WORLD (PT) |
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5:00 pm
State of the Re:Union
"Tuscon, Arizona"
One year after the shootings that killed six people and maimed 13 more in Tucson, Arizona, State of the Re:Union asked relatives of victims and those who bore witness to this horror to write a letter to their city, reflecting on Tucson one year after this tragedy occurred. D
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6:00 pm
Frontline
"My Father, My Brother and Me"
In 2004, journalist Dave Iverson received the same news that had been delivered to his father and older brother years earlier: He had Parkinson's disease, a degenerative neurological disorder that affects about one million Americans. In this FRONTLINE and ITVS joint production, Iverson sets off on a personal journey to explore the scientific, ethical, and political debate that surrounds Parkinson's, a disease at the center of the ongoing controversy over embryonic stem cell research. Iverson talks to scientists on the cutting edge of new cures and therapies -- not only for Parkinson's, but a number of other major neurological conditions. D
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7:00 pm
PBS NewsHour
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8:00 pm
Nightly Business Report
Stocks soar thanks to Investor hope that global policymakers will take action against the Eurozone's debt crisis. New York Correspondent Suzanne Pratt reports. Jobs & the Economy: Virginia is a key swing state, find out why this year its presidential race is like a "tale of two regions. D
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8:30 pm
Journal
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9:00 pm
Charlie Rose
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10:00 pm
State of the Re:Union
"Tuscon, Arizona"
One year after the shootings that killed six people and maimed 13 more in Tucson, Arizona, State of the Re:Union asked relatives of victims and those who bore witness to this horror to write a letter to their city, reflecting on Tucson one year after this tragedy occurred. D
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11:00 pm
Frontline
"My Father, My Brother and Me"
In 2004, journalist Dave Iverson received the same news that had been delivered to his father and older brother years earlier: He had Parkinson's disease, a degenerative neurological disorder that affects about one million Americans. In this FRONTLINE and ITVS joint production, Iverson sets off on a personal journey to explore the scientific, ethical, and political debate that surrounds Parkinson's, a disease at the center of the ongoing controversy over embryonic stem cell research. Iverson talks to scientists on the cutting edge of new cures and therapies -- not only for Parkinson's, but a number of other major neurological conditions. D
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