RNZ National. 2016-07-13. 00:00-23:59.

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2016
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288277
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Rights Information
Year
2016
Reference
288277
Media type
Audio
Item unavailable online

This content is for private viewing only. The material may not always be available for supply.
Click for more information on rights and requesting.

Series
Radio New Zealand National. 2015--. 00:00-23:59.
Categories
Radio airchecks
Radio programs
Sound recordings
Untelescoped radio airchecks
Duration
24:00:00
Broadcast Date
13 Jul 2016
Credits
RNZ Collection
RNZ National (estab. 2016), Broadcaster

A 24-hour recording of RNZ National. The following rundown is sourced from the broadcaster’s website. Note some overseas/copyright restricted items may not appear in the supplied rundown:

13 July 2016

===12:04 AM. | All Night Programme===
=DESCRIPTION=

Including: 12:06 Music after Midnight; 12:30 Insight (RNZ); 1:15 Country Life (RNZ); 2:05 The Forum (BBC); Including: 12:05 Music after Midnight;
12:30 Nga Taonga Korero (RNZ);
1:05 Our Changing World (RNZ);
2:05 Heart and Soul (RNZ);
2:35 Hymns on Sunday;
3:05 The Conductor by Sarah Quigley read by Peter Bland (RNZ);
3:30 Te Waonui a Te Manu Korihi (RNZ);
4:30 Science in Action (BBCWS);
5:10 Mihipeka: Time of Turmoil by Mihipeka Edwards (4 of 12, RNZ);
5:45 NZ Society
3:30 Diversions (RNZ); 5:10 BBC Witness (BBC)

===6:00 AM. | Morning Report===
=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ's three-hour breakfast news show with news and interviews, bulletins on the hour and half-hour, including: 6:16 and 6:50 Business News 6:18 Pacific News 6:26 Rural News 6:48 and 7:45 NZ Newspapers

=AUDIO=

06:00
Top Stories for Wednesday 13 July 2015
BODY:
Police shoot dead a person during a raid on a building near Hamilton. President Obama addresses a memorial service in Dallas for five slain police officers and twenty people are killed and dozens more hurt as two passenger trains collide in southern Italy.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 28'38"

06:06
Sports News for 13 July 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'06"

06:13
David Cameron chairs final cabinet meeting
BODY:
David Cameron chairs his final cabinet meeting before handing in his resignation to the Queen, clearing the decks for new British prime minister Theresa May.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UK
Duration: 3'53"

06:18
NZ slow to sign up to agreement over crimes of aggression
BODY:
New Zealand is being criticised by an international law expert for being too slow to sign up to an agreement to make countries that carry out crimes of aggression subject to sanctions by the International Criminal Court.
Topics: politics, law
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'43"

06:21
Early Business News for 13 July 2015
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 2'37"

06:26
Morning Rural News for 13 July 2015
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sector.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'02"

06:40
Police shot person dead during search of Hamilton property
BODY:
A person is dead after being shot by the police as they were carrying out a search warrant in Hamilton last night. We talk to a witness.
Topics: crime
Regions: Waikato
Tags: police, shooting
Duration: 1'43"

06:46
Plans to build kitset homes for Akl dissed as short term fix
BODY:
Plans to build cheap kitset homes in south Auckland to ease housing crisis are criticised by social groups as a short-term fix that risks becoming permanent.
Topics: housing, politics
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: kitset homes
Duration: 3'25"

06:51
Govt proposes shake up of financial advisers sector and rules
BODY:
The financial advisory sector is to be reformed and more closely regulated under plans released by the government this morning.
Topics: business, law
Regions:
Tags: Financial Advisors Act
Duration: 1'53"

06:53
Banking expert criticises RBNZ as ad hoc
BODY:
A banking expert is criticising the Reserve Bank's approach to rein in the housing market.
Topics: business, housing
Regions:
Tags: Reserve Bank
Duration: 1'42"

06:54
Commercial property market driven by low interest rates
BODY:
The property investment firm, Stride Property, says the commercial property market will continue to strengthen as long as low interest rates and New Zealand's strong economy holds up.
Topics: business, housing
Regions:
Tags: Stride Property
Duration: 1'26"

06:55
Turners buys into lucrative Auckland market
BODY:
The car auction firm, Turners, is buying into the lucrative Auckland used-car market.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Turners, Buy Right Cars
Duration: 1'08"

06:57
Vodafone chooses 10 start-ups for accelerator programme
BODY:
Telecommunications company Vodafone has chosen the first ten companies to set up shop in its new Christchurch business incubator called the Xone.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Vodafone, Xone
Duration: 1'35"

06:58
Morning markets for 13 July 2015
BODY:
Wall Street on song, boosted by the start of the earnings season, aluminium producer Alcoa had a reasonable result.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 1'00"

07:07
Sports News for 13 July 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'24"

07:11
Person shot by police in Hamilton during search of house
BODY:
Police have shot and killed a person while executing a search warrant in Hamilton. Our reporter Andrew McRae is at the scene in Frankton.
Topics: crime
Regions: Waikato
Tags: police, shooting
Duration: 3'26"

07:14
Obama honours those killed in Dallas protest shootings
BODY:
The United States president Barack Obama has spoken at an interfaith memorial service in Dallas, Texas for five police officers killed there last week.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: US, Dallas
Duration: 6'58"

07:22
Sanders publicly endorses Clinton for US President
BODY:
Bernie Sanders finally gives Hillary Clinton his endorsement as the Democratic Party presidential candidate after negotiating what he's calling the most progressive election platform in the party's history.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: US, Clinton, Sanders
Duration: 4'14"

07:26
At least 23 dead in Italian train crash
BODY:
Rome based journalist Josephine McKenna with the latest after two trains crash head-on in Italy, killing at least 23 people.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Italy, train crash
Duration: 3'38"

07:34
Social housing providers react to kitset home plan
BODY:
The wave of announcements set to tackle the country's housing problems keep on coming. The latest - the Social Housing Minister Paula Bennett revealed a plan to put 140 kitset homes into new temporary villages somewhere in South Auckland. The Director of Community Housing Aotearoa, Scott Figenshow, gives us his take.
Topics: housing, politics
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: kitset housing
Duration: 6'21"

07:41
Beijing's South China Sea claims rejected by court
BODY:
An international tribunal has dismissed China's claim to much of the South China Sea, which is rich in mineral, energy and fishing resources. China called the ruling "ill-founded" and says it will not be bound by it. The Philippines is welcoming the ruling.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: South China Sea, China
Duration: 3'24"

07:44
NZers in South Sudan warned to get out amidst heavy fighting
BODY:
World Vision is hopeful a lull in fighting in the South Sudan capital of Juba following a ceasefire will improve the situation for thousands of people displaced by the latest outbreak of what threatens to deteriorate into a renewed civil war.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: South Sudan
Duration: 3'31"

07:48
Contenders for UN top job face off in first ever debate
BODY:
Helen Clark lines up for a television debate with nine others vying to become the next United Nations secretary-general. We talk to Al Jazeera's James Bays, who is moderating the debates.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Helen Clark, UN
Duration: 3'09"

07:51
Transgender athletes likely to make history in Rio
BODY:
A person born as a man but who's switched sex is in line to compete at Rio and become the first transgender Olympic athlete.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags: Olympics, transgender
Duration: 2'40"

07:55
KiwiRail to charge for rail crossings
BODY:
KiwiRail is set to enforce a system of annual charges for using level-crossings and underpasses that cross its network around the country.Farmers are the first group being targeted by the state-owned enterprise and they're not happy as Robin Martin reports.
Topics: business
Regions:
Tags: Kiwirail, Charges
Duration: 3'47"

08:07
Sports News for 13 July 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'24"

08:11
President Obama makes hard-hitting speech on race
BODY:
President Obama speaks powerfully against racism at a memorial service for slain police officers in Dallas, Texas. We get reaction from veteran civil rights activist Kevin Alexander Gray.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: US, Dallas
Duration: 7'13"

08:18
If Trump wins "time to move to New Zealand"
BODY:
The US Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's joke about moving to New Zealand if Donald Trump is elected president has fallen flat. But some people including the former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg say she's crossed a line. We're joined by Aaron Blake from the Washington Post.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: US, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Trump
Duration: 3'01"

08:22
Lobby group disappointed at surcharge verdict
BODY:
A lobby group for the renewable electricity industry says it is bitterly disappointed it lost a complaint over extra charges levied on many people with solar panels on their roof. But it's not the end of the matter as Eric Frykberg reports.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags: Unison, Electricity Authority, renewable energy
Duration: 2'56"

08:25
Rents could rise as terms of interest-only loan change
BODY:
Westpac is the latest bank to cut its maximum term for interest-only loans. Could it be a sign the banks are worried about the housing market? We talk to the Property Investors' Association about what the changes could mean for landlords.
Topics: housing
Regions:
Tags: mortgages, banks, investers
Duration: 2'40"

08:28
Whanau ora provider hits back at criticism of inequality gap
BODY:
A South Island Wanau Ora provider says iwi Ngai Tahu is the reason for its success amid criticism iwi aren't doing enough to close the widening gap between urban and tribal Maori.
Topics: te ao Maori
Regions:
Tags: Whanau Ora
Duration: 3'04"

08:31
Markets Update for 13 July 2015
BODY:
A brief update of movements in the financial sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 52"

08:36
Winston Peters to receive Grey Power cannabis petition
BODY:
Northland MP Winston Peters has agreed to accept a petition by a Grey Power chapter to legalise cannabis. We talk to Mr Peters about Otamatea Grey Power's enthusiasm for being able to have a few pot plants in their back yards.
Topics: health, politics, law
Regions:
Tags: cannabis
Duration: 3'39"

08:40
Te Papa not best place for sporting treasures, historians say
BODY:
Sports historians say Te Papa shouldn't be entrusted with New Zealand's sporting treasures and the smaller Hall of Fame should be bolstered instead.
Topics: sport, history
Regions:
Tags: Te Papa
Duration: 3'10"

08:42
Record migration puts pressure on housing in Whangarei
BODY:
Record migration levels are pushing up rents and putting the squeeze on housing in Whangarei. Our Northland reporter Lois Williams has the details.
Topics:
Regions: Northland
Tags: migration
Duration: 3'46"

08:47
Corbyn secures right to defend his leadership of UK Labour
BODY:
The British Labour Party executive has ruled that Leader Jeremy Corbyn has an automatic right to contest a pending leadership vote.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UK, Jeremy Corbyn
Duration: 6'29"

08:53
Increasing student transience disrupting learning
BODY:
Principals are reporting more and more children are shifting from school to school as their parents struggle to find stable accommodation. As Jo O'Brien reports the frequent moves are disrupting the students' education and their classes.
Topics: education
Regions:
Tags: student transience
Duration: 3'14"

=SHOW NOTES=

===9:06 AM. | Nine To Noon===
=DESCRIPTION=

Current affairs and topics of interest, including: 10:45 The Reading: When We Wake, by Karen Healy. Sixteen-year-old Tegan is happiest when playing the guitar, she's falling in love for the first time, and she's protesting the wrongs of the world. (Part 3 of 12, RNZ)

=AUDIO=

09:09
Roland Kun's escape from Nauru
BODY:
Nauru opposition MP Roland Kun, has just returned to New Zealand after a cloak and dagger escape from his home country. A year ago Mr Kun had his Nauruan passport cancelled, amid allegations he'd taken part in an anti-government protest outside its parliament. No charge has ever been laid against him, but the Nauru Government has refused to issue him a new passport. But now Mr Kun has been reunited with his family after being issued with a New Zealand passport, and managing to sneak through customs without raising the attention of Nauruan authorities.
EXTENDED BODY:

Former Nauru opposition MP Roland Kun, who escaped earlier this week, says the New Zealand Government did everything it could to help him.
Mr Kun's Nauruan passport was cancelled amid accusations he had taken part in protests outside Parliament about the apparent breakdown in the rule of law. This meant he was unable to leave the country.
He still denies any involvement in the protests.
He applied for New Zealand citizenship in December last year in order to join his family in Wellington.
His lawyer, Claudia Geiringer, said his New Zealand passport was issued 12 days ago and sent to Nauru. Despite fears he would be arrested before boarding a flight, he escaped the country via Brisbane.
He told Nine to Noon that after more than a year apart, being reunited with his wife and three young children in New Zealand was a massive relief, although his children found it emotionally difficult.
He said they do not remember him the same as before.
He believes the Nauru government wanted to forget about him but the New Zealand Government did all it could to help.
"That was exactly what they needed to do; raise the issues about the existence of rule of law in Nauru and this was the exact thing I had spoken to the media about prior to my suspension from Parliament and then my passport being taken off me," he said.
He said he still had major concerns about the function of democracy in Nauru and the moral compass of some politicians.
He has never been arrested or charged and said he had never been given a clear reason for his passport being cancelled.
"As far as I'm concerned they never had any reason to cancel my passport and no legal basis," he said.
"We never got our day in court. We ran around for six months making technical arguments until the court said I was out of time and threw my matter out."
While trapped in Nauru he said he relied heavily on his extended family and lived with his sister.
He said a downside of leaving is he is now separated from them and does not know when he might see them again.

Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Narua
Duration: 26'46"

09:38
Dr Dava Newman: Humans on Mars
BODY:
NASA's second in charge explains how we'll get humans to the red planet in the next 30 years - and why it's worth the trip. Dr Dava Newman is a former MIT professor who designed the Biosuit - a slimmed down next generation spacesuit she says will be critical for the exploration of Mars.
EXTENDED BODY:
“Boots on Mars” - That's the motto of NASA at the moment and the agency's second in charge, Dr Dava Newman, says we'll get there by the year 2039 - 70 years on from the first moon landing.
And NASA's been making some strides towards that goal.
It recently completed a critical test of the Space Launch System - a next-generation rocket that's set to take humans into deep space for the first time in decades.
Even further afield its Juno probe went into orbit around Jupiter last week.
Dr Newman has also been instrumental in research to make life in space easier on astronauts.
In her previous job with MIT she designed the Biosuit - a new, sleek kind of spacesuit that makes it easier for astronauts to move around while walking on the surface of the Red Planet.
Kathryn Ryan talks to Dava Newman who is in the country for the New Zealand International Science Festival.
Read an edited excerpt of the interview below:
Explain the sort of strides you are taking towards getting people to Mars
Well, our journey to Mars is already well underway. There are three phases – so there will be what I call “Boots on Mars” in 2030, [it will be] the farthest humanity would ever travelled and explored.
First [is] why? Why travel? And asking the enduring questions: Are we alone in the universe? Are there other habitable planets? And particular to Mars – did Mars once have life? We think the evidence is mounting.
So a three-phase plan. So the first phase starts closer to home on the international space station. For 16 years we’ve had astronauts working together in the lower orbit and were learning about their physiologies and we’re learning about their technologies.
Second phase is the 2020s…. that’s called the space launch system with the Orion capsule on top that will harbours the astronauts. All of the 2020s will be taking humans a next step further than humans have ever been. So that’s earth moon orbit and we call that deep space beyond, and we will be trying to test the technologies that only we have to test in deep space to get to Mars. We have a list of 85 top technologies we have to get to mars, but 4-6 we call prove out, so that will be the proving ground in the 2020s.
Phase three: Mars orbit, then Boots on Mars. So we are closer than humanity has ever been to standing on the Red Planet, but as you know we have been exploring for 50 years with orbiters and landers and landers on Mars. So every day I check the Martian temperature. The warmest it gets is freezing and it gets right down to -200 degrees Celsius.
So there’s the plan, but what are the biggest barriers to this happening?
Launch capability, first and foremost, because we need heavy lift launch system. So our space system needs to be more powerful than the Saturn 5. So we’re testing the pre-ambles, we’re testing the solids, we’re testing the engines and we’re putting it on the stack in 2018. That’s its first mission and we call the Exploration Mission One. And it won’t have astronauts on board. But that’s just around the corner so all the milestones we’re testing for 2018 and the launch of Exploration Mission One. Then early in the 2020s there will be exploration mission two, then three, four, five and we just keep going through that decade. So we will have that heavy launch capability that the world doesn’t have at this time. So that’s our major development programme that we have at this time at NASA. And when we get into orbit we will need in space propulsion, so that means solar-electric propulsion.
Of course [people] are living on space stations, but we need to close the loops. So for the air loop it has to be completely closed and you have to recycle all the water, all of the liquid. We need closed loop systems and we don’t have them yet.
And we do that third phase to Mars, [the astronauts] have to be completely autonomous, and completely independent from Earth.
How accurate was the movie The Martian?
It was excellent, we consulted with them. First of all [Andy Weir] wrote a great book, and really did his research. They really wanted to portray that they were using the correct technology. We say at NASA “We’re the real Martians, and we’re walking on all those technologies.” And they did a really great job to get it right.
The support system shown in that movie, and the entire self-sufficiency entirely feasible though. And understanding the science in order to do so.
That’s right, it’s completely autonomous. All of our life support systems, but growing your own food, so on the space station today we’re growing lettuce and vegetables and the astronauts are harvesting…We really have to have our own life support system on Mars. Mars has an atmosphere, but it’s only one percent and it is carbon dioxide so there will be a pressurised habitat, and there will be exploring abilities and the astronauts will need a lot of mobility. Because why are we going there with humans? We’ve been there with rovers and landers for 5 years. But the first human mission, for say the first month, they will cover more territory than we have covered in 50 years.
And we work in teams. So astronaut explorers with my robots with path planning. I’d love to send astronauts out there to find out: where is the evidence of life? The “why” for Mars, which they didn’t really portray as well in the movie as I would have liked. Why are we going? We are going to look for any signs of the history of life. Mars and Earth are sister planets – 4.5 billion years old each. About 3.5 billion years ago we think Mars harboured like, it was probably wet, and wonderful. Today we don’t see life on Mars, it is pretty cold. I wouldn’t say it’s a dead planet. We see methane coming up and some of the characteristics that could harbour life. But essentially we are going there as fossil hunters. To find out about past life. Because whatever we find out about Mars will tell us about life here on Earth.
Topics: science
Regions:
Tags: NASA, space, Mars, spacecraft
Duration: 21'44"

10:06
Australia correspondent Bernard Keane
BODY:
Australia correspondent Bernard Keane checks in on Malcolm Turnbull just about securing a majority government, while the outcome in the Senate is still unclear.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Australia
Duration: 6'58"

10:14
Naif Al-Mutawa: Superheros fighting extremism.
BODY:
Kuwaiti entrepreneur, clinical psychologist and cartoonist Dr Naif Al-Mutawa created comic book series 'The 99', presenting positive Muslim role models. After 9/11 he wanted children, including his own, to have Muslim heroes who were not advocating violence. His 99 heros from 99 countries were the first Islamic comic superheroes. Based on the 99 attributes of Allah, Naif's cartoons have drawn plaudits from around the world, including from President Obama. They've inspired a TV series, even a theme park. But they've come at a cost. Naif has received death threats from ISIS and been charged with blasphemy.
EXTENDED BODY:
Kuwaiti entrepreneur, clinical psychologist and cartoonist Dr Naif Al-Mutawa created comic book series 'The 99', presenting positive Muslim role models.
After 9/11 he wanted children, including his own, to have Muslim heroes who were not advocating violence. His 99 heros from 99 countries were the first Islamic comic superheroes.
Based on the 99 attributes of Allah, Naif's cartoons have drawn plaudits from around the world, including from President Obama.
They've inspired a TV series, even a theme park. But they've come at a cost. Naif has received death threats from ISIS and been charged with blasphemy.
He talks to Kathryn Ryan.
Topics: media, life and society
Regions:
Tags: The 99, Naif Al-Mutawa
Duration: 27'51"

11:07
Literature Review - Udon by The Remarkables by Harvey Molloy
BODY:
Reviewed by Harry Ricketts, published by Makaro Press.
Topics: books
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'59"

11:13
Marty Duda's artist of the week: Lawrence Arabia
BODY:
Marty Duda plays the music of one of our best song writers - Silver Scroll winning Lawrence Arabia - aka James Milne. He's just released his long-awaited 4th album 'Absolute Truth".
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 17'04"

11:29
Creating a new school culture in Kawerau
BODY:
The closure of both Kawerau College and Kawerau Intermediate resulted in the birth of Tarawera High School catering for students from year 7 to 13. The old high school was notorious, low achievement, high truancy and students falling foul of the law. But now things have changed, attendance and achievement has lifted. The principal of Tarawera High School, Helen Tuhoro outlines what it is about her approach that appears to be working, and long time Kawerau Police Youth Aid Officer, Senior Constable George Westerman discusses the positive change he's seeing in the community.
EXTENDED BODY:
The closure of both Kawerau College and Kawerau Intermediate resulted in the birth of Tarawera High School catering for students from year 7 to 13.
The old high school was notorious, low achievement, high truancy and students falling foul of the law. But now things have changed, attendance and achievement has lifted.
The principal of Tarawera High School, Helen Tuhoro outlines what it is about her approach that appears to be working, and long time Kawerau Police Youth Aid Officer, Senior Constable George Westerman discusses the positive change he's seeing in the community.
Topics: education
Regions: Bay of Plenty
Tags: George Westerman, Helen Tuhoro, youth aid, truancy, education, Tarawera High School, Kawerau
Duration: 19'37"

11:50
Brexit and British art
BODY:
Arts commentator Courtney Johnston looks at English artist Jeremy Deller's "human memorial" to mark a hundred years since the Battle of the Somme.
Topics: arts
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'29"

=SHOW NOTES=

09:05 Roland Kun's escape from Nauru
Nauru opposition MP Roland Kun, has just returned to New Zealand after a cloak and dagger escape from his home country. A year ago Mr Kun had his Nauruan passport cancelled, amid allegations he'd taken part in an anti-government protest outside its parliament. No charge has ever been laid against him, but the Nauru Government has refused to issue him a new passport. But now Mr Kun has been reunited with his family after being issued with a New Zealand passport, and managing to sneak through customs without raising the attention of Nauruan authorities.
09:20 Dr Dava Newman: Humans on Mars
NASA's second in charge explains how we'll get humans to the red planet in the next 30 years - and why it's worth the trip. Dr Dava Newman is a former MIT professor who designed the Biosuit - a slimmed down next generation spacesuit she says will be critical for the exploration of Mars.
[image:74220:full]
09:45 Australia correspondent Bernard Keane
10:05 Naif Al-Mutawa: Superheros fighting extremism.
Kuwaiti entrepreneur, clinical psychologist and cartoonist Dr Naif Al-Mutawa created comic book series 'The 99', presenting positive Muslim role models. After 9/11 he wanted children, including his own, to have Muslim heroes who were not advocating violence. His 99 heros from 99 countries were the first Islamic comic superheroes. Based on the 99 attributes of Allah, Naif's cartoons have drawn plaudits from around the world, including from President Obama. They've inspired a TV series, even a theme park. But they've come at a cost. Naif has received death threats from ISIS and been charged with blasphemy.
[gallery:2262]
10:35 NZ Literature Review - Udon by The Remarkables by Harvey Molloy
reviewed by Harry Ricketts, published by Makaro Press
10:45 The Reading
When We Wake by Karen Healy read by Francesca Emms (Part 3 of 12)
11:05 Marty Duda's artist of the week: Lawrence Arabia
11:20 Creating a new school culture in Kawerau
The closure of both Kawerau College and Kawerau Intermediate resulted in the birth of Tarawera High School catering for students from year 7 to 13. The old high school was notorious, low achievement, high truancy and students falling foul of the law. But now things have changed, attendance and achievement has lifted. The principal of Tarawera High School, Helen Tuhoro outlines what it is about her approach that appears to be working, and long time Kawerau Police Youth Aid Officer, Senior Constable George Westerman discusses the positive change he's seeing in the community.
[gallery:2260]
11:45 Brexit and British art
Arts commentator Courtney Johnston looks at English artist Jeremy Deller's "human memorial" to mark a hundred years since the Battle of the Somme.
[gallery:2257]
Courtney Johnston discusses the potential impact on British art of Brexit, and looks at the work of English artist Jeremy Deller, and his "human memorial" - a large-scale public performance work - to mark 100th anniversary of the beginning of the Battle of the Somme.

=PLAYLIST=

Artist: The Byrds
Song: Mr Tambourine Man
Composer: Dylan
Album: Mr Tambourine Man
Label: Columbia
Time: 9.40
Artist: David Kilgour/The Heavy Eights
Song: A Break in the Weather
Composer: Kilgour/Hunt
Album: Left by Soft
Label: Arch Hill
Time: 10.42

===Noon | Midday Report===
=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ news, followed by updates and reports until 1.00pm, including: 12:16 Business News 12:26 Sport 12:34 Rural News 12:43 Worldwatch

=AUDIO=

12:00
Midday News for 13 July 2016
BODY:
The Police account of last night's Hamilton shooting is disputed. Helen Clark goes head to head with her rivals for the UN's top job.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 15'21"

12:17
Fin market regulator says changes good for consumers
BODY:
The Financial Markets Authority says consumers will be better informed and protected by planned changes to beef-up rules covering the financial advisory sector.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'44"

12:19
Telecommunications options paper misses mark for consumers
BODY:
The government's review of the Telecommunications Act is attracting a lot of positive feedback from industry players, but end users are less enthusiastic.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'52"

12:21
T&G Global says new shareholder can help grow China market
BODY:
The produce exporter, T&G Global, is looking for long term market gains and growth in China from a new shareholder.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'19"

12:25
Midday Markets for 13 July 2016
BODY:
For the latest from the markets we're joined by Brad Gordon at Macquarie Private Wealth.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'53"

12:26
Midday Sports News for 13 July 2016
BODY:
New South Wales mean to have the final word in the State of Origin series.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'50"

12:35
Midday Rural News for 13 July 2016
BODY:
News from the rural and farming sectors.
Topics: rural, farming
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 8'47"

=SHOW NOTES=

===1:06 PM. | Jesse Mulligan, 1–4pm===
=DESCRIPTION=

An upbeat mix of the curious and the compelling, ranging from the stories of the day to the great questions of our time (RNZ)

=AUDIO=

13:15
Television debate for Helen Clark in her UN bid
BODY:
The former prime minister Helen Clark has taken part in a television debate this morning between 10 of the candidates vying to become the next United Nations secretary-general.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UN secretary-general debate
Duration: 7'57"

13:25
The man who grew an ear on his arm
BODY:
One of the more intriguing guests at the Dunedin science festival is Australian performance artist Stelarc - who has visually probed and acoustically amplified his body, suspended himself with hooks in his skin, performed as a 6 legged walking robot, and even grew an ear on his own arm.
EXTENDED BODY:
One of the more intriguing guests at the Dunedin science festival is performance artist Stelarc, who has visually probed and acoustically amplified his body, suspended himself with hooks in his skin, performed as a 6 legged walked robot and even grew an ear on his own arm.
The ear is actually a surgical construct on Stelarc's arm.
"So it’s partly surgically constructed and a cell grows. So if you can imagine inserting a construct of a porous material, you skin s suctioned over that scaffold over a period of six to eight months your cells grow into the construct, you get tissue ingrowth… and it is a living part of my body."
The ear looks exactly like an ear, and it’s covered in skin.
He says took ten years to find three plastic surgeons who were willing to take part in the project and get the adequate funding for it.
"And it’s still an ongoing effort because it’s not just a matter of constructing a replica of an ear on his arm, but to internet-enable the ear so people in other places can listen to what the ear is hearing."
But making the ear hear is still in the works.
He says he had previously performed with a mechanical third hand attached to my body, I’ve performed with and extended arm and the ear was an extension of this idea.
"I just wanted to construct a soft prostheses and I wanted something from my body, from my own skin and that’s primarily the reason.
"To explore alternate anatomical architectural features."
Stelarc joins Jesse Mulligan in the Dunedin studio to talk about his exploration of the interfaces between man and machine and between art and science.
Topics: science, technology
Regions: Otago
Tags: Dunedin Science Festival, Stelarc
Duration: 12'35"

13:35
Sound Archive: NZ's first pilots
BODY:
Sarah Johnston of Nga Taonga Sound and Vision looks back at our first pilots.
EXTENDED BODY:
One hundred years ago today the first New Zealander to get a pilot’s licence got that important piece of paper.
He was Vivian Walsh and with his brother Leo, he had set up the Walsh Brothers Flying School at Orakei in Auckland.
Several recordings in the sound archives at Nga Taonga Sound & Vision recall these exciting early days of flying in New Zealand and Sarah Johnston plays us some of them.

Topics: history
Regions:
Tags: Sound Archives, Nga Taonga Sound & Vision
Duration: 10'35"

13:50
Favourite album - The United States Of America (1968)
BODY:
Dunedin musician and music producer, Sean Norling - aka Rocko Mandroid - has chosen our favourite album today, The United States Of America [eponymous](1968).
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'05"

14:10
Music critic - Simon Sweetman
BODY:
Time to talk music, with critic Simon Sweetman.
Topics: music
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 16'00"

14:20
Albert Manero: Making 3D printed limbs
BODY:
Albert Manero is taking 3-D printing to a whole new level.
EXTENDED BODY:
Albert Manero is taking 3-D printing to a whole new level.
His non profit organisation Limbitless Solutions, makes personalised bionic limbs for children born without them, or who have lost them through injury or disease - all made thanks to 3D printing, which means they can be made at a fraction of the cost.
Albert Manero is a doctoral student in mechanical engineering at the University of Central Florida - and is in Dunedin as a guest of the Science Festival.
He is our guest on Bookmarks, and shares some of the music, art, books and films that have inspired and entertained him.
Topics: health, technology
Regions:
Tags: bionic limbs
Duration: 31'57"

15:10
Submarine designer Lucy Collins
BODY:
As a child, Lucy Collins had actually wanted to build space shuttles, but found out only US citizens could get that kind of work at NASA, so she eventually became a naval architect instead... and went on to specialise in submarine design.
EXTENDED BODY:
Submarines are often thought to be the stuff of action movies. Think Hunt for the Red October or the adventures of super-marionette Troy Tempest and his crew on Stingray.
UK Royal Navy nautical designer Lucy Collins not only gets to live and work on submarines, she also designs them.
She originally wanted to build space shuttles but, after finding out only US citizens could work for US space agency NASA, decided to go deeper - and became a naval architect with a specialty in submarine design.
Ms Collins, who is a guest of the Dunedin International Science Festival, joined Jesse Mulligan in the studio to talk about the unique features of the underwater vessels.
She also said she wanted more women to get into the engineering field, as only 9 percent of the UK engineering profession were women - the lowest rate in Europe.
The UK needed about 1.2 million more women in engineering, she said. The country needed many more engineers in general, and there was no reason to exclude half the population.
It also helped if girls saw women doing those sorts of jobs.
She said the best thing a 13-year-old, for example, could do to get into the field was to keep studying physics.
"I did really enjoy maths and I have to say I was quite good at it but you don't have to be.
"And that's something that I think really important turns people, I think sometimes turn off, because they think you have to be a maths whizz or an engineering whizz but that's not the case at all.
"As long as you have the passion for it, that's what's important."
Topics: science, defence force, transport, technology
Regions:
Tags: submarine design
Duration: 23'08"

15:45
The Panel pre-show for 13 July 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'43"

=SHOW NOTES=

1:10 First song
1:15 Television debate for Helen Clark in her UN bid
The former prime minister Helen Clark has taken part in a television debate this morning between 10 of the candidates vying to become the next United Nations secretary-general.
The debate is the first of its kind for the UN - with questions will be asked by international ambassadors and some submitted by members of the public on video.
1:25 The man who grew an ear on his arm
One of the more intriguing guests at the Dunedin science festival is performance artist Stelarc, who has visually probed and acoustically amplified his body, suspended himself with hooks in his skin, perfomed as a 6 legged walked robot and even grew an ear on his own arm.
It is all part of his exploration of the interfaces between man and machine and between art and science
[gallery:2258]
1:35 Sound Archive: NZ's first pilots
One hundred years ago today the first New Zealander to get a pilot’s licence got that important piece of paper. He was Vivian Walsh and with his brother Leo, he had set up the Walsh Brothers Flying School at Orakei in Auckland. Several recordings in the sound archives at Nga Taonga Sound & Vision recall these exciting early days of flying in New Zealand and Sarah Johnston plays us some of them.
[gallery:2263]
1:40 Favourite album
2:20 Albert Manero: Making 3D printed limbs
Albert Manero is taking 3-D printing to a whole new level...
His non profit organisation Limbitless Solutions, makes personalised bionic limbs for children born without them, or who have lost them through injury or disease - all made thanks to 3D printing, which means they can be made at a fraction of the cost.
[gallery:2259]
Albert Manero is a doctoral student in mechanical engineering at the University of Central Florida - and is in Dunedin as a guest of the Science Festival.
He is our guest on Bookmarks, and shares some of the music, art, books and films that have inspired and entertained him.
3:10 Submarine designer, Lucy Collins
For many of us submarines are the stuff of action movies ... like Hunt for the Red October, or the adventures of the supermarionettes Troy Tempest and his crew on Stingray...
My next guest not only gets to live and work on them, she also designs them.
As a child, Lucy Collins had actually wanted to build space shuttles, but found out only US citizens could get that kind of work at NASA, so she eventually became a naval architect instead... and went on to specialise in submarine design.
[gallery:2261]
3:35 New Zealand Society
Tales of life in Aotearoa.
3:45 The Panel Pre-Show

=PLAYLIST=

JESSE MULLIGAN : AFTERNOONS 1 - 4pm
Wednesday 13th July
JESSE'S SONG:
ARTIST: The Verlaines
TITLE: Death And The Maiden"
COMP: Graeme Downes
ALBUM: Juvenilia
LABEL: Flying Nun
FAVOURITE ALBUM:
ARTIST: The United States of America
TITLE: The American Metaphysical Circus
COMP: Joseph Byrd
ALBUM: The United States of America
LABEL: Columbia
ARTIST: The United States of America
TITLE: Cloud Song
COMP: Joseph Byrd, Dorothy Moskowitz
ALBUM: The United States of America
LABEL: Columbia
MUSIC CRITIC: Simon Sweetman
ARTIST: Margaret Glaspy
TITLE: Memory Street
COMP: Margaret Glaspy
ALBUM: Emotions and Math
LABEL: ATO Records
ARTIST: Tortoise
TITLE: Rock On
COMP: David Essex
ALBUM: The Catastrophist
LABEL: Thrill Jockey
BOOKMARKS: Alfred Manero
ARTIST: Postmodern Jukebox
TITLE: Royals
COMP: Ella Yellich O'Connor, Joel Little
ALBUM: Twist Is The New Twerk
LIVE: Mud Hut

ARTIST: Julia Fischer
TITLE: Caprice 24
COMP: Niccolò Paganini
ALBUM: Julia Fischer 24 Caprices Paganini
LABEL: Decca
FEATURE STORY:
ARTIST: Kacey Musgraves
TITLE: Good Ole Boy's Club
COMP: Kacey Musgraves, Luke Laird, Natalie Hemby
ALBUM: Pageant Material
LABEL: Mercury
THE PANEL HALF TIME SONG:
ARTIST: Spearhead
TITLE: Crime To Be Broke In America
COMP: Michael Franti
ALBUM: Home
LIVE: Capitol

===4:06 PM. | The Panel===
=DESCRIPTION=

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

=AUDIO=

15:45
The Panel pre-show for 13 July 2016
BODY:
Your feedback, and a preview of the guests and topics on The Panel.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 13'43"

16:00
The Panel with Lisa Scott and Bernard Hickey (Part 1)
BODY:
Panel intro; Are NZers anti renewable energy?;China loses a ruling from The Hague;Robo-advice;Brexit could take six years.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 23'15"

16:10
Panel Intro
BODY:
What the Panelists Lisa Scott and Bernard Hickey have been up to.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 4'13"

16:12
Are NZers anti renewable energy?
BODY:
Former Green Party co-leader Jeanette Fitzsimons talks about New Zealand's attitude to renewable energy.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 8'45"

16:16
China loses a ruling from The Hague
BODY:
Paul Sinclair from the Centre for Strategic Studies on an international tribunal ruling on the South China Sea. What now?
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'51"

16:25
Robo-advice
BODY:
Would you trust financial davice from a computer programe?
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'18"

16:28
Brexit could take six years
BODY:
The British exit from the EU could take six years. And should there be another referendum?
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'59"

16:30
The Panel with Lisa Scott and Bernard Hickey (Part 2)
BODY:
Creative solutions to homelessness;Panel says; Smart motorway;Dunedin looking for new street names;Andy refuses dance with Serena.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 27'43"

16:33
Creative solutions to homelessness
BODY:
Portable shelters, folding insulated tents and award-winning shelter designs. Are creative solutions needed to home the homeless?
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 3'32"

16:35
Panel says
BODY:
What the Panelists Lisa Scott and Bernard Hickey are thiking about.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 5'16"

16:42
Smart motorway
BODY:
How does the new Smart motorway in Wellington work? We ask Neil Walker from the New Zealand Transport Agency.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 9'19"

16:46
Dunedin looking for new street names
BODY:
This year's Wimbleton mens champ Andy Murray wouldn't do the traditional thing and dance with womens champ Serena Williams.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 19"

16:50
Andy refuses dance with Serena
BODY:
The Dunedin City Council wants the public to suggest some street names that aren't those of white men.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'05"

=SHOW NOTES=

===5:00 PM. | Checkpoint===
=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ's weekday drive-time news and current affairs programme

=AUDIO=

17:00
Checkpoint with John Camppbell, Wednesday 13 July 2016
BODY:
Watch Wednesday's full programme here. It starts 5 minutes in.
Topics:
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 00"

17:08
Controversy over shot Hamilton man's death
BODY:
A 36-year-old Hamilton man, Nick Marshall, was fatally shot by police last night, who claim that he was armed and refused to put the weapon down.
Topics: law, crime
Regions: Waikato
Tags: police, Hamilton shooting
Duration: 6'40"

17:16
Affordable housing buyers hitting walls
BODY:
How do you get property in the Government's new Special Housing Areas? Would-be buyers say getting onto a waiting list, or some kind of ballot, is proving impossible.
Topics: housing, business, environment
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: housing markets
Duration: 6'25"

17:21
Affordable housing developers hard to contact
BODY:
The First Home Buyers' Club spokesperson Dustin Lindale says nobody is overseeing who is allocated an affordable homes by developers, and the developers are near impossible to contact.
Topics: housing
Regions: Auckland Region
Tags: affordable housing, First Home Buyers' Club
Duration: 5'41"

17:27
Cameron set for final few hours as UK Prime Minister
BODY:
David Cameron has just a few hours left as Prime Minister and will today attend his final Prime Minister's Questions, before heading to Buckingham Palace to hand his resignation to the Queen.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: Brexit, UK politics
Duration: 5'40"

17:35
Evening Business for 13 July 2015
BODY:
News from the business sector including a market report.
Topics: business, economy
Regions:
Tags: markets
Duration: 2'48"

17:40
Wild winds now heading to Wgtn, Marlborough
BODY:
A bus load of tourists had a lucky escape this morning when their bus was blown off the road in the Mackenzie Country.
Topics: weather
Regions:
Tags: northerly front, South Island
Duration: 2'34"

17:48
Questions raised over Uber's NZ tax bill
BODY:
Uber's New Zealand arm paid just over $9,000 in tax last year, despite earning revenues of more than $1m.
Topics: transport, business
Regions:
Tags: Uber, taxation systems
Duration: 3'45"

17:50
UN needs peace, security, says Helen Clark
BODY:
Helen Clark has spelled out why she believes she should be the next Secretary General of the United Nations in a very public job interview.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UN Secretary General nominations
Duration: 3'02"

17:53
Child porn offences likened to stamp collecting
BODY:
A former Taranaki teacher jailed for four-and-a-half years on child pornography charges today likened his offending to stamp collecting.
Topics: crime
Regions: Taranaki
Tags: child pornography charges
Duration: 4'15"

17:57
John Minto to run for Chch mayor
BODY:
John Minto, often described as a 'veteran activist' and one of the leading figures in the campaign against the 1981 Springbok Tour of New Zealand, is to run for Mayor of Christchurch.
Topics: politics
Regions: Canterbury
Tags: Local Body Elections, mayoral candidates
Duration: 4'56"

18:05
Sports News for 13 July 2015
BODY:
An update from the team at RNZ Sport.
Topics: sport
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 1'18"

18:10
Hamilton man armed, say police
BODY:
Police say Hamilton man Nick Marshall was killed last night because the 36-year-old was armed and refused to put his weapon down.
Topics: crime
Regions: Waikato
Tags: police, Hamilton shooting
Duration: 3'37"

18:13
Heavy rain warning for South Island
BODY:
A heavy rain warning has been issued for Fiordland, Westland, Buller, Nelson, and Otago and Canterbury high country.
Topics: weather
Regions:
Tags:
Duration: 2'34"

18:17
Retired school administrator jailed for fraud
BODY:
A retired school administrator has been sentenced to two years and three months' jail for stealing 375-thousand dollars from a Wellington high school.
Topics: crime
Regions:
Tags: fraud
Duration: 2'28"

18:21
New rules for financial advisors
BODY:
Financial advice from robots and tougher rules for humans are part of an overhaul of the financial advice sector.
Topics: technology, business
Regions:
Tags: financial robots
Duration: 2'13"

18:23
UN Sec Gen candidates take part in debate
BODY:
Contestants for the next Secretary General of the United Nations today participated in the first ever televised debate between candidates for the UN's top job.
Topics: politics
Regions:
Tags: UN Secretary General debates
Duration: 4'42"

18:28
Obama seeks to heal divisions at Dallas memorial
BODY:
United States President, Barack Obama, has led tributes to five Dallas police officers who were killed during a sniper attack last week.
Topics: politics, crime, security
Regions:
Tags: US shootings, Dallas
Duration: 2'35"

=SHOW NOTES=

===6:30 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

Highlighting the RNZ stories you're sharing on-line
Clare Short on Blair: "He misled people, there's no question"
How long should appliances last?

===7:06 PM. | Nights===
=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ's weeknight programme of entertainment and information

=AUDIO=

19:12
John Thornley - Songs of the Spirit
BODY:
The Methodist lay-preacher, John Thornley, continues his series on the spiritual side of pop music.This evening he discusses I Dreamed a Dream sung by Aretha Franklin.
Topics: music, spiritual practices
Regions:
Tags: Aretha Franklin
Duration: 16'41"

20:12
Nights' Overseas - England
BODY:
Breakfast producer at BBC Radio Will Flockton reports from post BREXIT Brighton.
Topics: life and society, politics
Regions:
Tags: United Kingdom
Duration: 15'40"

=SHOW NOTES=

[image:74420:full] no metadata
7:12 John Thornley - Songs of the Spirit
The Methodist lay-preacher, John Thornley, continues his series on the spiritual side of pop music.This evening he discusses I Dreamed a Dream sung by Aretha Franklin.
7:30 Spectrum
Twenty five dollars and a dream: the story of Tapu te Ranga - Spectrum visits an urban marae which is struggling financially after several of its buildings were closed by the Wellington City Council.

8:12 Nights' Overseas - England
Breakfast producer at BBC Radio Will Flockton reports from post BREXIT Brighton.

8:30 Window on the World
Wine Alcoholics - The conventional treatment for chronic alcoholics is abstinence. Not in Ottawa. At the Oaks, a residence for those who were once homeless, occupants are given a measure of white wine at hourly intervals throughout the day. The 'Managed Alcohol Program' has improved the health of its participants, reduced their alcohol intake, and in some cases enabled them to stop drinking altogether. It's also saved the city of Ottawa millions of dollars in public services - one man was hospitalised 191 times in the six months before joining the programme.
9:07 The Drama Hour
Orders - What can a man do when he finds himself increasingly on the outer at home, and his work is as boring as?
As It Happens #1 -Jimmy Van is a low-life on the run from the law. When he comes across an uninhabited house he stumbles into more than he was counting on.
10:17 Late Edition
A round up of today's RNZ News and feature interviews as well as Date Line Pacific from RNZ International
11:07 At the Eleventh Hour
A Short History of Jazz (8) - This eight part series guides listeners on a historical path, tracing the evolution of jazz from its beginnings in the early 1900s, up until the 1990s and beyond. During the course of the series, we hear the story of jazz; learn about how it developed structurally and harmonically, and find out about the social context behind everything. It is brought to you by some of New Zealand's greatest jazz thinkers and players, all lecturers and graduates of the New Zealand School of Music.
Tonight in the final of our series we look at The 1990s - a period of fusion, hybrids and cultural collaborations as musical styles blended with each other - led by session host Mark Donlon.

===7:35 PM. | Spectrum===
=DESCRIPTION=

People, places and events in New Zealand. (RNZ)

===8:30 PM. | Windows On The World===
=DESCRIPTION=

International public radio features and documentaries

===9:06 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

A man finds himself increasingly on the outer at home, and buries himself in his archival work. (RNZ)

===10:00 PM. | Late Edition===

Late Edition for 13 July 2016
Helen Clark's job interview. Getting to Mars and in Dateline Pacific, the former Nauru MP Roland Kun speaks out.

=DESCRIPTION=

RNZ news, including Dateline Pacific and the day's best interviews from RNZ National

===11:06 PM. | None (National)===
=DESCRIPTION=

Reuben Bradley presents the third programme in a four-part series guiding listeners through the musical, social and personal history of jazz. (RNZ)