Radiozine

Tune in to KBOO's Morning Radiozine for intriguing Public Affairs programming every Monday through Friday!

 

Coming Soon

Living Yoga and the 2013 Yogathon
Interview with Portland's Noise Control Officers
 

Episode Archive

Radiozine on 08/07/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Thu, 08/07/2008 - 9:30am - 10:00am

Per Fagereng interviews Joseph Culp and Jarek Kupsc, who discuss their film, The Reflecting Pool, an investigation of the events of 9/11 by a Russian-American journalist and a father of a 9/11 victim that implicates the US government in the attacks.

Radiozine on 08/06/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Wed, 08/06/2008 - 10:30am - 11:00am

Dave Mazza speaks with two participants in upcoming Portland events for Remembering Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Dr. James N. Yamazaki is UCLA professor emeritus in pediatrics. At the age of 33, Yamazaki was the lead physician of the 1949 U.S. Atomic Bomb Medical Team, studying the effects of nuclear bombing on children in Nagasaki, in which more than 100,000 persons died directly, with hundreds of thousands more being exposed directly and indirectly to the bomb. He helped establish the website Children of the Bomb. Pamela Vergun is editor and translator of "A Dimly Burning Wick: Memoir from the Ruins of Hiroshima.

Radiozine on 08/06/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Wed, 08/06/2008 - 10:00am - 10:30am
Short Description: 
"Free Trade" or Fair Trade? - Reform, Accountability, Development and Employment Act

Laurie King of Portland Jobs with Justice and Arthur Stamoulis of the Oregon Fair Trade Campaign join host Martha Odom to discuss The Trade Act introduced in Congress in June, '08. They will review the devastating consequences of trade agreements, both for the U.S. and for other countries and talk about why the new law would correct many of the injustices. And hear what you can do to help insure passage of this critical legislation.

Radiozine on 08/05/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Tue, 08/05/2008 - 10:00am - 10:30am

Religion scholar Karen Armstrong talks about her book The Bible: A Biography. Armstrong not only describes how, when and by whom the Bible was written, she also examines some 2,000 years of biblical interpretation by bishops and rabbis, scholars and mystics, pietists and critics. The book dispells the fundamentalist notion that only one view of the Bible can be correct

Radiozine on 08/01/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Fri, 08/01/2008 - 10:00am - 10:30am

Host Jay Thiemeyer interviews local activists Jules Boykoff and Kaia Sand about their new book, Landscapes of Dissent: Guerrilla Poetry and Public Space. They discuss how guerrilla poets and others have challenged the commodification of public space.

Radiozine on 07/31/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Thu, 07/31/2008 - 9:30am - 10:00am

Host Linda Olson-Osterlund speaks with a recent Reed College graduate about his detention by Israeli police in Gaza. They also discuss harassment of him and his mother by the FBI upon his return to the U.S. His attorney Tom Nelson will  be interviewed.

Radiozine on 07/29/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Tue, 07/29/2008 - 10:00am - 10:30am

The Answers Series. Bruce Silverman has another installment of this solutions-based program. Today's topics...waste heat recovery and making politicians more responsible.

Radiozine on 07/25/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Fri, 07/25/2008 - 10:00am - 10:30am

Per Fagereng interviews Alan Rosenblith about Community Way, a business loyalty program that connects local businesses, charitable organizations and individuals in a mutually beneficial three-way partnership and Community Prosper, an online social networking tool promoting a sustainable economy.
 

Radiozine on 07/24/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Thu, 07/24/2008 - 9:30am - 10:00am

Host Linda Olson Osterlund interviews legal reporter Frederick S. Lane, author of The Court and the Cross: The Religious Right’s Crusade to Reshape the Supreme Court.

Radiozine on 07/23/08

Program: 
Radiozine
Air date: 
Wed, 07/23/2008 - 10:00am - 10:30am

Leigh Anne Kranz welcomes Ronault L.S. (Polo) Catalani, human rights lawyer and Asian Reporter columnist. Polo asks that, for a moment, we shift the focus from what immigrants want & need, to what Oregon needs from immigrants--their social, cultural and spiritual capital.

Audio

Hillbilly Nationalists, interview with James Tracy

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 12/24/2012

"Hillbilly Nationalists, Urban Race Rebels and Black Power: Community Organizing in Radical Times." Paul Roland interviews James Tracy, co-author with Amy Sonnie of this provocative and timely book about white radical working class groups in the late 1960's.

Your rating: None Average: 5 (1 vote)

The Nonpocalypse

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Fri, 12/21/2012

Friday is the 2012 Winter Solstice.  There's been years of sensational hype about the date, much based on the Mayan Long Count Calendar cycle and some supposed apocalypse.

But the claims are based on bad archaeology, bad astronomy and bad geology.

Hosted by Andrew Geller, in this program, there is taped audio from both  David Stuart, the Linda and David Schele Professor of Mesoamerican Art and Writing at the University of Texas at Austin, and Mark Van Stone, a Maya expert specializing in Maya Hieroglyphs and calligraphy.  They discussed the complete lack of basis in the Mayan calendar system to support any apocalyptic claims this Friday.

Andrew next speaks live with Kristine Larsen, professor of physics and astronomy at Central Connecticut State University, to debunk the astronomical and physical sciences claims.

Storyteller, mythologist and author Michael Meade will join in last to provide background and context regarding apocalypse, apocalypsis (the original term) and why claims regarding 'the end of the world' hold such sway in certain cultures. Michael latest book is Why the World Doesn't End.

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Oregon Coast Bridges

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 12/10/2012

Portland preservationist Ray Allen has written a book about the many bridges of the Oregon Coast Highway. The coast has been a travel route for thousands of years, but it wasn't until the 1930's that a government-sponsored project to build five major bridges was completed, linking North and South, and changing the local economy forever. One man, engineer/architect Conde McCullough, was primarily responsible for the success of the project. Ray Allen talks about the beauty of McCullough's concrete arch bridges, and the challenge of building in remote, rugged locations. He enables us to compare this accomplishment with contemporary challenges such as the Columbia Crossing on Interstate 5.

  • Length: 26:35 minutes (24.34 MB)
  • Format: MP3 Stereo 44kHz 128Kbps (CBR)
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Update from the Gaza Strip

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Fri, 11/16/2012

 Rami Almeghari is a journalist and father of two children living in al-Maghazi refugee camp in central Gaza.  He spoke with KBOO Friday morning, November 16th about the latest in the Israeli assault on the coastal strip.

  • Length: 20:06 minutes (18.41 MB)
  • Format: MP3 Mono 44kHz 128Kbps (CBR)
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Economic Update

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Fri, 09/28/2012

Host Richard Wolff interviewed John Curl, author of For All the People: Uncovering the Hidden History of Cooperation, Cooperative Movements, and Communalism in America

You can hear this program by going to the following link for the program "Economic Update":

rdwolff.com/content/economic-update-history-workers-coops

  • Title: Economic Update
  • Length: 0:02 minutes (38.82 KB)
  • Format: MP3 Stereo 44kHz 128Kbps (CBR)
Your rating: None Average: 1 (1 vote)

Beyond Toxics

Categories:
program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Tue, 08/21/2012

 Health and Health Care Forum hosted by Roberta Hall.

Roberta speaks with Beyond Toxics executive director Lisa Arkin, and the outreach director Alison Guzman. Beyond Toxics. Beyond Toxics works toward providing environmentally safe environments for all Oregonians, and is especially interested in assuring environmental justice for all communities.

In the photo: Lisa Arkin (left) and Alison Guzman (right) with a Beyond Toxics flyer between them.

 
 
 
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Fighting Coal Transport Through the Pacific Northwest: Reform and Revolution.

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Fri, 08/17/2012

Oregon and Washington have dramatically reduced coal-powered energy generation. As a result coal companies are pushing to export tens of millions of tons of coal from Montana and Wyoming, through Pacific Northwest ports, to Asian markets. The coal would pass through dozens of communities in Oregon and Washington by rail, barge, or ship. Mercury and other toxins from Asian fired coal returns to the Columbia valley as blowback and acid rain.

KBOO's Joe Meyer presents interviews with:
 

Phil Rigdon, Deputy Director for Yakama Nation Department of Natural Resources - http://www.yakamanation-nsn.gov/

Dan Serres the Conservation Director at Columbia Riverkeeper - http://columbiariverkeeper.org/

Paul Cienfuegos a rights based organizer out of Portland, Oregon - http://paulcienfuegos.com/

Bonnie Meltzer, a neighborhood activist - http://www.facebook.com/NorthPortlandCoalCommittee

 The show's emphasis is on what humans can do about it and listens through the lens of reform and revolution.

The music for the show is 'Paradise' by John Prine performed by Johnny Cash.

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Aria Minu-Sepehr on "We Heard the Heavens Then", his memoir of a boy in revolutionary Iran

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 08/13/2012

 Host Marianne Barisonek speaks with Aria Minu-Sepehr about his book We Heard the Heavens Then, a memoir of a boy in revolutionary Iran.  Seen through the eyes of a ten year old with unusual access to the two poles of his society – modern and traditional – the tale recounts the rising tension, collision, and eventual fallout of the split.

Following the fall of the Shah of Iran in 1979 and the purges that targeted the author’s class, Aria Minu-Sepehr sought refuge in the United States. The hostage crisis, a year later, would prove that the edicts of the Iranian Revolution could impact the global community and destroy the goodwill of one people for another. Aria Minu-Sepehr has worked to bridge that divide. He has lectured on issues concerning Iranian culture and U.S. foreign policy, and created and directed Forum for Middle East Awareness at Susquehanna University, where he also taught world and Middle Eastern literature. In 2007, an excerpt of We Heard the Heavens Then was awarded the John Guyon Literary Non-Fiction Prize. Aria Minu-Sepehr lives with his family in Oregon.

 
 
 

 

  • Title: RadioZine 20120813
  • Length: 28:30 minutes (21.65 MB)
  • Format: MP3 Stereo 44kHz 106Kbps (VBR)
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Marie Long and Medical work in Nepal

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 07/30/2012

 Health and Health Care Forum, Hosted by Roberta Hall.

In this segment, we hear Marie Long, a neurosurgeon who did volunteer medical work at Tribuvan Hospital, Nepal, and developed a project to prevent neurological diseases that have afflicted some Nepali people.

 

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Nancy Sullivan with Problems Arising from Fad Diets and Processed Foods

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 07/30/2012

 Health and Health Care Forum, Hosted by Roberta Hall

 

Today's guest is Nancy Sullivan, a registered dietitian who uses nontraditional methods to understand and help clients with gastrointestinal problems. In this conversation we talk about difficulties in interpreting symptoms and problems that can arise with fad diets and with additives in commercially prepared foods.

 
 

 

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Comments

Correction

 A typo occured with one of our guests, Todd Dalotto on Radiozine this past Friday. Our apologies for the oversight.

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