Design | Times (The)
30 June 2001
New Zealand-born Alice Beatrice Waymouth was a noted silversmith, enameler and jeweler. Her daughter Judith Hughes, now 89, is “a cabinetmaker and designer who reached the top of a male dominated profession” and was dubbed “Miss Chippendale”…
Watersports | Japan Times
30 June 2001
Former New Zealand representative sailor Dominic Mee and his best buddy Tim Welford are half way across the Pacific in a rowboat named Crackers.
Writers | Telegraph (The)
30 June 2001
Emily Perkins is “an adventurous writer” whose recent novel, The New Girl is an “ambitious work, rich with creative tension”, and a “huge leap” for a writer whose first two books met with critical…
Writers | Orange | Salon.com
30 June 2001
British-based New Zealand writer Emily Perkins sat on the all-powerful all-girl jury for the Orange Prize, Britain’s major literary award for women only. Also, Perkins comments on the double jury battle of the sexes controversy…
Writers | Guardian (The) | Telegraph (The)
30 June 2001
Comment on Peter Walker’s “fascinating” biography of William Fox Omahuru, the Maori boy abducted to be raised by Sir William Fox, future New Zealand PM. A tale of colonialism told with “doggedness, intelligence and…
Z-Files | Detroit Free Press
30 June 2001
How do Americans explain the antipodean phenomenon of Vegemite? “It looks like a mixture of kangaroo poop and old motor grease, but it doesn’t taste as good as either.”
Sport General | Guardian (The) | Wimbledon
29 June 2001
Mourning the days when tennis players had urbanity and looked like professors, Howard Jacobson, first time Wimbledon-watcher turns to the past for solace: “Bored with it, I take a turn around the museum and spend…
Business | News.com.au
29 June 2001
400 store managers at the Warehouse Group are to receive share options with a total value of $184 million, but Australian managers, working in newer, smaller stores will miss out.
Sport General | Times (The)
29 June 2001
“Suave, tanned and wearing tight white jodphurs,” New Zealander Peter Grace is Britain’s best polo coach, teaching the rich and trendy to swing mallets and retain a firm seat at Ascot Park Polo Club.
Politics and Economics | Times of India
28 June 2001
“In principle, we are just about there. I want it and everyone wants it,” says former NZ-PM, WTO head Mike Moore, confirming his work on bringing China into the WTO has nearly reached its conclusion. …
Politics and Economics | Financial Times
28 June 2001
A low dollar, good tourism revenues and buoyant international prices for our primary commodities are leading New Zealand towards an unexpectedly strong export-lead recovery, including a $95million current account surplus. Also, “It was a boomer,” says UBS Warburg…
Nature | International Herald Tribune
28 June 2001
Global warming, along with over-fishing and oil-spills, threatens penguin populations around the world says University of Otago penguin biologist Lloyd Davies.
Film & TV | Salon.com | Times (The)
28 June 2001
Kiwi co-directed Shrek is “a computer-generated miracle. Based on William Steig’s 28-page book, the film puts forward the most marvellous case for the craziness of repressing fairytales since Sondheim’s musical Into the Woods.” But,…
General | ABC News
27 June 2001
New Zealand’s health minister Dr Annette King calls on the world not to neglect the small island nations of the Pacific in the fight against HIV/AIDS.
Science/Tech | Age (The)
27 June 2001
Renewable Energy Corporation, powered by New Zealander Paul Williams’ organic waste energy generation technology, signs to put power-plants next to pig farms in North Carolina. The plants will gasify pig manure and burn the gas to…
Opera | Kathimerini
27 June 2001
Dame Kiri Te Kanawa, “a woman with an exotic beauty and – beyond any doubt – an absolutely stunning voice” who “personifies the modern version of a diva most completely” talks about her roles,…
Nature | Yahoo! News
27 June 2001
New Zealand’s carbon emissions rose 22% in the 1990’s, almost certainly putting Kyoto targets out of reach.
War & Peace | Los Angeles Times
27 June 2001
The debate continues over scrapping the Air Force. Is it an example to the world or peacenik idealism?
Politics and Economics | Australian (The)
26 June 2001
New Zealand’s privacy laws touted as an example for Australia to follow in protecting the rights of its citizens and mesh better with EU legislation.
New Zealand | Las Vegas Sun
26 June 2001
Survivor 2: The Australian Outback has tourism spin-offs for New Zealand in South Nevada.
Nature | BBC News
26 June 2001
New Zealand rat predatation expert Mike Bell called in to save the puffins of Lundy Island in the Bristol Channel.
Business | Sydney Morning Herald (The)
26 June 2001
New Zealand leads the world with a fully deregulated agricultural sector – but big players like the US still protect and subsidise farmers, talking the free-trade talk but not walking the walk.
Education | Times (The)
25 June 2001
Oxford’s “Rollerskating media don”, Kiwi Ngaire Woods is a classroom pioneer using team game and corporate learning strategies in her International Relations MPhil classes.
Visual Arts | Los Angeles Times
25 June 2001
Cartoons from New Zealander David Low’s (“the greatest cartoonist of the twentieth century”) “Russian Sketchbook” on show alongside high-profile Russian cartoonists in the first exhibition run by Britain’s new Political Cartoon Society.
General | Times (The)
25 June 2001
Gender can’t be hidden, even in faceless e-communication according to research by Tamar Murachver of Otago University.
Sport General | Star (The)
24 June 2001
Kiwi Shelly Kitchen squashes the opposition, taking out the YTL Women’s Open title. The win was the second in a row for Kitchen, also the winner of the Singapore Open.
New Zealand | Independent (The)
24 June 2001
New Zealand Beaches: solitude, expanse, beauty. The best. “At the back of the beach was a huge whale vertebra, bleached and scoured by the surf. I took a break on a huge log facing the sun,…
Adrenalin | Boston Globe | Travel Channel
24 June 2001
US Travel Channel radically overhauls its image with “a new TV spot showing skate kids mountain-boarding down a sheep-studded slope in New Zealand”. “For the first time, the excitement and feel of a commercial really matched our…
Music | Excite News
24 June 2001
Today in history: alongside the anniversary of the patenting of barbed wire and Custer’s last stand, it’s also the day Tim Finn was born in Te Awamutu.
Film & TV | Thirty Odd Foot of Grunts | Yahoo! News
23 June 2001
Russell Crowe’s Thirty Odd Foot of Grunts hots up Texas barbeque with proceeds going to the city’s Settlement Home for troubled youth. As well as being a New Zealander and an Australian, Crowe has…
Science/Tech | Business Day
22 June 2001
Prototypes of New Zealand-based Deep Video Imaging’s revolutionary actualdepth monitors are due to be built by early next year.
Taste | Miami Herald
22 June 2001
What does an Irish pub in Miami serve to go with the Guinness? New Zealand lamb, cooked Mediterranean style!
Film & TV | Guardian (The)
22 June 2001
How does it feel when your pregnant girlfriend takes an acting role that breaks all the boundaries about sex on screen in serious, mainstream films? Kerry Fox’s boyfriend answers that question.
Wine | NZEdge
22 June 2001
The Martinborough vineyard wins the Pinot Noir international trophy for the third time with a “beautifully balanced, seductive wine.” NZEdge brings you the press release of this impressive feat.
Film & TV | Age (The)
22 June 2001
“It’s not often you can say an animated feature’s rich in subtext, but much-acclaimed fractured fairytale Shrek fits the description… beneath striking visuals and a classic hero-princess-villain story arc, there’s a frothy adult undercurrent…
Originators | Entrepreneur | Featured
22 June 2001
John Britten was a revolutionary motorcycle designer whose home-brewed machine won international plaudits with its stunning design and performance. The 300+ km/h blur of speed, the smell of burning rubber and the distinctive roar…
Magazine
22 June 2001
Edge Message #41 from Brian Sweeney, producer NZEDGE.COM
TO NZ EDGE GLOBAL GROOVERS
This is a longish message please read it all,
I promise it’s worth it.
META MAILBOX
Today we have the best mailbox ever, 72 messages,
go right…
Music | Age (The)
21 June 2001
Neil Finn at the Forum: “It was magic. It was intimate, it was funny. And above all, reverential”. Also, Finn in Sydney.
Business | Forbes | Yahoo! News
21 June 2001
New Zealand energy family the Todds become the first New Zealanders to make the Forbes 500 list of the world’s wealthiest people, coming in at 490 with a net worth of US$1 billion.
Nature | Las Vegas Sun
21 June 2001
New Zealand Kune Kune pig Grunty, former star of British programme Pig at the Ritz, currently resident at a farm in Wellington, southwest England, saved from slaughter after being declared free of foot and mouth.
Rugby | Times (The)
20 June 2001
It was fourteen years ago today that Captain Kirk got the boys to play, winning the inaugural Rugby World Cup at Eden Park.
Te Ao Maori | Asia Times (The)
20 June 2001
Maori fishing rights seen as inspiration for other indigenous groups negotiating for sea rights.
Te Ao Maori | Globe and Mail (The)
20 June 2001
Over half the world’s languages are under threat. Maori initiatives such as Kohanga reo (language nests), where elders teach children whose parents don’t speak the language, are seen as a model for other struggling cultures to…
Business | Age (The)
19 June 2001
Global Dairy Co. New Zealand’s newly-formed giant dairy company looks to the Australian industry for further expansion. Also, we want to be fifth in the world, size-wise, says Global Dairy Company chairman John Roadley.
Business | Star (The)
19 June 2001
Taking on the world’s food ingredients multinationals, New Zealand farmers vote to merge NZ dairy Group and Kiwi Cooperative Dairies to form Global Dairy Co., a company that will be the ninth largest dairy company in…
Writers | Times (The)
19 June 2001
New Zealand novelist, poet, critic and scholar Professor Karl Stead awarded an honorary doctorate by Bristol University.
Film & TV | Scotsman (The)
18 June 2001
Arthur Conan Doyle’s Lost World filmed in New Zealand “where there are still forests that resemble those of the Cretaceous Period when the great dinosaurs walked the land”.
Sport General | Age (The)
18 June 2001
New Zealand wins over it’s down under rivals to win tri-nations series.
Opera | Jerusalem Post
18 June 2001
Dame Kiri in Israel “to do music”. “I love things that are difficult. I love looking for new arias and presenting them to the public,” said edge voice Dame Kiri.
Theatre | Gazette (The)
18 June 2001
Miss Wonder drags herself out to promote New Zealand comedy group the Improv Bandits at the Montreal Fringe Festival.
General | Star (The)
17 June 2001
When is a pin-hole camera a pen-hole camera? When the person issuing the instructs has a strong New Zealand accent…
Nature | Seattle Times
17 June 2001
New Zealand plant expert Doctor Warwick Harris lectures in Seattle on the Christchurch Botanical gardens.
New Zealand | Guardian (The)
17 June 2001
New Zealand scores as Guardian readers’ favorite long-haul travel destination.
New Zealand | Guardian (The)
17 June 2001
Beautiful scenery and dare-devil flying over “a serene sea-loch towered over by glossy, beech-clad pyramidal peaks”.
Spirituality | Irish Times (The)
16 June 2001
James Joyce was the pre-eminent modernist prose stylist; his sister was a devout Catholic nun who spent her life praying for his soul and “witnessing at the ends of the earth” – New Zealand.
New Zealand | Guardian (The)
16 June 2001
“There was a moment halfway up the Coromandel Peninsula, only a couple of hours out of Auckland, when I felt that this was as good as it gets. But there was plenty of competition for that…