----- Original Message -----
From: "V.Wilcox" <hotsheett@cbc.ca>
Newsgroups: alt.radio.networks.cbc,alt.tv.networks.cbc
To: <jlawlor@toronto.cbc.ca>; <hotsheets@interact.cbc.ca>
Sent: Friday, February 13, 2004 1:39 PM
Subject: [Hotsheets] HOTSHEET Monday February 16
> HOT SHEET FOR MONDAY FEBRUARY 16, 2004
>
> . CBC NEWS INQUIRY - A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE:
>
> All this week, CBC Radio, Television, Newsworld and cbc.ca
> are running a special series called A World of Difference, a
> look at how Canadians are making a difference around the
> world. You'll meet soldiers, aid workers, doctors,
> activists, people of all ages and backgrounds in this
> special series. You'll find in-depth programming at
> cbc.ca, on Sounds Like Canada, The National, and many
> programs on CBC Newsworld.
>
> -- RADIO ONE --
>
> 1. THE CURRENT:
>
> Anna Maria Tremonti talks with Quebec insiders about the
> latest revelations in the Liberals' growing sponsorship
> scandal, this morning on The Current. Also, a look at how
> tough it is to get medical treatment if you live in
> a northern Ontario native community. And thanks to Dr.
> Atkins and his friends, carbs - bread, potatoes, rice - are
> being vilified. But what about the wickedest carb of them
> all? That's on The Current, this morning at 8:30 (9:00 NT)
> on CBC Radio One.
>
> 2. CANADA READS:
>
> Join host Bill Richardson all this week for Canada Reads.
> The battle of the books returns, this year with Blue
> Rodeo's Jim Cuddy, Winnipeg mayor Glen Murray, opera diva
> Measha Brueggergosman, journalist and film-maker Francine
> Pelletier and writer Zsuzsi Gartner. Whose choice will
> prevail to become the book that Canada Reads? Hear the
> debate, in Hour One of Sounds Like Canada, at 10 a.m.,
> 10:30 NT, or in the last half-hour of As It Happens, this
> evening at 7:30 (8 NT), all on CBC Radio One.
>
> 3. SOUNDS LIKE CANADA:
>
> How private is your e-mail? It's a hot legal topic in the
> U-S and beginning to show up here. Find out more on Sounds
> Like Canada. And as part of CBC's special series A World of
> Difference, Shelagh Rogers talks with Georgette Gagnon today
> on Sounds Like Canada. Gagnon is a Canadian human rights
> lawyer who's taking a leading role on the world stage. She
> is known for her work in Bosnia, where she helped re-settle
> the country and re-establish the rule of law. That's Sounds
> Like Canada, this morning at 10 (10:30 NT) on CBC Radio One.
>
> 4. OUTFRONT:
>
> Today on OutFront..."Do you want Shepherd's Pie with that
> Roti?" Joseph Daly says his experience growing up black in
> Toronto has been beautiful, harrowing, outrageous, and
> schizophrenic. Some days, he feels as if he's living in the
> pages of "An Anthropologist on Mars" by Oliver Sacks. On
> Outfront, Joseph Daly - A-K-A DJ Vishus - tells his story as
> only he can, this morning at 11:45 (12:15 NT)
> NT) on CBC Radio One.
>
> 5. RICHARDSON'S ROUNDUP: ***last half-hour not heard in
> Toronto***
>
> Five books, five judges, one Bill Richardson trying to
> maintain order. Canada Reads begins today. Which book will
> make the cut as the must-read book for the whole country?
> Hear excerpts from all five books, this afternoon on the
> Roundup as Colleen Leung winds up her stint as guest host
> That's this afternoon on the Roundup at 2 (2:30 NT) on
> CBC Radio One.
>
> 6. RADIO NOMAD:
>
> Host Andre Alexis explores the idea of work tonight on Radio
> Nomad. He'll share stories of being hired, fired, and the
> search for happiness on the job. Radio Nomad, tonight at 8
> (8:30 NT) on CBC Radio One.
>
> 7. WORDBEAT:
>
> Hats Off: a brief history of Canada's spoken word scene
> tonight on Wordbeat. Poets Roy Miki and Michael Holmes
> provide a glimpse into the scenes of Vancouver and Toronto.
> There are performances by the late bp Nichol, First Nations
> poet Jeanette Armstrong, Penn Kemp, dubzz-poet-at-large
> Clifton Joseph, and Ian Ferrier. And Dr. Poetry brings news
> of the latest poetic treatments and consumer trends.
> Wordbeat, with poet/host Lillian Allan, tonight at 8:30 (9
> NT) on CBC Radio One.
>
> 8. IDEAS:
>
> Part One of Slow Food tonight on Ideas. While mass
> demonstrations against globalization have grabbed the
> headlines, a more positive challenge to global food and
> agriculture has been growing. The Slow Food Movement began
> in Italy in 1986, when McDonald's first opened in Rome.
> Since then, it has spread around the world. Jill Eisen
> explores this tantalizing mix of politics, environmentalism
> and the pursuit of pleasure, tonight on Ideas at 9 (9:30 NT)
> on CBC Radio One. (CONCLUDES NEXT MONDAY)
>
> 9. THE ARTS TODAY:
>
> An unusual hit this evening on The Arts Today - "The
> Triplets of Belleville", a unique and beautiful animated
> movie, now nominated for two Oscars. Hear all about it on
> The Arts Today, right after the ten p.m. news (10:30 NT) on
> CBC Radio One.
>
> 10. BETWEEN THE COVERS: ***BOTH AFT & EVNG EDITIONS
> WILL BE HEARD IN TORONTO THIS WEEK***
>
> This week, while the Canada Reads panelists duke it out
> verbally in defence of their book choices, Between the
> Covers will air excerpts from all the books that are still
> in the race. Today, since none has been bumped yet, you'll
> hear samples of all five books. That's on Between the
> Covers, in Hour Two of Richardson's Roundup, which begins at
> 2 (2:30 NT) and later tonight at 10:40 (11:10 NT) on CBC
> Radio One.
>
> 11. NORTHERN LIGHTS:
>
> Tune in to Northern Lights tonight for Brahms' Clarinet
> Trio. Also, music from bassist Charlie Haden's "Nocturne"
> album. That's Northern Lights, with host Andrea Ratuski, at
> 11:00 p.m. (11:30 NT) on CBC Radio One and at 4 a.m. (4:30
> NT) on CBC Radio Two.
>
> -- RADIO TWO --
>
> 12. TAKE FIVE: ***unless otherwise noted, concerts begin at
> 1 p.m.****
>
> Pianist Stephen Hough joins the National Arts Centre
> Orchestra in concert today on Take Five. The program
> features music by Takemitsu, Saint-Saëns and Sibelius.
> That's on Take Five, with host Shelley Solmes, which
> begins at 10 (10:30 NT) on CBC Radio Two.
>
> 13. MUSIC FOR A WHILE:
>
> Join host Danielle Charbonneau this evening for Music
> for a While. She'll have Beethoven's Sonata No. 31 in A flat
> major, op.110, played by pianist Anton Kuerti. Also, the
> Symphony in C major, Op. 81 by Ignaz Moscheles, played by
> the Frankfurt State Orchestra. That's Music for a While,
> this evening at 6:30 (7:00 NT) on CBC Radio Two.
>
> 14. IN PERFORMANCE:
>
> A concert from Redpath Hall in Montreal tonight on In
> Performance. The André Turp Musical Society presents soprano
> Wendy Nielson with pianist Michael McMahon, in music by
> Mozart, Dvorak, and Shostakovich. That's In Performance,
> with host Eric Friesen, at 8:00 p.m. (8:30 NT) on CBC Radio
> Two.
>
> --TELEVISION--
>
> 15. CBC NEWS MORNING:
>
> The special CBC News Inquiry: A World of Difference
> continues today on CBC News Morning. You'll see interviews
> with newsmakers and Canadians who have worked overseas as aid
> workers. Is Canadian aid spread too thin? Also, Farmers
> Helping Farmers in Kenya and Tanzania, rescuing street kids
> in Brazil, and much more. Plus a 12-year-old Ontario boy who
> has raised money to build more than 70 clean water wells in
> Africa and his pen pal from Uganda who now lives with him in
> Canada. That's on CBC News Morning at 6 a.m. local time on
> CBC Television, and 6 a.m. ET on CBC Newsworld.
>
> 16. CBC NEWS TODAY:
>
> The special CBC News Inquiry: A World of Difference
> continues today on CBC News Today. Nancy Wilson talks with
> Safia Siddiqi, a Canadian-Afghan woman who is working with
> the government of Afghanistan. That's on CBC News Today, at
> noon local time on CBC Television, and at noon ET on CBC
> Newsworld.
>
> 17. NEWSWORLD TODAY:
>
> The special CBC News Inquiry: A World of Difference
> continues today on Newsworld Today. Don Murray reports from
> Bosnia on the legacy of ethnic cleansing and the Canadians
> stationed there to help bring order to the area. Also, a
> Canadian soldier who's just arrived in Kabul, and a Canadian
> doctor who has traveled to the slums of Haiti to treat the
> poor for more than 20 years. Newsworld Today at 12:30 p.m.
> ET on CBC Newsworld.
>
> 18. CANADA NOW:
>
> As part of CBC News Inquiry: a World of Difference, tonight
> and tomorrow, Ian Hanomansing will be in St. John's,
> Newfoundland to anchor the national edition of Canada Now.
> In the wake of the tragic death in Afghanistan of one of
> Newfoundland's own - Corporal Jamie Murphy - Hanomansing
> reports on Newfoundland's great contribution to the Canadian
> military and the country's peacekeeping efforts. Canada Now
> at 6 p.m. local time on CBC Television and 7 p.m. ET on CBC
> Newsworld.
>
> 19. THE NATIONAL:
>
> Tonight on The National...Chief Correspondent Peter
> Mansbridge broadcasts live from Camp Julien in Kabul,
> Afghanistan as part of a look at how Canadians are making a
> difference around the world. Also, the start of a major CBC
> News series on adverse drug reactions - Canadians who suffer
> serious side effects from already-licensed pharmaceuticals.
> Tonight, Diana Swain looks at problems in the system Canada
> uses to monitor those adverse reactions. Results show a
> tripling of adverse drug reactions among Canadian children
> over the last few years. The National, at 10 p.m. local time
> on CBC Television, 9 p.m. ET on CBC Newsworld.
>
> -- NEWSWORLD --
>
> 20. THE PASSIONATE EYE:
>
> As part of CBC News Inquiry: a World of Difference, tonight
> The Passionate Eye presents the Canadian premiere of "Life
> After War," the story of a courageous American journalist
> who stepped to the other side of the camera to help rebuild
> an Afghan village, in the face of hardship and threats from
> local warlords. Don't miss "Life After War," on The
> Passionate Eye, tonight at 10 p.m. ET on CBC Newsworld.
>
>
>
>
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