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Tuesday 23 September 2014 Rātū 23 Mahuru 2014

Programmes are subject to change.

  • 12:04 AM. All Night Programme

    Including: 12:05 Music After Midnight; 12:30 Spectrum (RNZ); 1:05 From the World (RNZ); 2:05 Jazz-Footprints: Remembering Christchurch jazz legend, Stu Buchanan (6 of 10, RNZ); 3:05 Hard Up (NZ) Limited, by Susy Pointon, read by Aaron Alexander (2 of 5, RNZ); 3:30 An Author's View (RNZ); 5:10 Witness (BBC)

  • 6:00 AM. Morning Report

    Radio New Zealand's three-hour breakfast news show with news and interviews, bulletins on the hour and half-hour, including:

    6:18 Pacific News

    6:22 Rural News

    6:27 and 8:45 Te Manu Korihi News

    6:44 and 7:41 NZ Newspapers

    6:47 Business News

    7:42 and 8:34 Sports News

    6:46 and 7:24 Traffic

  • 9:06 AM. Nine to Noon with Kathryn Ryan

    Current affairs and topics of interest, including:

    10:45 The Reading: My Brother's Keeper, by Donna Malane, read by Alison Bruce (11 of 12, RNZ)

  • Noon Midday Report

    Radio New Zealand news, followed by updates and reports until 1.00pm, including:

    12:16 Business News

    12:26 Sport

    12:34 Rural News

    12:43 Worldwatch

  • 1:06 PM. Afternoons with Simon Mercep

    Information and debate, people and places around NZ

  • 4:06 PM. The Panel with Jim Mora

    An hour of discussion featuring a range of panelists from right along the opinion spectrum (RNZ)

  • 5:00 PM. Checkpoint

    Radio New Zealand's two-hour news and current affairs programme

  • 7:06 PM. Nights with Bryan Crump

    Entertainment and information, including:

    7:30 The Sampler: A weekly review and analysis show of new CD releases

    8:13 Windows on the World: International public radio features and documentaries

    9:06 The Tuesday Feature: The War That Changed The World - The Psychology of War

    A panel considers the impact of the First World War from the viewpoint of some of the countries which fought - to provide a globalised history of the effect of World War One. One hundred years ago the First World War broke out. For the countries that took part nothing would be the same again. It triggered the collapse of three major empires, led to the Soviet Union, reshaped the Middle East, brought the USA into world affairs in a major way and changed the way people thought. The third debate of the series comes from The Imperial War Museum in London as we explore the psychology of war. What did the world's first industrial war do to the minds that fought it? And what can the horrors and the intimacies of that war teach us about the nature of the human mind? Historian and broadcaster Amanda Vickery is joined by a panel of experts and a live audience to explore the mental motivations and psychological impacts of fighting the First World War. Dan Todman and Michael Roper are joined by the celebrated cultural historian, Joanna Bourke, who presents her specially commissioned essay, Shell Shock and the Shock of Shells. How does a society recover from war and what difference does winning or losing make to a psychological recovery? (BBC

  • 10:00 PM. News and Late Edition

    Radio New Zealand news, including Dateline Pacific and the day's best interviews from Radio New Zealand National

  • 11:06 PM. The Shed

    A glorious mix of brand new sounds from all over the world, real conversations with music makers and tales of everyday life as seen from an English garden shed (F, MCM)

Next day - Wed 24

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