Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Radio CALS -- August 30, 2017

Radio CALS airs on KABF 88.3 FM in Little Rock from 6-6:30 p.m. every Wednesday. It may be streamed live at www.kabf.org (click "Listen Live") or anytime at www.soundcloud.com/radiocals.

Today's broadcast of Radio CALS (8/302017) features:

The Memory Project at Little Rock Central High is a student-led effort to preserve, and share oral history of civil and human rights. For the 60th anniversary of the 1957 Central High Desegregation Crisis, the Memory Project students have produced an audio walking tour recounting the events of September 4th, 1957: the historic first attempt by the Little Rock Nine to attend their classes at Central.  This episode of Primary Sources highlights a conversation with the Memory Project students about their work.

Upcoming Events:  

Legacies and Lunch: 20 Years and Family Films
Wednesday, September 6, Noon, Free
CALS Ron Robinson Theater

CALS is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Main Library campus, located in Little Rock's River Market District, and the founding of the Butler Center with a series of family films and a special 20th anniversary video. Family films will highlight the center’s remarkable collection of amateur films and provide an abridged history of the Terry family, including Arkansas civil rights activist Adolphine Fletcher Terry and her brother, Pulitzer prize-winning poet, John Gould Fletcher. CALS Terry and Fletcher libraries are namesakes of the siblings. Legacies and Lunch is sponsored in part by the Arkansas Humanities Council. Attendees are invited to bring a sack lunch; drinks and dessert will be provided.

Rwake and Neurosis Concert Film Double Feature
Friday, September 8, 7:00 p.m., Free (Doors open at 6:00 p.m.)
CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave.
Arkansas Sounds will present two concert films: Rwake: A Stone, A Leaf, An Unfound Door by Arkansas metal band Rwake and A Sun That Never Sets by Bay Area heavy music masters Neurosis.

2nd Friday Art Night
Friday, September 8, 5:00-8:00 p.m., Free
CALS Butler Center Galleries, 401 President Clinton Ave.
Join the Butler Center for a night of art and live music by ukulele and cornet and vocal duo Kit and Kaboodle.

Art Teachers of Arkansas, Butler Center Galleries, Loft Gallery
A display of Butler Center artists who are also art teachers. Exhibition open through September 30.

Modern Ink, Butler Center Galleries, West Gallery
Modern Ink explores new artworks created in the medium of ink by artists Carmen Alexandria, Robert Bean, Daniel Broening, Diane Harper, Neal Harrington, and Steve Rockwell. Exhibition open through October 28.

The Art of Injustice, Butler Center Galleries, Concordia Hall
Assembled by guest curator Dr. Sarah Wilkerson Freeman, history professor at Arkansas State University, The Art of Injustice features photographs taken by Paul Faris during his visit to the Rohwer incarceration center in 1945. His captivating black-and-white photographs capture the community created by Japanese Americans during their incarceration in Arkansas during World War II. Exhibition open through December 30. This project was funded, in part, by a grant from the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program.

The Vietnam War, a film by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick
Saturday, September 16, 2:00 p.m., Free
CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave.
The Butler Center, in partnership with AETN, will present select clips from the ten-part, 18-hour documentary series that tells the epic story of one of the most consequential, divisive, and controversial events in American history as it has never before been told on film. Visceral and immersive, the series explores the human dimensions of the war through revelatory testimony of nearly 80 witnesses from all sides—Americans who fought in the war and others who opposed it, as well as combatants and civilians from North and South Vietnam. A lecture about the Arkansas Vietnam War Project will follow the screening. The event is sponsored by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Clinton School of Public Service. The series will air on AETN beginning September 17 at 7:00 p.m.

Betsey Wright Distinguished Lecture Series: “Hattie Caraway's Long Shadow: Women in the U.S. Senate”
Thursday, September 21, 7:00 p.m., Free (Doors open at 6:00 p.m.)
CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave.
Dr. Donald A. Ritchie, Historian Emeritus of the United States Senate, will discuss the influence of women on Capitol Hill since Arkansas voters elected Hattie Caraway in 1932—making her the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate. Ritchie will be introduced by former U.S. Senator Blanche Lincoln, the most recent woman to represent Arkansas in the Senate.

Sounds in the Stacks  
Tuesday, September 26, 6:30 p.m., Free
CALS Fletcher Library, 823 N. Buchannan St.
Sounds in the Stacks, a program of Arkansas Sounds, is a series of free piano concerts at CALS branches. The September artists are vocalists who play piano and saxophone, father-and-son duo Robert "Frisbee" Coleman & Franko Nilsson Coleman. The program is sponsored, in part, by Piano Kraft, Kawai, and KATV 7.

Hot Club of Cowtown
Friday, September 29, 7:00 p.m., $20 (Doors open at 6:00 p.m.)
CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave.
Arkansas Sounds presents the Western swing-gypsy jazz trio that has been lauded for its “down-home melodies and exuberant improvisation” (The Times, London).

Read more...

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Radio CALS -- August 23, 2017

Radio CALS airs on KABF 88.3 FM in Little Rock from 6-6:30 p.m. every Wednesday. It may be streamed live at www.kabf.org (click "Listen Live") or anytime at www.soundcloud.com/radiocals.

Today's broadcast of Radio CALS (8/23/2017) features:

Arkansas State University History Professor Sarah Wilkerson Freeman sits with Matt DeCample to talk about The Art of Injustice, a show she is curating at the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies through the end of the year. Injustice focuses on the WWII Japanese internment camps in Southeast Arkansas and the art that shared the experiences of those who lived there.

Upcoming Events:  


Legacies & Lunch: 20 Years and Family Films
Wednesday, September 6, Noon, Free
CALS Ron Robinson Theater

CALS is celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Main Library campus, located in Little Rock's River Market District, and the founding of the Butler Center with a series of family films and a special 20th anniversary video. Family films will highlight the center’s remarkable collection of amateur films and provide an abridged history of the Terry family, including Arkansas civil rights activist Adolphine Fletcher Terry and her brother, Pulitzer prize-winning poet, John Gould Fletcher. CALS Terry and Fletcher libraries are namesakes of the siblings. Legacies & Lunch is sponsored in part by the Arkansas Humanities Council. Attendees are invited to bring a sack lunch; drinks and dessert will be provided.

Rwake & Neurosis Concert Film Double Feature
Friday, September 8, 7:00 p.m., Free (Doors open at 6:00 p.m.)
CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave.
Arkansas Sounds will present two concert films: Rwake: A Stone, A Leaf, An Unfound Door by Arkansas metal band Rwake and A Sun That Never Sets by Bay Area heavy music masters Neurosis.

2nd Friday Art Night
Friday, September 8, 5:00-8:00 p.m., Free
CALS Butler Center Galleries, 401 President Clinton Ave.
Join the Butler Center for a night of art and live music by ukulele and cornet and vocal duo Kit & Kaboodle.

Art Teachers of Arkansas, Butler Center Galleries, Loft Gallery  
A display of Butler Center artists who are also art teachers. Exhibition open through September 30. 

Modern Ink, Butler Center Galleries, West Gallery
Modern Ink explores new artworks created in the medium of ink by artists Carmen Alexandria, Robert Bean, Daniel Broening, Diane Harper, Neal Harrington, and Steve Rockwell. Exhibition open through October 28.

The Art of Injustice, Butler Center Galleries, Concordia Hall
Assembled by guest curator Dr. Sarah Wilkerson Freeman, history professor at Arkansas State University, The Art of Injustice features photographs taken by Paul Faris during his visit to the Rohwer incarceration center in 1945. His captivating black-and-white photographs capture the community created by Japanese Americans during their incarceration in Arkansas during World War II. Exhibition open through December 30. This project was funded, in part, by a grant from the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program. 

The Vietnam War, a film by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick
Saturday, September 16, 2:00 p.m., Free
CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave.
The Butler Center, in partnership with AETN, will present select clips from the ten-part, 18-hour documentary series that tells the epic story of one of the most consequential, divisive, and controversial events in American history as it has never before been told on film. Visceral and immersive, the series explores the human dimensions of the war through revelatory testimony of nearly 80 witnesses from all sides—Americans who fought in the war and others who opposed it, as well as combatants and civilians from North and South Vietnam. A lecture about the Arkansas Vietnam War Project will follow the screening. The event is sponsored by the Arkansas Humanities Council and the Clinton School of Public Service. The series will air on AETN beginning September 17 at 7:00 p.m.

Betsey Wright Distinguished Lecture Series: “Hattie Caraway's Long Shadow: Women in the U.S. Senate”
Thursday, September 21, 7:00 p.m., Free (Doors open at 6:00 p.m.)
CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave.   
Dr. Donald A. Ritchie, Historian Emeritus of the United States Senate, will discuss the influence of women on Capitol Hill since Arkansas voters elected Hattie Caraway in 1932—making her the first woman elected to the U.S. Senate. Ritchie will be introduced by former U.S. Senator Blanche Lincoln, the most recent woman to represent Arkansas in the Senate.

Sounds in the Stacks  
Tuesday, September 26, 6:30 p.m., Free
CALS Fletcher Library, 823 N. Buchannan St.
Sounds in the Stacks, a program of Arkansas Sounds, is a series of free piano concerts at CALS branches. The September artists are vocalists who play piano and saxophone, father-and-son duo Robert "Frisbee" Coleman & Franko Nilsson Coleman. The program is sponsored, in part, by Piano Kraft, Kawai, and KATV 7.

Hot Club of Cowtown
Friday, September 29, 7:00 p.m., $20 (Doors open at 6:00 p.m.)
CALS Ron Robinson Theater, 100 River Market Ave. 
Arkansas Sounds presents the Western swing-gypsy jazz trio that has been lauded for its “down-home melodies and exuberant improvisation” (The Times, London). 


Read more...

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Radio CALS -- August 16, 2017

Radio CALS airs on KABF 88.3 FM in Little Rock from 6-6:30 p.m. every Wednesday. It may be streamed live at www.kabf.org (click "Listen Live") or anytime at www.soundcloud.com/radiocals.

Today's broadcast of Radio CALS (8/16/2017) features:

Primary Sources: Salley Mengel of Loblolly Creamery 

Sally Mengel tells Matt DeCample the origin story of Loblolly Creamery and why she thinks it has grown so quickly. She also explains why vanilla ice cream has an unfair reputation as a "basic" flavor.

Upcoming Events:   

Dazz & Brie
Friday August 18, 2017
7:00 PM, Ticket Price: $10.00
Click here to purchase tickets

Concert with the winners of the 2017 Arkansas Times Musicians Showcase in support of their new album "Can't Chase Girls & Your Money Too."

Music used in this broadcast was created by:
The Joy Drops - freemusicarchive.org/music/The_Joy_Drops
David Szesztay - freemusicarchive.org/music/David_Szesztay

Radio CALS is a production of the Central Arkansas Library System (CALS), its Arkansas history department, the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, and the CALS Communications and Public Relations Department. For more information, visit www.cals.org and www.butlercenter.org. Our producer is  Glenn Whaley. Our production manager is Shelle Stormoe. Voices by Jasmine Jobe and John Miller. Engineering and editing by Shelle Stormoe and Anna Lancaster. Our executive producers are Lee Ann Blackwell Hoskyn and David Stricklin.

Read more...

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Radio CALS August 9, 2017

Radio CALS airs on KABF 88.3 FM in Little Rock from 6-6:30 p.m. every Wednesday. It may be streamed live at www.kabf.org (click "Listen Live") or anytime at www.soundcloud.com/radiocals.

Today's broadcast of Radio CALS (8/9/2017) features:

Chewing the Fat with Rex & Paul  
This week, Rex and Paul chew the fat about Paul’s new grandson, Wyatt, about whom he is understandably proud, Rex’s relief that he can’t bother people listening to this with pictures of the grandson, their great visit to the 133rd annual Davidson Camp Meeting and its nostalgic mixture of old-time religion, music, and food, Rex’s remarkable tenure with the same insurance agent he’s had since he started driving, eating at the counter at the Old South Restaurant in Russellville, the peach festival in Clarksville, the “peach-off” between Johnson County and Howard County, courtesy of CALS Executive Director and Nashville native Nate Coulter, peach butter, peach pies, peach iced tea, the full-peach Monty, how Paul wants to get a peach tattoo, their making what may be the steepest drive in Arkansas as they journeyed to Oark, the winding mountain road that helped Rex decide to drive, given Paul’s tendency to nod off, an oak tree said to be 300 years old, poetry reading at the Oark General Store, how a rare moment of temperance modified the burger challenge so they only had one at the Catawpa CafĂ©, some northern transplants who booked the main dining room, the Juicy Lucy cheese-stuffed burger Rex had, the foot bridge that is still down in the Mulberry River after last year’s flood and the possibility that certain podcast and radio stars might have contributed to its demise by stressing its load limit on a previous visit, and the great views you can catch if you make it up that way.

Upcoming Events 

Second Friday Art Night (this Friday!) 

Friday, August 11, 5-8 p.m., Free
CALS Butler Center Galleries, 401 President Clinton Avenue

Two Exhibitions will open:

Jim Nelson: Abstraction and Color
A survey of new and older works by Jim Nelson that combines elements of abstract painting and low relief carving to create colorful and dynamic artworks in a variety of soft and hard woods.

Exhibition open August 11-November 25, 2017.

The Art of Injustice
The Art of Injustice, assembled by guest curator Dr. Sarah Wilkerson Freeman, history professor at Arkansas State University, will display images taken by Paul Faris during his visit to Rohwer Incarceration Center in 1945. His captivating black-and-white photographs capture the community created by Japanese Americans during their incarceration in Arkansas during World War II.

The curator's presentation will begin at 7 p.m.

This project was funded, in part, by a grant from the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program.

Exhibition open August 11-December 30, 2017.

Upcoming Arkansas Sounds Concerts  

Dazz & Brie
Friday August 18, 2017
7:00 PM, Ticket Price: $10.00
Click here to purchase tickets

Concert with the winners of the 2017 Arkansas Times Musicians Showcase in support of their debut album, "Can't Afford California."


Music used in this broadcast was created by:
The Joy Drops - freemusicarchive.org/music/The_Joy_Drops
David Szesztay - freemusicarchive.org/music/David_Szesztay

Radio CALS is a production of the Central Arkansas Library System (CALS), its Arkansas history department, the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, and the CALS Communications and Public Relations Department. For more information, visit www.cals.org and www.butlercenter.org. Our producer is  Glenn Whaley. Our production manager is Shelle Stormoe. Voices by Jasmine Jobe and John Miller. Engineering and editing by Shelle Stormoe and Anna Lancaster. Our executive producers are Lee Ann Blackwell Hoskyn and David Stricklin.

Read more...

Wednesday, August 2, 2017

Radio CALS - August 2, 2017

Radio CALS airs on KABF 88.3 FM in Little Rock from 6-6:30 p.m. every Wednesday. It may be streamed live at www.kabf.org (click "Listen Live") or anytime at www.soundcloud.com/radiocals.

Today's broadcast of Radio CALS (8/2/2017) features:


Primary Sources

with Matt DeCample and Gretchen Hall, CEO Little Rock Convention and Visitors Bureau

Gretchen Hall sits down with Matt DeCample to discuss how being a student athlete prepared her for a career in tourism, how she helps sell Little Rock to the world, and the city's potential to someday host a national table-tennis tournament.


Legacies and Lunch Program - TODAY!

Rock Island Railroad in Arkansas
Speaker: Michael Hibblen
August 2, 2017, 12:00 pm -1:00 pm
Darrah Center, Main Library
100 Rock Street, Little Rock

Michael Hibblen is news director at KUAR in Little Rock and the author of Rock Island Railroad in Arkansas, a collection of photographs of the crucial railroad that provided passenger and freight services in Arkansas for nearly 80 years. A decline in rail travel after World War II left the railroad struggling, and the Rock Island shut down in 1980. A few relics of the once-great railroad remain, such as the Little Rock passenger station and the Arkansas River bridge. Join Michael Hibblen as he depicts the glory days of railroading in Arkansas.


Second Friday Art Night 

Friday, August 11, 5-8 p.m., Free
CALS Butler Center Galleries, 401 President Clinton Avenue

Two Exhibitions will open:

Jim Nelson: Abstraction and Color
A survey of new and older works by Jim Nelson that combines elements of abstract painting and low relief carving to create colorful and dynamic artworks in a variety of soft and hard woods.

Exhibition open August 11-November 25, 2017.


The Art of Injustice
The Art of Injustice, assembled by guest curator Dr. Sarah Wilkerson Freeman, history professor at Arkansas State University, will display images taken by Paul Faris during his visit to Rohwer Incarceration Center in 1945. His captivating black-and-white photographs capture the community created by Japanese Americans during their incarceration in Arkansas during World War II.

The curator's presentation will begin at 7 p.m.

This project was funded, in part, by a grant from the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Japanese American Confinement Sites Grant Program.

Exhibition open August 11-December 30, 2017.

Upcoming Arkansas Sounds Concerts  

Dazz & Brie
Friday August 18, 2017
7:00 PM, Ticket Price: $10.00
Click here to purchase tickets

Concert with the winners of the 2017 Arkansas Times Musicians Showcase in support of their debut album, "Can't Afford California."


Music used in this broadcast was created by:
The Joy Drops - freemusicarchive.org/music/The_Joy_Drops
David Szesztay - freemusicarchive.org/music/David_Szesztay

Radio CALS is a production of the Central Arkansas Library System (CALS), its Arkansas history department, the Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, and the CALS Communications and Public Relations Department. For more information, visit www.cals.org and www.butlercenter.org. Our producer is  Glenn Whaley. Our production manager is Shelle Stormoe. Voices by Jasmine Jobe and John Miller. Engineering and editing by Shelle Stormoe and Anna Lancaster. Our executive producers are Lee Ann Blackwell Hoskyn and David Stricklin.

Read more...

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