Mar 3, 2013 | 52:52Writers and Company George Saunders Interview AudioWriters and Company George Saunders Interview Mar 3, 2013 | 52:52A conversation with the American writer George Saunders. When Saunders won a MacArthur "genius grant" - half a million dollars, no strings - they talked about how he brings "a sense of humour, pathos and literary style all his own" to contemporary American fiction. He's an original.
Mar 1, 2013 | 26:29WireTap Alana AudioWireTap Alana Mar 1, 2013 | 26:29When Jonathan's high school crush appears in his office doorway, 25 years later, Jon realizes not much has changed since she stole his heart in grade 12. Some people just stay with us forever, no matter how much time goes by without seeing them.
Feb 28, 2013 | 22:00The Current Are police targeting elderly drivers in Sudbury? AudioThe Current Are police targeting elderly drivers in Sudbury? Feb 28, 2013 | 22:00Head to YouTube and you can watch dozens of scenarios to a problem with older or elderly drivers. Statistically,drivers aged 80-plus almost have the accident rate of the most dangerous driving demographic ... the under 24s. And in Sudbury they are the target of a police tip-line urging other drivers to call in to report any seemingly erratic or dangerous elderly driver. Simple public safety in action? Or age discrimination?
Mar 1, 2013 | 8:22Mainstreet NS Shark Deaths and Impact AudioMainstreet NS Shark Deaths and Impact Mar 1, 2013 | 8:22A team led by our oceans guy, Boris Worm, has found that about 100 million sharks die every year, and the biggest preventable culprit is fishing. He explains the significance of his finding.
Feb 26, 2013 | 55:28And the Winner Is Remembering Georg Tintner - And the Winner Is AudioAnd the Winner Is Remembering Georg Tintner - And the Winner Is Feb 26, 2013 | 55:28As a boy in pre-war Austria, Georg Tintner played the piano, sang with the Vienna Boys Choir, and composed his own music. By the time World War Two broke out, he was also a conductor. But Georg Tintner was a conductor with Jewish roots. And so, after the Anschluss in 1938, he was fired.
By 1942, Mr. Tintner made his way to New Zealand, and for the better part of the next forty-five years of his life, he served as a conductor across New Zealand, Australia and South Africa.
But in 1987, he moved to Halifax, where he would leave his mark as the conductor of Symphony Nova Scotia. He died in Halifax on October 2, 1999.
Feb 22, 2013 | 54:00Tapestry Keeping the Doubt AudioTapestry Keeping the Doubt Feb 22, 2013 | 54:00We take a look at how doubt and skepticism can be essential ingredients to faith. Mary meets Rabbi Rami Shapiro - a rabbi who says he isn't religious, but rather a curious, holy rascal. She also talks to Michael Shermer, the founder of Skeptic Magazine. He's held his own against Deepak Chopra in a go round on consciousness and quantum physics.
Feb 25, 2013 | 53:58Ideas Opening the Book AudioIdeas Opening the Book Feb 25, 2013 | 53:58The book has stayed pretty much the same for over 500 years: a bunch of paper pages between covers. It's been both finite and easily grasped. But our digitally-connected world is forcing us to re-imagine what books could be.
Feb 22, 2013 | 26:29WireTap The Mistake AudioWireTap The Mistake Feb 22, 2013 | 26:29A man receives a strange phone call in the middle of the night from a woman named Nicole. Their conversation leads to an over-the-phone relationship that spans years before he discovers that she's not entirely who she seems. Plus, Josh enjoys the perks of being mistaken for a Baldwin brother, and Jonathan gets accused of being his own impostor.
Feb 28, 2013 | 54:59Rewind The Death of the Penny AudioRewind The Death of the Penny Feb 28, 2013 | 54:59Rewind takes a look at the dear-departing penny.Goodbye to the sweaty, metallic smell of the smallest of coins. Goodbye to a pocket full of change messing up the lines of our fancy pants. Goodbye to a coin with which you could buy nothing.