April-2012

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krcb.org A reader’s companion to KRCB Television 22 & Radio 91 www.krcb.org Volume 11 - No. 4 April 2012 Three Weekends April 20-22, April 27-29 & May 18-20 7 - 11 pm t h e Online bidding begins April 13 www.krcb.org To benefit North Bay Public Media sm

Transcript of April-2012

Page 1: April-2012

DOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISINGAND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS

krcb.org

A reader’s companion toKRCB Television 22 & Radio 91

www.krcb.orgVolume 11 - No. 4 April 2012

T h ree Week endsApr i l 20 -22 , Apr i l 2 7 -29

& May 18 -207 - 1 1 p m

presen t s

T r a v e l a n d W i n ea u c T i o n

baya r e a

the

On l i ne b i dd i ng beg i n s Apr i l 1 3www .kr cb .org

To benefit North Bay Public Mediasm

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ContentsKRCB News …3 - 4Television Articles …5 - 11Radio Articles …12 - 15, 18 - 19 Radio Schedule …16 - 17Membership … 20 TV Daytime Listings …21 Television Listings …22 - 28Business Spotlight …31

Board of DirectorsPatrick Campbell

Sheri CardoSteve DeLapNancy DobbsPaul GinsburgJohn Kramer

Margaret McCarthy Eric McHenryRalph O’RearRobert Quail Harry Rubins David Stare

Dr. Larry SlaterGordon Stewart

KRCB’s Board and Community Action

Council meetings are open to the public. Call the

station for details on time and location.

President & CEO Nancy Dobbs

Chief Operations OfficerLarry Stratton

Radio Program DirectorRobin Pressman

TV Broadcast OperationsStan Marvin

News DepartmentBruce Robinson

Cover – KRCB Travel & Wine Auctions - page 5-7A service of North Bay Public Mediasm

Thank you for your support!

To discuss estate planning to benefit KRCB, please call Nancy Dobbs,

President & CEO, at 707-584-2000.

Gordon Stewart knows

the power of giving.

“For the last 30 years or so, I’ve lived in the Bay Area. I’ve traveled a fair amount around the country and around the world, and everytime I come back here, I’m glad to be home. I appreciate the efforts that KRCB goes through to integrate the community. It’s a great resource for information, and for discussion and for entertainment. I hope that my support will enable the station to continue to provide the community with the programming and services that are important to it. I’m Gordon Stewart, I’m thinking of including KRCB in my will, I hope you will too.”

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in the news

KRCB’s Open Air is printed monthly by RepoGraphics and available by request or online at krcb.org.Published by KRCB Television & Radio, 5850 Labath Avenue, Rohnert Park, CA 94928

707-584-2000 – krcb.org Bruce Robinson, Editor - Deena Berens, Designer

Television 22Comcast Cable and AT&T,

U-Verse-TV, DISH and DirecTV Satellite,

Channel 22.Over the air-digital,

Channel 22.1, 22.2, 22.3.

Radio 91Broadcasting on

91.1 and 90.9 FM

Comcast Cable 961

Streaming & podcasting at krcb.org

A service of North Bay Public Media

Music captured live at KRCB Even as the debut edition of KRCB Live was in production, our skilled video crew was con-tinuing to capture more fine performances by emerging regional talent in our Rohnert Park studios. Forthcoming programs will feature these exciting artists, including Afro-jazz vocalist Meklit Hadero, folk-rock veteran Frebo, and Sonoma County favorites Dginn. Watch for our next KRCB Live program on KRCB TV and FM in May.

Meklit Hadero

Dginn

Roger McGuinnTimothy O’Neil Band

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What’s happening at KRCB?

Nancy DobbsPresident and CEO

The Big Read rolls on March was Big Read, Sonoma County Month, in which community members of all ages were encouraged to read and talk about Bless Me, Ultima and other books by Rudolfo Anaya. Among the special events was a “Little Read” at a Windsor school, and a project for high school students with the Imaginists Theater Collective to interpret Bless Me, Ultima as a radio drama. Reading discussion groups, art projects, and special programs airing on Radio 91 FM are continuing in early April. Go to krcb.org/thebigread for a calendar of events as well as video and audio that features local Sonoma County youth talking about the themes and characters in Anaya’s Bless Me, Ultima.

A student with shoes on his hands has fun using Foley sound effects to accompany Antonio and Ultima as they are walking along the llano picking herbs and listening to the wind.

For those too young to read Bless Me, Ultima there was a “Little Read” featuring Rudolfo Anaya’s story, The First Tortilla. Afterward, third grade students in Windsor received a lesson in making tortillas as part of their healthy foods curriculum.

Dear Member, In the past two months KRCB has received two wonderful notices of supporters remembering KRCB in their will or planned giving vehicles, such as a trust or an insurance policy. We can’t tell you how fantastic such news is to KRCB, as the station, like many organizations, continues to be affected by the recession. If you are preparing or amending these documents, I would ask, after you have taken care of your family and loved ones, that you consider KRCB as a pos-sible benefactor of your generosity and concern for the community. If there is a particular program genre or KRCB service to which you would like to have your support directed, such as children’s programming or local news, you have only to make a note of those wishes. You can check out a few more options and the legal information needed at krcb.org/plannedgiving. And, thanks in advance for your consideration and generosity.Sincerely,

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T r a v e l a n d W i n ea u c T i o n

baya r e a

the

T h ree Week endsApr i l 20 -22 , Apr i l 2 7 -29 & May 18 -20

7 - 1 1 p m On l i ne b i dd i ng beg i n s Apr i l 1 3 t h a t k r c b .org

• American Safari Cruises: Eight-day Alaska cruise

• Greystone Estate in the Vines, Kenwood: Three- night luxury stay for 10 with wine tastings

• Cunard: Seven-day Queen Mary 2 Transatlantic Crossing with airfare

• Sagrada Wellness, Santa Margarita: “Yoga, Wine & Chocolate” retreat, private cabin

• The Kahala Hotel & Resort, Honolulu: Four nights, partial ocean view suite

• Inkaterra, Peru: Nine-day Peru adventure; Machu Picchu, the Amazon & Cusco

• Wickaninnish Inn, Tofino, BC: Three nights Canopy Suite, dinner & more

• Halekulani, Honolulu: Four nights ocean view room & more

• Elite Island Resorts: Seven nights for four at Palm Island Resort, the Grenadines

• Hilton Sedona Resort & Spa, Sedona: Two nights mid-week (six items available)

Bidding on KRCB’s Travel & Wine Auction not only puts viewers in the running for some fabulous vacations, but also helps provide quality, non-commercial, locally owned public television in Sonoma, Napa, Marin and San Francisco Counties as well as parts of Alameda, Contra Costa, Mendocino, San Mateo, and Solano Counties.

KRCB makes it affordable for bidders to travel. The following is a partial list of the many impressive items that will be offered during The Bay Area Travel and Wine Auction.

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• Mauna Kea Beach Hotel, Kohala Coast: Three nights, ocean view room

• The Ritz-Carlton, Laguna Niguel: Four nights, garden/pool view accommodations

• Crowne Plaza Cabana, Palo Alto: Weekend stay in the Presidential Suite

• The Fairmont Chateau, Whistler: Three nights, deluxe room with unlimited golf

• Honua Kai Resort & Spa, Lahaina: Three nights, partial ocean view one bedroom suite

• The Liberty Hotel, Boston: Weekend stay in a Charles River Suite & more

• Red Mountain Resort & Spa, Ivins, Utah: Two night “Essential Package” (two items available)

• Bernardus Lodge, Carmel Valley: Three nights mid-week, Premium Garden or Croquet room

• Gaylord Opryland Resort, Nashville: Three nights, dinner, massage

• Body Glove Cruises, Kailua-Kona: Your choice of cruise

• The Redwoods in Yosemite, Wawona: Two nights, one- or two-bedroom cabin

• Vino Bello Resort/Shell Vacations Hospitality, Napa: Three night, one bedroom suite & more

• Iguazu Grand Resort Spa & Casino, Iguazu Falls, Argentina: Three nights, Junior Suite & more

• The Bishop’s Lodge Ranch Resort & Spa, Santa Fe: Two nights in a suite

• Jet Blue: Two round-trip flights between any two domestic cities

• Sunglow Ranch, Pearce, AZ: Two nights, Grande Casita, dinner nightly, horseback riding & more

• Lafitte, San Francisco: Cooking class & more for four with Chef Russell Jackson

• Waikiki Parc Hotel, Honolulu: Four nights, ocean view room & more

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• Cheyenne Mountain Resort, Colorado Springs: Two nights, deluxe room, unlimited golf

• Madonna Inn Resort & Spa, San Luis Obispo: Two nights, Junior Suite with dinners

• Taj Campton Place, San Francisco: Weekend stay deluxe king room

• Tourisme Montreal, Quebec: Two nights Hyatt Regency Montreal, museum passes & guided walking tour

• The Ridge at Tahoe, Stateline, NV: Two nights, two bedroom suite

• Distrikt Hotel, New York City: Two nights, Grand View King Room

• Rosewood Sand Hill, Menlo Park: Two nights deluxe accommodations, exclusive VIP wine tastings, customized dinner at Michelin-starred Madera Restaurant

• Idaho Rocky Mountain Ranch, Stanley, Idaho: Two nights in a cabin with meals & more

• Cooking with Julie, Napa: Cooking class for one

• Rawhide Ranch, Bonsall, CA: One week of summer camp, child 7 to 15 years old

• American Conservatory Theater, San Francisco: Two tickets to any performance

• Thunder Valley Casino, Lincoln: One night stay

* All items are for two people unless otherwise noted

On l i ne b i dd i ng beg i n s Apr i l 1 3 t h a t k r c b .org

Co-brand with one of the most trusted brands in AmericaGfk Roper Public Affairs & Media poll shows Americans consider PBS the nations’ most trusted institution among nationally known organizations. That’s something the networks simply can’t offer.Learn more, call KRCB today at 707-585-2030.

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Mother Nature’s Child: Growing Outdoors in the Media Age Mother Nature’s Child explores nature’s powerful role in children’s health and development through the experi-ence of toddlers, children in middle childhood, and adolescents. The film marks a moment in time when a living generation can still recall childhoods of free play outdoors; this will not be true for most children growing up today. The effects of “nature deficit disorder” are now being noted across the country in epidemics of child obesity, attention disorders, and depression. Mother Nature’s Child asks the questions: Why do children need unstructured time outside? What is the place of risk-tak-ing in healthy child development? How is play a form of learning? Why are teachers resistant to taking students outside? How can city kids connect with nature? What does it mean to educate the ‘whole’ child? Tuesday, April 3 at 9 pm

Global Health Frontiers: Foul Water, Fiery Serpent Global Health Frontiers: Foul Water, Fiery Serpent, the first in a series of public television specials chronicling the devastating illnesses affecting the world’s poor, follows a cast of engaging, passionate characters as they confront the disabling parasitic infection known as Guinea worm disease. The film, narrated by Academy Award®-winner Sigourney Weaver, documents the efforts of American health workers and community partners over the course of three years as they track the last-known reports of Guinea worm in Ghana and Sudan.Tuesday, April 17 at 9 pm

U.S. Health Care: The Good News One small community in the Colorado oil patch near the Utah border delivers the highest value-for-the-money health care in the United States, and in the process covers nearly every-one in town. How do they do it? Could other communities do it, too? Correspondent T.R. Reid interviews health policy experts at the Dartmouth Institute before heading to Colorado and other places in the U.S. where doctors and hospitals are working hard to provide excel-lent health care at reasonable cost.Tuesday, April 24 at 9 pm

Designing Healthy Communities: Retrofitting Suburbia On the first episode of Designing Healthy Communities, Dr. Richard Jackson investigates the link between our na-tion’s obesity and Type 2 Diabetes epidemic with urban sprawl fueled by car dependency. To prevent disease through better urban planning, Boulder, Colorado rede-signs the city to make bicycles a safe alternative trans-portation. Two Denver suburbs transform dead malls into mixed use and public transit-centered communities. An abandoned mall in Georgia gains new life as a K-8th grade charter school. And two former grad students from Georgia Tech, mentored by their professor, create visionary projects that are forever changing the face of Atlanta. Thursday, April 26 at 8 pm

KRCB Health Connections

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OurDaytimeAudienceisGrowing!

Every week, KRCBTelevision22 delivers 32 hours of the best children’s programming on television.

We don’t want your kids to watch more television. We want them to watch better TV!Support the one TV choice that kids, families and teachers trust for innovative, curriculum-based programs that are educational—andfun!

KRCBTelevision22

SupportingTelevisionWorthWatching…MadeEasy!KRCB invites you to join a special group of supporters. Those who provide their support to KRCB through automatic deduction, on a monthly basis, from their checking or credit card accounts. It’s Easy...

To become a Sustaining Partner simply contact KRCB, at 800-287-2722 or visit our website at krcb.org/sustaining-partner program.

“What a great way to support KRCB and it’s so easy!”

Viewers Like You!

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Month of April is all about healthy EarthThe New Environmentalists

The New Environmentalists is the latest installment of an Emmy® award-winning series that features portraits of six passionate and dedicated activists. They are true environmental heroes who have placed themselves squarely in harm’s way to battle intimi-dating adversaries, while often creating partnerships with unlikely allies. The New Environmentalists share a common goal, safeguarding the Earth’s natural

resources from exploitation and pollution, while fighting for environmental justice in their communities. Sunday, April 8 at 11 pm

Small Farm Rising Right now, in our back yards, a new generation of farmers is redefining agriculture in America. Small, modern, sustainable, and rooted in the community, these local farms are in the forefront of a movement growing across the nation. A family owned and operated farm produces award-winning goat milk cheeses; a farm powered solely by horses provides mem-bers with a full diet year-round; and two youthful entrepreneurs run an organic vegetable farm. Small Farm Rising invites you to explore the sustainable practices, creative business models, and deep connections to the communities of these three small farms in the shadow of the Adirondack Mountains. Tuesday, April 10 at 9 pm

Green Buildings - EcoSense for Living Green Buildings: EcoSense for Living profiles Arabia Mountain High School which focuses on environmental learning throughout its curricula using Promethean boards (to reduce paper and enhance learning), outdoor classrooms, and even energy- and water-efficient rest rooms. Green Buildings also compares modular, new, completely green homes to modified older homes with energy efficient systems. Wednesday, April 11 at 9:30 pm

Heartbreak Turtle Today The Heartbreak Turtle Today documentary features the story of the dramatic recovery of the critically endangered Kemp’s ridley sea turtle in the Gulf of Mexico. Illegal poaching at nesting beaches in Mexico and deadly shrimp trawls in the Gulf of Mexico cut the estimated 47,000 nesters to less than 500 nesting females in 1985, nearly driving them to extinction. Scientists also attribute their decline to coastal habitat destruction and the massive 1979 Ixtoc oil spill in Mexico offshore their main nesting beach. Thanks to grassroots conservation efforts, modifications to shrimp trawl fisheries, and bi-national efforts to protect nesting beaches, the Kemp’s ridley population has slowly grown. Wednesday, April 25 at 10:30 pm

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PBSKidsprogramlineupSaturdaysSid the Science Kid-SPCat in the Hat Knows A Lot About That!-SPClifford-SPCyberchase-SPAngelina BallerinaThomas & FriendsBob The BuilderMister Rogers’ NeighborhoodCuriosity Quest

7:007:308:008:309:009:30

10:0010:30

11:00

WeekdaysSesame StreetSid the Science KidCurious George Cat in the Hat Knows a Lot About That! Clifford the Big Red DogCyberchaseArthurWordGirlThe Electric Company

7:008:008:309:00

2:002:303:003:304:00

What’s new in daytime TV?Katie Brown Workshop Lifestyle guru Katie Brown and her workshop crew return to demonstrate more fun and inexpensive cooking, decorating and craft projects, and provide useful gardening tips designed to turn any house into a home. This season, Katie dedicates three episodes to a home makeover, in which she explains the nuts and bolts of a renovation—from choosing a contractor to choosing wallpaper, and everything in between. Thursdays at 9:30 am

Color World with Gary Spetz Veteran public television host Gary Spetz continues his ar-tistic journeys in his new series Color World with Gary Spetz. This visual travelogue emphasizes the path the painter-pho-tographer takes when creating his art. Color World celebrates the wonders of travel and the beauty of the natural world. This season, Spetz sets off for the Mediterranean.Saturdays at 1:30 pm

Second Opinion Fast-paced and provocative, Second Opinion focuses on health literacy in an engaging, entertaining and accessible way. The long-running series engages a panel of medical professionals and lay people in honest, in-depth discussions about complex health issues and life-changing medical decisions. Host Dr. Peter Salgo presents intriguing, real-life medical cases to professionals representing a variety of special-ties. Mondays at 11 am beginning April 23

Shalom Sesame: It’s Passover, Grover!

Saturday, April 7 at 10 am

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Harmonia spotlights early music performers young and old

April 1 – A Spotlight on Harry Christophers This week we’re honoring the work of Harry Christophers (rt)—conductor, singer, and founder of The Sixteen. We’ll also hear from the next gen-eration of early music performers with highlights from Early Music America’s Young Performer’s Festival. Plus, we’ll hear music by Georg Muffat on a featured release by La Concordanza.

April 8 – A Musical Tour of Ferrara Travel with us today to the city of Ferrara and explore the sounds of its renaissance. Then pay tribute to a pioneer in the field of early music, Gustav Leonhardt, who passed away in January 2012. We’ll also hear “new music” from 17th-century Italy on a featured release by the ensemble Quicksilver.

April 15 – A Springtime Celebration with Early Music Song and Dance Celebrate spring with songs and dance music from the Middle Ages, Renaissance, and early Baroque. Plus, we’ll hear settings of Palestrina’s madrigal Vestiva i colli, and French baroque composer Nicolas Chedeville’s (left) arrangement of Spring from Vivaldi’s Four Seasons.

April 22 – Bad Boys of Renaissance England What do Tobias Hume, Carlo Gesualdo, and King Henry VIII have in common? Hear the answer to that question and more on this edition of Harmonia! We’ll give you a line-up of musical bad boys from Renaissance England. We’ll also hear some Scottish music in our

featured release Alas Poore Men.

April 29 – The Far Side of the Veil Today we will explore the boundaries between this life and beyond. We’ll hear musical laments that pass beyond the veil from the Codex Las Huelgas, as well as a musical homage by Josquin des Prez, and death’s depiction in the keyboard music of Johann Jakob Froberger. Then we’ll follow Percival on his quest for the Holy Grail, travel along Celtic crossroads, and hear a 13th-century service for St. Martin of Tours.

Sundays at 9 am

FolkMusicCalendarLiveandOnlineKRCB presents a weekly calendar of live folk music performances in and around Sonoma County. Hear it live at 2 pm Saturdays during Our Roots Are Showing, or read it anytime at krcb.org. The folk music calendar is compiled by Schaef-Able Productions.

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Literary WednesdaysNorth Korea, as seen by Stanford novelist On this month’s Word By Word, host Gil Mansergh has a conversation with Stanford creative writing professor Adam Johnson, called by Playboy Magazine “one of the nation’s most influential and imaginative college professors.” Johnson’s captivating novel, The Orphan Master’s Son is set in the clouded reality of North Korea and has received numerous accolades including one from Michiko Kukatani in The New York Times, who called the book “a daring and remarkable novel…that not only opens a frightening window on the mysterious kingdom of North Korea, but one that also excavates the very meaning of love and sacrifice.” Wednesday, April 4 at 7 pm

A poetic mystery, set in Guerneville Everyone in the Russian River Valley is obsessed with poetry. Yes, it’s true in real life, but in Bart Schneider’s latest novel, Nameless Dame: Murder on the Russian River, it’s over the top. Schneider has relocated from Minnesota back to his native Northern California and brought his characters with him: Private Investigator Augie Boyer and retired cop Bobby Sabbatini —who has moved to Cazadero and is the current owner of a poetry karaoke bar, Ginsberg’s Galley, in Guerneville. This follow-up to The Man in the Blizzard is steeped in pot, poetry, and the real and fictional perplexities of the West County. Bart Schneider joins host Rosemary Manchester this month on A Novel Idea.Wednesday, April 11 at 7 pm

Poetry Party In celebration of National Poetry Month, WordTemple host Katherine Hastings will air a wide variety of poetry and music including works by John Berryman, Gary Snyder (rt), Muriel Rukeyser, William Stafford, and many others. Also, a centerpiece from The Atlantis Fragments by Donald Sidney-Fryer. This book, over 500 pages in length, contains all three volumes of Sidney-Fryer’s Songs and Sonnets Atlantean. The work unfolds as a type of allegory about nature, an “extend-ed ecological metaphor of our planet Earth” and is presented as translations not just from French, but from Atlantean. Imagine the first body of poems from Atlantis! All of this, and more, on WordTemple.Wednesday April 18 at 7 pm

KRCB North Bay ReportThe North Bay Report is a daily in-depth look at an issue, event, person or activity in our region, prepared by KRCB News Director Bruce Robinson, a veteran journalist who has been covering Sonoma County since 1985.

The North Bay Report is heard Monday through Friday at 6:06 am and 8:06 am, repeating at 5:30 pm, on KRCB FM, 91.1 and 90.9 FM, and online at krcb.org/north-bay-report.

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Flashback in full bloom Here in Northern California, the spring flowers don’t wait for any April showers that may eventually arrive—the blossoms are abundant among us already. In their multi-colored honor, this month’s edition of Flashback is all about flowers, literally, metaphorically, and quite possibly as names shared with a certain species (and gender) of fauna. Prepare to be dazzled by tunes from the Greatful Dead, Rolling Stones, Pentangle, the Blues Project, the Doors, and the inevitable many others. Tuesday, April 3 at 7 pm

LA Theatre WorksApril 7 – Neat Actress and playwright Charlayne Woodard stars in an autobio-graphical story about her journey on the road to self-revelation…and the influence of a most unlikely family member.April 14 – The Cocktail Hour, by A.R. Gurney A playwright has composed a new work about a subject he knows best: his aristocratic, besotted family. When he goes home to get their approval for this touchy project, they object…and as they down their martinis, the recriminations fly.April 21 – Completeness, by Itamar Moses Two brainy graduate students fall in love while tackling some of science’s biggest unsolved questions. But can their book-smarts help them through the innate uncertainties of romance?April 28 – Betrayed, by George Packer

Journalist George Packer came to Baghdad in 2003 as a staff writer for the New Yorker and, from his experiences there, produced Betrayed, a play based on the real-life struggles of Iraqi interpreters working for American forces. Emboldened by optimism and the promise of a new era in their homeland, the translators, Adnan and Laith, are forced to cross continu-ally between the Green and Red Zones, each time risking their own lives and those of their loved ones.Saturdays at 6 pm, repeating at midnight

What do the BBC, PRI, and NPR have in common?They have all rented the ISDN studio at KRCB!When you need ISDN capability for an interview or to record someone far away, KRCB has a state-of-the-art ISDN studio available for rent. We supply the engineer as well as full digital recording capability at our end. Our facility is set up for audio recording and transmission services for live broadcasts, talk shows, and audio production. Studio “B” is available for ISDN 2-ways, traditional voice tracking, and stereo audio production.

Located off Highway 101 in Rohnert Park, CA.

Contact Wendy Nicholson, 707-584-2016,

[email protected]

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KRCB Community CalendarAre interesting arts events happening in your area?Get the attention that they deserve. Promote them on KRCB’s Website on the Community Calendar page. It’s free and easy!

Post your event today at: www.krcb.org

Carbon-based conversations, from the UN to your neighborhood economyApril 5 – From Durban to Rio None of the experts gathered for this Climate One conversation expect much to come from the United Nations climate change negotiations. The panel, which included an international environmental lawyer, a clean energy investor, and a muckraking journalist, say to expect countries to continue investing in clean energy and carbon-cutting projects within their borders.

April 12 – Covering Carbon California’s scheme to reduce carbon pollution is forging ahead even though Washington, DC and other states have hit the brakes on similar efforts. How is the state’s main climate law (AB 32) holding up in a national political environment hostile to any environmental regula-tions? How well is the mainstream news media covering the complex and murky world of carbon trading? Is the media giving people who deny basic climate science too much voice? A discussion of the news media and energy markets and politics with two leading reporters on the beat.

April 19 – GM CEO Dan Akerson After going bankrupt and using government money to bail out its sinking ship, General Motors has emerged from the crisis with a new perspective and its own electric vehicle to toss into the EV race. But will the Chevy Volt be able to overcome its bat-tery problems to lead the “new GM” into the future? GM CEO Dan Akerson joins Climate One in a conversation on the auto industry, cleaner cars, and the future of personal mobility.

April 26 – Local Dollars, Local Sense Michael Shuman, author of Local Dollars, Local Sense joins Climate One at the Common-wealth Club in a discussion on how to invest in local businesses, create resilient communities, and make a buck.Thursdays at 7 pm

• Art and Museum Exhibits• Theater and Dance• Charity and Outreach• Classes-Workshops• Community Events• Fairs and Festivals

• Lectures and Literary• Film• Kids-Family• Live Music• Book Readings• Wine Tastings

Categories on the calendar page include:

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11:04EARTh&SKy

ShadedprogramsarecreatedandproducedatKRCB

SONOMASPOTLIGhT: Five minutes on local events and issues with Roland Jacopetti

Office: 707-584-2000 Studio: 707-584-2020

Public Radio for Sonoma County & the North Bay at 91.1 & 90.9 FM

KRCBOVERNIGhTDOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISINGAND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS

FREShAIRwith Terry Gross

ALLThINGSCONSIDERED-NPRNEWS (KRCB host Mark Prell)NorthBayReport with Bruce Robinson - daily at 5:30 pm

JimhightowerReport- daily at 6:30 pm

DEMOCRACyNOW!with Amy Goodman

yOuRAVERAGEABALONEJohnny Bazzano

SOMEThINGCOMPLETELyDIFFERENT

Roland Jacopetti

CONNECTIONSDoug Jayne &

Allegra Broughton

FREIGhTTRAINBOOGIEBill Frater

FIDDLIN’zONEGus Garelick

ONThEROADAGAIN

Linda Seabright

KALEIDOSCOPEJan Stephens

PERCuSSIONDISCuSSIONJim Laveroni

RADIOFREESONOMA

E-TOWNLive folk/rock

KRCBOVERNIGhT

HEAR IT

ONKRCB

MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

PERFORMANCETODAy with Fred ChildClassical music magazine offering live concert performances

and interviews with distinguished artists and composers

5:005:30 6:006:307:007:308:008:309:009:30

10:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:301:001:302:002:303:003:304:004:305:005:306:006:307:007:308:008:309:009:30

10:0010:3011:0011:3012:001:002:00

FLAShBACK WORDByWORDANOVELIDEA

WORDTEMPLEPOETRy

PILLOWSTORMJosh Drake &Josh Staples

RADIOLAB

MIDDAyCLASSICSwith Julie Amacher, Lynn Warfel and Mindy Ratner

MORNINGEDITION-NPRNEWS(KRCB host Mark Prell) Featuring: NORThBAyREPORTat6:06&8:06am

KRCB’sCaliforniaupdate@7:30am

SecondRowCenterwithDavidTempleton, Wednesday, 6:35 and 8:35 am & 6:45 pm

ReelTimeFilmReview with Diane McCurdy -Thursday at 8:35 am

AnotherVoice with Susan Swartz - Friday at 6:35, 8:35 am & at 6:45 pm

DEMOCRACyNOW!withAmyGoodmanFREShAIRwithTerryGross

CLIMATEONEFORuMS

CROSSINGBORDERS

Doug Gosling, Amy Contardi &

David Sharp

MINDy’SMIxMindy Berrett

LADySPINSThEBLuESMary Carroll

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FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY

KRCBOVERNIGhT

CuRTAINCALLCharles Sepos

OuTOFThEBOxShafiq Spanos

(New classical releases)

ThISAMERICANLIFEwithIraGlass

BEyOND&BACK

Hillary Culhane

SPACE/TIMEPaul E

RADIOFREESONOMA

BLuESBEFORESuNRISERADIOFREESONOMA

WEEKENDEDITION

NPRNEWSwith

Scott Simon

ALLThINGSCONSIDERED-NPRNEWS

LAThEATREWORKSRadio theater

FROMThETOP

LAThEATREWORKS(Repeat)

ThISTLE&ShAMROCKCeltic Music

WEEKENDEDITION

NPRNEWSwith Rachel Martin

WESTCOASTLIVESedge Thomson

hosts music & guests live from San Francisco

ThISAMERICANLIFEwith Ira Glass

hARMONIAEarly Music

ST.PAuLSuNDAy

SuNDAyCLASSICS

Classicalmusic from KRCB-FM

John Katchmer, Shafiq Spanos,Nick Xenelis &

John Lounsbery

LEShOWMusic & satire from Harry Shearer

NEWDIMENSIONSRADIO

OuTBEATGLBT Radio

BLuESBEFORESuNRISE

OuRROOTSAREShOWING

Folk & acoustic music with

Robin Pressman & Steve DeLap

OPENSPACEDISTRICTJohn Katchmer

NIGhTTRAVELERLinda Coffin

5:005:30 6:006:307:007:308:008:309:009:3010:0010:3011:0011:3012:0012:301:001:302:002:303:003:304:004:305:005:306:006:307:007:308:008:309:009:3010:0010:3011:0011:3012:001:002:00

ThEChOIRLOFTD. Solter, S. Osborn, A. Martin,

K. Haugen & Jenny Bent

ECLECTICAPaul Timberman &

Mr. Bad Rules

MOuThFuLFood & wine with

Michele Anna Jordan

JAzzCONNECTIONS

Chuck Sher,Ric Mancuso,

Toby Gleason, Paul Kaplan &

Larry Slater the Jazz MD

Opera SundayBartók: Duke Bluebeard’s Castle Bela Bartok (Composer), Istvan Kertesz (c), London Symphony Orchestra (Orchestra), Christa Ludwig and Walter Berry.Captures the private, intimate horrors at the core of the story. Kertész conducts brilliantly, drawing full, warm sounds from the LSO.Sunday, April 8 at noon

RhyThM&ROOTSMark Nicholas

BRAVENEWWORLDDwight Loop hOLyCOW!

Richard Wisinski

This program available as a podcast

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What’s playing on KRCB FMSpoken Word

ARTS & IDEASAnother Voice A Novel IdeaCurtain CallFresh AirLe Show New Dimensions RadioReel Time Film ReviewsLA Theatre WorksThe MothThis American Life West Coast LiveWord By Word WordTemple PoetryCOMMUNITY CONCERNSClimate One LecturesDemocracy Now!Jim HightowerKRCB’s Calif. UpdateMouthful North Bay ReportOutbeat Radio

Sonoma SpotlightMostly Music

CLASSICALThe Choir LoftFrom the TopHarmoniaMidday ClassicsOpera SundayOut of the BoxPerformance TodaySaint Paul SundaySunday ClassicsFOLK, AMERICANA & MOREYour Average AbaloneE-town Fiddlin’ Zone Freight Train BoogieOn the Road AgainOur Roots Are ShowingThistle & Shamrock Something Completely Different

INTERNATIONALCrossing BordersFREE-FORM FMBeyond & Back Brave New WorldConnectionsFlashbackHoly Cow!KaleidoscopeMindy’s MixPercussion DiscussionPillow StormRadio Free SonomaSpace/TimeJAZZ, BLUES, R&BBlues Before SunriseJazz ConnectionsLady Spins the BluesRhythm & RootsTECHNO & TRANCEEclecticaNight TravelerOpen Space District

Lofty music on Sunday mornings Every Sunday morning at 10, Sonoma County’s very own choir lofters bring you the best in choral music.April 1 – Orfeo Excerpts from the world’s first great opera, by Claudio Monteverdi. Hosted by Kris Haugen.April 8 – The Easter Show Plenty of music from which to choose. Hosted by Dan Solter.April 15 – Magical Mystery Show Contents too astounding to be revealed. Hosted by Jenny Bent.April 22 – Misericordias Domini Bach cantatas for this second Sunday after Easter. Hosted by Steve Osborn.April 29 – Robin & Marion Songs and motets from the time of Adam de la Halle. Hosted by Cheryl Moore.

•91.1 and 90.9 FM over the air•Streaming over the web at krcb.org•Comcast Digital Cable on TV•iPhone app•Download shows from iTunes

So many ways to listen to KRCB Radio 91!

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E-town for AprilApril 2 – Joshua Radin / Sarah and Christian Dugas Joshua Radin (rt) got his break in music when a homemade demorecording landed in actor/director Zach Braff ’s hands. One of Joshua’s songs ended up on the popular TV series Scrubs, beginning a rapid rise to commercial success. Also with us the talented Canadian brother and sister duo (and former members of The Duhks) Sarah & Christian Dugas.

April 9 – The Jayhawks / Justin Townes Earle After a lengthy hiatus, the original members of the The Jayhawks reunited last year behind a long awaited, chart topping album. They’ll share songs showcasing their original alternative country rock sound. Justin Townes Earle (son of Steve Earle) also visits E-town. This Nashville-born musician has won over critics and music lovers alike, chosen as the “Best New and Emerging Artist” at the 2009 Americana Music Awards.

April 16 – Grace Potter & The Nocturnals / Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore Hosts Nick & Helen Forster welcome Grace Potter & The Nocturnals who are emerging as one of the nation’s foremost rock bands. There’s also the acoustic driven duo of Ben Sollee & Daniel Martin Moore, featuring Ben on cello and vocals and Daniel on guitar and vocals; Nick & Helen and the eTones add their musical and vocal support to the duo’s sound. It’s all capped off with a one-of-a-kind E-town finale!

April 23 – Arlo Guthrie / Reed Foehl Legendary folk artist Arlo Guthrie (left) shares hand-picked selections from more than 40 years of musical exploration, plus plenty of stories as only Arlo can tell them. Later in the show, Reed Foehl, a Colorado-based singer/songwriter (and a gifted storyteller in his own right), joins us. Reed was formerly with the popular band Acoustic Junction; in recent years he has struck out on his own solo path.

April 30 – Elephant Revival / Jimmy LaFave Elephant Revival has a genre-jumping style that’s been called “Transcendental Folk.” Also with us is Austin-based singer/songwriter and guitarist Jimmy LaFave, a two-time winner of the Austin Music Award category for Best Singer/Songwriter; and he is said to be one of Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan’s favorite artists. Mondays at 7 pm

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Volunteer of the Month – Kylie Mendonca

A message from MembershipDid you know that you don’t have to wait for a member-ship drive to continue or enhance your relationship with KRCB?

You are always welcome to contact us at 707-584-2018 or join us at our website at www.krcb.org/donate.

Membership is by far our largest and most reliable source of revenue and your continued association with KRCB truly does make a difference. The funding you provide makes possible all the wonderful programming you’ve come to appreciate on KRCB.

Thank you so much for being a part of our KRCB family.

It was over a year ago that I received an email from Kylie Mendonca inquiring about internships at KRCB Radio. Her resume was impressive; she had been a freelance writer for a number of newspapers including the San Luis Obispo New Times, San Jose Metro, and the North Bay Bohemian. She was studying political science at Santa Rosa Junior College and had her eye on U.C. Berkeley. But it was the statement of her goal—to be an intern for Ira Glass (This American Life)—that told me she was going to be a good fit for our station. She proved me right; last fall Kylie began working with Bruce Robinson, KRCB News Director, on the produc-tion of North Bay Report. She learned the mechanics of taping interviews before being sent out into the field to gather her own stories. Fortunately for us, Kylie is continuing her internship here for another semester. When Kylie isn’t at KRCB or pursuing stories in the field, she could be out riding her bicycle or helping others learn how to fix their bikes (she started a bicycle repair class for women prior to moving to Sonoma County). Occasionally Kylie rides to San Francisco; I had to ask her how long that took because for me the equivalent would be climbing Mt. Everest. For Kylie it’s maybe a five hour trip including stops. Equally impressive but in a different way is her creativity when it comes to taking material—in this case old sweaters—and giving them a new functionality with an artistic flair. On the day we spoke she had on a sweater to which she’d added a hood and a small gray star. At KRCB we know Kylie will achieve her goal, do it with style, and in great health. And last fall at the Wells Fargo Center for the Arts Kylie had a chance to speak with Ira Glass himself so she’s well on her way to achieving her American dream. It’s people like Kylie who help keep the dream of Public Media alive by helping to create original and interesting content for our listeners/viewers. For information on journalism internships (both audio and video) contact Cheryl Scholar, KRCB Community Engagement Director and Volunteer Manager, at 707-584-2005.

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Daytime Television ListingsMONDAY5:00 Democracy Now! with Amy

Goodman * 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches6:30 Classical Stretch7:00 Sesame Street8:00 Sid the Science Kid8:30 Curious George9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot

About That! 9:30 Fons & Porter Love of Quilting 10:00 Quilting Arts10:30 Learn to Read11:00 Functional Fitness with Suzanne

Andrews (4/23 - Second Opinion)

11:30 Healing Quest 12:00 Hometime12:30 Taste This!1:00 Crafting at the Spotted Canary1:30 Signing Time!2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 2:30 Cyberchase3:00 Arthur 3:30 WordGirl4:00 Electric Company4:30 Nightly Business Report 5:00 Newsline 5:30 PBS NewsHour6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal TUESDAY5:00 Democracy Now! with Amy

Goodman *6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches6:30 Power Yoga7:00 Sesame Street8:00 Sid the Science Kid8:30 Curious George9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot

About That! 9:30 Knitting Daily10:00 Sew It All 10:30 GED Connection (English) 11:00 Wider World 11:30 Healthy Body, Healthy Mind 12:00 Ask This Old House12:30 Simply Ming

[repeatsSat.at6pm]1:00 NOVA (repeat of Monday)2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 2:30 Cyberchase3:00 Arthur 3:30 WordGirl4:00 Electric Company4:30 Nightly Business Report5:00 Newsline 5:30 PBS NewsHour6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal WEDNESDAY5:00 Democracy Now! with Amy

Goodman *6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches6:30 Wai Lana Yoga7:00 Sesame Street8:00 Sid the Science Kid8:30 Curious George9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot

About That! 9:30 Beads, Baubles and Jewels 10:00 It’s Sew Easy

10:30 Music Voyager11:00 America’s Heartland 11:30 Bake, Decorate, Celebrate [repeatsSat.at4pm] 12:00 This Old House12:30 Sweet Life with Chris Xaver1:00 Nature (repeat of Tuesday) 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 2:30 Cyberchase3:00 Arthur 3:30 WordGirl4:00 Electric Company4:30 Nightly Business Report5:00 Newsline 5:30 PBS NewsHour6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal THURSDAY5:00 Democracy Now! with Amy

Goodman *6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches6:30 Wai Lana Yoga7:00 Sesame Street8:00 Sid the Science Kid8:30 Curious George 9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot

About That! 9:30 Katie Brown Workshop10:00 Sewing with Nancy10:30 GED on TV (Spanish)11:00 Travel with Kids11:30 Roadtrip Nation12:00 American Woodshop 12:30 Essential Pépin

[repeatsSat.at5:30pm]1:00 Truth About Money with Ric

Edelman 1:30 Artist Toolbox2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 2:30 Cyberchase3:00 Arthur 3:30 WordGirl4:00 Electric Company4:30 Nightly Business Report 5:00 Newsline 5:30 PBS NewsHour6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal FRIDAY5:00 Democracy Now! with Amy

Goodman *6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches6:30 Wai Lana Yoga7:00 Sesame Street8:00 Sid the Science Kid8:30 Curious George9:00 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot

About That! 9:30 Creative Living

[repeatsSun.at4pm]10:00 Martha’s Sewing Room10:30 Living Smart 11:00 This American Land 11:30 Ciao Italia12:00 Victory Garden12:30 Rachel’s Favorite Food for Living1:00 Sara’s Weeknight Meals [repeatsSat.at6:30pm] 1:30 Sit and Be Fit2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 2:30 Cyberchase3:00 Arthur

3:30 WordGirl4:00 Electric Company4:30 Nightly Business Report5:00 Asia Biz Forecast 5:30 PBS NewsHour6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal SATURDAY7:00 Sid the Science Kid (Sp)7:30 Cat in the Hat Knows A Lot

About That! (SP)8:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog (Sp) 8:30 Cyberchase (Sp) 9:00 Angelina Ballerina9:30 Thomas and Friends 10:00 Bob the Builder (4/7 - Shalom

Sesame: It’s Passover, Grover!) 10:30 Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood11:00 Curiosity Quest11:30 To The Contrary with Bonnie

Erbe 12:00 Teaching Channel 1:00 Paint This w/Jerry Yarnell1:30 Color World with Gary Spetz2:00 Best of the Joy of Painting2:30 Woodsmith Shop3:00 Woodwright’s Shop3:30 Ask This Old House

[repeatsTues.atnoon]4:00 Bake, Decorate, Celebrate4:30 Kimchi Chronicles5:00 Chef John Besh’s New Orleans 5:30 Essential Pépin 6:00 Simply Ming 6:30 Sara’s Weeknight Meals SUNDAY8:00 Ideas in Action with Jim Glassman 8:30 Maria Hinojosa One-On-One 9:00 McLaughlin’s One on One9:30 Consuelo Mack: WealthTrack 10:00 Religion & Ethics Newsweekly10:30 Between the Lines

[repeatsWedat7:30pm]11:00 (4/1, 4/8, 4/15 - Hispanic

Lifestyles) (4/22 - Climate One) (4/29 - Someplace with a Mountain)

11:30 Autoline 12:00 Motorweek 12:30 Inside Washington1:00 European Journal1:30 Scully the World Show2:00 America’s Heartland2:30 California’s Gold, Green, Water,

Golden Parks, Communities, & Golden Fairs

3:00 American Woodshop[repeatsThurs.atnoon]

3:30 This Old House[repeatsWed.atnoon]

4:00 Creative Living4:30 Garden Smart5:00 Growing a Greener World5:30 Victory Garden

[repeatsFri.atnoon]6:00 P. Allen Smith’s Garden to Table6:30 Red Green

[repeatsSat.at7:30pm]

* Available on Cable and AT&T U-Verse only

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Primetime Listings for April1 SUNDAY7:00 AntiquesRoadshow:

Pittsburgh,PA-hourTwo 8:00 Tupperware!American

Experience In the 1950s, American women discovered they could earn thousands —even millions—of dollars from bowls that burped. “Tupperware ladies” fanned out across the nation’s living rooms, selling efficiency and convenience to their friends and neighbors through home parties. Bowl by bowl, they built an empire that now spans the globe.

9:00 MasterpieceClassic:DowntonAbbey,SeriesII-PartFiveAs the war nears its end, Downton’s aristocrats and servants put their lives back together. Mary and Sir Richard go estate hunting. A mysterious wounded officer makes a shocking revelation.

10:00 haiti:WhereDidTheMoneyGo? In a disaster the size of Haiti’s January 2010 earth-quake, it might seem like only the big NGOs and government agencies could handle it. But 10 months after, with millions of Haitians left without some of the most basic necessi-ties, the smaller players were doing some of the best work. Filmmaker Michele Mitchell and the Film@11 team speak to members of small NGOs and independent businessmen who were on the ground in November helping Haitians protect themselves against Hurricane Tomas and the cholera outbreak.

11:00 Totallyunprepared:ASurvivalGuidetoDisasters

In this important, timely and entertaining look at earthquake preparedness, the safety experts of the Totally Unprepared team go into homes across California to tell folks how safe their homes really are. Will those book-shelves crash to the floor? Is there a way to keep that expensive flat-screen TV from shattering during a quake?

Plus, visit a shake table at an earthquake laboratory to see what will happen inside your home if you don’t follow the experts advice. Totally Unprepared is a family-friendly guide to making your home safer and more secure during the next earthquake.

11:30 BestofKRCB*1:00 BestofLINKTV *

2 MONDAY 7:00 OutofIreland7:30 Naturalheroes:NewShep-

herdsoftheFarm8:00 NOVA:Japan’sKillerQuake In its worst crisis since World

War II, Japan faces disaster on an epic scale: a rising death toll in the tens of thou-sands, massive destruction of homes and businesses, shortages of water and power,

and the specter of nuclear reactor meltdowns. The facts and figures are astonishing. The March 11th earthquake was the world’s fourth largest earthquake since record

keeping began in 1900 and the worst ever to shake Japan. The seismic shock wave released over 4,000 times the energy of the largest nuclear test ever conducted; it shifted the earth’s axis by 6 inches and shortened the day by

a few millionths of a second. The tsunami slammed Japan’s coast with 30 feet-high waves that traveled 6 miles inland, obliterating entire towns in

a matter of minutes.[repeatsTuesdayat1pm]

9:00 Moyers&Company 10:00 PBSNewshour 11:00 CharlieRose

12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

3 TUESDAY 7:00 AsTimeGoesBy7:30 GrowingBolder:Making

Memories8:00 Nature:WhatFemalesWant

andMalesWillDo-Part2:WhatMalesWillDoThere is nothing a male will not do for the right to mate with a female —dance, sing, make music, fight, overdress, change body colors, develop astonishing anatomy, illuminate, even agree to be eaten alive. You’re nobody until somebody loves you.

[repeatsWednesdayat1pm)9:00 MotherNature’sChild:

GrowingOutdoorsintheMediaAge

(see page 8)10:00 PBSNewshour 11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

4 WEDNESDAY7:00 KeepingupAppearances7:30 BetweentheLineswith BarryKibrick:MikeRose

(Educator) Why School? 8:00 AmericanMasters:Phil

Ochs:ThereButforFortune One of the most politically

active singer-songwriters to emerge in the 1960s anti-Vietnam War era, Phil Ochs was inspired by Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, but also by Elvis Presley and John Wayne. He was a journalism student in college, which, perhaps, informed the extent of his protest lyrics—always witty, topical and insightful, always slightly haunting— such songs as I Ain’t Marching Any-more, Love Me I’m a Liberal, Outside of a Small Circle of Friends, Power and the Glory, The War Is Over, and There

But for Fortune, are insepa-rable from those times.

9:30 BuffaloBill’sAmericanWest Visions of the American West

explores Buffalo Bill Cody’s legacy through iconic images

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Primetime Listings for April

and artifacts of the American West from the Buffalo Bill

Historical Center in Cody, Wyoming, a Smithsonian Insti-tution Affiliate. Stunning high definition footage of artistic masterworks help paint a

portrait of the man who em-bodied the spirit of the West in all its complexities, while telling the story of western expansion.

10:00 PBSNewshour11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

5 THURSDAY7:00 LastoftheSummerWine7:30 InnerVIEWSwithErnie

Manouse:hollandTaylor8:00 historyDetectivesGwen

dissects the mystery behind an ornate Belgian war medal. Elyse traces a pennant to the early battle for the women’s vote. And a cartoon cel leads Tukufu to unsung heroes of animation.

9:00 Frontline:TheInterruptersThe Interrupters presents profiles in courage, as three former street criminals in Chicago place themselves in the line of fire to protect their

communities. The film follows the lives of these “Violence Interrupters,”who include the charismatic daughter of one of the city’s most notorious former gang leaders, the son of a murdered father, and a man haunted by a killing he committed as a teenager. As they intervene in disputes to

prevent violence, they reveal their own inspired journeys of struggle and redemption.

11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow!* 1:00 BestofLINKTV *

6 FRIDAY7:00 MaytoDecember7:30 ConsueloMack:WealthTrack8:00 InsideEStreet:PensionsIn

Peril8:30 McLaughlinGroup9:00 MyGeneration:LiveWhat

youLove9:30 OnStorySuspenseful

storytelling is discussed by the creative minds behind The Usual Suspects, The Silence of the Lambs, The Big Easy, and Lethal Weapon. Featuring Shane Black, Ted Tally, Daniel Petrie, Jr. and Christopher McQuarrie. Film: Unawakening by Jack Daniel Stanley.

10:00 PBSNewshour11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow!* 1:00 BestofKRCB*

7 SATURDAY7:00 America’sTestKitchenfrom

Cook’sIllustrated:Deep-DishPizza

7:30 RedGreenShow:CheapJeep

8:00 LawrenceWelkShow: Easter9:00 AustinCityLimits:Raphael

Saadiq/BlackJoeLewis&Thehoneybears

10:00 SongoftheMountains:DoyleLawson&Quicksilver

11:00 OfficialBestofFest:RealPeople Our hosts Rick Stevenson and Dr. Brandon Whitehead (aka the silent critic) show us how growing up can be hard on everyone in Letting Go. Next, Freesia

of Eden is a film from Ireland about a grandfather’s bond with his grandson and how he uses that bond to explain the tough things in life.

11:30 WorldofShortFilms:BodegaBayInternationalShortFilmFestivalThe Daffodils Are Blooming (USA) Directed by Kirk Demorest

12:00 BestofKRCB*

8 SUNDAY7:00 AntiquesRoadshow:

Pittsburgh,PA-hourThree 8:00 AnnieOakley:American

ExperienceIn 1926, just a few months before Annie Oakley’s death, Will Rogers

described her as “the greatest woman rifle shot the world has ever produced. “As the star attraction of Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show, she thrilled audiences around the world with her daring shooting feats. Her act helped fuel turn-of-the-century nostalgia for the vanished, mythical world of the American West. Over time she became an American legend—the loud, brassy,

cocksure shooter celebrated in the musical Annie Get Your Gun. But that legend had

little to do with the real Annie Oakley. Although famous as a

Western sharpshooter, Oakley lived her entire life east of the Mississippi. A champion in a man’s sport, she forever changed ideas about the

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Primetime Listings for Aprilabilities of women, yet she opposed female suffrage. Her fame and fortune came from

her skill with guns, yet she was a Quaker.

9:00 MasterpieceClassic:DowntonAbbey,SeriesII-PartSixThe Spanish flu strikes Downton, disrupting one match, hastening another

and transforming the fortunes of all. Mary, Sybil and Robert each confront a moment of truth. Anna and Bates know a moment of happiness.

11:00 TheNewEnvironmentalists (see page 10)11:30 BestofKRCB*1:00 BestofLINKTV *

9 MONDAY7:00 OutofIreland7:30 Naturalheroes:Brower

youthAwards20098:00 NOVA:MindOverMoney In the face of the recent crash,

can a new science that aims to incorporate human psychol-ogy into finance—behavioral economics—do better? This program recreates some of the new field’s most compel-

ling experiments. We’ll see how the brains and bodies of Wall Street traders respond as they buy and sell stocks. We’ll watch as an ingenious experi-ment reveals how too many spending choices and the way they’re framed can overwhelm consumers’ ability to make rational decisions.

[repeatsTuesdayat1pm]9:00 Moyers&Company 10:00 PBSNewshour 11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

10 TUESDAY 7:00 AsTimeGoesBy7:30 GrowingBolder:Pursuitof

Passion8:00 Nature:Survivorsofthe

FirestormThe bush fires that tore through the Australian state of Victoria in Febru-ary 2009 incinerated over a million acres of land, including key mountain ash forest ecosystems. Fires are a natural force of nature which spur regeneration, but the immediate aftermath of this giant firestorm was devasta-tion. Kangaroos and koalas, wombats and wallabies, endangered possums and gliders, lizards, echidnas, birds of all kinds, and even fish that lived among these eucalypts were overcome by the flames. Millions died. But burned and traumatized survivors tenderly nursed back to health at wildlife hospitals showed a remarkable ability to bounce back, and the environment an extraordinary capacity for healing.

[repeatsWednesdayat1pm)9:00 SmallFarmRising (see page 10)10:00 PBSNewshour 11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow!* 1:00 BestofLINKTV *

11 WEDNESDAY7:00 KeepingupAppearances7:30 BetweentheLineswith BarryKibrick:Elainehall

(Autism Specialist) Seven Keys to Unlock Autism

8:00 JewsandBaseball:AnAmericanLoveStory

Narrated by Dustin Hoff-man, Jews and Baseball: An American Love Story explores the connection between Jewish Americans and America’s national pastime. The feature-length documen-tary tells a story of immigra-tion, assimilation, bigotry, heroism, the passing on of traditions and the shattering of stereotypes. Interviews feature fans, writers, executives and

players and interweaves pow-erful personal and historical stories with an extraordinary collection of rare archival foot-age and photos.

9:30 GreenBuildings-EcoSenseforLiving (see page 10)

10:00 PBSNewshour11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

12 THURSDAY7:00 LastoftheSummerWine7:30 InnerVIEWSwithErnie

Manouse:CliveCussler8:00 historyDetectivesWhat can

a Club Continental business card tell us about California’s prohibition-era underground? Then, did gangs use this shotgun in the Chicago St. Valentine’s Day massacre that shocked the nation? And why is FDR on the guest list for a High Society Circus during the depths of the Depression?

9:00 Frontline:TheChildCases After Frontline’s broadcast last

year, a Texas judge has moved to overturn the conviction of Ernie Lopez. He was sent to prison for 60 years for what

was seen as a “clearcut and classic” case of child abuse, in the death of 6-month-old Isis Vas. In this joint investigation with ProPublica and NPR,

Frontline correspondent A.C. Thompson unearths more than 20 child death cases in which people were jailed on medical evidence—involving abuse, assault, and “shaken baby syndrome”—that was later found unreliable or flat-out wrong. Are death investigators being properly trained for child cases?

˘

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Primetime Listings for April10:00 PBSNewshour11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow!* 1:00 BestofLINKTV *

13 FRIDAY7:00 MaytoDecember7:30 ConsueloMack:WealthTrack8:00 InsideEStreet:hoarder

Disorder8:30 McLaughlinGroup9:00 MyGeneration:Connections

ThatCount9:30 OnStoryReflecting the real

world in film is discussed by the creative minds behind Jarhead, The Company Men,

Cast Away, and Falling Down. Featuring John Wells, William Broyles, Jr., and Herschel Weingrod. Film: Martha by Katja Straub.

10:00 PBSNewshour11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow!* 1:00 BestofKRCB*

14 SATURDAY7:00 America’sTestKitchen

fromCook’sIllustrated:All-AmericanFruitDesserts

7:30 RedGreenShow:DNAAllTheWay

8:00 LawrenceWelkShow:AprilShowers

9:00 AustinCityLimits:JohnLegend&TheRoots

10:00 SongoftheMountain:hardRyde;JamesLeva&PurgatoryMountain;McPeakBrothers

11:00 OfficialBestofFest:BoyPowerOur hosts Rick Stevenson and Dr. Brandon Whitehead (aka the silent critic) introduce us to Scotland’s Snakebite, where a seven-year-old boy is convinced he’s been bitten by a poisonous snake. Next is USA’s Shadowball, where

everything is real except the ball.

11:30 WorldofShortFilms:BodegaBayInternationalShortFilmFestival

12:00 BestofKRCB*

15 SUNDAY7:00 AntiquesRoadshow:El

Paso,Tx-hourOne 8:00 TitanicBelfast:Birthplace

ofaLegendThe tragic end of Titanic is well known. What is less well known is the story of her origin, how and why she was built and by whom. This film tells us many new details of the Titanic. Titanic Belfast: Birthplace of A Legend traces Belfast’s emergence as a shipbuilding powerhouse in the early 19th Century, primarily in the form of the Harland and Wolff shipyard. In 1907 the White Star Line awarded Harland and Wolff a contract to construct three superb steam liners that would hit new heights in terms of passenger safety, comfort,

style and sheer size. The first two to be commissioned were the sister ships Olympic and the Titanic, with the construc-tion of the Titanic beginning in March of 1909. Descendants of ship-workers and historians explore the role the building of the massive Titanic played in the lives of the inhabitants of Belfast.

9:00 MasterpieceClassic:DowntonAbbey,SeriesII-PartSevenIn the finale, the family gathers at Downton Abbey for Christmas.

11:00 you’llAlwaysBewithMe The loss of a loved one can

generate unpredictable reactions, particularly in children. Children often cannot articulate their feelings, which can lead to loneliness, confu-sion and even self-destructive behavior. You’ll Aways Be With Me examines grief in young people, from toddlers to teenagers, and explores the many unique challenges they and their loved ones face.

11:30 BestofKRCB*1:00 BestofLINKTV *

16 MONDAY7:00 OutofIreland7:30 Naturalheroes:TheEdgeof

theSea8:00 NOVA:DogsDecoded Dogs have been domesti-

cated for longer than any other animal on the planet and humans have developed a unique relationship with these furry friends. We treat our pets like a part of the family and we feel that they can understand us in a way other animals cannot. Now, new research is revealing what dog lovers have suspected all along: dogs have an uncanny ability to read and respond to human emotions. What is surprising, however, is new research showing that humans, in turn, respond to dogs with the same hormone responsible for bonding mothers to their babies. How did this incredible relationship between humans and dogs come to be? And how can dogs, so closely related to fearsome wild wolves, behave so differently?

[repeatsTuesdayat1pm]9:00 Moyers&Company 10:00 PBSNewshour 11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

17 TUESDAY 7:00 AsTimeGoesBy7:30 GrowingBolder:Funand

Funky8:00 Nature:OceanGiants:Giant

LivesThe great whales such as the blue and the bowhead

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Primetime Listings for Aprilare the largest animals that have ever lived on our planet. Yet these mighty leviathans feed on tiny shrimp and sardines. Giant Lives discovers why size matters in the world of whales.

[repeatsWednesdayat1pm)9:00 GlobalhealthFrontiers:Foul

Water,FierySerpent (see page 8)10:00 PBSNewshour 11:00 InTheLifeArt, culture,

issues, and news of the gay and lesbian community.

11:30 DreamersTheaterThe uplift-ing performance documentary Dreamers Theater follows a group of cognitively chal-lenged teens and young adults as they rehearse and stage the original musical, Assum-ing Assumptions. The play dramatizes the issues faced by individuals with special needs in the hopes of increasing

awareness about this popula-tion and their capabilities. Members of this Richmond, VA-based acting troupe live with a variety of develop-mental disabilities, including autism, Down’s Syndrome, As-perger’s Syndrome and other high-functioning disorders or differences.

12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV*

18 WEDNESDAY7:00 KeepingupAppearances7:30 BetweentheLineswith BarryKibrick:TimVan-

derhook (CEO of Myspace) Rebuilding Myspace

8:00 AmericanMasters:CabCal-loway:Sketches“Hi de hi de hi de ho,” the popular refrain

from “Minnie the Moocher” was Cab Calloway’s signature song and Harlem’s famous Cotton Club was his home

stage. A singer, dancer and band leader, Calloway was an exceptional figure in the his-tory of jazz—a consummate musician, he charmed audi-ences across the world with boundless energy, bravado and elegant showmanship.

His back glide dance step is the precursor to Michael Jackson’s moonwalk and his scatting lyrics find their legacy in today’s hip-hop and rap.

9:00 InPerformanceattheWhitehouse:Red,WhiteAndBluesPresident and Mrs. Obama host this all-star celebration of the blues—the musical form that sprang from the Mississippi Delta, up Highway 61 to the West Side of Chicago, with deep roots in Africa and slavery and influences on modern American music from soul to rock and roll. Leading popular artists’ performances trace that migratory root and pay homage to the great figures of the genre and the songs they made famous—from Robert Johnson to Muddy Waters.

10:00 PBSNewshour11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

19 THURSDAY7:00 LastoftheSummerWine7:30 InnerVIEWSwithErnie

Manouse:RobReiner8:00 historyDetectivesA one-

of-a-kind photograph poses a jarring question: Is the African

American wearing a Confeder-ate uniform slave or free? And, did Hollywood treat the Native Americans listed in this pay-ment ledger fairly? Then, an

ornate stock certificate unlocks secrets to the earliest days of Harlem.

9:00 Frontline:InsideJa-pan’sNuclearMeltdownFrontline continues its

investigation of nuclear safety with an unprecedented ac-count of the crisis inside the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear

complex after a devastat-ing earthquake and tsunami struck Japan on March 11, 2011. With exclusive eyewit-ness testimony from key figures in the drama—in-cluding the Japanese Prime Minister and senior executives at the power company Tepco —Frontline tells the story of the workers struggling

frantically to reconnect power inside the plant’s pitch-dark and highly radioactive reactor buildings; the nuclear experts and officials in the Prime Minister’s office fighting to get information as the crisis spiraled out of control; and the plant manager who disobeyed his executives’ orders when he thought it would save the lives of his workers.

10:00 PBSNewshour11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow!* 1:00 BestofLINKTV *

20 FRIDAY7:00 BayAreaTravel&Wine

AuctionYou can be the high bidder on vacation getaways across the U.S., Canada and beyond! Cruises, B & B stays, resort hotels and more!

11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow!* 1:00 BestofKRCB*

21 SATURDAY7:00 BayAreaTravel&Wine

AuctionBid to win on fine wines, leisure activities, fine dining, Wine Country holidays. Sedona, Hawaii, Puerto Val-larta, Colorado, Santa Fe!

Page 27: April-2012

Primetime Listings for April

27

11:00 OfficialBestofFest:GirlPower:Our hosts Rick Stevenson and Dr. Brandon Whitehead (aka the silent critic) celebrate girl power with three award-winning Australian shorts, Triple Concerto In D Minor, Clarissa Performs a Magic Trick, and Ruby Who?

11:30 WorldofShortFilms:BodegaBayInternationalShortFilmFestival

12:00 BestofKRCB*

22 SUNDAY7:00 BayAreaTravel&Wine

AuctionThe Silver and Gold Boards close tonight! Boston, the Caribbean, Yosemite and Tahoe!

11:00 GreatGetaways:RobontheRoad Host Rob Stewart continues his exploration of the Golden State with new

and fascinating destina-tions throughout California. This time, Rob ventures off the Pacific coast in search of migrating whales, and discovers the incomparable beauty of Point Reyes National Seashore.

11:30 BestofKRCB*1:00 BestofLINKTV *

23 MONDAY7:00 OutofIreland7:30 Naturalheroes:TheStoryof

MoreStuff8:00 NOVA:ExtremeIce In

collaboration with National Geographic, NOVA follows the exploits of acclaimed photojournalist James Balog and a scientific team as they deploy time-lapse cameras in risky, remote locations in the Arctic, Alaska, and the Alps. Grappling with blizzards, fickle technology, and climbs up craggy precipices, the team must anchor cameras capable of withstanding sub-zero temperatures and winds up to 170 mph. The goal of Balog’s team’s perilous expedition: to create a unique photo archive of melting glaciers that could provide a key to understanding

their runaway behavior and their potential to drive rising sea levels.

[repeatsTuesdayat1pm]9:00 Moyers&Company 10:00 PBSNewshour 11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

24 TUESDAY 7:00 AsTimeGoesBy7:30 GrowingBolder:Better

Together8:00 Nature:OceanGiants:Deep

ThinkersIn some respects, the brains of whales and dol-phins are more complex than

ours. Whales and dolphins work cooperatively, show empathy and are self-aware. Deep Thinkers finds out how clever—and how much like us—whales and dolphins might be.

[repeatsWednesdayat1pm)9:00 u.S.healthCare:TheGood

News (see page 8)10:00 PBSNewshour 11:00 CharlieRose 12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV*

25 WEDNESDAY7:00 KeepingupAppearances7:30 BetweentheLineswith BarryKibrick:Dr.JohnIzzo

(Philosopher/Psychologist) Stepping Up

8:00 GreatPerformances:MemphisWinner of the 2010 Tony Award for Best New Musical, Memphis turns the

radio dial back to the 1950s to tell the story of a white DJ named Huey Calhoun (Chad Kimball), whose love of music transcends racial lines and

airwaves. His romantic interest

is Felicia Farrell (Montego Glover), a young black singer whose career is on the rise, but who can’t make the

break out of segregated clubs on her own. When the two collaborate, her soulful sound reaches radio audiences everywhere, and the golden era of early rock & roll takes flight.

10:30 heartbreakTurtleToday (see page 10)

11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

26 THURSDAY7:00 LastoftheSummerWine7:30 InnerVIEWSwithErnie

Manouse:ClayAiken8:00 DesigninghealthyCommu-

nities:RetrofittingSuburbia (see page 8)9:00 Frontline:TheVaccineWar Public health scientists and

clinicians tout vaccines as one of the greatest achievements of modern medicine. But for many ordinary Americans vaccines have become contro-versial. Young parents are con-cerned at the sheer number of shots—some 26 inoculations for 14 different diseases by

age six—and follow alterna-tive vaccination schedules advocated by gurus like Dr. Robert Sears. Other parents go further. In communities like

Ashland, Oregon, up to one-third of parents are choosing not to vaccinate their kids at all. And some advo-cacy groups, like Generation Rescue, argue that vaccines are no longer a public health miracle but a scourge; they view vaccines as responsible for alarming rises in certain disorders, including ADHD and autism.

10:00 PBSNewshour11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow!* 1:00 BestofLINKTV *

27 FRIDAY7:00 BayAreaTravel&Wine

AuctionNew Silver and Gold

Page 28: April-2012

Primetime Listings for April

28

Board open tonight! Be the high bidder on vacations to Hawaii, Whistler, Vancouver Island, Montreal!

11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow!* 1:00 BestofKRCB*

28 SATURDAY7:00 BayAreaTravel&Wine

AuctionBid to win on wines for every palate and budget! Santa Barbara, Carmel Valley, San Diego, Tahoe!

11:00 OfficialBestofFest:PerspectiveOur hosts Rick Stevenson and Dr. Brandon Whitehead (aka the silent critic) give us a lesson in perspective with Jillian’s Vantage, about a man who

gets set up on a blind date with a blind woman.

11:30 WorldofShortFilms12:00 BestofKRCB*

29 SUNDAY7:00 BayAreaTravel&Wine

AuctionLast night of the April Auction – more to come in May! Airline tickets, stays in Nashville, Argentina, Monterey, Santa Fe; highly-rated wines, limited production wines, cooking classes and more!

11:00 California’sNationalParks:RobontheRoad In the spirit of Ken Burns’ recent PBS series, The National Parks:

America’s Best Idea, reporter Rob Stewart of KVIE Public Television’s Rob on the Road program takes viewers along as he explores some of

California’s most magnificent national parks.

11:30 BestofKRCB*1:00 BestofLINKTV *

30 MONDAY7:00 OutofIreland7:30 Naturalheroes:Watershed

Revolution8:00 NOVA:CrackingyourGenetic

CodeWhat will it mean when most of us can afford to have the information in our DNA —all three billion chemical letters of it—read, stored and

available for analysis? As NOVA reveals in “Bioethics”

we stand on the verge of a revolution in medicine, the first effects of which are already

upon us. We meet cancer pa-tients returned to robust health and a cystic fibrosis sufferer breathing easily, because scientists have been able to pinpoint and neutralize the genetic abnormalities underly-ing their conditions. But we also meet ethicists convinced we need to consider the moral dilemmas raised by the new technology. Will it help or hurt us to know that we are likely to come down with a serious disease? What if such infor-mation falls into the hands of insurance companies, employ-ers, prospective mates? Should parents be allowed to select embryos with specific characteristics? Both ominous and promising, the new era of

personalized, gene-based medicine is one thing for cer-tain: it’s relevant to everyone. Because soon you will be deciding whether to join the ranks of those who know what their genes reveal.

[repeatsTuesdayat1pm]9:00 Moyers&Company 10:00 PBSNewshour 11:00 CharlieRose12:00 DemocracyNow! *1:00 BestofLINKTV *

Program listings are accurate at the time of printing. For late programming changes, phone

(800) 287-2722

The majority of our prime time programs are closed captioned.

cc

* AvailableonCable andAT&Tu-Verseonly * LinkTV is an independent television network that broad- casts unseen documentaries from around the world.

200 N. SaN Pedro rd, SaN rafael, Ca

TICKETS 415.444.8000marinjcc.org/arTS

3/15 @ 7:30pmThe nigerian

BroTherSdance to live traditional West african folk music.

3/18 @ 2pmmill Valley

PhilharmonicStravinsky, Hindemith, respighi

& ice cream! Free

3/22 @ 7pm cokie & STeVe

roBerTSInterfaith Passover traditions

4/21 @ 8pmloS PinguoS

latin rhythms from Buenos aires & dancing

5/3 @ 7:30pmmekliT hadero

ethiopian-born songstress with jazz, soul & folk influences

5/13 @ 5pmnew cenTury

chamBer orcheSTraCommedia dell’Arte

5/19 @ 8pmThe

Tony deSare TrioSwingin’ night in Manhattan

with Great american Songbook & originals.

6/16 @ 8pma SPecial eVening

oF comedy — stay tuned!

at tHe oSHer MarIN jCC

Page 29: April-2012

29

Supported by the Sonoma County Board of Supervisors

Watch for Expressions on KRCB Television

Sonoma County Outdoor Adventures

CanoeingHot Air BallooningBikingClimbingKite Surfing

PBS Helps Kids Realize Their Potential According to the latest Roper Public Affairs and Media survey, the American public has rated PBS the most educational media brand and the undisputed leader in children’s programming. Here are some other interesting statistics:

• More than 21 million children watch PBS KIDS on TV, and more than 20 million engage with PBS KIDS online each quarter. (Nielsen NTI and Google Analytics)

• PBS is the #1 source of TV and online content used by pre-K teachers in the classroom. (Frunwald Study)

• For the 12th year in a row PBS Kids won more Emmy awards for children’s programs than any other media company.

• Children from low-income families who watched as few as two episodes of Super Why! scored 46% higher on standardized tests than those who did not watch the program. (University of Pennsyvania Annen-berg School for Communiction)

• PBS KIDS offers nine literacy series and 15 series on science, technology, engineer-ing, and math.

• PBSKIDSPlay.org was named the winner of the 2009 Teachers Choice Awards for the family.

• Preschoolers from low-income communities who participated in PBS KIDS’ media-rich curriculum outscored their peers who did not participate in the curriculum on all tested measures of early literacy. (Education Development Center and SRI International).

Page 30: April-2012

30

Art,MuseumsandCultural

Organizations

Artbeat

Audubon Canyon Ranch

GLBT History Museum

Napa Valley Opera House

Quicksilver Mine Co.

RBP Concerts, Inc

Santa Rosa Symphony

Sonoma Bach

SSU Intercultural Center

Automotive

Earth In Upheavel

Business&Professional

Edgewave

GoLocal “Bank Local”

Cooperative

North Bay Labor Council

North Bay Leadership Council

PG&E

Primadesk

Rileystreet Art Supply

Simple Office Solutions

Solar Living Institute

Sonic.Net

Dining,Food/Wine&Lodging

Aqus Cafe Foundry Wharf

Alexander Valley Winegrowers

Association

Cafe Trieste

Clouds Rest Vineyards

Clover Stornetta Farms

Community Market

Don Taylor’s Omelette Express

Fresh Choice Restaurants

Hampton Inn & Suites

Oliver’s Market

Pearson & Company

Peter Lowell’s Cafe

Roadhouse Winery

Sebastopol Farmers’ Market

Suncé Winery and Vineyard

Tallman Hotel & Restaurant

Education

University of San Francisco - SR

Entertainment

Festivale Del Sol

Marin JCC “Center Stage”

Rialto Cinemas Lakeside

Wells Fargo Center for the Arts

Financial&Insurance

Community First Credit Union

Rubins Financial Strategies

Summit State Bank

healthCare

Blood Centers of the Pacific

Medtronic Foundation

Palm Drive Hospital

St. Joseph’s Healthcare,

Sonoma County

home&Garden

Clark Pest Control

Clars Auction Gallery

Culligan Water Company

Earthtone Construction

General Hydroponics

Harmony Farm Supply & Nursery

North Bay Recycle

Sonoma Compost

Media,Magazines&Publishing

Bay Nature Magazine

North Bay Biz

North Bay Bohemian

Pacific Sun

Petaluma Post

Point Reyes Light

Sonoma Index Tribune

Sonoma West Publishing

The Community Voice

The Sonoma County Gazette

WaccoBB.net

West Marin Citizen

Non-profit&Government

American Ag. Credit

Becoming Independent

CA Retired Teachers

Association

City of Santa Rosa

North Bay Leadership Council

Rohnert Park Chamber of

Commerce

Russian River Keeper

Sebastopol Area Chamber of

Commerce

Sonoma Land Trust

Town of Windsor

United Way of the Wine Country

Windsor Chamber of Commerce &

Visitors Center

RetirementRelated

Fountaingrove Lodge

Santa Rosa Memorial Hospice

Vineyard Commons

Forfurtherinformation

visitkrcb.org/business-sponsors

ThankyoutothesesupportersofKRCB!

Special Thanks To:Advent Office Furniture

Hawley’s Paint Store

Stephen Curley Roofing

Page 31: April-2012

31

A READER’SMONTHLYGUIDE TO

NORTH BAYARTS ANDEVENTS

on newsstandsand at

petalumapost.com

A ReAdeR’s MonthlyPost

thePetAlUMA

DOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISINGAND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS

Get involved today!KRCB offers a variety of ways for you to show your support, from basic membership to volunteering, you’ll find details online at www.krcb.org/ membership.

Business Sponsor – Green Music Center The wait is over and the music is ready to begin—Sonoma State University is prepar-ing to step onto the world’s musical stage. On September 29, 2012 the Donald & Maureen Green Music Center launches the 2012-13 Inaugural Season with a perfor-mance by internationally acclaimed pianist Lang Lang in the newly-completed Joan & Sanford I. Weill Hall. The Inaugural Season will feature artists who represent the pinnacle of their genres; Yo-Yo Ma, Joyce DiDonato, Wynton Marsalis, Alison Krauss, and many more. Subscription packages went on sale to the general public March 25th. The Grand Opening of the Green Music Center is a milestone not only for Sonoma State University, but also for Sonoma County and the entire Northern California region. Weill Hall, with its architectural beauty and superb acoustics, is destined to become one of the most sought-after music venues in the world, where audiences and artists alike will have the privilege of experiencing music as few ever have. An immersion into pure sound, it brings out the finest talents in its performers and the deepest appreciation in its listeners. KRCB appreciates the Green Music Center’s support for KRCB and its mission to enhance our vibrant musical community here in Sonoma County in live performance and on the air.

For more information visit http://gmc.sonoma.edu/.

Page 32: April-2012

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Partner with KRCB and reachThe North Bay Public TV

& Radio Audience ✓ Decision makers

✓ Upscale home owners

✓ Post grad or professional

✓ Active in community

Contact program underwriting at 707-584-2030 or 800-287-2722