they’re adrenaline junkies.  Risk takers.  But they're often surprisingly humble about their work -- maybe because their job is to erase themselves, to become the lens that lets us see the world.  Here photojournalist Brendan Bannon talks about finding beauty in the midst of suffering and about a photo he took at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya. 

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Lesley Kagen was a Milwaukee girl.  But she blew off Wisconsin for the bright lights of LA, where she lived for 10 years.  But despite the lures of California, something about Milwaukee kept calling her home.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Psychologist Martin Seligman is the former president of the American Psychological Association.  He tells Jim Fleming about his philosophy of “Positive Psychology.”

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Jim Cummings runs Earth Ear, an on-line catalogue of environmental sound-scapes.  He talks about the new field of acoustic ecology.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Michael Perry is proud to be a Wisconsin writer.  He writes with humor and grace about his life there in the books, "Population: 485," and "Truck: A Love Story."  So, what's life like, as a writer from the Midwest?

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Some people went to war, some went to Canada, and others did alternative service. Coleman went to prison for refusing to fight. His memoir, “Spoke” tells the story of how he decided. 

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Melissa Fay Greene provides a profile of the AIDS orphans of Ethiopia and one remarkable woman who saved dozens by opening her home to them after the death of her adult daughter from AIDS.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

John Eisner and Daphne Greaves tell Steve Paulson that the Lark is a “research and development” theater company, and explain how it helps writers.

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