Diana Blau is an epidemiologist with the U.S. Centres for Disease Control . She's also the main author of the study and she was in Atlanta.
H1N1 and Bacteria - 1918 expert
There have been several studies looking into the role that bacteria played in the 1918 flu pandemic. Doctor Keith Klugman is the co-author of one of them. He is the Chair of Global Health at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University. His study was published in the Journal of Emerging Infectious Diseases. Doctor Klugman was in Philadelphia this morning.
Thursday is our weekly mail day on The Current. And our Friday host, Hana Gartner joined Anna Maria in studio to help read the mail.
WCB Hostage: It was a tense ten-hours last week at the Workers' Compensation Board building in Edmonton. Armed with a gun, Patrick Clayton took eight people hostage before surrendering peacefully to police.
Before that he called the CBC in Edmonton to voice his grievances. The CBC's Gareth Hampshire answered the phone and we played some of those calls on Thursday.
One of those calls was with
hostage Randy Morrow. He was released when the gunman gave himself up. Randy Morrow joined us from his home in Peace River, Alberta.
Gay in Uganda: Being gay or lesbian in Uganda isn't easy. You can be imprisoned for life for having sex with someone of the same sex. But a proposed law is creating a lot of anger and fear in the lesbian-gay-bi and transgendered community. It would impose jail terms on people who don't report gays and lesbians to police. And it also proposes the death penalty for gay sex in some cases. The writer behind a blog called Gay Uganda is so worried about the government monitoring him that he wouldn't speak to us over the phone, and would only answer questions by e-mail.
*** We should warn you, his views are homophobic. But we felt it was important to hear them in order to understand the context in which Uganda's anti-homosexuality bill is being proposed. Many of you will find this offensive and may not be suitable for young children. ***
And we did get a letter from a listener in Halifax after listening to our original item on Tuesday to put in a request for Honourable Ministers Cannon and Day to share Canda's response to this bill. So we did just that and we will bring you the minister's response in the days ahead.
Request Count: As for other ministerial interview requests, we didn't make any this week. So we're still at 15 requests for federal cabinet ministers so far this season that have resulted in three interviews. Three for 15.
Listen to Part Two:
The Crash of 1929
Eighty years ago today, American investors watched in horror as the markets on Wall Street lost 14-Billion dollars in a single day. At the time, that was more than the entire annual budget of the U.S. Federal Government and more than the country had spent on World War One. Black Tuesday nearly drove the market to collapse. And it marked the beginning of the Great Depression. In the end, it took the devastation of World War Two to end a decade of poverty, misery and political extremism.
Eighty years after Black Tuesday, the ups and downs of world's economies still hinge on the movements of the stock markets. So it's not surprising that economists all over the world have been trying their best to come up with a scientific theory about what drives the market.
We ended the program today with an addendum to a story we brought you last week on the 40th anniversary of the tragic fire aboard the HMCS Kootenay, the worst peacetime disaster in the history of Canada's Navy. Our documentay generated a lot of mail including this e-mail from John Ducker of Victoria. He wrote:
The story is not complete without having the awards these fine men received for their actions that day. As typical Canadian servicemen, the survivors were too modest to mention it of their own accord. It's an important part of the story.
Thanks to John Ducker of Victoria for flagging that. So we gave the last word this morning to the citations for bravery awarded to the members of the HMCS Kootenay.