LISTEN online HERE— iTunes podcast HERE
40 years after the military coup that overthrew Salvador Allende, the two leading candidates for president of Chile are daughters of air force generals were were on opposite sides in 1973. Conservative candidate Evelyn Matthei’s father was promoted by Pinochet to run the air force. Socialist challenger Michelle Bachelet’s father opposed the coup, was tortured and died in prison. The election will be Sunday Nov 17. UCI historian HEIDI TINSMAN will explain; her new book, Buying into the Regime: Grapes and Consumption in Cold War Chile and the United States, will be published in February.
Also: Girls in prison need health care – and LESLIE ACOCA has been working on ending the incarceration of girls through access to health care. Thanks to the Girls Health Screen, LA is now the first county in the United States to provide health care in locked settings just for girls.
The end of WWII is usually remembered in terms of Auschwitz and Hiroshima, genocide and nucear holocaust; but it was also a beginning—for Algerians and Vietnamese and Indonesians seeking independence from colonialism. IAN BURUMA tells that story in his amazing new book 1945: YEAR ZERO. He has written more than a dozen books and is a frequent contributor to the New York Review.
I haven’t read all 1,000 JFK assassination books, but I do have five favorites: at TheNation.com:
LISTEN online
Also: a memoir of Polish-Jewish reconciliation:
Plus: JOHNNY CASH: the unvarnished truth about “the man in black,” a musical genius who was humbled by addicition. 
Also:
It’s not hard to understand what Bill Ayers and his friends in the Weather Underground were thinking in the early 1970s, when they made plans to bomb the Capitol and other sites. The Vietnam War was raging, Nixon was president. The American people were so distracted by the media, or blinded by ideology, or bought off by consumerism that they would never wake up; except, that is, for Bill Ayers and his friends. They saw what was going on. . . . ”
Jon Wiener: The star of your new book [Dissident Gardens] is Rose Zimmer, the “Red Queen of Sunnyside” in the 1950s—you also call her “the Last Communist,” in capital letters. Where did you get Rose?
Also Valerie Plame is the former CIA officer who was outed in 2003 by the Bush White House after her husband, Ambassador Joe Wilson, challenged Bush’s rationale for invading Iraq. Now she has a new book out, her first work of fiction – it’s titled Blowback. We’ll speak with her about fact and fiction about the CIA.

It doesn’t happen very often that a leading critic calls on a university press to withdraw and then reissue a corrected version of a scholarly book. But it’s happening now—the book is The Collaboration: Hollywood’s Pact with Hitler, by Ben Urwand; the publisher is Harvard University Press, and the critic is David Denby of The New Yorker . . .
