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| Join the club and receive 2 for
1 offers at nearly 100 local restaurants, plus
special discounts at arts events and outlet shopping!
When you make
your contribution of $100 or more to WVXU,
we'll send you your own MemberCard in addition
to whichever other gift you may choose.
Restaurants:
Participating restaurants include the Grande Finale,
La Petite France, Shanghai Mama's and the Lazy
Gourmet to name just a few. Purchase two entrees
at any of these and dozens more restaurants, show
your WVXU MemberCard, and the less expensive
of the two is free. |
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The Details:
- Your card is good for one time use at each restaurant and is valid for one year from the date of your contribution.
- We will send a catalog detailing the complete list of participating restaurants, etc.
- For the most up to date list of participating restaurants/offers, go to membercard.com anytime. Or call the hotline at 1-800-423-7645.
- There are lots of offers in cities all over the U.S. When you travel, simply call
1-800-423-7645 and a current complete list can be mailed to you for a small fee, or visit membercard.com.
- The card is not valid on major holidays.
Thank You
Your support helps to maintain the service that WVXU provides to you every day. It means more award-winning programming like All Things Considered and coverage of local events from top-notch radio journalists. The WVXU MemberCard is simply a way for us to give you back a little more, and to thank you for your contribution. Please let us know what you think about the MemberCard idea, and tell us which restaurants you'd like us to add to our list!
Make your $100 contribution to receive your WVXU Member Card!
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| Irish, S. African Leaders Share Lessons With Iraqis A group of Sunni and Shiite leaders will meet in Iraq with Martin McGuinne, the deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland and former IRA leader, and Cyril Ramaphosa, the South African negotiator who helped end apartheid. They have been meeting privately with Iraq's politicians for two years to try and hammer out an agreement on reconciliation. On Saturday, they'll announce the results — a new accord among Iraq's feuding political factions, reports Lourdes Garcia-Navarro.
Windows Media
RealPlayer |  | Helms, Betencourt and Mugabe NPR Senior News Analyst Daniel Schorr weighs in on the week's news: Former Colombian presidential candidate Ingrid Betancourt was freed six years after being taken hostage by the Colombian rebel group FARC; Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe was re-elected; Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama said he was open to "refining" his Iraq policy, but wasn't shifting his stance on troop withdrawals; Republican presidential hopeful John McCain made significant changes in the top tier of his campaign staff; and former Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.), died on July 4.
Windows Media
RealPlayer |  | Clarke: Negotiate With Pakistan To Staunch al-Qaida Twenty-eight American soldiers were killed in Afghanistan in June, making it the deadliest month for U.S. troops since the war in Afghanistan began in 2001. Much of the spike in violence is attributed to a resurgent Taliban and al-Qaida, both in Afghanistan, and in neighboring Pakistan. Richard Clarke, who has served as a top counterterrorism adviser to every president since George H.W. Bush, tells Linda Wertheimer about steps the United States could take to reduce the threat from these groups. According to Clarke, the U.S. should strike a new deal with the Pakistani, telling them if "they cooperate with ending this sanctuary with the Taliban, we will help you
but we cannot have a sanctuary for al-Qaida again."
Windows Media
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