Radiozine

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

 

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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

Host Roberta Hall speaks with Dr. Vern Saboe about Oregon Medicare, Part 2.

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 08/22/2011

Host Roberta Hall speaks with Dr. Vern Saboe, Part 2.

Vern Saboe is a chiropractor in Albany, Oregon, and he was one of 44 members of the Oregon Transformation Team that developed the framework for a reorganization of Oregon's Medicaid --- and he was the only complementary care practitioner on the team so he spoke for naturopaths and other practices as well as for chiropractors. Additional to his practice, he is the legislative lobbyist for Oregon's chiropractic association, and in these two conversations he talks about all of these activities and about what preventive medicine offers in opposition to first-line treatment with drugs.

(Part 2 of 2. Part 1 of 2 aired on Friday, August 19, 2011 at 11:30 AM.)

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Dr.Rosser and 3 Iraqi students talk about the Iraqi Student Project

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program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 08/08/2011

 Host Marianne Barisonek talks with Dr. Rosser and 3 Iraqi students about the Iraqi Student Project

 The Iraqi Student Project (www.iraqistudentproject.org) is a grass-roots effort to help war-displaced Iraqi students acquire the undergraduate education they need to participate inrebuilding their country. Dr. Robert Rosser, executive director of The Iraqi Student Project and three students: Awab AlwareFarah Mohsen and Mustafa Mahmood talk about the project and thier experiences as students here in the United States.

 

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Homefront 911: Military Family Monologues

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Fri, 08/05/2011

Host Marvin Simmons of Northwest Veterans for Peace spoke with Stacy Bannerman, creator and producer of "Homefront 911: Military Family Monologues," a project of the Sanctuary for Veterans and Families. Also on the program are Tamara Rosenleaf, who wrote two of the monologues, and Belle Landau of the Returning Veterans Project. This program features moving readings of the military family monologues.

Homefront 911: Military Family Monologues is an original performance art piece based on actual accounts of how the war is coming home. Developed and presented by military family members, Homefront 911 is a non-partisan event intended to raise awareness of the impact of nearly a decade of war on the families left behind, and strengthen the community safety net.

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Medical Marijuana Use

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program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Fri, 07/29/2011

 A conversation with Angela Fairless, Anna Diaz and Todd Dalotto about the current state of medical marijuana in Oregon.

Your rating: None Average: 4.7 (3 votes)

Soundbitten: The Perils of Media-Centered Political Activism

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Thu, 07/21/2011

Host Michelle Schroeder Fletcher interviews Sarah Sobieraj, author of Soundbitten: The Perils of Media-Centered Political Activism.

Sobieraj explores the dynamics and costs of media obsession by activist groups.  She says the pervasive mediatization of politics has jeopardized the ability of dissenting groups to engage in public discourse and so has altered the very fabric of both social movements and the civil society that the news media claim to inform.

Her book is an ethnographic portrait of fifty diverse organizations over the course of two presidential campaign cycles. She argues that while most activist groups equate political success with media success and channel their energies accordingly, their efforts fail to generate news coverage and come with deleterious consequences.

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Arthur Stamoulis talks about the Columbia Free Trade Agreement

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 07/11/2011

Arthur Stamoulis of Oregon Fair Trade Campaign talks about the demonstration planned for Congressman Earl Blumenauer's Office on Monday, July 11 * 12:00 noon at 729 NE Oregon St (Near the 7th Avenue MAX Station)

Fifty-one union leaders were assassinated in Colombia last year — more than in the rest of the world combined. At least 17 have been assassinated so far this year.

As the Colombia Free Trade Agreement races towards a vote in Congress, our elected officials will be forced to pick a side.  Will they stand with union members, small farmers, human rights advocates and others in the United States and Colombia who oppose the FTA?   Or will they stand with the transnational corporations who profit off the violent suppression of workers' rights, the forced displacement of Afro-Colombians from their land and the dumping of subsidized agricultural commodities?

So far, Congressman Earl Blumenauer is "undecided" on the Colombia FTA.

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Writer Nathaniel Philbrick on his latest book, "The Last Stand."

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 07/04/2011

Host Gene Bradley speaks with award-winning author Nathaniel Philbrick about his latest book, "The Last Stand." Philbrick explores the volatile political, economic, and social forces that led to the  Battle of the Little Bighorn, the infamous confrontation, and demolishes some commonly held myths

Nathaniel Philbrick's previous books include In the Heart of the SeaSea of Glory, and Mayflower.The Last Stand was published in hardback in 2010 and is just out in paperback. He is presently at work on a book about Boston during the early years of the Revolution.

Mayflower was a finalist for both the 2007 Pulitzer Prize in History and the Los Angeles Times Book Award and was winner of the Massachusetts Book Award for nonfiction. In the Heart of the Sea won the National Book Award for nonfiction; Revenge of the Whale won a Boston Globe-Horn Book Award; Sea of Glory won the Theodore and Franklin D. Roosevelt Naval History Prize and the Albion-Monroe Award from the National Maritime Historical Society.

http://www.nathanielphilbrick.com/

 

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The Oregon Food Bank in Action

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program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Wed, 06/29/2011

The Oregon Food Bank works with a cooperative, statewide network of partner agencies to distribute emergency food to hungry families. KBOO reporter Ross Freeman Levin visited OFB and talked to volunteers from local agencies and programs who were picking up food to distribute. Hear the voices of people involved in this important process.

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  • Length: 23:22 minutes (21.4 MB)
  • Format: MP3 Stereo 44kHz 128Kbps (CBR)
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Tali Sharot on "The Optimism Bias: A Tour of the Irrationally Positive Brain"

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program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 06/27/2011

 Host Marianne Barisonek interviews Tali Sharot about her book "The Optimism Bias: A Tour of the Irrationally Positive Brain,an exploration of the neural basis of optimism, and how the brain simulates the future. How does the brain generate hope? How does it trick us into moving forward? What happens when it fails? How do the brains of optimists differ from those of pessimists?

Tali Sharot’s research on optimism, memory, and emotion has been the subject of features inNewsweek, The Boston Globe, Time, The Wall Street Journal, New Scientist, and The Washington Post, as well as on the BBC. She has a Ph.D. in psychology and neuroscience from New York University and is currently a research fellow at the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging at University College London. She lives in London.

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Thor Hanson and "Feathers: The Evolution of a Natural Miracle"

program: 
Radiozine
program date: 
Mon, 06/13/2011

 Host Kathleen Stephenson speaks with conservation biologist Thor Hanson about his book "Feathers: The Evolution of a Natural Miracle." Hanson says, "Their sheer diversity of form and function make feathers unique from waterproofing to flight, insulation and colorful display." He'll talk about the debate about how feathers evolved and how scientists are studying feathers to gain insights into their many valuable qualities and functions.

Thor Hanson has studied Central American trees and songbirds, nest predation in Tanzania, and the grisly feeding habits of African vultures. He is a Switzer Environmental Fellow and a member of the Human Ecosystems Study Group. Hanson’s first book, The Impenetrable Forest: My Gorilla Years in Uganda, won the 2008 USA Book News Award for nature writing. He lives on an island in Washington State. www.thorhanson.net

 
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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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