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    Q | Feb 28, 2013

    Giorgi Gogia, from Human Rights Watch, on how a novel about a friendship between two Azerbaijani men and their Armenian neighbours made the author a target in his own country. Legendary Canadian comedian Martin Short on his life, career and unique role promoting Canadian talent. Writer Peter Frase on defending rude service.

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    The Current | Feb 28, 2013

    Head 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?

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    The Debaters | Mar 2, 2013

    Alan Park and Ali Hassan debate whether Canada needs jet fighters.

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    Mainstreet NS | Mar 1, 2013

    A 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.

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    And the Winner Is | Feb 26, 2013

    As 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.

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    Tapestry | Feb 22, 2013

    We 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.

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Dispatches - December 29, 2011Dec 29, 2011 | 52:17Dispatches December 29, 2011 Audio
Dispatches December 29, 2011 Dec 29, 2011 | 52:17from Artibonite, Haiti - Brazil - New York - Uganda - Saudi Arabia
Dispatches - December 22, 2011Dec 22, 2011 | 52:19Dispatches December 22, 2011 Audio
Dispatches December 22, 2011 Dec 22, 2011 | 52:19from: Seoul, South Korea - Monrovia, Liberia - Zambia - Port-au-Prince, Haiti -Manila, the Philippines
Dispatches - December 15, 2011Dec 15, 2011 | 52:23Dispatches December 15, 2011 Audio
Dispatches December 15, 2011 Dec 15, 2011 | 52:23from Rio de Janeiro - Democratic Republic of Congo - Mexico City - Russia - Delhi
Dispatches - British PM on Somali pirates - Dec. 8, 2011Dec 8, 2011 | 0:39Dispatches British PM on Somali pirates - Dec. 8, 2011 Audio
Dispatches British PM on Somali pirates - Dec. 8, 2011 Dec 8, 2011 | 0:39In a recent interview with the BBC, British Prime Minister David Cameron said when it comes to Somalia's pirates, the gloves are now off.
Dispatches - December 8, 2011Dec 8, 2011 | 52:12Dispatches December 8, 2011 Audio
Dispatches December 8, 2011 Dec 8, 2011 | 52:12From Santiago - Benghazi, Libya - Zimbabwe - Somalia - Boston - Independencia, Peru
Dispatches - December 1, 2011Dec 1, 2011 | 52:27Dispatches December 1, 2011 Audio
Dispatches December 1, 2011 Dec 1, 2011 | 52:27from: Afghanistan - Egypt - the Philippines - Amsterdam - Colombia
Dispatches - Mattia Cabitza on Peruvians remembering their dead - Nov.13/11Nov 24, 2011 | 7:34Dispatches Mattia Cabitza on Peruvians remembering their dead - Nov.13/11 Audio
Dispatches Mattia Cabitza on Peruvians remembering their dead - Nov.13/11 Nov 24, 2011 | 7:34In Peru, Mattia Cabitza goes to a funeral, where mourners honour a group of men killed by death squads 19 years ago. It was a time when guerillas were clashing with the government, and civilians were targetted by both sides. The country's Truth and Reconciliation Commission estimates seventy-thousand people simply...disappeared. But as mass graves emerge, the dead are finally embraced.
Dispatches - Sarah Grainger revisits Jonestown, Guyana - Nov.24/11Nov 24, 2011 | 8:38Dispatches Sarah Grainger revisits Jonestown, Guyana - Nov.24/11 Audio
Dispatches Sarah Grainger revisits Jonestown, Guyana - Nov.24/11 Nov 24, 2011 | 8:38Reporter Sarah Grainger goes back to Jonestown, Guyana, to the site of the massacre of 900 Americans in 1978, presided over by Jim Jones. Now some want to turn this site into a tourist destination...while others find that idea distasteful.
Dispatches - November 24, 2011Nov 24, 2011 | 52:19Dispatches November 24, 2011 Audio
Dispatches November 24, 2011 Nov 24, 2011 | 52:19from Dhaka, Bangladesh - Santa, Peru - Jonestown, Guyana - Equatorial Guinea - Mexico City
Dispatches - November 17, 2011Nov 17, 2011 | 52:13Dispatches November 17, 2011 Audio
Dispatches November 17, 2011 Nov 17, 2011 | 52:13from South Africa - Afghanistan - Espiritu Santu, Brazil - Mogadishu, Somalia
Dispatches - Megan Williams sees Ben Hur on stage in Rome - Nov.10/11Nov 10, 2011 | 5:10Dispatches Megan Williams sees Ben Hur on stage in Rome - Nov.10/11 Audio
Dispatches Megan Williams sees Ben Hur on stage in Rome - Nov.10/11 Nov 10, 2011 | 5:10When Ben Hur, the extravagant, epic film, came out in 1959, it was box office gold. But what happens when you put it on stage in Rome in 2011? Dispatches contributor Megan Williams found out.
Dispatches - November 10, 2011Nov 10, 2011 | 52:09Dispatches November 10, 2011 Audio
Dispatches November 10, 2011 Nov 10, 2011 | 52:09from Les Cayes, Haiti - Detroit, Michigan - Rome - San Diego
Dispatches - The BBC's Roland Buerk on the Japanese politician's new drink - Nov.03/11Nov 3, 2011 | 0:19Dispatches The BBC's Roland Buerk on the Japanese politician's new drink - Nov.03/11 Audio
Dispatches The BBC's Roland Buerk on the Japanese politician's new drink - Nov.03/11 Nov 3, 2011 | 0:19This week in Japan, a politician drank a glass of water drawn from a puddle on the floor of the crippled Fukashima nuclear plant. And meanwhile, he reports, they're planting flowers around the plant for the visit of journalists next week. Never mind that the reactors are still unstable and their water's boiling at a bazillion degrees.
Dispatches - November 3, 2011Nov 3, 2011 | 52:14Dispatches November 3, 2011 Audio
Dispatches November 3, 2011 Nov 3, 2011 | 52:14from Syria - Berlin - Fukushima - Sudan - Lukango, Democratic Republic of Congo
Dispatches - October 27, 2011Oct 27, 2011 | 52:17Dispatches October 27, 2011 Audio
Dispatches October 27, 2011 Oct 27, 2011 | 52:17from Kabul - Freetown, Sierra Leone - Zimbabwe - Chiquitania, Bolivia

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