Friday, September 19, 2014

Saturday Morning with Mark Cubey: 20 September 2014 (Kim Hill is unwell.) - Radio New Zealand National


8:15 Rollo Wenlock: startups in Tel Aviv
8:40 Jeffrey E. Stern: Ebola outbreak
9:05 Rachel Dawick: boundary riders
9:45 Art Crime with Arthur Tompkins: Sarajevo Haggadah
10:05 Gayle Souter-Brown: healing landscapes
11:05 Karim Khan: active health
11:45 Children's Books with Kate De Goldi: two teenage novels


This Saturday's team:
Producer: Mark Cubey
Line producer: Melanie Phipps
Wellington engineer: Carol Jones
Auckland engineer: Jeremy Ansell
Research by Anne Buchanan, Infofind




8:15 Rollo Wenlock
Rollo Wenlock is a filmmaker, and CEO of video software start-up company Wipster. 
He is currently in Israel for Start Tel Aviv Competition 2014, at which eighteen companies from around the world have seven days in Tel Aviv to meet investors, other startups and like-minded people.

8:40 Jeffrey E. Stern
Jeffrey E. Stern is a writer and development worker whose reporting from Afghanistan, Kashmir, and elsewhere has appeared in The Atlantic, The New Republic, Esquire, Time and other publications. His book The Zero Option, which follows members of Afghanistan's most vulnerable ethnic group as they prepare for the withdrawal of foreign troops, will be published by St. Martin's Press next year, and his article Hell in the Hot Zone, about the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, appears in the October issue of Vanity Fair.

9:05 Gayle Souter-Brown
Landscape and urban design consultant Gayle Souter-Brown founded Greenstone Design in 2009, and is now based between London and Wellington. She is the author of Landscape and Urban Design for Health and Well-Being: Using Healing, Sensory and Therapeutic Gardens (Routledge Press, ISBN: 978-0-415-84352-2), which is being launched through the NZ Institute of Architects' national Urban Design Speaker Series in Auckland, Napier, Wellington, Nelson and Christchurch (22-26 September). She will also address the conference, A Place to Live: For the Life Worth Having, in Whanganui from 16 to 19 November.

9:45 Art Crime with Arthur Tompkins
Arthur Tompkins is a District Court Judge, and member of Interpol's DNA Monitoring Expert Group. He has a special interest in crimes involving artistic masterpieces, and will discuss the 14th century book, Sarajevo Haggadah.

10:05 Rachel Dawick
Songwriter and vocalist Rachel Dawick has spent most of the last ten years performing in New Zealand and the United Kingdom. In 2010, she began researching the lives of New Zealand women in the 1800s, and turning their stories into songs. This project has resulted in the album The Boundary Riders: Musical Tales of New Zealand Pioneer Women, and an accompanying book, The Boundary Riders Souvenir Programme (Forgotten World Highway, ISBN: 978-0-473-27787-1). She is launching the book in Auckland (19 September), Queenstown (20 September), and Otago (21 September), performing at a number of events during Heritage Festival Auckland (27 September - 12 October), and at Heritage Week Christchurch (21-27 October).

11:05 Karim Khan
Professor Karim Khan is the editor of the British Journal of Sports Medicine and an expert in physical activity for public health. He is visiting New Zealand to speak at the Linking the Chain conference of Physiotherapy New Zealand.

11:45 Children's Books with Kate De Goldi 
New Zealand writer Kate De Goldi is the author of many books, most recently, The ACB with Honora Lee (Random House). She will discuss two novels for older teenage readers:
Pink Smog: Becoming Weetzie Bat by Francesca Lia Block (2012, HarperTeen, ISBN: 978-0-06-156600-4); and Razorhurst by Justine Larbalestier (2014, Allen & Unwin, ISBN: 978-174331-943-7).

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On Saturday 20 September 2014 during Great Encounters between 6:06pm and 7:00pm on Radio New Zealand National, you can hear a repeat broadcast of Kim Hill's interview from 13 September with Margaret Lock on dementia and aging.


Next Saturday, 27 September, Kim Hill's guests will include Mary Beard, Moana Maniapoto and Paddy Free.

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