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Socrates Exchange: Can War Ever Be Just?By Laura Knoy on Monday, December 29, 2008.Each month The Socrates Exchange explores a different philosophical question, on the air and on the web. This month: Can war ever be just? Join the conversation online and on-air. Guest
listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
Alzheimer’s Disease: Caring for the Growing Number of PatientsBy Laura Knoy on Friday, December 5, 2008.A lot of progress has been made on delaying the serious symptoms of Alzheimer’s Disease, but there is still no cure. Add the Baby Boom generation growing older and medical breakthroughs helping us live longer, and it’s a perfect storm for caring for men and women with the disease. In part two of our series on Alzheimer's, we'll look at whether we'll be ready to provide assistance for the growing number of Americans with Alzheimer’s disease. Guests
listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
A Winter Holiday for the BeaverBy Rosemary Conroy on Friday, December 5, 2008.Beavers are pretty busy throughout the years, but as Rosemary explains in the winter months, they hole up in the dams and take it easy. Alzheimer’s Disease: What We Know and What We’re LearningBy Laura Knoy on Thursday, December 4, 2008.Roughly 4.5 million Americans have Alzheimer’s. It affects about 1 in 20 people over the age of 65 and that number greatly increases as one gets older. Scientists know a lot about its causes, though it’s hard to diagnose while one is alive. And there's no cure, only drugs that delay the onset of symptoms. In part one of our series exploring Alzheimer’s Disease, we look at what we do and don't know about Alzheimer's, as well as what we’re learning and how we’re treating it. Guests
listen: No audio currently available. Order on CD (pdf).
State Senate Makes HistoryBy Dan Gorenstein on Wednesday, December 3, 2008.For the first time in United States history, women will make up the majority of members in a legislative chamber. That legislative chamber is the New Hampshire Senate State Senators acknowledged the historic achievement with pride and a bit of a shrug. New Hampshire Public Radio’s Dan Gorenstein reports. Liquor Chief Mulls Putting Booze In Grocery StoresBy Josh Rogers on Wednesday, December 3, 2008.Liquor commission says selling hard alcohol where people shop everyday would boost state revenues, and make life easier for consumers. The suggestion comes amid repeated calls from Governor Lynch for liquor officials to find new ways to make money. Cooking RemotelyBy Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, December 3, 2008.
And now, video game developers are tapping into our culinary aspirations with a new menu of products. You can now use your Wii controller to slice, dice, sauté and stir-fry several dishes at once – no splatters and no messy kitchen to clean up afterwards. In the game "Hell’s Kitchen," based on the hit Fox TV show,"wannabe restaurateurs slice and dice their way through each episode, vying for chef Gordan Ramsay's attention." In "Iron Chef" the Wii remote becomes your hand as you hold a knife, spoon, or sauté pan handle and chop, stir, tilt or flick. Of course, there won’t be any real food to eat when your done either. Washington Post food editor Joe Yonan reviews some of these games in today’s paper, and he joins us live on the line. Click here to read his article. And watch the video below: The Raw Food DivideBy Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, December 3, 2008.Here’s a way to cut down on energy: food you don’t need to cook. Imagine how much fuel we’d save by eating only salads of raw fruits and vegetables served at room temperature.
Lessley Anderson has followed the growth of the raw food movement. She’s senior editor at the food website CHOW.com, and she joins us now from San Francisco. Click here to read her article. (Photo of raw pizza by francistoms) High Fashion At Bargain RatesBy Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, December 3, 2008.
There was a time when buying high fashion brands from a giant retail store would be unthinkable, but over the past few years, Stella McCartney, Karl Lagerfeld and others have sold limited edition clothing to the masses at stores like Target and H&M. Rob Walker is author of Buying In, and writes the weekly "Consumed" column for The New York Times Magazine, and he says the current economic downturn may mean more merging of fashion’s high and lowbrow. Where's My Jetpack?!By Virginia Prescott on Wednesday, December 3, 2008.I grew up in the waning years of the space age. Cars no longer had big fins, but the Russians were still the bad guys, and the Jetsons were still on TV.
Last month, Eric Scott jet-packed across a 1,500-foot wide Colorado canyon – he could only stay in the air for about thirty seconds. Why can we send a man to the moon, but only fly with a jetpack for under a minute? That question frustrates Mac Montandon. At 35, Mac suspected he was having a premature mid-life crisis, couldn’t afford a Porsche, and traveled the world in search of his childhood dream: to fly a jetpack. He tells the story in his new book Jetpack Dreams: One Man’s Up and Down (But Mostly Down) Search for the Greatest Invention That Never Was. Mac joins us with more on the history, and possible future, of the jetpack. Watch a trailer for Jetpack Dreams from Mac Montandon: And watch a video of Eric Scott's 9-second flight: (Photo of Lost in Space, with stars June Lockhart and Guy Williams, a pop culture touchstone for jetpack obsessives the world over.) |
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