Architect Daniel Libeskind proposes keeping the original "bathtub" of the World Trade Center, but his plan is no bubble bath. The plan calls for a number of jagged, angular buildings arrayed around the WTC footprints, which would be left bare. Later, although New York is counted as one of the more liberal states in the country, the Empire State --along with Texas and Mississippi --forbids felons from voting. And: the ethics of cvilian deaths, part two, and an alternative measure of patriotism.
Costly Thy Habit
Douglass Cassel, director of Center for International Human Rights at Northwestern University's School of Law and Jack Spencer, senior defense analyst at Heritage on the civilian casualty toll
Open Phones
Listeners respond to the potential toll of going to war
Daniel's Design
Daniel Libeskind, architect, has ideas about what to do with Ground Zero.
Ballots Behind Bars
Juan Cartagena, general counsel for the Community Service Society of New York and Joseph Hayden, an ex-felon and head plaintiff in Hayden vs Pataki, on the disenfranchisement of parolees
Flagging Spirits
Richard Harwood, founder and president of The Harwood Institute for Public Innovation, on redefining patriotism and reinvigorating civic participation
Open Phones
Listeners on performing the hajj