WGLT Program Guide, August, 1980

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

WGLT Program Guide, August, 1980 Illinois State University ISU ReD: Research and eData WGLT Program Guides Arts and Sciences Fall 8-1-1980 WGLT Program Guide, August, 1980 Illinois State University Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/wgltpg Recommended Citation Illinois State University, "WGLT Program Guide, August, 1980" (1980). WGLT Program Guides. 15. https://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/wgltpg/15 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Arts and Sciences at ISU ReD: Research and eData. It has been accepted for inclusion in WGLT Program Guides by an authorized administrator of ISU ReD: Research and eData. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WGLT 89.1 FM is a non-commercial radio station, which is operated by Il ­ linois State University in Normal, Illinois. Program Guide The station is financed by the Illinois State University General Revenue fund, August 1980 local and area business underwriting, Editor-Nancy N. Briere and the Friends of WGLT. We provide unique and informative programming Assistant Editor-Patricia Glaser which includes classical, jazz, and ethnic Art Director-Luciane Har/a music, along with a wide variety of public This guide is prepared more than a affairs, and general interest educational month in advance of broadcast. All shows. Also, our affiliation with National programming is subject to preemp­ Public Radio enables WGL T to provide tion consistent with WGL T's com­ an excellent selection of programming to mitment to public affairs. And, in the Bloomington-Normal and Mclean order to bring you timely programs County area. on short notice, we occasionally vary from this printed schedule. For more up-to-date information, con­ tact WGLT by mail or phone. DOLBY WGLT 89.1 FM about Educational Media Center the Illinois State University Normal, Illinois 61761 cover (309) 438-2255 This month our cover work and some of the in­ WGLT89.1FM is associated with terior design work is being done by Lucianne the Corporation for Public Broad­ Harla, graphics intern at the station. Luci wanted casting, National Public Radio the cover to reflect the many kinds of music found Architecture, the Mother Art (NPR), Public Radio In Mid­ on WGLT. She felt that a patchwork quilt best America (PRIMA), National Radio depicted the diversity of sounds that can be heard Frank Lloyd Wright Broadcasters Association (NRBA), on WGLT: opera and classical, jazz and the His tools were paper, wood, stone, brick, concrete-and the contour of the land. As no other Illinois Broadcasters Association blues-all a reflection of our rich musical heritage. American architect had, Frank Lloyd Wright used his tools to create an architecture that for the first (IBA), Illinois News Broadcasters time coll)bined form with function. "Frank Lloyd Wright and the Mother Art," a one-hour OPTIONS Association (!NBA) and Illinois documentary, explores the life-long pursuit of matching America's unique landscape with buildings that News Network (INN). become one with nature. The program will be broadcast on WGLT on Saturday, Aug. 30 at 6:00 pm. When Wright was born in Wisconsin in 1867, America was a country of prairies, small towns and a few large cities. The population was 50 million and the architecture of the day was primarily European in design. As America grew and became mechanized, industrialized and more urban, Wright's designs evolved into a new architecture, wholly American in scope and texture. "I think the way space flows in his buildings, horizontally and visually, all the way to the horizon, that is a very American notion of what space is like," says Peter Blake, architect and Wright biographer. "Wright had an enormous intuitive talent, how to use ordinary things-light, water and very ordinary materials-in a way that really made a kind of poetry which not many people are capable of produc­ ing." Wright was perceived by his peers at the turn of the century as a radical and very few prestigious commissions came his way. When the Depression came and construction slowed down, Wright used his free time to start a school of architecture at his home in Wisconsin-the Taliesin Fellowship. Wright's creations are monuments to his genius and strongly influence modem architecture. Some of his best known works are the Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Johnson Wax building in Wisconsin and dozens of single-family houses, one of which is in Peoria. Mrs. Marjorie F. Leighey, who lives in Wright's Pope Leighey House, describes for OPTIONS, as she does for the many guests who visit her home each day, how it feels to live in a Frank Lloyd Wright house: "There is harmony here that isn't necessarily found in any other house, not just in the sizes and shapes of each part to the next, but the way they are all tied together. Subtly, he achieves things that make for your comfort even when you're not conscious of them." The Frank Lloyd Wright home located in Peoria. 1 friday 3 sunday 4 monday 5 tuesday 6:00 Morning Concert 6:00 Morning Edition: McLean County A look at Stravinsky's first six ballets. 6:00 Morning Edition: McLean County 7:00 Morning Edition: NPR STRAVINSKY: The Firebird (1910) A 7:00 Morning Edition: NPR 6:00 Morning Edition: McLean County 9:00 Morningside-Jazz Dance Tale in Two Tableaux 9:00 Morningside-Jazz 7:00 Morning Edition: NPR 12:00 Midday Magazine 8:00 News 11:45 Midday Magazine 9:00 Morningside-Jazz 12:30 Past Is Prologue 8:05 The Art of Song 12:00 Nat'!. Press Club Luncheon 12:00 Midday Magazine Dr. Earl Reitan discusses the Battle of Soprano Elizabeth Mosher sings Rudolph Nuriyev, dancer 12:30 Agenda Britain Spanisches Uederbuch songs; Sheri 1:00 Afternoon Concert Guest: Dr. George Stimeling, Dist 87 1:00 Afternoon Concert Beaudry sings Rauel; Baritone Sanford Don White features compositions which Schools. Don White salutes Aaron Copland. Sylvan concludes with Faure and R. commemorate special occassions. 12:45 Safety for Everyone 4:00 All Things Considered Strauss. PURCELL: Come Ye Sons of Art, Ode/or With Dr Benton Bristol. 5:30 Evening Magazine 10:00 News Queen Mary's Birthday, 1694 1:00 Afternoon Concert 6:00 Options in Education 10:05 Morning Song HANDEL: Royal Fireworks Music Summer Camp-routine summertime ac­ John Muriello features works of the 4:00 All Things Considered tivity or once-in-a-lifetime experience. greatest English composers of the 20th 5:30 Evening Magazine 7:00 Evening Concert century: 6:00 The Past Is Prologue Music composed for the harp. Selections BRITTEN: A Ceremony of Carols Dr. Paul Holsinger on religious freedom in of Mozart, Guridi, Debussy, and VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Hodie A Christ­ America. Hindemith. mas Cantata 6:30 Early Music with Denis Stevens 9:00 News 12:00 International Concert Hall BEETHOVEN: Irish Folksong Settings­ 9:05 Masterpiece Radio Theatre The Dresden State Orchestra performs Old bards in a new guise. "Far From the Madding Crowd" (Part I) by Variations and Fugue on a Theme of 7:00 Baltimore Symphony Orchestra Thomas Hardy. Mozart, Op. 132, and Rossini's great 4:00 All Things Considered Sergiu Comissiona conducts Mahler's 10:05 More Jazz "Stabat Mater." 5 30 Evening Magazine Symphony No. 3 in D minor. 2:00 Die Bibliothek Local news, weather and interviews. 9:00 News Tom Fatten presents highlights from La 6:00 Horizons 9:05 The Studs Terkel Almanac Trauiata and a Claude Bolling piece for The Black Boat People of Haiti-political Ethnomusicologist Paul Berliner talks with 2 saturday violin and jazz piano. refugees or illegal aliens? Studs about the music of Southern Africa. 3:00 Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz 6:30 Atlantic Dateline 10:05 More Jazz 6:00 Jazz Revisited-"Firsts" Bobby Short reminisces about vaudeville British steel is the topic. Some "firsts" in jazz, including the first ses­ and radio days, and takes a loving look at 7:00 Music from ISU sion of King Oliver, Buddy Rich, Bud the songs of Duke Ellington. Roar Schaad, composer, talks about his Powell and others. 4:00 Washington Week in Review music for multi-media including Concert 6:30 Jazz Waves 4:30 Agenda with Rod Neaveill Piece for Oxygen Tank, Stage Manager 6 11:00 Giant Steps Issues discussed with Bloomington and Mallets as well as A Reel Experience, wednesday Oscar Peterson is spotlighted. Schools Superintendent, Dr. George both with Gary Sudano. 12:00 Ebony Affair Stimeling. 8:00 The Clavier 6:00 Morning Edition: McLean County Contemporary requests at 436-5431. 4:45 Safety For Everyone Don White features organ music of the 7:00 Morning Edition: NPR 5:00 All Things Considered With Dr. Benton Bristol and guests. classical period. 9:00 Morningside-Jazz 6:00 Options-Vache/ Lindsay 5:00 All Things Considered MOZART: Fantasias 12:00 Midday Magazine A sound portrait including readings and 6:00 Masterpiece Radio Theatre 9:00 News 12:30 BBC Science Magazine observations of friends and scholars all "Far From the Madding Crowd" (Part II) 9:05 Earplay 1:00 Afternoon Concert recorded in the town the poet was born by Thomas Hardy. "Don't Be Cruel by Rose Tremain-An ex­ BACH: Wedding Cantata, BWV 202, and died in, Springfield. 7:00 Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra private school man is at a loss to know why "Weichel nur, betrubte Schatten" 7:00 NPR Recital Hall Emanuel Ax solos on piano in works by his wife has left him. He also cannot un­ 4:00 All Things Considered Tashi performs selections of Brahms, Berlioz, Rachmaninoff, Gutche (World derstand her demand that their son be 5:30 Evening Magazine Mozart and Peter Lieberson.
Recommended publications
  • NPR Mideast Coverage April - June 2012
    NPR Mideast Coverage April - June 2012 This report covers NPR's reporting on events and trends related to the conflict between Israel and the Palestinians during the second quarter of 2012. The report begins with an assessment of the 37 stories and interviews, covered by this review, that aired from April through June on radio shows produced by NPR. The 37 radio items is just one more than the lowest number for any quarter (in July-September 2008) during the past ten years. Over that period, NPR programs have carried an average of nearly 100 items per quarter related to Israel, the Palestinians, or both. I also reviewed 20 news stories, blogs and other items carried exclusively on NPR's website. All of the radio and website-only items covered by this review are shown on the "Israel-Palestinian coverage" page of the website. The opinions expressed in this report are mine alone. Accuracy I carefully reviewed all items for factual accuracy, with special attention to the radio stories, interviews and website postings produced by NPR staffers. NPR's coverage of the region continues to be remarkably accurate for a news organization with very tight deadlines. NPR has posted no corrections on its website for stories that originated during the April-June quarter; two corrections were posted in April concerning items dealt with in my report for the January-March quarter. I found no outright inaccuracies during the period, but I will point out two instances of misleading use of language. Freelance correspondent Sheera Frenkel reported for All Things Considered on May 8 about the status of a hunger strike among Palestinian prisoners.
    [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]
  • Radiowaves Will Be Featuring Stories About WPR and WPT's History of Innovation and Impact on Public Broadcasting Nationally
    ON AIR & ONLINE FEBRUARY 2017 Final Forte WPR at 100 Meet Alex Hall Centennial Events Internships & Fellowships Featured Photo Earlier this month, WPR's To the Best of Our Knowledge explored the relationship between love WPR Next" Initiative Explores New Program Ideas and evolution at a sold- out live show in Madison, We often get asked, "Where does WPR come up with ideas for its sponsored by the Center programs?" First and foremost, we're inspired by you, our listeners for Humans in Nature. and neighbors around the state. During our 100th year, we're looking Excerpts from the show, to create the public radio programs of the future with a new initiative which included storyteller called WPR Next. Dasha Kelly Hamilton (pictured), will be We're going to try out a few new show ideas focused on science, broadcast nationally on pop culture, life in Wisconsin, and more. You can help our producers the show later this month. develop these ideas by telling us what interests you about these topics. Sound Bites Do you love science? What interests you most ---- do you wonder about new research in genetics, life on other planets, or ice cover on Winter Pledge Drive the Great Lakes? What about pop culture? What makes a great Begins February 21 book, movie or piece of music, and who would you like to hear WPR's winter interviewed? How about life in Wisconsin? What do you want to membership drive is know about our state's culture and history? What other topics would February 21 through 25.
    [Show full text]
  • Thesis a Uses and Gratification Study of Public Radio Audiences
    THESIS A USES AND GRATIFICATION STUDY OF PUBLIC RADIO AUDIENCES Submitted by Scott D. Bluebond Speech and Theatre Arts Department In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Colorado State University Fort Collins, Colorado Spring, 1982 COLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY April 8, 1982 WE HEREBY RECOMMEND THAT THE THESIS PREPARED UNDER OUR SUPERVISION BY Scott David Bluebond ENTITLED A USES AND GRATIFICATIONS STUDY OF PUBLIC RADIO AUDIENCES BE ACCEPTED AS FULFILLING IN PART REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF Master of Arts Committee on Graduate Work ABSTRACT OF THESIS A USES AND GRATIFICATION STUDY OF PUBLIC RADIO AUDIENCES This thesis sought to find out why people listen to public radio. The uses and gratifications data gathering approach was implemented for public radio audiences. Questionnaires were sent out to 389 listener/contrib­ utors of public radio in northern Colorado. KCSU-FM in Fort Collins and KUNC-FM in Greeley agreed to provide such lists of listener/contributors. One hundred ninety-two completed questionnaires were returned and provided the sample base for the study. The respondents indicated they used public radio primarily for its news, its special programming, and/or because it is entertaining. Her/his least likely reasons for using public radio are for diversion and/or to trans­ mit culture from one generation to the next. The remain­ ing uses and gratifications categories included in the study indicate moderate reasons for using public radio. Various limitations of the study possibly tempered the results. These included the sample used and the method used to analyze the data. Conducting the research necessary for completion of this study made evident the fact that more i i i research needs to be done to improve the uses and gratifica- tions approach to audience analysis.
    [Show full text]
  • The 2018 NEA Jazz Masters Tribute Concert Honoring the 2018 National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters
    4-16 JAZZ NEA Jazz.qxp_WPAS 4/6/18 10:33 AM Page 1 The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts DAVID M. RUBENSTEIN , Chairman DEBoRAh F. RUTTER, President CONCERT HALL Monday Evening, April 16, 2018, at 8:00 The Kennedy Center and the National Endowment for the Arts present The 2018 NEA Jazz Masters Tribute Concert Honoring the 2018 National Endowment for the Arts Jazz Masters TODD BARKAN JOANNE BRACKEEN PAT METHENY DIANNE REEVES Jason Moran is the Kennedy Center Artistic Director for Jazz. This performance will be livestreamed online, and will be broadcast on Sirius XM Satellite Radio and WPFW 89.3 FM. Patrons are requested to turn off cell phones and other electronic devices during performances. The taking of photographs and the use of recording equipment are not allowed in this auditorium. 4-16 JAZZ NEA Jazz.qxp_WPAS 4/6/18 10:33 AM Page 2 THE 2018 NEA JAZZ MASTERS TRIBUTE CONCERT Hosted by JASON MORAN, Kennedy Center Artistic Director for Jazz With remarks from JANE CHU, Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts DEBORAH F. RUTTER, President of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts The 2018 NEA JAzz MASTERS Performances by NEA Jazz Master Eddie Palmieri and the Eddie Palmieri Sextet John Benitez Camilo Molina-Gaetán Jonathan Powell Ivan Renta Vicente “Little Johnny” Rivero Terri Lyne Carrington Nir Felder Sullivan Fortner James Francies Pasquale Grasso Gilad Hekselman Angélique Kidjo Christian McBride Camila Meza Cécile McLorin Salvant Antonio Sanchez Helen Sung Dan Wilson 4-16 JAZZ NEA Jazz.qxp_WPAS 4/6/18
    [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]
  • Chenjerai Kumanyika
    Updated on January 14, 2019 Chenjerai Kumanyika Assistant professor Department of Journalism and Media Studies School of Communication and Information 4 Huntington Street New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901 [email protected] EDUCATION Ph.D., Department of Mass Communications, The Pennsylvania State University, May 2013 Dissertation: Producing the Cause: Branded Social Justice, Hip-Hop and the Promotional Public Sphere. Dissertation co-chairs: Matthew McAllister and C. Michael Elavsky B.A., The Pennsylvania State University, Major: African-African American Studies, May 1995 ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS Assistant professor, Department of Journalism and Media Studies, fall 2017-present Department of Journalism and Media Studies, Associate member, Ph.D. faculty, School of Communication & Information, fall 2017-present Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey Assistant professor, summer 2013-summer 2017 Department of Communication Studies, College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities, Clemson University Instructor, summer 2011-fall 2012 Department of Communication Arts and Sciences, College of Communications, The Pennsylvania State University Co-instructor, fall 2008-spring 2013 Department of Sociology and Criminology, College of Liberal Arts The Pennsylvania State University Graduate teaching assistant, fall 2008-spring 2010 Department of Communication Arts and Sciences, College of Communications The Pennsylvania State University PRIZES, AWARDS, FELLOWSHIPS George Foster Peabody Award, May 2018 For “The Raid,” an episode of the podcast “Uncivil,” for which I was co-creator, co-executive producer, co-producer, and co-host. The award was one of 30 Peabody awards for video or audio storytelling given in 2018 from among about 1,200 electronic media entries across news, entertainment, documentary, children’s, and web-interactive programming.
    [Show full text]
  • Communitas, Vol. 1, No. 5
    COMMUNITAS Official PH,hlication of the Bard ColIe:;c Communit~.. ================= ======- ._=.------- Vol. 1, No.5 ANNANDALE-ON-HUDSON, NEW YORK Resignations Point Divisional Panels, Case Speech Mark Out EPC Crisis ALBEE SOCIAL, May 11 - After quite a bit of introspective analysis. Bard's Sucessful Student Conference the top blew off EPC's lid. The sen­ ---------- - ...• ---.--- . _--_._---_.. ---_ .. _.. timent of EPC Chairman Louise Odes and Science division repre­ Student's' Conference sentative George Waltuch that EPC Case's Address To Students Bard Arts Festival should resign en masse was punctu­ Statistics ated by notification of their resigna­ Schools Represented 32 tions. Dan Klublock who became Stresses Need Of Education Students ... ....... ............... .. ... ....... ..... 52 In New York May 17 President James H. Case Jr. opened the Admission Day proceedings An arts festival featuring work in acting·-chairman in the course of Teachers 7 events, suggested that the fate 01 by speaking on the subject "What Good Is A College Education?" At Parents 22 music, drama, dance and art by Bard students, will be presented by this academic body be brought to the start he warned us that the question was unanswerable. It would be Total Guests 81 the YM-YWHA, Lexington Avenue the attention of the Community and equally impossible to say what values health, love and life itself contain. Students came from the following' at 92nd Street, New York, on Mon­ to let the decision rest with Con­ But if we cannot define the worth of a college education, we can at least E'astern States; Massachusetts, Con­ day.
    [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]
  • Zzcalifornia Aconservatory
    a conservatory california zz EDITION 14.0 2014 – 2015 general catalog California Jazz Conservatory Academic Calendar 2014 – 2015* Spring Semester 2014 Auditions for Spring 2014 By Appointment Academic and Administrative Holiday Jan 20 First Day of Spring Instruction Jan 21 Last Day to Add / Drop a Class Jan 31 Academic and Administrative Holiday Feb 17 Spring Recess March 24 – March 30 Auditions for Fall 2014 By Appointment Last Day of Instruction May 11 Final Examinations and Juries May 12 – 16 Commencement May 17 Fall 2014 Enrollment Deposit Due On or before June 1 Fall 2014 Registration On or before August 4 Fall Semester 2014 Auditions for Fall 2014 By Appointment New Student Orientation Aug 14 First Day of Fall Instruction Aug 18 Academic and Administrative Holiday Sept 1 Last Day to Add/Drop a Class Sept 2 Academic and Administrative Holiday Nov 24 – Nov 30 CJC academic calendar Spring 2015 Enrollment Deposit Due On or before Dec 1 Spring 2015 Registration Jan 5 – 9 Last Day of Instruction Dec 7 Final Examinations and Juries Dec 8 – 14 Commencement Dec 20 Winter Recess Dec 15 – Jan 19 Spring Semester 2015 Auditions for Spring 2015 By Appointment Academic and Administrative Holiday Jan 19 First Day of Spring Instruction Jan 20 Last Day to Add / Drop a Class Feb 3 Academic and Administrative Holiday Feb 16 Spring Recess March 23 – March 29 Auditions for Fall 2015 By Appointment Last Day of Instruction May 10 Final Examinations and Juries May 11 – 15 Commencement May 16 A Z Z C J O N A S Fall 2015 Enrollment Deposit Due On or before June 1 I E Fall 2015 Registration August 3 – 7 N R R V O A D F S T E E I V * Please note: Edition 14 of the CJC 2014–2015 General Catalog C O L E N L R O E A I covers the time period of July 15, 2014 – July 14, 2015.
    [Show full text]
  • Instead Draws Upon a Much More Generic Sort of Free-Jazz Tenor
    1 Funding for the Smithsonian Jazz Oral History Program NEA Jazz Master interview was provided by the National Endowment for the Arts. MARIAN McPARTLAND NEA Jazz Master (2000) Interviewee: Marian McPartland (March 20, 1918 – August 20, 2013) Interviewer: James Williams (March 8, 1951- July 20, 2004) Date: January 3–4, 1997, and May 26, 1998 Repository: Archives Center, National Museum of American History Description: Transcript, 178 pp. WILLIAMS: Today is January 3rd, nineteen hundred and ninety-seven, and we’re in the home of Marian McPartland in Port Washington, New York. This is an interview for the Smithsonian Institute Jazz Oral History Program. My name is James Williams, and Matt Watson is our sound engineer. All right, Marian, thank you very much for participating in this project, and for the record . McPARTLAND: Delighted. WILLIAMS: Great. And, for the record, would you please state your given name, date of birth, and your place of birth. McPARTLAND: Oh, God!, you have to have that. That’s terrible. WILLIAMS: [laughs] McPARTLAND: Margaret Marian McPartland. March 20th, 1918. There. Just don’t spread it around. Oh, and place of birth. Slough, Buckinghamshire, England. For additional information contact the Archives Center at 202.633.3270 or [email protected] 2 WILLIAMS: OK, so I’d like to, as we get some of your information for early childhood and family history, I’d like to have for the record as well the name of your parents and siblings and name, the number of siblings for that matter, and your location within the family chronologically. Let’s start with the names of your parents.
    [Show full text]
  • Downloaded PDF File of the Original First-Edi- Pete Extracted More Music from the Song Form of the Chart That Adds Refreshing Contrast
    DECEMBER 2016 VOLUME 83 / NUMBER 12 President Kevin Maher Publisher Frank Alkyer Editor Bobby Reed Managing Editor Brian Zimmerman Contributing Editor Ed Enright Creative Director ŽanetaÎuntová Design Assistant Markus Stuckey Circulation Manager Kevin R. Maher Assistant to the Publisher Sue Mahal Bookkeeper Evelyn Oakes Editorial Intern Izzy Yellen ADVERTISING SALES Record Companies & Schools Jennifer Ruban-Gentile 630-941-2030 [email protected] Musical Instruments & East Coast Schools Ritche Deraney 201-445-6260 [email protected] OFFICES 102 N. Haven Road, Elmhurst, IL 60126–2970 630-941-2030 / Fax: 630-941-3210 http://downbeat.com [email protected] CUSTOMER SERVICE 877-904-5299 / [email protected] CONTRIBUTORS Senior Contributors: Michael Bourne, Aaron Cohen, Howard Mandel, John McDonough Atlanta: Jon Ross; Austin: Kevin Whitehead; Boston: Fred Bouchard, Frank- John Hadley; Chicago: John Corbett, Alain Drouot, Michael Jackson, Peter Margasak, Bill Meyer, Mitch Myers, Paul Natkin, Howard Reich; Denver: Norman Provizer; Indiana: Mark Sheldon; Iowa: Will Smith; Los Angeles: Earl Gibson, Todd Jenkins, Kirk Silsbee, Chris Walker, Joe Woodard; Michigan: John Ephland; Minneapolis: Robin James; Nashville: Bob Doerschuk; New Orleans: Erika Goldring, David Kunian, Jennifer Odell; New York: Alan Bergman, Herb Boyd, Bill Douthart, Ira Gitler, Eugene Gologursky, Norm Harris, D.D. Jackson, Jimmy Katz, Jim Macnie, Ken Micallef, Dan Ouellette, Ted Panken, Richard Seidel, Tom Staudter, Jack Vartoogian, Michael Weintrob; North Carolina: Robin
    [Show full text]