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Recent items from Saturday Morning
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An email from Dave
11:30 AM.Dave asks a question we all do, can I be of help? Audio
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Roger Dennis: innovation and strategy
11:20 AM.Christchurch consultant in foresight and innovation, supporting government bodies and companies across Asia and Australasia. Audio
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Nat Torkington: the Christchurch Recovery Map
11:15 AM.Auckland technologist who is part of the volunteer team that created the Christchurch Recovery Map, listing community information by citizens for citizens. Audio
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Craig Nevill-Manning: Google Person Finder
11:12 AM.Director of New York Engineering for Google, talking about Google Person Finder, developed after the 2010 Haiti earthquake to help locate missing friends and family members. Audio
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www.LetsFixIt.co.nz
11:08 AM.Find out how you can register to help with plumbing problems in Christchurch. Audio
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Sven Baker: design and plumbing
10:52 AM.Group CEO of Designworks, which is teaming up with the New Zealand plumbing industry to help fix domestic water and sewerage for affected residents in Christchurch. Audio
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Win Clark: earthquake engineering
10:41 AM.Retired structural engineer, and executive officer of the New Zealand Society of Earthquake Engineers. Audio
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Fiona Parks: Rangiora Quake Express
10:38 AM.Asking Christchurch residents to provide hot food that can then be delivered by helicoptor to badly affected areas such as Bexley and Wainoni. Audio
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Hamish Campbell: earthquake geology
10:10 AM.Geologist and paleontologist at GNS Science Hamish Campbell discusses the geology behind the Christchurch earthquake. Audio
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Introduction
10:08 AM.Kim outlines what will be covered this morning. Audio
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Merlin Mann : creativity and productivity
11:45 AM.Writer, speaker, broadcaster and creator of 43folders.com visiting Wellington for the annual Webstock conference. Audio
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Augustina Driessen : children and attachment
11:05 AM.Nurse and psychotherapist who established the Family Attachment BASE SAFE Trust which runs in several schools in the Bay of Plenty area. Audio
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Playing Favorites with Lennie James
10:05 AM.British writer and actor who is collaborating with theatre group Massive Company on Havoc in the Garden at the Auckland Festival. Audio
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Art with Mary Kisler
9:45 AM.Mackelvie Curator of International Art at the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki discussing work by artists Emily Valentine, Denis O'Connor and Fiona Pardington amongst others. Audio
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Peter Sunde : file-sharing and micropayments
9:09 AM.Scandinavian hacker, entrepreneur and DJ best known for co-founding The Pirate Bay and guest speaker at the annual Webstock conference in Wellington. Audio
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James Stewart : arms and international crime
8:40 AM.A New Zealander based at the University of British Columbia Faculty of Law whose research includes the liability of arms vendors for international crimes. Audio
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Richard Hurt : big tobacco and nicotine dependence
8:15 AM.The director of the Mayo Clinic Nicotine Dependence Centre, visiting New Zealand for the Inaugural International Cancer Symposium organised by the University of Otago. Audio
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Listener feedback
11:55 AM.Kim Hill reads emails and texts from listeners to the Saturday Morning programme. Audio
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Poetry with Bill Manhire
11:45 AM.Director of the International Institute of Modern Letters, whose latest book of poetry is The Victims of Lightning, discussing why so many poems are sad. Audio
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David McCandless: making information beautiful
11:05 AM.Author, data-journalist and information designer for print, advertising, television and the internet, who visualises ideas, issues, knowledge and data with the minimum of text. Audio
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Playing Favourites with Annabel Alpers
10:10 AM.New Zealand electronic/folk/vocal musician, who performs and records as Bachelorette, and is now based in New York. Audio
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Sir Richard Friend: commercialising chemistry
9:15 AM.Director of the Cavendish Laboratory at the University of Cambridge, who visited New Zealand to launch the International Year of Chemistry. Audio
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Nubar Hovsepani: Egypt's future
9:05 AM.Associate Professor of Political Science and International Studies at Chapman University, California. Audio
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Michael Hunter: 17th century science
8:30 AM.Leading historian of English science, who has worked particularly on Robert Boyle, the most influential British scientist of the late seventeenth century. Audio
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Pratap Chatterjee: Egypt and the USA
8:10 AM.Senior fellow at the Centre for American Progress, and columnist for the Guardian, discussing Egypt's militaty-industrial complex and its links to United States interests. Audio