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[Swprograms] RA Previews #747; 27-29 Oct '04
- Subject: [Swprograms] RA Previews #747; 27-29 Oct '04
- From: John Figliozzi <jfiglio1@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 27 Oct 2004 20:56:53 -0400
RADIO AUSTRALIA PREVIEWS
Edition 747
Oct. 27-29, 2004
Days and times are in UTC. An * indicates that a program is produced by
Radio Australia. All others are produced by Radio National or by other
ABC Radio networks as indicated. Further information about these
programs, as well as transcripts and on-demand audio files of
particular programs, and a wealth of supporting information can be
obtained from <http://www.abc.net.au>. Additional information and a key
to abbreviations and symbols used appear at the bottom of the page.
---------------------------
[EDITOR'S NOTE: The combination of the approaching winter solstice in
the Northern Hemisphere and the further weakening of an already waning
solar cycle appear to have made reception of RA during local evenings
and nights in eastern North America on shortwave nearly impossible.
Despite adequate reported MUFs (maximum useable frequencies), signals
simply are not propagating from the South Pacific. Fortunately,
morning reception remains robust from as early as an hour or more
before local sunrise and usually has remained so into the late morning
hours in eastern North America.]
(RA or ABC News every hour on the hour)
Weekdays
0010 -
Thu.: BACKGROUND BRIEFING - Radio National's agenda-setting, current
affairs radio documentary program. This week: "Endangered Livestock".
Every month six breeds of domestic livestock become extinct. Varieties
of pigs, cattle, horses, sheep and poultry die out as farmers
selectively breed for the meat market. Helen Thomas reports. [T;%]
Fri.: HINDSIGHT - social history. This week: "Sweet Sorrow". Between
1879 and 1920, 60,000 indentured workers were sent from India to Fiji.
This is a tale of brutality, struggle and survival, told entirely by
the descendants of the indentured labour system. Was it little better
than slavery? [%]
0110 -
ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310) [T;%]
0130 -
Wed.: RELIGION REPORT - with Stephen Crittendon. This week: Barry
Cohen on the ALP and anti-Semitism; Lloyd Geering on “secular” and
“religious; Timothy Radcliffe O.P. on celibacy . [T;%]
Thu.: MEDIA REPORT - with Mick O'Regan. This week: "US Media Campaign".
After months of intensive media campaigning, both sides of American
politics have just a few more days to make their pitch through the
media to the voters. So who won the battle on the terrain of TV, and
how were messages shaped by the media?. [T;%]
Fri.: THE SPORTS FACTOR - with Amanda Smith. This week: "Seniors'
Weight Training and Depression". Churchill called it 'The Black Dog'
and millions are spent each year on drugs to fight depression. But is
there a simpler solution? We look at recent research which shows that
heavy weight training is particularly effective in treatment of
depression, particularly among our senior citizens. [T;%]
0210 -
THE WORLD TODAY - the ABC's comprehensive lunchtime current affairs
program. [T]
0310 -
SPORT*
0320 -
LIFE MATTERS - a daily interview program about social change and
day-to-day life in Australia with Julie McCrossin. This week: "Week of
Change". Whether it's from school to work, moving into retirement,
contemplating a different body, grappling with adolescence (even
grappling with adolescents), or waking up to find yourself in a new
life, all this week we'll be exploring life's changes. [%]
0356 -
HEYWIRE - the voice of regional youth in Australia.
0410 -
BUSH TELEGRAPH - rural and regional issues around Australia with
Michael Mackenzie. [%]
0510 -
PACIFIC BEAT* - daily afternoon magazine for the Pacific with Sport at
0530. [T;%]
0610 -
SPORT* - reports and scores.
0620 -
Wed.: LINGUA FRANCA - about language. This week: "The Covert Language
Of Racism". The American historian Dan Carter on the sub-text of
American conservative rhetoric over the last three decades. [%]
Thu.: THE ARK - Rachael Kohn talks to some of the world's leading
religious historians and authors about curious moments in religious
history that shatter the usual perception of the past and illuminate
the present. This week: "Missions to Aborigines".
Jessie Mitchell tells the story of the first missionaries who came to
Australia from England in the 1830s and 1840s with the aim of teaching
Indigenous Australians the Bible. [T;%]
Fri.: INSIDE OUT - presented by Isabelle Genoux. A weekly programme
that brings out personal views from the Pacific region and stories
gathered in Australia, within Pacific communities. [%]
0633 -
Wed.: JAZZ NOTES* - presented by Ivan Lloyd.
Thu.: OZ COUNTRY STYLE - from ABC Local Radio.
0710 -
PACIFIC BEAT* - daily afternoon magazine for the Pacific with Sport at
0730. [T;%]
0810 -
PM - with Mark Colvin. A comprehensive current affairs program which
backgrounds, analyses, interprets and encourages debate on events and
issues of interest and importance to all Australians. [T]
0910 -
AUSTRALIA TALKS BACK - a daily national talkback program that's a
forum for the discussion of a specific topic with the involvement of
expert guests, Radio National specialists and listeners.
[abc.net.au/rn/talks/austback/] for details. [%]
Thu.: Power Shortages. Another hot summer is looming...and with it
the prospect of power outages. Queensland Premier, Peter Beattie, is
calling for a reduced reliance on air conditioners and better building
design. How do we address the inevitable power shortages over summer?
Fri.: Australia Talks Books--"The Tyrant's Novel", by Thomas
Keneally. Sandy McCutcheon and Ramona Koval discuss The Tyrant's Novel
with author Thomas Keneally. In a detention camp a detainee tells a
visiting writer about the extraordinary events that led to his
incarceration.
1005 -
ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310) [T;%]
1105 -
SPORT - reports and scores.
1110 -
ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310) [T;%]
1130 -
Wed.: RURAL REPORTER - the people and places that make up country
Australia.
Thu.: AUSTRALIA NOW* - a 13-part series looking at the jobs
Australians do, the homes they live in and the way they spend their
leisure. The series also examines the environment that supports
Australians, the political structures that govern them and the way they
get along with each other and their regional neighbours. "Program #4:
Taming the Land". Soil erosion and reduced water quality have forced
Australians to question the widespread use European farming practices
and to come up with fresh ideas on how best to preserve the
environment. [%;T]
Fri.: THE CHAT ROOM* - presented by Heather Jarvis. The place to meet
people from the region living lives a little out of the ordinary.
1205 -
Wed.-Thu.: LATE NIGHT LIVE - Phillip Adams hosts a discussion of
current events in politics, science, philosophy and culture.
[abc.net.au/rn/talks/lnl/] for details. [%]
Thu.: The Accidental American. Phillip Adams speaks with the
distinguished British journalist and broadcaster, James Naughtie, about
The Accidental American - Naughtie's study of the relationship between
Tony Blair and George W Bush.
Fri.: SOUND QUALITY - For 25 years, Tim Ritchie has been seeking out
music: the interesting, the evolutionary, the inaccessible and the
wonderful. [abc.net.au/rn/music/soundqlt/] for details and playlists.
About this week's show, Tim writes "Sometimes sense comes from
nowhere.... think about a bunch of cds that how no common factors apart
from the point that they are all music releases [not surprising for
cds]... I had a pile of disparate artists and sounds - I thought that
there was no program here... then suddenly it came, a whole appeared.
And that whole was greater than the sum of the blah blah... this week's
show is a freak - a beautiful freak that ends up making perfect sense."
[T;%]
1305 -
THE PLANET - Lucky Oceans (Doug Spencer on Mondays) with jazz, blues,
folk styles, art music and more in a show artfully arranged for radio.
[abc.net.au/rn/music/planet/] for playlists and further details. [T;%]
Wed.: In March of 2002, 16 of Scotland’s leading female singers
toured through Scotland backed by a fine band led by Brian McNeill.
Some of the singers were Karine Polwart, Ray Fisher, Sheena Wellington,
Ishbell MacAskill and Corrina Hewatt. Spirits were high for these
concerts, with a repertoire that ranged from unaccompanied Gaelic song
to rousing anthems to dirty ditties. It’s simply called “Scottish
Women” and it’s fun and beautiful too.
Thu.: “In Praise of Dreams” presents a singular new trio. It’s the
first album in six years by Jan Garbarek. Ancestrally, he’s as much
Polish as Scandinavian, his colleagues African & Armenian.
Residentially, saxophonist Garbarek is Norwegian &
drummer-percussionist Manu Katché French. Detroit-born Kim Kashkashian
lives in Germany & is professor of viola at the Hanns Eisler Hochschule
in Berlin. Jan & Manu have a shared history of many years. Although not
their first encounter, this is Jan & Kim’s first album-length
collaboration. He praises the “life & depth” she brought to his music,
saying “the richness in her sound brings the music to another level, &
gives me something to reach for, in my improvisations.” Her praise of
him is as glowing. The music is lusciously textured, intimate yet
orchestral.
Fri.: Mark Knopfler's new album "Shangri-La" is full of songs about
colourful and complicated characters, with an emphasis on iconic
figures of the USA. Backed by his characteristic 'FM' sound, there are
songs about heavyweight champion Sonny Liston, McDonald's founder Ray
Croc and one that imagines Elvis at the moment he realises that his
film career is not doing it for him. There's even a song in the voice
of George Bush Sr. 'giving the keys' to his son and fellow president.
It's called 'Don't Crash The Ambulance.'
1405 -
SPORT
1410 -
PM (refer to 0810)
1505 -
SPORT - reports and scores.
1510 -
ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310) [T;%]
1530 -
REPORT programs (refer to 0130)
1605 -
MARGARET THROSBY - in conversation with a special guest, playing their
favourite music and telling their own stories.
[abc.net.au/classic/throsby/#promo] for details. (from ABC Classic FM)
[%]
Thu.: Gay Bilson, Restaurateur.
Fri.: Markus Stenz, Chief Conductor and Artistic Director of
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.
1705 -
AUSTRALIA TALKS BACK (refer to 0905)
1805 -
Fri.: PACIFIC REVIEW - the best of the previous week's PACIFIC BEAT.
1810 -
Wed.-Thu.: PACIFIC BEAT* - focuses in on the island nations which
depend on the Pacific Ocean for their existence, drawing on Australian
based reporters and correspondents throughout the region. With
headlines at 1829 and sport at 1830. [T;%]
1830 -
Fri.: COUNTRY BREAKFAST - Australia beyond the urban fringe. [T;%]
1835 -
Wed.-Thu.: ON THE MAT* - Where the Pacific comes together to chat and
discuss issues of regional interest. This week:
1905 -
Fri.: RURAL REPORTER - the people and places that make up country
Australia.
1910 -
Wed.-Thu.: PACIFIC BEAT* - continued from 1810 with headlines at 1929
and sport at 1930.
1930 -
Fri.: AUSTRALIAN COUNTRY STYLE - Aussie country music with John
Nutting.
1935 -
Wed.-Thu.: THE BEST OF BUSH TELEGRAPH* - Myra Mortensen with a
selection of stories and reports of rural and regional issues. [%]
2005 -
Fri.: ASIA PACIFIC (refer to 2310)
2010 -
Wed.-Thu.: PACIFIC BEAT* - continued from 1910 with headlines at 2029
and sport at 2030.
2030 -
Fri.: THE BUZZ (refer to 2330 Thu.) [%]
2105 -
Fri.: VERBATIM - oral histories. This week: "Ted Dukas--Lithuanian
Nomad". Ted Dukas was born eighty years ago in snowy Lithuania. He was
one of tens of thousands who fled to the West after the Second World
War, to escape the final Soviet occupation of their country. [T;%]
2110 -
Wed.-Thu.: AM - ABC Radio's flagship current affairs program setting
the day's news agenda with concise reports and analysis from
correspondents around Australia and around the world. [T;%]
2130 -
Wed.-Thu.: RNZI PACIFIC DATELINE - Pacific news and current affairs
from Radio New Zealand International.
Fri.: IN CONVERSATION - Scientists and those interested in the subject
talk about what science has meant to their lives. This week: "Fred
Watson" is a star who peers at stars. He also sings about them. Now he
has produced a book giving the definitive history of telescopes from
the rough kinds invented 400 years ago to the computer-driven monsters
of today. Which is entirely appropriate as he’s in charge of one of the
world’s greatest instruments: the Anglo Australian Telescope at Siding
Spring Mountain in NSW. [%]
2205 -
Fri.: ASIA PACIFIC WEEKEND EDITION [T;%]
2210 -
Wed.-Thu.: AM - (repeat of 2110)
2230 -
Fri.: SATURDAY AM - ABC's Saturday morning news magazine. [T;%]
2240 -
Wed.-Thu.: AUSTRALIA WIDE - a roundup of "home" news from ABC
Newsradio.
2305 -
Fri.: COUNTRY BREAKFAST (refer to 1830)
2310 -
ASIA PACIFIC - current events in the Asia Pacific region. [T;%]
2330 -
Wed.: THE ARTS ON RA - Julie Copeland interviews artists, composers
and craftspeople and Julie Rigg looks at the movies.
<http://www.abc.net.au/rn/arts/sunmorn/> for details concerning
possible segments carried in this program, as the program is an
abridged version of the "Sunday Morning" program that is broadcast on
ABC Radio National. [%]
Thu.: THE BUZZ - technology understandably explained with Richard
Aedy. This week: "Beethoven and Software". When Beethoven was composing
his most famous works he was not constrained by patent law. Imagine if
he had been - what if somebody else had already patented certain note
combinations, or the idea of a single instrument playing alone.
"Alternate Reality". Do you ever think that something's secretly going
on that you're not a part of That there are networks of people that
span the globe who have a secret agenda? This could be paranoia, or it
could be that you've discovered the world of alternate reality gaming.
"Ward, Interrupted". Thousands die in Australian hospitals each year
because of errors that could have been avoided. The problem is, in a
high-stress environment where everybody's multi-tasking, there are so
many interruptions that staff quickly run up against the limitations of
short-term memory. [%]
Fri.: HIT MIX* - presented by Brendon Telfer. Find out what we're
listening to in Australia and what we're giving to the world in our
brand new look at the Australian music scene. [T;%]
How to Listen to Radio Australia----
Via shortwave:
Best as noted in eastern North America -
2100 - 2200 UTC: 15515 (usually reliable)
2200 - 0000 UTC: 21740 (usually reliable)
0000 - 0200 UTC: 17715 (usually reliable)
0200 - 0700 UTC: 15515 (usually reliable) [15240 also noted at times]
0700 - 0800 UTC: 13630 (usually reliable) [15240 also noted at times]
0800 - 1400 UTC: 9580 (reliable) [6020 and 9590 also noted (reliable)]
1400 - 1600 UTC: 9590 (reliable until fade out)
(European listeners are invited to report reception experience to this
editor.)
(Complete worldwide schedule from
<http://www.abc.net.au/ra/schedule/default.htm>.)
Via Internet audio streaming:
from <http://www.abc.net.au/ra/audio/englishlive.htm> [Note: Suspended
for the duration of the Olympics due to copyright restrictions.]
Via World Radio Network:
<http://www.wrn.org/listeners/stations/station.php?StationID=50>
Via CBC Overnight:
<http://cbc.ca/overnight/>
Via satellite:
consult <http://www.abc.net.au/ra/hear/america.htm>
Via the Mobile Broadcast Network, which offers WRN
<http://www.myMBN.com>
Symbols Used:
Within brackets by each program listing, % denotes that the listed
program is available as an on-demand audio file via the Internet. T
indicates that a printed transcript of the program is available via the
RA or via an ABC domestic network Internet site. Consult
<http://www.abc.net.au/streaming/audiovideo.htm> or the particular
program's web page.
The midweek update will be posted by 0500 UT Fri.
Good Listening!
John Figliozzi
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