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Eating wild foods in the industrial age

Eating wild foods in the industrial age

by radiocafe | Jun 12, 2018 | Down to Earth, Food & agriculture

What’s the difference between one head of lettuce and another? A lot, journalist Jo Robinson tells us. The foods we eat that are freshest and closest to their wild ancestors are healthier and can prevent many of the chronic illnesses that are part of modern life.

Learn more …

Desiree Mays on the 2018 Santa Fe Opera Season 

Desiree Mays on the 2018 Santa Fe Opera Season 

by radiocafe | Jun 12, 2018 | Arts & films, Santa Fe New Mexican

Opera expert Desiree Mays talks about nuclear weapons, broadway musicals, strong women, love and betrayal — all in the context of the five operas of the upcoming season of the Santa Fe Opera.

Learn more & listen …

Bloomsday in Santa Fe

Bloomsday in Santa Fe

by radiocafe | Jun 8, 2018 | Arts & films, Books, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

Who was James Joyce, why is his 1922 novel Ulysses still so influential today, and why do Joyce’s fans celebrate June 16 every year as “Bloomsday”? Find out all that and so much more, as we talk to three local hard core Joyce geeks.

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Art, science, and outer space: Futurition Santa Fe

Art, science, and outer space: Futurition Santa Fe

by radiocafe | Jun 5, 2018 | Arts & films, Santa Fe New Mexican

What does art about science look like? How can art make science more comprehensible? How are these disciplines separate and where do they meet? Check out Currents New Media and the SFI Interplanetary Festival to find out more.

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Magma and lava and ash: the ins and outs of volcanoes

Magma and lava and ash: the ins and outs of volcanoes

by radiocafe | May 31, 2018 | New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican, Science & health

Magma. Lava. Fissures. Eruptions. Tectonic plates. Angry gods. What are volcanoes, and what’s going on at the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii? Charlotte Rowe, vulcanologist at Los Alamos National Laboratory, shares her experience as a scientist and witness to live volcanoes.

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Saving the Gunnison Sage Grouse: Community Conservation in Action

Saving the Gunnison Sage Grouse: Community Conservation in Action

by radiocafe | May 31, 2018 | Down to Earth, Food & agriculture

Conservationists and cattlemen come together to restore land, with multiple benefits, including improved wildlife habitat and increased cattle forage.

Learn more …

What happened in Gaza…and why?

What happened in Gaza…and why?

by radiocafe | May 29, 2018 | Activism, Politics, Santa Fe New Mexican

What is the nature of the special relationship between the US and Israel? Why were 60 people killed–11 of them children–earlier this month by Israeli soldiers? What are the possible paths to ending this decades-long conflict? Foreign policy expert Phyllis Bennis shares her expertise.

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A treasure trove of native history: The Indian Arts Research Center

A treasure trove of native history: The Indian Arts Research Center

by radiocafe | May 26, 2018 | Arts & films, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

The School for Advanced Research in Santa Fe has an extraordinary collection of Pueblo pottery and other Indian arts. But to what extent are the communities who created these works involved in curating, conserving, and understanding them?

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Mark Twain meets William Shakespeare—in Santa Fe

Mark Twain meets William Shakespeare—in Santa Fe

by radiocafe | May 22, 2018 | Arts & films, Santa Fe New Mexican

What do Shakespeare and Twain have in common? A whole lot more than you think. Scholar Lois Rudnick teamed up with actor/playwright Jonathan Richards to create an evening of fun and revelry — and snuck in a whole bunch of scholarship while they were at it.

Learn more & listen …

Depriving school children of food because of their parents’ debts: Lunch shaming in the US

Depriving school children of food because of their parents’ debts: Lunch shaming in the US

by radiocafe | May 17, 2018 | Activism, Food & agriculture, New Mexico, Santa Fe New Mexican

New Mexico was the first state to outlaw “lunch shaming,” the practice of taking food away from children whose parents have fallen behind on their kids’ lunch payments.

Learn more & listen …

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