Program Listings” Christopher C

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Program Listings” Christopher C WXXI-TV/HD | WORLD | CREATE | AM1370 | CLASSICAL 91.5 | WRUR 88.5 | THE LITTLE PROGRAMPUBLIC TELEVISION & PUBLIC RADIO FOR ROCHESTER LISTINGSJANUARY 2014 PREMIERES SUNDAY, JANUARY 5 AT 9 P.M. ON WXXI-TV Season 4 of the international hit finds aristocrats coping with last season’s shocking finale. Change is in the air as three generations of the Crawley family have conflicting interests in the estate. Paul Giamatti makes an appearance alongside the beloved returning ensemble, including Dame Maggie Smith, Elizabeth McGovern, Hugh Bonneville, Michelle Dockery, Jim Carter, Joanne Froggatt, guest star Shirley MacLaine and many others. AFTER DOWNTON LIVE SUNDAY, JANUARY 5 & 12 AT 11 P.M. ON WXXI-TV After Downton Abbey be sure to stay tuned for After Downton Live, WXXI’s “post-game” wrap up show. Host Danielle Abramson and special local guests will dissect the episode, invite viewers to share their take on the show by calling (866) 264-5904 or on Twitter using hashtag: #ADLWXXI, and talk about what “buzz” is brewing about the upcoming episode. EVAN DAWSON JANUARY 25 AT THE LITTLE THEATRE DETAILS INSIDE>> JOINS WXXI NEWS DETAILS INSIDE>> 384 East Avenue Inn & Suites Ferrel’s Garage Leary’s Rochester Area Booksellers Association AMC Lowes Webster Ferris Hills at West Lake Legacy Dental Laboratory Rochester Area Community Foundation Accu-Roll Inc. Festa Italia Productions LTD Lento Restaurant Rochester Brainery Advanced Motion Systems Finger Lakes Grassroots Festival LiDestri Foods, Inc. Rochester Broadway Theatre League Alesco Advisors First National Rochester Fringe Festival Lifespan of Greater Rochester Rochester City Ballet Alfred University Fox Run Vineyards Lift Bridge Book Shop Rochester City School District Allendale Columbia School Freed Maxick, CPAs, P. C. Little Bleu Cheese Shop Rochester Clinical Research Alzheimer’s Association Friends of CMAC/Bowery Presents Louis S. and Molly B. Wolk Foundation Rochester Folk Art Guild Amaya Bar and Grill Friends of School of the Arts Lovin’ Cup Bistro & Brews The Rochester Group at UBS American Diabetes Association Friends of the Garden Aerial (Greentopia) Lucas Greenhouses Rochester Guitar Club American Guild of Organists GEVA Theatre Center M&T Bank Rochester Hearing & Speech Center Ancient Acupuncture and Chinese Gardner PLUS Architects MVP Health Care RIT-Office of Adult and Continuing Education Herbal Pharmacy Gates Automotive Maplewood Nursing Home RIT-College of Liberal Arts Aquavation The Genesee Community Charter School Matthews & Fields Lumber Rochester Museum and Science Center The Artful Gardener Genesee Country Village & Museum Maxwell Boev Neurosurgical Clinic Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra The Bank of Castile Geneva on The Lake McArdle Ramerman Center Rockwell Museum of Western Art Batavia Turf George Eastman House Memorial Art Gallery The Rohrbach Brewing Co. Bausch + Lomb Granger Homestead & Carriage Museum Memorial Art Gallery-Council Fine Rowe Photo, Video & Audio Beltz Ianni & Associates Greater Rochester Health Foundation Craft Show St. John Fisher College Better Contractors Bureau Merry-Go-Round Playhouse St. John’s Home Big Rib BBQ and Blues Festival Blue Cactus Mexican Grille CORPORATE PARTNERS JULY 2012 - JUNE 2013 Boylan Code LLP Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra Business Association of South Wedge C&S Companies Salena’s Mexican Restaurant CSEA Seabreeze Cabot Creamery Shade Tree Greetings, Inc. Canandaigua National Bank & Trust The Shaw Festival Catholic Family Center Shepard Ford Center for Teen Empowerment William E. Simon Graduate School (Rochester) of Business Administration Childcare Council Sound Source City Blue Imaging Spiritus Christi Church City of Rochester Greater Rochester International Airport Mirbeau Inn & Spa Sterling Stage Kampitheatre Clover Lawn & Landscape The Harley School Monroe Veterinary Associates Sticky Lips Juke Joint Cobblestone School Hart Hearing Centers Nathaniel Square Corner Store Sullivan Violins The College of Brockport Hearcare Hearing National Multiple Sclerosis Society Sustainable Energy Developments, Inc. Community Arts Partnership of Hillside Family of Agencies Nazareth College Arts Center To Your Measure Tompkins Co. Historic Houseparts New York State Association of Licensed Turning Stone Resort Constellation Brands Hochstein School of Music and Dance Midwives United Way of Greater Rochester Corning Museum of Glass Hodge Podge Lodge Niagara Wine Trail Unity Health - Total Sports Experience Daisy Marquis Jones Foundation Houghton College Nixon Peabody, LLP University of Rochester Medical Center Dan Smalls Presents The Housing Council Nocon & Associates Up All Night Presents Davenport-Hatch Foundation id Signsystems Inc. One World Goods URMC-Center for Community Health Democrat & Chronicle Imagine RIT Oriental Garden Supply, LLC Valley Manor Custom Apartmen Homes Discovery Trail Innovative Solutions Oriental Rug Mart Velmex Inc. Dolomite Products Co. Interlakes Oncology/Hematology Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at RIT Veritas Wine Bar Downtown Ithaca Alliance Ithaca Catholic Worker Community Park Ave Bike Shop Visit Rochester (GRVA) ESL Federal Credit Union Ithaca Shakespeare Company Parker Law Office Visiting Nurse Service East House J Vincent Real Estate Plant Designs Inc. Water Street Music Hall Eastman Community Music School Jack Wanderman Estate Sales RG&E Watkins Glen International Eastman School of Music Jewish Federation of Greater Rochester Ralph Honda Westminster Financial Edward Jones Financial Jewish Senior Life-The Summit at Brighton Record Archive Wilmington Trust Advisor Tom Kroon Kango Play Center & Academy Reel Mind Theatre & Film Series Woods Oviatt Gilman LLP Excellus BlueCross BlueShield Kilian J. and Caroline F. Schmitt Foundation Richard Aerni Ceramic Design Writers and Books Exodus to Jazz LaBella Associates, P.C. Rising Lotus Marriage & Family Therapy Xerox Corporation F. Olivers Leadership Learning Collaborative Rivers Run Yep Roc Records DEAR FRIENDS, EXECUTIVE STAFF JANUARY 2014 No rm Silverstein, President Happy New Year! I hope you had a VOLUME 5, ISSUE 1 Susan Rogers, Executive Vice President and General Manager wonderful holiday season and are looking WXXI is a public non-commercial Je anne E. Fisher, Vice President, Radio forward to an exciting 2014. broadcasting station owned Kent Hatfield, Vice President, Technology and Operations and operated by WXXI Public Attention Downton Abbey fans— great El issa Orlando, Senior Vice President of TV and News Broadcasting Council, a not-for- news! The wait is over. Downton Abbey, profit corporation chartered by th the Board of Regents of New BOARD OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS Season 4, premieres on January 5 at York State. “Program Listings” Christopher C. Booth, Chair 9:00PM on WXXI-TV. And we have also Norm Silverstein (USPS 0742-390) is published James W. Fulmer, Vice Chair received word that Season 5 will soon be monthly at 280 State Street, Dr. Cynthia Reddeck-LiDestri, Treasurer in production! Rochester, NY 14614 to promote Robert A. Healy, Secretary the programs and activities of For our radio listeners, 2014 marks a very special year for WXXI. the public broadcasting stations. Classical 91.5 celebrates its 40th anniversary and AM 1370 turns 30. You Periodical mailing postage paid at Member & Audience Services ............585.258.0200 may have been among the visionary group of WXXI friends who helped Rochester, N.Y. WXXI Main Number ................... 585.325.7500 to start these stations. Thank you for your continued support of our radio Service Interruptions .................. 585.258.0331 POSTMASTER: services that have expanded greatly in the past 40 years. Send changes of address to Audience Response Line ............... 585.258.0360 WXXI Program Listings, Copies of Local Programs .............. 585.258.0369 When we signed on WXXI-FM 91.5 in 1974, the station played an eclectic Membership Department, Reachout Radio ....................... 585.258.0333 blend of folk, jazz, talk, and classical. There was even a children’s radio P.O. Box 30021, Rochester, NY Educational Resources ................ 585.258.0278 14603-3021. program. Ten years later, 91.5 FM became a full-time classical station Volunteer Services .................... 585.258.0249 and AM 1370 signed on as a full-time NPR station, along with local news * Please note that all programs are Corporate Sponsorships ............... 585.258.0282 and talk. subject to change. For up-to-date Auction/Special Events ................ 585.258.0287 program listings, special highlights Just as we promised when we signed on 40 years ago, Classical 91.5 and local news, just log onto WXXI.org. Newsroom ........................... 585.258.0340 WXXI On-line .........................www.wxxi.org is dedicated to spotlighting the rich culture we have in Rochester. AM 1370 keeps you informed with in-depth coverage of local, national, and international news that sets our news department apart. You can also hear Morning Edition and All Things Considered and great adult album music on WRUR 88.5 FM, thanks to our broadcast partnership with the University of Rochester. We’re proud to engage our community in dialogue about important issues like the future of education for our children. Our community forums—such as last month’s Common Core panel with State Education Commissioner John King—along with our news reports and talk shows are critical to an informed and involved society In 1974 we could not have foreseen the future needs of our community or anticipated the emerging technologies that continue to shape our
Recommended publications
  • Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan: a Sufi Music Master Revived
    Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan: A Sufi Music Master Revived : NPR http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=12201563 Generated by Foxit PDF Creator © Foxit Software http://www.foxitsoftware.com For evaluation only. NPR Home | News | Arts & Life | NPR Programs DONATE | NPR Shop | NPR Social Media | Login | Register SEARCH FIND A STATION Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan: A Sufi Music Master Revived by Anil Mundra Listen on All Things Considered add to playlist | download August 7, 2007 - Resurrecting the dead is nothing new in music. Remember Natalie Cole singing and dancing with her late father, Nat King Cole? The latest luminary to be revived is the Pakistani singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan. August 16 marks the tenth anniversary of his death. In his short life, Nusrat was the world's greatest singer of qawwali, a boisterous and passionate music of mystical Photo: Ishida Masataka Islam. He embraced western pop music, teaming up with Pakistani singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan Peter Gabriel and Eddie Vedder. Now, Nusrat returns with (1948-1997) was considered the finest qawwali singer of his generation. the help of Italian dub reggae producer Gaudi. Their new CD is called Dub Qawwali. SONGS FROM 'DUB QAWWALI' Gaudi is a veteran producer with 11 solo albums over the past two decades. He specializes in dub reggae, a style that Hear old Nusrat recordings dressed up in dub reggae beats by producer often reworks existing material, mixing booming bass and Gaudi. drums with electronic effects. 'Ena Akhiyan Noo' After dabbling in punk music, Gaudi began experimenting add with synthesizers, and was fully steeped in reggae when he first heard one of Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan's records in the 'Bethe Bethe Kese Kese' mid-1980s.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2020
    WEST VIRGINIA PUBLIC BROADCASTING ANNUAL REPORT 2020 FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR WVPB AT A GLANCE We are always busy at WVPB. From the business West Virginia Public Broadcasting has been an indispensable resource for education, news and public affairs, emer- office to the programming team, and the news team gency services and economic development for West Virginia for more than 50 years. Headquartered in Charleston, it to our Folkways reporting corps, has locations/reporters in Morgantown, Wheeling, Shepherdstown and Beckley. it seems as if we are always in Our 54-person team, from production to news, and education to programming, aspires to inform, educate, protect motion. So when the coronavirus and inspire our listeners and viewers. The governing board of WVPB is the Educational Broadcasting Authority, which hit West Virginia, like everyone holds the federal licenses to broadcast both public radio and public television for the Mountain State. else, we had a lot of adapting to WVPB airs international, national and state- do and many things to juggle. wide news and entertainment programs across Some of us could work from West Virginia and in some surrounding states home, but for others it wasn’t through its radio, television and digital net- possible. Wouldn’t it be an incredible feat to upgrade works. In the event of a serious crisis, emergency our transmission technology from the comfort of a officials can communicate to the entire state dining room table instead of suspended from a tower from the Capitol through WVPB equipment. over rugged West Virginia terrain? Our engineers Organizationally, WVPB has nine main depart- don’t have that luxury.
    [Show full text]
  • Airwaves (1985-08 And
    / AIRWAVES \ · A Service of Continuing Education & Extension University of Minnesota-Duluth Volume 6, Number 4 ' August-September 1985 Special •· Ray Charles: His Life and Music. kumd 103.3 fm Station Manager • Paul Schmitz Program Director • John Ziegler Public Aflairs Director • Jean Johnson Report to the Listeners Outreach Coordinator • Bob DeArmond Engineer • Kirk Kersten by Paul Schmitz, Station Manager Secretary • Donna Neveau Volunteer Staff • Remember the slighlly perplexed look patience. Projects of this magnitude jus.t couple of different departments at UMD, Lake Lime. Bil l Agnew, Bob Allen, Craig Anderson, Jon on Kirk Kerslen's face in lasl month's started with us on July 17, and will be Anderson, Kath Anderson, Mark Anderson, Bob issue when he was plugging in our new al the front desk from about 9:30 a.m. Lo Andresen, Leo Babcau, Todd Borstad, John"llrazner, antenna? I don't really know what he You may notice a change in our staff list - 2:30 p.m. four days a week. We are look- Dave Brygger, Jan Cohen, Tim Connelly, was thinking about al the moment that this issue; if you visit the station 'in ing forward Lo having her with us, and Christopher Devaney, Bruce Eckland, Dann Edholm, Pat Eller, Phil Enke, Linda Estel, Doug Fifield, photo was taken, but ever since he's been person, you will certainly notice a LO utilizing her previous experience with Kerry Fillmore, Susanna Frenkel, Scott Frisby, Brian thinking about "field Lun·ing .." That's a change becau e we have lost Helen computers as we are about LO enter the Gitar, Stan Goltz, Doug Greenwood, Jim Gruba, term for a specialized kind of work on Prekker.
    [Show full text]
  • Literary, Subsidiary, and Foreign Rights Agents
    Literary, Subsidiary, and Foreign Rights Agents A Mini-Guide by John Kremer Copyright © 2011 by John Kremer All rights reserved. Open Horizons P. O. Box 2887 Taos NM 87571 575-751-3398 Fax: 575-751-3100 Email: [email protected] Web: http://www.bookmarket.com Introduction Below are the names and contact information for more than 1,450+ literary agents who sell rights for books. For additional lists, see the end of this report. The agents highlighted with a bigger indent are known to work with self-publishers or publishers in helping them to sell subsidiary, film, foreign, and reprint rights for books. All 325+ foreign literary agents (highlighted in bold green) listed here are known to work with one or more independent publishers or authors in selling foreign rights. Some of the major literary agencies are highlighted in bold red. To locate the 260 agents that deal with first-time novelists, look for the agents highlighted with bigger type. You can also locate them by searching for: “first novel” by using the search function in your web browser or word processing program. Unknown author Jennifer Weiner was turned down by 23 agents before finding one who thought a novel about a plus-size heroine would sell. Her book, Good in Bed, became a bestseller. The lesson? Don't take 23 agents word for it. Find the 24th that believes in you and your book. When querying agents, be selective. Don't send to everyone. Send to those that really look like they might be interested in what you have to offer.
    [Show full text]
  • Songs by Title Karaoke Night with the Patman
    Songs By Title Karaoke Night with the Patman Title Versions Title Versions 10 Years 3 Libras Wasteland SC Perfect Circle SI 10,000 Maniacs 3 Of Hearts Because The Night SC Love Is Enough SC Candy Everybody Wants DK 30 Seconds To Mars More Than This SC Kill SC These Are The Days SC 311 Trouble Me SC All Mixed Up SC 100 Proof Aged In Soul Don't Tread On Me SC Somebody's Been Sleeping SC Down SC 10CC Love Song SC I'm Not In Love DK You Wouldn't Believe SC Things We Do For Love SC 38 Special 112 Back Where You Belong SI Come See Me SC Caught Up In You SC Dance With Me SC Hold On Loosely AH It's Over Now SC If I'd Been The One SC Only You SC Rockin' Onto The Night SC Peaches And Cream SC Second Chance SC U Already Know SC Teacher, Teacher SC 12 Gauge Wild Eyed Southern Boys SC Dunkie Butt SC 3LW 1910 Fruitgum Co. No More (Baby I'm A Do Right) SC 1, 2, 3 Redlight SC 3T Simon Says DK Anything SC 1975 Tease Me SC The Sound SI 4 Non Blondes 2 Live Crew What's Up DK Doo Wah Diddy SC 4 P.M. Me So Horny SC Lay Down Your Love SC We Want Some Pussy SC Sukiyaki DK 2 Pac 4 Runner California Love (Original Version) SC Ripples SC Changes SC That Was Him SC Thugz Mansion SC 42nd Street 20 Fingers 42nd Street Song SC Short Dick Man SC We're In The Money SC 3 Doors Down 5 Seconds Of Summer Away From The Sun SC Amnesia SI Be Like That SC She Looks So Perfect SI Behind Those Eyes SC 5 Stairsteps Duck & Run SC Ooh Child SC Here By Me CB 50 Cent Here Without You CB Disco Inferno SC Kryptonite SC If I Can't SC Let Me Go SC In Da Club HT Live For Today SC P.I.M.P.
    [Show full text]
  • National Endowment for the Arts Annual Report 1996
    TO THE CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES: It is my pleasure to transmit herewith the Annual Report of the National Endowment for the Arts for the fiscal year 1996. One measure of a great nation is the vitality of its culture, the dedication of its people to nurturing a climate where creativity can flourish. By support­ ing our museums and theaters, our dance companies and symphony orches­ tras, our writers and our artists, the National Endowment for the Arts provides such a climate. Look through this report and you will find many reasons to be proud of our Nation’s cultural life at the end of the 20th century and what it portends for Americans and the world in the years ahead. Despite cutbacks in its budget, the Endowment was able to fund thou­ sands of projects all across America -- a museum in Sitka, Alaska, a dance company in Miami, Florida, a production of Eugene O’Neill in New York City, a Whisder exhibition in Chicago, and artists in the schools in all 50 states. Millions of Americans were able to see plays, hear concerts, and participate in the arts in their hometowns, thanks to the work of this small agency. As we set priorities for the coming years, let’s not forget the vita! role of the National Endowment for the Arts must continue to play in our national life. The Endowment shows the world that we take pride in American culture here and abroad. It is a beacon, not only of creativity, but of free­ dom. And let us keep that lamp brightly burning now and for all time.
    [Show full text]
  • MEDIA KIT Radio Net Rate Card MPB Radio Is Our Statewide Radio Service, Carrying Local and NPR Programming
    RADIO MEDIA KIT www.mpbonline.org Radio Net Rate Card MPB Radio is our statewide radio service, carrying local and NPR programming. Sponsorships are available. Radio Program / All rates net to station Time Period :15 Net Rate Day Part AM Drive Time M-F 6 AM - 9 AM $150 Day Time M-F 6 AM - 4 PM $75 PM Drive Time M-F 4 PM - 7 PM $125 Night Time M-F 7 PM - 6 AM $25 Weekend AM Sat 8 AM - 11 AM Sun 8 AM - 10 AM $75 Weekend Day Time Sat 11 AM - 8 PM Sun 10 AM - 6 PM $35 Weekend Night Time Sat 8 PM - 8 AM Sun 6 PM - 6 AM $25 Premium Programming Sponsoring Adjacent to Morning Edition M-F 5 AM - 8:30 AM $150 Mississippi Edition M-F 8:30 AM - 9 AM $150 Deep South Dining (Mon.) Money Talks (Tues.) Fix It 101 (Wed.) M-F 9 AM - 10 AM $150 Creature Comforts (Thur.) Gestalt Gardener (Fri.) All Things Considered M-F 4 PM - 6 PM $100 Marketplace M-F 6 PM - 6:30 PM $150 All rates are net. Radio production is included and voiced by an MPB radio announcer. Certain minimums apply. All sponsorship messages must be approved by MPB to meet FCC guidelines for non-commercial stations. Rates and programming are subject to change. Please check with your account executive for current offerings. Biloxi WMAH 90.3 | Booneville WMAE 89.5 | Bude WMAU 88.9 | Greenwood WMAO 90.9 Jackson WMPN 91.3 | Meridian WMAW 88.1 | MS State WMAB 89.9 | Oxford WMAV 90.3 CEDRIC GRIZZELL THOMAS LAMBERT 601.432.6615 [email protected] 601.432.6309 [email protected] AM Weekday 9Mornings Southern cuisine is world-renowned, and there’s so much more to cooking Mon.
    [Show full text]
  • The Voices of NPR
    Episode 11 – Michael Goldfarb – All Along the Watchtower The Voices of NPR And now a personal word, Michael Goldfarb has the voice of a journalist who has witnessed important events. He speaks with weariness and authority. His voice evokes a chorus of NPR announcers who report from near and distant places. Writer Dierdre Mask noted in an article in the Atlantic magazine, “We can’t see NPR reporters, so we have to picture them. And because they are with us in our most private moments—alone in the car, half-asleep in bed—we start to think we know them.” And we do think we know them. Their voices are iconic: distinct, informative, comforting, familiar. Their voices are the sounds of our better selves when we are bright and learned and engaged in the affairs of the world. No matter the day’s events, they give us hope that in a crazy world, sense and sensibility will prevail. Here are a few names I grew up with: Susan Stamberg, Bob Edwards, Carl Kasell, Noah Adams, Linda Wertheimer, Robert Siegel, Scott Simon, Cokie Roberts, and Bob Mondello. Each name evokes a voice, a style, a beat, that is the news soundtrack of our lives and shared imagination. We hear their stories as they report from bureaus from foreign capitals: Eleanor Beardsley, Paris; Rob Gifford, London; Ofiebea Quist-Arcton, Dakar; and, of course, Sylvia Poggioli, Rome. We hear war correspondents in the thick of battle: Michael Golfarb in Northern Ireland and Bosnia; Kelly McEvers in the midst of death and kidnapping in the Arab Spring, Tom Bowman among the fire and mortars of Helmand Province, and David Gilkey ambushed and killed by the Taliban.
    [Show full text]
  • Wvpb Annual Report 2019 Web.Pdf
    WEST VIRGINIA PUBLIC BROADCASTING ANNUAL REPORT 2019 FROM THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR West Virginia Public Broadcasting has been here since man first walked on the moon. The pivotal year was 1969. NASA took us farther than we’d ever been. The country was conflicted over war. Hundreds of thousands of music fans attended Woodstock. It was a year of social strife and huge scientific advances. Meanwhile, here in the Mountain State, a visionary decision by leadership created the Educational Broadcasting Authority. From a humble beginning during a year full of historical significance, WVPB has evolved to its current role as a statewide radio, television and digital network, as well as a critical resource for emergency communications for West Virginia. But, at times, our future wasn’t certain. WVPB has weathered changing technol- ogy, reorganizations and significant cuts to state and federal funding, which seem to have plateaued for the moment. For that, we are thankful; however, other challenges loom. If you’ve heard static on the radio or lost our television signal, please know that we’re doing our best to continually patch, replace and make major over- hauls to our aging transmissions system. There also will be times in the next year when our engineers will be busy converting your region’s system as a part of our conversion to ATSC 3, today’s high-definition television broadcast- ing standard. It will require that you rescan your television to pick up the new signal. In all instances, whether we are making repairs or doing conversions, we appreciate your patience as we work to improve your WVPB experience.
    [Show full text]
  • COMMUNITY PARTNERS 13WHAM ABC & CW, WUHF Fox Rochester
    COMMUNITY PARTNERS AS OF NOVEMBER 4, 2020 13WHAM ABC & CW, WUHF Fox Rochester Abbott's of Greece Abelard Reynolds School #42 Accountable Digital Accountable Health Partners ACT Rochester AFP Genesee Valley Chapter Al Sigl Community of Agencies Alfred University-Center for Student Involvement Allendale Columbia School Alliance Advisory Group, Inc. Allied Financial Partners Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc., Eta Rho Lambda Chapter American Foundation for Suicide Prevention - Western NY Chapter "American Heart Association American Stroke Association" American Red Cross Amy Kane Agency Anthony L. Jordan Health Center Architecture + Design at Alfred State College Asbury First United Methodist Church Assemblymember Harry Bronson's Office Association of Legal Administrators, WCNY Chapter AutismUp Bachelor Forum Balanced Care Community Services Bank of America Barakah Muslim Charity Barclay Damon LLP Bausch Health Benefit Resource LLC Best Buddies in Virginia & DC Best Buddies International Best Buddies WNY Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Rochester Bishop Kearney - A Golisano Education Partner Bivona Child Advocacy Center Black Button Distilling Bond, Schoeneck and King, PLLC Break The Ice Media Breast Cancer Coalition Bridgemark Solutions Brighton Central School District Brighton Chamber of Commerce Brighton Democratic Committee Brockport Central School District Brockport Student Government Brockport United Methodist Church Brockport Women's Club Soccer Butler/Till Calero-MDSL Cameron Community Ministries Campus Auxiliary Services Canandaigua National Bank and Trust Company Care-a-lot Child Care Career Start CASA of Rochester/Monroe County Catholic Charities Community Services Catholic Charities of Orange, Sullivan, and Ulster Catholic Family Center Causewave Community Partners Center for Community Engagement at St. John Fisher College Center for Perioperative Medicine Century Mold Co., Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • Firstchoice Wusf
    firstchoice wusf for information, education and entertainment • noVemBer 2008 Rolling On the River with Burt Wolf Each week, WUSF TV/DT viewers join Burt Wolf, the genial host of Burt Wolf: Travels & Traditions, on his journeys around the world. Wolf has traveled by plane, train and automobile — but a river cruise is his favorite way to see Europe. This month, on November 12, during a two-hour special, Wolf takes us through the heart of Europe on three voyages along the winding Danube River. In Cruising the Danube, Wolf kicks off his leisurely journey in Budapest and then stops off at the fairy tale castles and hidden streets of Burt Wolf’s two- Bratislava, Dürnstein, Melk, Grein, Linz hour river cruise and Passau before coming full circle to Budapest. On his second expedition, special airs Christmas in Vienna, Wolf sets shore November 12 in Vienna, Austria, exploring ancient Christmas traditions (some edible!) at 8 p.m. and festivities at locations ranging WUSF TV/DT from the magnificent Habsburg castle to Vienna’s celebrated outdoor Channel 16 Christmas markets. On the last leg of the voyage, Austrian Monasteries, Wolf takes us inside the abbeys at Melk and Klosterneuburg — each a fascinating realm of history, tradition and treasure. Wolf concludes his journey with lunch at the restaurant of one of Europe’s most talented chefs. Intrigued? If you’re more than an armchair traveler, you can join Burt Wolf in July 2009 on a Danube River cruise with other WUSF friends. Find more information about this once-in-a-lifetime voyage inside! wusf: FIRST choice WUSF Public WUSF TV/DT Broadcasting: November Highlights A range of media choices WORLDFOCUS brings American audiences a deeper understanding WUSF 89.7 of the stories shaping the world provides NPR news and today.
    [Show full text]
  • THE FIRST FORTY YEARS INTRODUCTION by Susan Stamberg
    THE FIRST FORTY YEARS INTRODUCTION by Susan Stamberg Shiny little platters. Not even five inches across. How could they possibly contain the soundtrack of four decades? How could the phone calls, the encounters, the danger, the desperation, the exhilaration and big, big laughs from two score years be compressed onto a handful of CDs? If you’ve lived with NPR, as so many of us have for so many years, you’ll be astonished at how many of these reports and conversations and reveries you remember—or how many come back to you (like familiar songs) after hearing just a few seconds of sound. And you’ll be amazed by how much you’ve missed—loyal as you are, you were too busy that day, or too distracted, or out of town, or giving birth (guess that falls under the “too distracted” category). Many of you have integrated NPR into your daily lives; you feel personally connected with it. NPR has gotten you through some fairly dramatic moments. Not just important historical events, but personal moments as well. I’ve been told that a woman’s terror during a CAT scan was tamed by the voice of Ira Flatow on Science Friday being piped into the dreaded scanner tube. So much of life is here. War, from the horrors of Vietnam to the brutalities that evanescent medium—they came to life, then disappeared. Now, of Iraq. Politics, from the intrigue of Watergate to the drama of the Anita on these CDs, all the extraordinary people and places and sounds Hill-Clarence Thomas controversy.
    [Show full text]