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To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Inocente is a 19 year old girl who grew up in San Diego.  She loves art and is an accomplished painter.  She’s also lived most of her life here as an undocumented immigrant from Mexico. She was the subject of the film that won the 2013 Oscar for best documentary short.  It’s called Inocente. 

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Jamaica Kincaid tells Steve Paulson that slavery and colonialism helped create a tradition of irresponsibility in men like her father and stepfather.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

What makes something funny? Deep in the Colorado mountains, researcher Peter McGraw run the Humor Research Lab (HuRL, for short).

He thought he'd found the formula for funny. Then he circled the globe to test his theory. Here's what he found...

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Isabel Allende talks about what happened on September 11, 1973, when a military coup in Chile overthrew her uncle, Salvador Allende.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

If the sea has a voice, how can we learn to hear it?  James MacManus chews on that question in his first novel, “The Language of the Sea.” 

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Buddhist Chaplain Steve Spiro shares some resources for preparing to die consciously, and to help others do the same. It includes the Advance Directive for Conscious Dying and a guided meditation on death.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Novelist Jacqueline Mitchard was one of the judges for the 2002 National Book Awards.  She talks about the experience.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Harvard law professor Jeannie Suk says she's recently heard students demand trigger warnings before her lectures on rape, or ask that she not talk about the subject at all. She tells Steve Paulson that it’s more important than ever to teach students about rape law, because when it comes to sex, the line between what’s legal and what’s criminal is rapidly shifting.

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