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A reader’s companion to KRCB Television 22 & Radio 91 www.krcb.org Volume 9 - No. 2 February 2010

Masterpiece Classic: Emma

DOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISING AND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS Contents Bag your greens with us! KRCB News …3 - 4 Television Articles …5 - 11 Radio Articles …12 - 15, 18 - 19 Radio Schedule …16 - 17 Membership … 20 TV Daytime Listings … 21 Television Listings … 22 - 29 Sponsors … 22 - 23 Business Spotlight … 30

Board of Directors Patrick Campbell Steve DeLap Nancy Dobbs KRCB’s eco-friendly produce bags eliminate Paul Ginsburg the need for wasteful (and in some places, John Kramer Carol Libarle outlawed) plastic bags. Our bags are made Josué López of unbleached, natural cotton, and recycled Margaret McCarthy material, and made by fair trade vendors. Eric McHenry Available now in two sizes – call Joel at Michael R. Musson 707-584-2018. Harry Rubins Rafael Rivero David Stare Dr. Larry Slater Gordon Stewart KRCB’s Board and Community Action On KRCB Council meetings are open Digital Channel 22.2 to the public. Call the Full schedule at station for details on time krcb.org/programming-schedules and location. President & CEO Create™ TV’s instructional programs provide Nancy Dobbs Chief Operations Officer expert advice on cooking, arts & crafts, Larry Stratton gardening, home improvement, and travel. Radio Program Director Tune in and be inspired to taste, grow, imagine, Robin Pressman explore, and live more fully. TV Broadcast Operations Stan Marvin News Department Bruce Robinson

Cover – Masterpiece Classics: Emma- pg 28

2 in the news Oh, the Places You’ve Been! What stands out when you think of your most memorable past vacations? An off-the-beaten track destination? A unique tour or adventure? A deserted tropical beach? An elegant urban hotel? A mountain hide-away with majestic views? A hole-in-the-wall café with fabulous food? What ever it was, the KRCB Travel, Leisure & Wine Auction wants to hear from you! You’re invited to go online to krcb.org/traveltalk and tell us about your favorite travel, leisure and wine experiences. It’s easy and fun! If you have pictures from your trip, you are also welcome to post them on our site. The KRCB Auction team will be reviewing your comments, and any accommodations, activities or wineries that you recom- mend will be contacted and invited to participate in our events for your bidding pleasure! It’s a new way to be a part of our upcoming online and televised auctions:

Travel, Leisure & Wine Auction, to be broadcast Friday April 23 through Sunday April 25 and Friday April 30 through Sunday May 2. And, just for fun, on Friday June 18 through Sunday June 20, we’ll have another online and televised segment of this very popular auction!

Radio 91 Television 22 Broadcasting on Comcast Cable and AT&T 91.1 and 90.9 FM U-Verse-TV, Channel 22. Comcast Cable 961 DISH and DirecTV Satellite, Channel 22. Streaming & podcasting KR CB.OR G Over the air-digital, at krcb.org Channel 22.1, 22.2, 22.3. KRCB’s Open Air is printed monthly by GPM and is available to current members by KRCB Television & Radio, 5850 Labath Avenue, Rohnert Park, CA 94928 707-584-2000 – krcb.org Bruce Robinson, Editor - Deena “Connie” Berens, Designer 3 KRCB in the community

Seneca Falls documentary debuts March is Women’s History Month (thanks to the Santa Rosa-based National Women’s History Project) and KRCB is delighted to introduce a great new program with which to celebrate. Louise Vance, an independent film producer from Sebastopol, has completed a fantastic documentary, Seneca Falls, tracing the journey of nine Bay Area young women as they traveled to Seneca Falls, New York in the summer of 1998. They were celebrating the 150th anniversary of the first women’s rights convention, held in that upstate New York town. On Saturday, February 27, KRCB will join with the Analy Honor Choir for a benefit screening of Seneca Falls at Analy High School in Sebastopol at 7:30 pm. Proceeds will support both the Honor Choir’s upcoming trip to Carnegie Hall and producer Vance’s efforts to support public screen- ings and local broadcasts of the film across the country. For tickets and further information on the screening go to www.analychoir.org.

Dear Member, Over the past several months you have seen KRCB increasingly using the expression “public media” rather than “public broadcasting.” I thought you might be curious what that shift signified. As we have discussed in these pages over the past two years, KRCB has a broad definition of our job in the community. Our mission statement captures the commitment most clearly: “In order to encourage full participation in society and community, KRCB provides educational, informational, and cultural telecommunications services in partner- ship with our community.” Our goal is not simply to provide the best possible television and radio service, but to use all the telecommunications tools available to us to serve the community. So you will see an increasing amount of content and opportunity to communicate and discuss at our web site, krcb.org. We will welcome your feedback as this service develops. And because we are working “in partnership with our community,” you will find us very present outside of our studios, working with our valuable community colleagues to focus attention, stimulate discus- sion, and encourage engagement across a wide range of issues and concerns. So, “public media” encompasses all the tools available to us to carry out that very ambitious mission statement. And, as I always say, your loyal and generous support makes it possible for KRCB to be one of the most forward looking stations in the nation. Thanks a million.

Nancy Dobbs President and CEO 4 : What’s the Right Thing to Do? Is torture ever justified? Would you steal a drug your child needs to survive? Is it sometimes wrong to tell the truth? How much is one human life worth? What do you think and why? Take a front seat for the first course Harvard has ever made available to everyone on the air. Session Five: Libertarians believe the ideal state is a society with minimal governmental interference. Profes- sor Michael Sandel introduces Robert Nozick, a libertar- ian philosopher, who argues that individuals have the fundamental right to choose how they want to live their own lives. Government shouldn’t have the power to enact laws that protect people from themselves (seat belt laws), to enact laws that force a moral value on society, or enact laws that redistribute income from the rich to the poor. Session Six: Libertarian philosopher Robert Nozick makes the case that taxing the wealthy—to pay for housing, health care, and education for the poor—is a form of coer- cion. Students first discuss the arguments in favor of redistributive taxation. If you live in a society that has a system of progressive taxation, aren’t you obligated to pay your taxes? Don’t the poor need and deserve the social services they receive? And isn’t wealth often achieved through sheer luck or family fortune? Monday, February 1 at 9 pm

Session Seven: John Locke is both a supporter and detractor of the theory of Libertarianism. Locke argues that in the ‘state of nature’, before any political structure has been established, every human has certain natural rights to life, liberty—and property. How- ever, once we agree to enter into society, we are consenting to being governed by a system of laws. And so, Locke argues, even though government is charged with looking after one’s individual rights, it is the majority that defines those rights. Session Eight: John Locke on the issue of taxation and consent. How does John Locke square away the conflict between 1) his belief that individuals have an unalienable right to life, liberty, and property and 2) that government ‘through majority rule’ can tax individuals without their consent? Doesn’t that amount to taking an individual’s property without his/ her consent? Monday, February 8 at 9 pm

Session Nine: During the Civil War, men were conscripted to fight in the war—but draftees were allowed to pay hired substitutes to fight in their place. Professor Sandel asks students: was this policy an example of free-market exchange? Or was it a form of coercion, because the lower class surely had more of a financial incentive to serve? This leads to a class- room debate about the contemporary questions surrounding war and conscription. Session Ten: Professor Sandel applies the issue of free-market exchange to a contempo- rary and controversial new area: reproductive rights. Sandel describes bizarre examples of the modern-day ‘business’ of sperm and egg donation. Sandel then takes the debate a step further, using the famous legal case of “Baby M,” which raised the question of ‘who owns a baby’? Mary Beth Whitehead signed a contract with a New Jersey couple in the mid-eighties, agreeing to be their surrogate mother, in exchange for a large fee. But 24 hours after giving (continued on next page 5 birth, Whitehead decided she wanted to keep the child and the case went to court. Students discuss the morality of selling human life, the legal issues surrounding consent and contracts, and the power of maternal rights. Monday, February 15 at 9 pm

Session Eleven: Professor Sandel introduces Immanuel Kant—one of the most challenging and difficult thinkers in his course. Kant believes we, as individuals, are sacred and the bearer of rights, but not because we own ourselves. Rather, it is our capacity to reason and choose freely that makes us unique, that sets us apart from mere animals. And when we act out of duty (doing something because it is right) only then do our actions have moral worth. Session Twelve: Immanuel Kant says that in so far as our actions have moral worth, what confers moral worth is precisely our capacity to rise above self-interest and inclination and to act out of duty. Sandel tells the true story of a 13-year old boy who won a spelling bee contest, but then admitted to the judges that he had, in fact, misspelled the final word. Using this story and others, Sandel explains Kant’s test for determining whether an action is morally right: when making a decision, imagine if the moral principle behind your actions became a universal law that everyone had to live by. Would that principle, as a universal law, benefit everyone? Monday, February 22 at 9 pm

Join Burt Wolf on a 2010 European River Cruise and help support KRCB Public Media

This is an opportunity for a limited number of people to travel this summer with Burt Wolf, host of Travels & Traditions, see the sights and help support KRCB. Information is available at krcb.org/burt-wolf or call 1-888-365-3443. 6 KRCB TV 22 honors Black History Month Locked Out: The Fall of Massive Resistence Marking the 50th anniversary of the reopening of public schools in Virginia and the historic 1959 fall of Massive Resistance, the Community Idea Stations. This film profiles the tragedies and triumphs of the children of Virginia who found themselves on the front lines of cultural war that desegregated Virginia Public schools and forever altered American history. Tuesday, February 9 at 9 pm American Masters: Sam Cooke: Crossing Over Sam Cooke put the spirit of the Black church into popu- lar music—creating a new sound and setting into motion a chain of events that forever altered the course of popular music and race relations in America. With “You Send Me” in 1957, Cooke became the first African-American artist to reach #1 on both the R&B and the pop charts. It was groundbreaking. It was also risky for this young gospel performer to alienate his fans by embracing “the devil’s music”—but he proved, with his pop/gospel hybrid, that it was, indeed, possible to win over white teenage listeners and keep his faithful church followers intact. Wednesday, February 10 at 8 pm An Evening with Smokey Robinson This program provides an inside look into the life and career of Motown legend Smokey Robinson. Taped at Northwestern University Law School’s Thorne Auditorium, An Evening With Smokey Robinson is hosted by veteran jour- nalist Gwen Ifill and features musical tributes from artists Teena Marie, Howard Hewett and Musiq Soulchild. Wednesday, February 10 at 9 pm Great Performances: Passing Strange Passing Strange is the story of a young African- American man on a journey of escape, exploration and self-discovery. Recorded at of its Broadway run in July, 2008, by Spike Lee, the musical is the semi- autobiographical story of a young black man who leaves behind his middle-class, church-ruled upbringing in mid-70s Los Angeles to travel to Europe in search of his artistic and personal identity, or what he calls “the real.” There he finds he can exploit his “South Central” persona, playing the cool black expatriate- musician until he learns complexity and hypocrisy are not limited to middle-class African-American life, and only love is truly more than real. 7 Wednesday, February 17 at 8 pm For Love of Liberty: The Story of America’s Black Patriots This PBS miniseries uses letters, diaries, speeches, journalistic accounts, historical text, and military records to document and acknowledge the sacrifices and accomplishments of African-American service men and women since the earliest days of the republic. The story spans the Revolution to Iraq and examines why, despite enormous injustice, these heroic men and women fought so valiantly for freedoms they themselves did not enjoy. Friday, February 19 & 26 at 9 pm Faugourg Treme: The Untold Story of Black New Orleans New Orleans newspaperman Lolis Eric Elie takes view- ers on a tour of the city in what becomes a reflection on the relevance of history folded into a love letter to his storied neighborhood, Faubourg Treme. Arguably the old- est black neighborhood in America and the birthplace of jazz, Faubourg Treme was home to the largest community of free black people in the Deep South during slavery and a hotbed of political ferment. Here, black and white, free and enslaved, rich and poor cohabitated, collaborated and clashed to create America’s first civil rights movement and a unique American culture. This program is a tale of heartbreak, hope and resiliency—all set to a soundtrack of New Orlean’s famous music. Tuesday, February 23 at 9 pm Great Performances: Harlem in Montmartre After peace was signed at Versailles, many black Ameri- the cans remained in Europe PetAlUMA rather than return to the brutal segregation and racism of America. Over the next two AP ReAdeostR’s Monthly decades, they created an expa- triate community of musicians, entertainers and entrepreneurs, primarily congregating in Paris’s hilly Montmartre neighbor- A READER’S hood. Some achieved enduring fame, while others have faded into history. MONTHLY Wednesday, February 24 at 8 pm GUIDE TO Ragtime Cabaret NORTH BAY Just before the turn of the 20th century, a unique musical form emerged in the United States. As African, European, and ARTS AND American cultures blended, the first truly American musi- EVENTS cal genre was born, predating jazz. For the next 20 years, an improvised music popular in the red light districts and saloons of cities like St. Louis and New Orleans gradually grew into a on newsstands sophisticated, composed style —“ragtime.” While the heyday and at of ragtime was short-lived, it is America’s own music, and it petalumapost. could not have happened anywhere else at any other time in history. Wednesday, February 24 at 9:30 pm com 8 Student to Citizen Series Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People This groundbreaking documentary dissects a slanderous aspect of cinematic history that has run virtually unchal- lenged from the earliest days of silent film to today’s biggest Hollywood blockbusters. Featuring acclaimed author Dr. Jack Shaheen, the film explores a long line of degrading images of Arabs—from Bedouin bandits and submissive maidens to sinister sheikhs and gun-wielding “terrorists”— along the way offering devastating insights into the origin of these stereotypic images, their development at key points in U.S. history, and why they matter so much today. Shaheen shows how the persistence of these images over time has served to naturalize prejudicial attitudes toward Arabs and Arabic culture, in the process reinforcing a narrow view of individual Arabs and the effects of specific US domestic and international policies on their lives. By inspiring critical thinking about the social, political, and basic human consequences of leaving these Hollywood caricatures unexamined, the film challenges viewers to recognize the urgent need for counter-narratives that do justice to the diversity and humanity of Arab people and the reality and richness of Arab history and culture. Tuesday, February 9 at 10 pm

9 What’s new on Television 22 Knit and Crochet Now! The entertaining Knit & Crochet Now! features the top designers and experts in the field. In each episode, host Bret Bara, editor of Crochet Today magazine, introduces a rotating cast of talented and experienced needle artists, each of whom demonstrates popular techniques for creating lace, purses, patterns, felting, and many other items. Field pieces also highlight the latest industry news, the best knitting and crochet blogs, and interviews with those on the cutting edge of color and apparel design. Wednesdays at 10 am Ideas in Action with Jim Glassman From the producers of Think Tank with Ben Wattenburg, comes this new half-hour weekly series on ideas and their consequences. Each edition of Ideas in Action presents a discussion of trends, conditions, and ideas behind the week’s headlines. In the tradition of the long-running Think Tank, the program limits itself to one topic per half-hour edition in order to go deeper into that subject than the average TV show. Viewers engage with a diverse group of economists, historians, anthropologists, political scientists, demogra- phers, and social philosophers, as well as authorities from many other disciplines. Sundays at 8 am Wild Gardens Bringing the viewer to lush, lavish environs in a unique Macro-video style, Wild Gardens is a series about wildflowers. It starts off in beautiful deserts and travels to majestic foothill and mountain areas, a nature walk with a bee’s eye view, giving the audience an awareness of these beautiful landscapes up close and personal. This program is entertaining, educational, and environmentally relevant. Sundays at 5 pm (begins February 21)

Climate One returns to KRCB Television on Sunday, Feb 28 at 11 am The Climate One team traveled to the recent UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen to put together a panel of several of the individuals critical to the conference discussion, including California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Huang Ming, for- mer petroleum engineer turned solar entrepreneur who is now one of China’s wealthiest men. Also interviewed is Rajendra Pachauri, Chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and Caio Koch-Wesser, Vice Chair of Deutsche Bank. Tune in. Sunday, February 28 at 11 am 10 New Brit Com lineup on Television 22 After You’ve Gone Jack-of-all-trades Jimmy Venables is probably the only man in Britain who gets divorced and ends up with his mother-in-law. That’s not how he planned it, but since when does life go according to plan? When his ex-wife volunteers to go to East Africa to help the victims of a natural disaster, weekend-dad Jimmy agrees to take care of their two teenage kids full-time in an attempt to win her back. Tuesdays at 7 pm

Last of the SummerWine moves to Wednesdays at 7 pm As Time Goes By moves to Thursdays at 7 pm

To the Manor Born As beneficiary of Grantleigh Manor, the snobbish Lady Forbes-Hamilton becomes a happy widower upon the death of her husband. But in the face of her late husband’s creditors, bank, and the government, she can no longer afford to maintain the family’s hold on the estate. Reluctantly, she sees it auctioned to Richard De Vere (formerly Bedrich Polouvicka), a mil- lionaire bachelor of Czechoslovakian extraction. Fridays at 7 pm

SciGirls Sci Girls is a new PBS Kids series for tween girls that showcases bright, curious girls putting science and engineering to work. Each half-hour episode follows a different group of middle-school girls as they answer real-life questions and make unexpected discoveries. Recurring animated characters, Izzie and Jake, embark on their own adventures and call on the SciGirls for help. Fridays at 4 pm (begins February 12) PBS Kids program lineup Weekdays Saturdays 7:00 Sesame Street 7:00 Los Niños en Su Casa-SP 8.00 Dragon Tales 7:30 Dragon Tales-SP 8:30 Curious George 8:00 Clifford-SP 9:00 Sid the Science Kid 8:30 Maya & Miguel-SP 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 9:00 Angelina Ballerina 2:30 Cyberchase 9:30 Thomas & Friends 3:00 Arthur 10:00 Bob The Builder 3:30 WordGirl 10:30 Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood 4:00 Fetch! - Mon - Th 11:00 A Place of Our Own SciGirls - Fri 4:30 The Electric Company SciGirls 11 Honoring Black History Month Memories of the Movement The years of the Civil Rights Movement are counted among the most volatile yet vibrant in American history. The people and events that shaped this period range from charismatic preach- ers and actors to students and domestic workers. To celebrate the courage, conviction and commit- ment of ordinary people who made extraordinary contributions to social progress in America, Tavis Smiley presents Memories of the Movement: A Black History Month Special. This program shares some of the poignant and powerful memories of some of the men and women who served on its front lines or played vital roles behind the scenes, including Rev. Jesse Jackson, Ruby Dee, Dick Gregory and Dr. Julia Hare. For each person, those years were life changing. For America, it was a time that redirected history. Hear the two parts of Memories of the Movement on consecutive Tuesday evenings this month, February 12 and 19 at 7 pm each night. Women of the Harlem Renaissance Scholar and co-founder of the NAACP, W.E.B. Du Bois argued that education, art, and culture could be powerful weapons for social change. He launched The Crisis, a magazine that played a major role in the Black Renaissance of the 1920s, giving voice to such young writers as Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston. But it was the dedicated Jessie Fauset, working in DuBois’ shadow, who managed The Crisis and shaped its lit- erary style. She is remembered today not only as a poet and novelist, but also as the midwife of the Harlem Renaissance. Women of the Harlem Renaissance spotlights the lives and artistry of women like Fauset who shaped and nurtured black culture in Jazz Age Harlem. Broadway’s Carol Woods joins The Jim Cullum Jazz Band on Riverwalk Jazz to celebrate a largely unsung group of black women whose artistry was pivotal to the Harlem Renaissance. Tuesday, February 23 at 7 pm Jessie Fauset

Folk Music Calendar Live and Online KRCB 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.

12 February is full of (radio) drama February 6 – Relativity by Medley, with Deidrie Henry, Judyann Elder, James Pickens, Jr., Jason Ritter, Terrell Tilford, Lorraine Toussaint Kalima, a brilliant young African-American biogeneticist, finds her cutting-edge research bringing her into ideological conflict with her mother, Claire, who fervently believes that the pig- ment melanin makes African-Americans genetically superior. A fascinating exploration of the divide between the methodologies of Western science and more faith-based analyses of our biologi- cal blueprints. February 13 – Beloved Clara, compiled by Lucy Parham, with Rosalind Ayres, Martin Jarvis, Lucy Parham The intense relationships between Robert Schumann, his wife Clara, and Johannes Brahms are brought to vivid life through music and excerpts from their passionate writings. With the arrival of the young, dynamic Brahms into their household, the Schumanns’ fragile marriage is threatened by the deepening bond between Clara and their gifted guest. February 20 – The Great Tennessee Monkey Trial, by Peter Goodchild, with Edward As- ner, Mike Farrell, Sharon Gless, James Gleason, Rob Nagle, Robert Pescovitz Taken from the transcripts of the Scopes Trial, a battle over the right to teach evolution in public school, plays out in a small-town Tennessee courtroom in 1925, setting the stage for the continuing debates over the separation of Church and State in a democratic society. February 27 – Ceremonies in Dark Old Men, by Lonne Elder III, with Rocky Carroll, John Cothran, Jr., Brandon Dirden, Jason Dirden, Charlie Robinson, Glynn Turman The portrait of a Harlem family that dreams of a better life, but pursues it in tragic ways, Ceremonies opened the door for new generation of African-American playwrights, August Wilson among them. The Play’s the Thing from LA Theater Works, Saturdays at 6 pm and midnight. Always something new on Outbeat Salon February 7 – Looking for love? Sheridan Gold and Dianna Grayer delve into a dating adventure, sharing the wishes and desires of single LGBT folks on air. You just might be living proof that you can find the love of your life in this new year! February 14 – Our newest Outbeat programmer, musician Sun Bell, brings us GLBT music from around the world on The Sunnyside. This month, as the date requires, it's music of romance. February 21 – Outbeat Collage - Out in the Arts. Hosts Gary Carnivele and Mark Prell talk about the documentary Queer Icon: The Cult of Bette Davis (just released on DVD) with its Bay Area filmmakers and Scott O'Brien, a local Hollywood biographer who appears in the film. They will also feature LGBT music that received 2009 OutMusic Awards. Plus, the Outbeat News with Joel Bellagio and the Arts and Entertainment Calendar, a round-up of local LGBT happenings. February 28 – On Outbeat Now! Joel Bellagio and Jeff Basham cover LGBT history including how it is becoming more visible, and examine how teachers might use that history in conjunction with this year's first "Harvey Milk Day" in California. On Outbeat Youth, Greg Miraglia features the Spectrum LGBT Center and their new facility in Marin County. Sundays at 8 pm 13 Literary Wednesdays on Radio 91 Find romance between, not under, the covers onWord by Word Valentine’s Day is much more than greeting cards, champagne and chocolates—it’s romance, love, and sensuality. This month, Word By Word host Gil Mansergh has conversa- tions with writers of romance novels, lotion and potion cook books, and sensual escape travel guides for a decidedly different, (but tasteful), hour-long investigation on ways to make the first Valentines Day of the new decade a lot more interesting for your partner and yourself. Wednesday, February 3 at 7 pm Redwood Writers talk Redwood Writers, the local branch of the California Writers Club, includes many of the emerging writers in the area. The organization, open to all writers, meets monthly and spon- sors workshops, conferences, writing classes, and seminars. In addition, writers are encour- aged to seek ways to publish and market their work. On a special edition of A Novel Idea this month, host Rosemary Manchester, will talk with members of the Redwood Writers about their writing and discuss their published work, Wednesday evening, February 10, at 7 pm. Laureate! Laureate! Laureate! On this month’s WordTemple, Katherine Hastings features three poets laureate: Carol Muske Dukes, poet laureate for the State of California; Albert Flynn DeSilver, Marin County’s poet laureate; and Gwynn O’Gara, the new poet laureate for Sonoma County. Carol Muske-Dukes is the author of seven books of poetry, most recently Sparrow, a National Book Award finalist pub- lished by Random House. She is also the author of four novels including Channeling Mark Twain (Random House) and her work is anthologized widely. Albert Flynn DeSilver is Marin County’s first poet laureate. His poet laureate project includes the creation of, along with artist Todd Pickering, “The Poetry Chair,” an armchair made out of poetry books that he takes around the county hosting readings and writing workshops. DeSilver’s poetry collections include Letters to Early Street and Walking Tooth & Cloud. Gwynn O’Gara is Sonoma County’s sixth poet laureate. A teacher with California Poets in the Schools, she is the author of three chapbooks of poetry, Winter at Green Haven, Fixer Upper, and Snake Woman Poems (Beatitude Press). Wednesday, Feb. 17 at 7 pm

YOU are our Valentine ~ and we love your continuing support!

14 Harmonia: Early Music on Sunday Mornings February 7 – Monteverdi’s Selva morale e spirituale, 1641 Claudio Monteverdi’s monumental collection of sacred music, Selva morale e spirituale, will be explored on Harmonia this week with performances by Cantus Cölln and Concerto Palatino. The ensemble Baroque Nouveau will perform from their recent release of Rameau’s complete Pièces de clavecin en concerts. February 14 – Valentine’s Special: Cupid, Love, and the Baroque Harmonia explores Cupid, a classic symbol of love and Valentine’s Day, including music from France, Italy, England, and Latin America. Harpsichordist Concerto Palatino Elisabeth Wright performs in a featured release entitled Flores de Musica. February 21 – The Lute Books of Francesco Spinacino Harmonia explores the first printed music for the lute, Francesco Spinacino’s Intabulatura de lauto of 1507. Spinacino’s life in brief, lute settings of popular chansons, and the story behind the last surviving copies of his lute books are all on the docket…plus a recent release by the Holland Baroque Society in a program of music by Georg Muffat. February 28 – Late Medieval Songs from Cyprus Harmonia looks at excerpts from a manuscript of late-medieval French songs copied on the island of Cyprus during the first half of the 15th century. Ensemble La Morra’s recent exploration of this repertoire on the Ramée label is featured alongside a recent release of 17th Century French and Italian music entitled Musique pour Mazarin! Sundays at 9 am An All-American Symphony broadcast Joanne Falletta, music director of the Buffalo Philharmonic and the Virginia Symphony, leads the Santa Rosa symphony in an all-American program, celebrating composer Elliott Carter’s 101st year with his Holiday Overture. Michael Ludwig is the guest soloist in John Corigliano’s Academy Award winning Red Violin Concerto. Rounding out the program is Samuel Barber’s Symphony No. 1 and Aaron Copeland’s El Salón México. Sunday, February 7 at noon

A musical menagerie on Flashback This month’s Flashback airs on February 2, known to all as Groundhog’s Day. So how could we not honor the occasion with a musical selection from the band that shares that name? From there, it’s a short step to an hour comprised entirely of bands that share names with animals. So in addition to The Groundhogs, you can expect to hear from Hot Tuna, Rhinoceros, Crazy Horse, Steppenwolf, the Turtles—even such zoological oddities as the rarely heard Frumious Band- ersnatch. They’re all coming your way on Flashback, Tuesday Feb. 2 at 7 pm. 15 Public Radio for Sonoma County & HEAR the North Bay at 91.1 & 90.9 FM IT Shaded programs are created and produced at KRCB ON

Office: 707-584-2000 Studio: 707-584-2020 KRCB MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

5:00 DOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISING 5:30 KRCB OVERNIGHTAND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS 6:00 6:30 MORNING EDITION - NPR NEWS (KRCB host Lizzie Hannon) 7:00 KRCB features: NORTH BAY REPORT at 6:06 & 8:06 am Second Row Center with David Templeton, Wednesday, 6:35 and 8:35 am 7:30 Reel Time Film Review with Diane McCurdy or 8:00 Eliza at the Movies with Eliza Hemenway -Thursday at 8:35 am 8:30 Another Voice with Susan Swartz - Friday at 6:35, 8:35 am & at 6:45 pm 9:00 SONOMA SPOTLIGHT: Five minutes on local events and issues with Roland Jacopetti 9:30 10:00 PERFORMANCE TODAY with Fred Child Classical music magazine offering live concert performances 10:30 and interviews with distinguished artists and composers 11:00 11:04 EARTH & SKY 11:30 12:00 12:30 MIDDAY CLASSICS 1:00 with Julie Amacher, Lynn Warfel and Mindy Ratner 1:30 2:00 2:30 3:00 3:30 DEMOCRACY NOW! with Amy Goodman 4:00 4:30 FRESH AIR with Terry Gross 5:00 5:30 ALL THINGS CONSIDERED - NPR NEWS (KRCB host Mark Prell) 6:00 North Bay Report with Bruce Robinson - daily at 5:30 pm Jim Hightower Report - daily at 6:30 pm 6:30 7:00 WORD BY WORD E-TOWN FLASHBACK A NOVEL IDEA 7:30 BLACK CLIMATE ONE Live folk/rock HISTORY MONTH WORDTEMPLE POETRY 8:00 KEEP UP YER ARTS YOUR AVERAGE FREIGHT TRAIN 8:30 SOMETHING ABALONE COMPLETELY CONNECTIONS BOOGIE 9:00 Johnny DIFFERENT Doug Jayne & Bill Frater ON THE 9:30 Bazzano FIDDLIN’ ZONE Roland Jacopetti Alegra Broughton ROAD AGAIN Gus Garelick Linda Seabright 10:00 RARE & WELL DONE CROSSING LEFT OF KALEIDOSCOPE 10:30 Jeffrey Weissman BORDERS THE DIAL Jan Stephens 11:00 Doug Gosling, Josh Drake, PERCUSSION 11:30 MINDY’S MIX Lawrence Alberti, & Josh Staples & DISCUSSION Mindy Berrett Amy Contardi Preston Reyes Jim Laveroni 12:00 DEMOCRACY NOW! with Amy Goodman 1:00 FRESH AIR with Terry Gross 2:00 KRCB OVERNIGHT RADIO FREE SONOMA 16 Weekly doubles on E-Town Feb 1: Imogen Heap & Gregory Alan Isakov Feb 8: Sonny Landreth & Juliana Hatfield Feb 15: Taj Mahal & Martha Wainwright Feb 22: John Hiatt & Brandi Carlile Mondays at 7 pm FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY 5:00 KRCB OVERNIGHT RADIO FREE SONOMA BLUES BEFORE SUNRISE 5:30 6:00 WEEKEND WEEKEND 6:30 EDITION EDITION 7:00 NPR NEWS NPR NEWS 7:30 with with 8:00 Scott Simon Liane Hansen 8:30 9:00 HARMONIA THIS AMERICAN LIFE 9:30 with Ira Glass Early Music 10:00 THE CHOIR LOFT WEST COAST LIVE Bob Worth, Jenny Bent, Dan Solter, 10:30 Sedge Thomson Steve Osborn & Anthony Martin hosts music & guests live 11:00 from San Francisco ST. PAUL SUNDAY 11:30 12:00 CURTAIN CALL THISTLE & SHAMROCK 12:30 Charles Sepos Celtic Music SUNDAY CLASSICS 1:00 OUT OF THE BOX Classical 1:30 OUR ROOTS music from Shafiq Spanos ARE SHOWING 2:00 (New classical releases) KRCB-FM John Katchmer, 2:30 Folk & acoustic Shafiq Spanos & 3:00 music with John Lounsbery Robin Pressman & 3:30 Steve DeLap 4:00

FROM THE TOP 4:30 5:00 ALL THINGS CONSIDERED - NPR NEWS 5:30 6:00 LE SHOW THE PLAY’S THE THING Music & satire from Harry Shearer 6:30 Radio theater from MOUTHFUL 7:00 THIS AMERICAN LIFE LA Theatre Works Food & wine with Michele Anna 7:30 with Ira Glass Jordan 8:00 RHYTHM & ROOTS JAZZ OUTBEAT SALON 8:30 Mark Nicholas BEYOND CONNECTIONS GLBT Radio 9:00 & BACK NEW DIMENSIONS Hillary Culhane Chuck Sher, 9:30 Larry Slater RADIO 10:00 (The Jazz MD), OPEN SPACE DISTRICT RED SHOES RODEO Maria Marquez, John Katchmer 10:30 Michele Anna Jordan & Toby Gleason ECLECTICA 11:00 Paul Timberman & 11:30 Trevor Alizopulos 12:00 ODDIOTORIUM SPACE/TIME THE PLAY’S THE THING Tom & Betsy Paul E (Repeat) NIGHT TRAVELER 1:00 BLUES BEFORE SUNRISE Linda Coffin 2:00 RADIO FREE SONOMA 17 What’s playing on KRCB FM Spoken Word Mostly Music FREE-FORM FM ARTS & IDEAS CLASSICAL Beyond & Back Another Voice The Choir Loft Connections A Novel Idea From the Top Flashback Curtain Call Harmonia Kaleidoscope Eliza at the Movies Midday Classics Left of the Dial Fresh Air Opera Sunday Mindy’s Mix Le Show Out of the Box Oddiotorum New Dimensions Radio Performance Today Percussion Discussion Reel Time Film Reviews St. Paul Sunday Radio Free Sonoma The Play’s the Thing Sunday Classics Rare & Well Done This American Life FOLK, AMERICANA & Red Shoes Rodeo West Coast Live MORE Space/Time Word By Word Your Average Abalone JAZZ, BLUES, R&B WordTemple Poetry E-Town Blues Before Sunrise COMMUNITY CONCERNS Fiddlin’ Zone Jazz Connections Climate One Freight Train Boogie Rhythm & Roots Democracy Now! On the Road Again TECHNO & TRANCE Jim Hightower Our Roots Are Showing Eclectica Mouthful Thistle & Shamrock Night Traveler North Bay Report Something Completely Open Space District Outbeat Salon Different Sonoma Spotlight INTERNATIONAL Crossing Borders Groundhogs in the Loft Punxsutawney Phil has taken up residence in The Choir Loft and forecasts another year of great choral music. You can hum along every Sunday morning at 10. February 7 – Monteverdi and his Milieu Madrigals not only by Monteverdi, but also Waert, d’India, Gesualdo, and Marenzio. Hosted by Bob Worth. February 14 – Polar Berlioz Contrasting styles in this great French composer, from opposite ends of the earth. Hosted by Dan Solter. February 21 – Poetic Inspiration Choral works set to the words of ee cummings, Walt Whitman, Robert Frost, and other American poets. Hosted by Jenny Bent. February 28 – Oswald von Wolkenstein This medieval Austrian knight was a master of the auto- biographical song. Hosted by Steve Osborn. KRCB’s Community Calendar Are interesting arts events happening in your area? Promote them on KRCB’s Community Calendar and get the attention your events deserve. Go to krcb.org, choose the Community drop-down menu on the homepage and select Community Calendar. 18 Bringing Friends Together on Saint Paul Sunday February 7 – Jorja Fleezanis, violin: Karl Paulnack, piano This week, violinist Jorja Fleezanis and pianist Karl Paul- nack join forces to celebrate the music that originally brought them together. These missionaries of contemporary sound have made it their calling to engage and enlighten audiences with rarely performed 20th and 21st century works. Listen for sonatas by Peter Mennin and Ernst Bloch. February 14 – OPUS ONE Four players representing the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center, Tashi, the Beaux Arts Trio, and the Orion and Guarneri String Quartets, OPUS ONE is the result of a mutual love of music-making among these extraordinary Jorja Fleezanis instrumentalists and friends. That sheer joy in music, not to mention the friendship, shines throughout their performances of piano quartets by Mozart and Dvořák. February 21 – Zuill Bailey, cello: Awadagin Pratt, piano Cellist Zuill Bailey and pianist Awadagin Pratt first met off hours in a ping pong duel when they were teenaged partici- pants in a music festival. In the years since, they’ve kept the association alive through frequent collaboration on the great works of their shared repertoire—music that opens new vistas for both of these remarkable soloists. They’ll bring us sonatas by Debussy, Beethoven, and Brahms. February 28 – Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio Joseph Kalichstein, Jaime Laredo, and Sharon Robinson have been playing together for almost thirty years and have made 18 recordings to date. When Bill asks them about their longevity, pianist Joseph Kalichstein jokes, “We’re just trying to get it right.” But you’ll hear for yourself, they’ve gotten it Zuill Bailey right from the beginning. Two masterworks of Brahms and a touchingly beautiful movement from Beethoven will illustrate the point. Sundays at 11 am Climate One conversations continue February 4 – The Peak: Oil, Water and Climate A former employee of the International Energy Agency told the Guardian newspaper recently that figures about worldwide oil supplies are exaggerated. That supported what peak oil adherents such as the hour’s guest, Chris Martenson, have been saying for years. February 11 – After Copenhagen: What Now? What are the prospects for a global climate treaty in 2010? With world leaders still arguing over how quickly to reduce carbon pollution and who will pay for the cleanup, a panel of experts who attended the U.N. climate summit in Copenhagen. address the possibility of U.S. domestic climate legislation and the political and industrial jockeying around this key piece of the energy puzzle. February 18 – Agriculture and the Environment A panel discussion about the dichotomy between farmers and environmental activists. Can they come up with a new definition of sustainability that meets the needs of both groups? Thursdays at 7 pm 19 You, KRCB and one Smart Card…

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Volunteer of the Month Rekha Agrawal Once in awhile a volunteer comes to KRCB with a special set of skills; we never know how or when they will come to us, but when they do it is truly a blessing. Last August the Volunteer Center of Sonoma County introduced us to Rekha Agrawal, a semi-retired professional who was looking for a place where her creativity would be appreciated. She was quickly matched with our Membership Manager, Joel Bellagio, who can’t say enough about the contributions she has made to his department in the relatively short time she has been with us. Rekha comes in to KRCB for several hours four days a week. She has an energetic personality, with a laugh that invites you to share the delight of the moment with her. But there is another side to Rekha that bears mentioning; she has been practicing Vipassana Meditation for more than ten years at the Northern California Vipassana Center in Kelseyville, California. Perhaps this explains Rekha’s ability to tackle anything Joel gives her with such clarity and sense of purpose. Rekha has contributed greatly to the efficiency of our organization, and has been a wonderful addition to our family of volunteers. Thank you, Rekha, for choosing to give your time and talents to KRCB! For information on becoming a KRCB Volunteer contact Cheryl Scholar at 707-584-2005 or email [email protected]. 20 Daytime Television Listings MONDAY 12:30 Cook’s Country from America’s 5:30 PBS NewsHour 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches Test Kitchen 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 6:30 Classical Stretch 1:00 Moment of Luxury SATURDAY 7:00 Sesame Street 1:30 Curiosity Quest Goes Green 7:00 Los Niños en Su Casa (Sp) 8:00 Dragon Tales 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 7:30 Dragon Tales (Sp) 8:30 Curious George 2:30 Cyberchase 8:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog (Sp) 9:00 Sid the Science Kid 3:00 Arthur 8:30 Maya & Miguel (Sp) 9:30 Fons & Porter Love of Quilting 3:30 WordGirl 9:00 Angelina Ballerina 10:00 Quilting Arts 4:00 Fetch! 9:30 Thomas and Friends 10:30 Learn to Read 4:30 The Electric Company 10:00 Bob the Builder 11:00 Fitness Show 5:00 World Focus 10:30 Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood 11:30 Allaire Back Fitness 5:30 PBS NewsHour 11:00 A Place of Our Own 12:00 Hometime 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 11:30 Healing Quest 12:30 Winemakers THURSDAY 12:00 To the Contrary 1:00 Nature 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 12:30 Scheewe Art Workshop 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 6:30 Power Yoga 1:00 Jerry Yarnell’s School of 2:30 Cyberchase 7:00 Sesame Street Fine Art 3:00 Arthur 8:00 Dragon Tales 1:30 Scrapbook Memories 3:30 WordGirl 8:30 Curious George 2:00 Best of the Joy of Painting 4:00 Fetch! 9:00 Sid the Science Kid 2:30 Gary Spetz’s Watercolor Quest 4:30 The Electric Company 9:30 Scrapbook Memories 3:00 Woodwright’s Shop 5:00 World Focus [repeats Sat. at 1:30 pm] 3:30 Ask This Old House 5:30 PBS NewsHour 10:00 Sewing with Nancy [repeats Tues. at noon] 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 10:30 GED on TV (Spanish) 4:00 Julie and Jacques Cooking TUESDAY 11:00 Rick Steves’ Europe 4:30 Winemakers 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 11:30 Rare Visions & Roadside [repeats Mon. at 12:30 pm] 6:30 Power Yoga Revelations 5:00 Gourmet’s Adventures with Ruth 7:00 Sesame Street 12:00 American Woodshop 5:30 Everyday Food 8:00 Dragon Tales 12:30 Joanne Weir’s Cooking Class 6:00 Simply Ming 8:30 Curious George 1:00 For Your Home 6:30 Mexico One Plate at a Time 9:00 Sid the Science Kid 1:30 Piano Guy with Rick Bayless 9:30 Knitting Daily 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog SUNDAY 10:00 America Sews with Sue 2:30 Cyberchase 8:00 Think Tank with Ben Wattenberg Hausman 3:00 Arthur (Feb 7-Ideas in Action with Jim 10:30 GED Connection (English) 3:30 WordGirl Glassman) 11:00 Wider World 4:00 Fetch! 8:30 La Plaza 11:30 Healthy Body Healthy Mind 4:30 The Electric Company 9:00 McLaughlin’s One on One 12:00 Ask This Old House 5:00 World Focus 9:30 MoneyTrack 12:30 Simply Ming 5:30 PBS NewsHour 10:00 Religion & Ethics Newsweekly [repeats Sat. at 6 pm] 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 10:30 Between the Lines 1:00 NOVA FRIDAY 11:00 European Journal (Feb 28 - 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches Climate One) 2:30 Cyberchase 6:30 Wai Lana Yoga 11:30 World Business 3:00 Arthur 7:00 Sesame Street 12:00 Motorweek 3:30 WordGirl 8:00 Dragon Tales 12:30 Inside Washington 4:00 Fetch! 8:30 Curious George 1:00 Life (Part2) 4:30 The Electric Company 9:00 Sid the Science Kid 1:30 Scully the World Show 5:00 World Focus 9:30 Creative Living 2:00 America’s Heartland 5:30 PBS NewsHour [repeats Sun. at 4 pm] 2:30 California’s Gold, Green, Water, 6:30 Deutsche-Welle Journal 10:00 Martha’s Sewing Room or Golden Parks WEDNESDAY 10:30 Katie Brown Workshop 3:00 American Woodshop 6:00 Priscilla’s Yoga Stretches 11:00 Art Wolf: Travels to the Edge [repeats Thurs. at noon] 6:30 Power Yoga 11:30 Ciao Italia 3:30 This Old House 7:00 Sesame Street 12:00 Victory Garden [repeats Wed. at noon] 8:00 Dragon Tales 12:30 Primal Grill with Steven Raichlen 4:00 Creative Living 8:30 Curious George 1:00 Chef’s A Field 4:30 Garden Smart 9:00 Sid the Science Kid 1:30 Sit and Be Fit 5:00 Jonathan Birds World 9:30 Beads, Baubles and Jewels 2:00 Clifford the Big Red Dog 5:30 Victory Garden 10:00 Knit & Crochet Now! 2:30 Cyberchase [repeats Fri. at noon] 10:30 Piano Guy 3:00 Arthur 6:00 P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home [repeats Thurs. at 1:30 pm)] 3:30 WordGirl 6:30 Red Green 11:00 California Heartland 4:00 DragonflyTV (Feb 12-SciGirls) [repeats Wed. at 11:30 am] 11:30 Red Green 4:30 The Electric Company 12:00 This Old House 5:00 World Focus 21 Television Listings for February 1 MONDAY 9:00 Justice: What’s The Right the snowy owls, musk oxen, 7:00 Out of Ireland Thing to Do? (see page 5) lemmings, Arctic foxes and 7:30 My Generation: Human 10:00 PBS NewsHour hares who share this fragile Spark 11:00 Charlie Rose ecosystem with them, fortunes 8:00 NOVA: What Are Dreams? 12:00 Democracy Now! * are always precarious. What are dreams and why 1:00 Best of LINK TV * [repeats 2/8 at 1 pm) do we have them? Are they a 9:00 Telling the Truth: The Best in window into a hidden realm 2 TUESDAY Broadcast Journalists Go within us? Science is only 7:00 After You’ve Gone behind the scenes with the just beginning to understand. (see page 11) year’s best reporters and get NOVA joins the leading dream 7:30 Life (Part 2): Should I Stay the inside stories from the researchers and witnesses the or Should I Go? 2010 winners of the Alfred I. extraordinary experiments they [repeats Sunday at 1 pm] duPont-Columbia Awards in use to investigate the world of 8:00 Nature: White Falcon, White television and radio journal- sleep. From human narcolep- Wolf On Canada’s remote ism. Learn how reporters and tics to sleepwalking cats, from Ellesmere Island, where June producers uncover injustice, is spring, July is summer and outsmart a blizzard of spin, August is already autumn, the and, in some cases, put their race is on for two remarkable lives on the line to bring the species to raise their families. most important stories to light. The white gyr falcon is enor- 10:00 PBS NewsHour mous, the largest and most 11:00 Charlie Rose powerful falcon in the world. 12:00 Democracy Now! * Yet last summer, the nesting 1:00 Best of LINK TV * falcon pair here failed to raise any young. The rare Arctic 3 WEDNESDAY 7:00 recurrent nightmares to those wolves rely on every member Last of the Summer Wine who can’t dream, each se- of the pack to chase and bring 7:30 Between the Lines with quence contains a vital clue to down the prey that keeps Barry Kibrick the question these scientists them alive. Last year was [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] are pursuing: why do we good to them, and they raised 8:00 Great Performances: La dream? three cubs. But for the wolves Boheme - The Movie [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] and the falcons, as well for as Giacomo Puccini’s endur- Thank you to these supporters of KRCB! Art, Museums and Cultural Solar Living Institute Santa Rosa Junior College Organizations Trope Group University of San Francisco - SR California Indian Museum Dining, Food/Wine & Lodging Entertainment Charles M. Schulz Museum Barndiva Restaurant & Lounge Marin JCC “Center Stage” Arts Council of Sonoma County Caffe Trieste Rialto Cinemas Lakeside Dry Creek Rancheria Band of Clover Stornetta River Rock Casino Pomo Indians Community Market Sebastiani theatre Quicksilver Mine Co. East West Cafe Spreckels Center Santa Rosa Symphony Fircrest Market Sonoma County Repertory Theatre Automotive Fresh Choice Restaurants Wells Fargo Center for the Arts Downtown Autobody Hampton Inn & Suites Financial & Insurance Manly Honda Healdsburg Farmers’ Market American AgCredit Out West Garage Holiday Inn Express Exchange Bank Books, Music, & Video Jack & Tony’s Restaurant Rubins Financial Strategies Copperfield’s Books Paradise Ridge Winery Summit State Bank Jackalope Records Pearson & Company Handcrafts, Wearables & Jewelry Last Record Store Peter Lowell’s Cafe Baksheesh Business & Professional Richmond Certified Farmers Market Kindred Fair Trade Handcrafts Daniel Data Sebastopol Farmers’ Market Health Care Leach Communication Sunce Winery Integrative Medical Clinic of SR Mac Networks Taylor Maid Farms Medtronic Foundation PEP Housing Traverso’s Gourmet Foods & Wine Petaluma Open MRI Red Condor Wine Spectrum Shop & Bar St. Joseph’s Healthcare, Simple Office Solutions Education Sonoma County 22 Television Listings for February ing 1896 blockbuster now 12:00 Democracy Now! * 8:30 McLaughlin Group makes its way to the big 1:00 Best of LINK TV * 9:00 Great Conversations: screen in a lushly atmospheric Michael Kinsley and James movie adaptation directed by 4 THURSDAY Surowiecki Author Michael Robert Dornhelm. The operatic 7:00 As Time Goes By Kinsley discusses his book “dream couple”—sensational 7:30 Innerviews with Ernie Creative Capitalism: A Russian soprano Anna Netreb- Manouse: Hector Elizondo Conversation with Bill Gates, ko and dashing Mexican tenor 8:00 History Detectives: Tokyo Warren Buffett And Other Rolando Villazon—reunite as Rose Recording, Crazy Economic Leaders with James the doomed lovers Mimi and Horse Photo, & WWII DIARY Surowiecki, staff writer of “The Rodolfo, joined by George von 9:00 Frontline: The Card Game Financial Page” at The New Bergen (vocals by Boaz Daniel) As credit card companies Yorker. face rising public anger, new 10:00 PBS NewsHour regulation from Washington 11:00 Charlie Rose and a potential perfect storm 12:00 Democracy Now! * of economic bad news, 1:00 Best of KRCB * Frontline correspondent Lowell Bergman examines the future 6 SATURDAY of the massive consumer loan 7:00 Jacques Pepin: More Fast industry and its impact on a Food My Way fragile national economy. 7:30 From the Top: Live from 10:00 PBS NewsHour Carnegie Hall: Jumping 11:00 Charlie Rose Through Hoopes 12:00 Democracy Now! * 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show: 1:00 Best of LINK TV * Youman’s Salute as Marcello, Adrian Erod as 9:00 Austin City Limits: Schaunard, Vitalij Kowaljow 5 FRIDAY Esperanza Spalding/Mad- as Colline, Tiziano Bracci as 7:00 To the Manor Born eleine Peyroux Benoit and Nicole Cabell as (see page 10) 10:00 Song of the Mountains Musetta. 7:30 MoneyTrack: From Wall 11:00 Theater Talk Street to Your Street 10:00 PBS NewsHour 11:30 : Legion 8:00 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack 11:00 Charlie Rose 12:00 Best of KRCB * Thank you to these supporters of KRCB! Home & Garden California League of Conservation Marinscope Community Alice’s Garden Voters Newspapers Clark Pest Control Community Action Marin More Marin! Culligan Water Company Laguna de Santa Rosa Foundation North Bay Biz Earthtone Construction North Bay Leadership Council North Bay Business Journal Far West Trading Company North Bay Labor Council North Bay Bohemian Gado Gado PFLAG Pacific Sun General Hydroponics Sebastopol Area Chamber of Petaluma Post Harmony Farm Supply & Nursery Commerce Point Reyes Light Hawley’s Paint Store Sierra Club Press Democrat Heritage Salvage Solar Sonoma County San Francisco Bay Guardian Rogers Pool & Spa Service Sonoma County Book Festival Sonoma Index Tribune Rugs of Persia Sonoma County GoLocal Coop Sonoma West Publishing Sebastopol Hardware Center Sonoma County Hikes The Community Voice Sittin’ Purrrdy Sonoma Land Trust The Sonoma County Gazette Solar Works Stewards of the Coast & West Marin Citizen Sonoma Compost Redwoods Wine Country Radio Vintage Bank Antiques United Way of the Wine Country Retirement Related Wyatt Irrigation Supply Wallace Genetic Foundation Friends House Non-profits Media, Magazines & Publishing Springfield Place American Ag. Credit Bay Nature Magazine Santa Rosa Memorial Hospice Becoming Independent KSRO For further information California Human Development La Voz Bilingual Newspaper visit krcb.org/sponsors C2 Alternatives Marin Independent Journal 23 Television Listings for February 7 SUNDAY friendly people have inspired the planet. New knowledge 7:00 Antiques Roadshow: countless artists. Prairie Public gained from scientists current- Raleigh, NC - Hour Two followed photographer Wayne ly making great breakthroughs 8:00 American Experi- Gudmundson to this island in hummingbird biology makes ence: Influenza 1918 country in the North Atlantic this a perfect time to focus on As the nation mobilized for Ocean to capture the sights these shimmering, flashing war in the spring of 1918, and explore its volcanic maj- jewels of the natural world. esty in A Photographer’s View Stunningly beautiful high- of Iceland. . definition, high speed footage 11:30 Best of KRCB * of hummingbirds in the wild 1:00 Best of LINK TV * combined with high-tech pre- sentations of their remarkable 8 MONDAY abilities help us to understand 7:00 Out of Ireland 7:30 My Generation: Create the Good 8:00 NOVA: Saved by the Sun In the face of steeply rising oil prices and political turmoil in the Middle East, there’s new urgency about finding a solu- ailing Private Albert Gitchell tion to our uncertain energy reported to an army hospital in future. Could it be time to take Kansas. He was diagnosed solar energy seriously again? with influenza, a disease about Breakthroughs in new materi- which doctors knew little. Be- als and ingenious designs for fore the year was out, America solar collectors are transform- would be ravaged by a flu ing the technology into a vastly the world of hummingbirds as epidemic that killed 600,000 cheaper, more efficient we never have before. people—more than died in alternative. NOVA presents [repeats 2/15 at 1 pm) all the wars of this century the latest thinking from solar 9:00 Locked Out: The Fall of combined—before enthusiasts and skeptics as it Massive Resistence disappearing as mysteriously investigates these cutting- Marking the 50th anniversary as it began. edge research developments. of the reopening of public 9:00 Masterpiece Classic: The film introduces viewers schools in Virginia and the Cranford - Part 3 to the scientists and business historic 1959 fall of Massive In episode three, Matty suffers people who are racing to Resistance. (see page 7) great disappointment and, in make solar power practical — 10:00 Student to Citizen a nostalgic mood one evening, for lighting and heating, and Series: Reel Bad Arabs : decides to confide in Mary for running power plants. How Hollywood Vilifies a about Mr. Holbrook. The [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] People (see page 9) mention of India prompts Mary 9:00 Justice: What’s the Right 11:00 Charlie Rose to write to Major Gordon to Thing to Do? (see page 5) 12:00 Democracy Now! * tell him that Jessie regrets 10:00 PBS NewsHour 1:00 Best of LINK TV * her decision not to marry him. 11:00 Charlie Rose 10 WEDNESDAY Also, Dr. Harrison visits the 12:00 Democracy Now! * 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine Rectory and formally asks 1:00 Best of LINK TV * the Reverend Hutton for 7:30 Between the Lines with permission to court Sophy. 9 TUESDAY Barry Kibrick Meanwhile, Miss Pole invites 7:00 After You’ve Gone [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] the ladies of the town to a 7:30 Life (Part 2): Ethnicity, Race 8:00 American Masters: Sam secret meeting to discuss & Aging Cooke: Crossing Over Matty’s crisis. United in their 8:00 Nature: Humming- Sam Cooke put the spirit of love for Matty, they decide to birds: Magic in the Air the Black church into popular help her financially. Hummingbirds represent one music . (see page 7) 11:00 Photographer’s View of of nature’s most interesting 9:00 An Evening with Smokey Iceland Travel with Prairie paradoxes—they are the Robinson An inside look into Public to Iceland, where the tiniest of birds, yet they qualify the life and career of Motown beautiful landscape and as some of the toughest and legend Smokey Robinson. most energetic creatures on (see page 7) 24 Television Listings for February 10:00 PBS NewsHour 12 FRIDAY opportunity in the American 11:00 Charlie Rose 7:00 To the Manor Born frontier. As a young man, 12:00 Democracy Now! * 7:30 MoneyTrack: Sandwich Wyatt Earp was a caricature of 1:00 Best of LINK TV * Generation the Western lawman, spending 8:00 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack his days drinking in saloons, 11 THURSDAY gambling, visiting brothels 7:00 As Time Goes By 8:30 McLaughlin Group 9:00 Great Conversations: John and gaining notoriety as the 7:30 Innerviews with Ernie legendary gunman in the Manouse: Nadia Comaneci Updike and Robert Siegel John Updike (Golf Dreams, shootout at the OK Corral in 8:00 History Detectives: Amelia the Rabbit series) and Robert Tombstone, AZ. But shortly Earhart Plane, Fillmore Siegel (National Public Radio). after his death in 1929, dis- Pardon, & Boxcar Home tressed Americans down on 10:00 PBS NewsHour 9:00 Frontline: Taking on the Ma- their luck transformed Wyatt fiaPBS’s premier international 11:00 Charlie Rose Earp into a folk hero: a central newsmagazine returns with 12:00 Democracy Now! * figure in the American narra- three more “stories from a 1:00 Best of KRCB * tive of how the west was won small planet,” starting with the 13 SATURDAY as a man who took control of 7:00 Jacques Pepin: More Fast his own destiny. Food My Way 9:00 Masterpiece Classic: Return 7:30 From the Top: Live from to Cranford - Part One Carnegie Hall: Back to the Dame Judi Dench returns in Future the sequel to the Emmy-nom- inated Cranford mini-series, 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show: Love based on the novels of Eliza- Songs beth Gaskell. Imelda Staunton, 9:00 Austin City Limits: Them Francesca Annis, and Julia Crooked Vultures McKenzie rejoin the cast in the 10:00 Song of the Mountains acclaimed story of everyday 11:00 Theater Talk life in a small Cheshire market 11:30 Red Dwarf: Gunmen of the town. Apocalypse 10:30 Scarred Justice: The inside story of a group of shop 12:00 Best of KRCB * Orangeburg Massacre 1968 owners and young activists 14 SUNDAY In February 8, 1968, eight who stood up to the powerful seconds of police gunfire left 7:00 Antiques Roadshow: Ra- Sicilian mafia. InTaking on three young men dying and leigh, NC - Hour Three the Mafia, FRONTLINE/World at least 27 wounded on the 8:00 Wyatt Earp: American correspondent Carola Mam- campus of South Carolina Experience He has been berto explores the story of a portrayed in countless movies State College in Orangeburg, restaurant owner—backed and television shows by some SC. All of the police were by an upstart anti-mafia of Hollywood’s greatest ac- white, all of the students movement of young people tors, including Henry Fonda, African-American. Almost all and an elite law enforcement Jimmy Stewart and more of the victims were shot from team—who refused to pay the recently, Kevin Costner, but behind as they fled the gunfire mafia’s monthly “tax,” taking these popular fictions belie that erupted without warning. a stand against mob bosses the complexities and flaws of The Massacre happened after who’ve kept Italy in their grip a man whose life is a lens on four days of student protests for decades. Also in this hour: politics, justice and economic to desegregate the city’s only the odyssey of several dozen bowling alley. It was the first men from their homes in rural time ever police opened fire China to years of detention on students on a U.S. campus. in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, Two years later Kent State and the story of a Brazilian would shock the nation. politician who took the name This powerful yet disturbing “Barack Obama” for his documentary film explores historic bid to become the first the eye-witness accounts of black mayor of his town. student protesters and police 10:00 PBS NewsHour officer participants. Interviews 11:00 Charlie Rose with former Governor Robert 12:00 Democracy Now! * McNair, the prize-winning 1:00 Best of LINK TV * journalists who covered 25 Television Listings for February the story, and many others, 17 WEDNESDAY provide a compelling account 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine of the price paid in America’s 7:30 Between the Lines with struggle for racial justice. Barry Kibrick It raises questions about [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] an event that has yet to be 8:00 Great Performances: Pass- resolved. ing Strange Passing Strange 11:30 Best of KRCB * is the story of a young African 1:00 Best of LINK TV * American man on a journey of 15 MONDAY escape, exploration and self discovery. (see page 7) 7:00 Out of Ireland 7:30 My Generation: Heart 10:30 PBS NewsHour 11:30 Charlie Rose 8:00 NOVA: Volcano Above the 9:00 As We Forgive Could you for- 12:30 Democracy Now! * Clouds Just 200 miles south give a person who murdered of the equator, Kilimanjaro has your family? The subjects of 1:30 Best of LINK TV * both equatorial and arctic con- As We Forgive face this very 18 THURSDAY ditions. Five distinct climatic question and others without 7:00 As Time Goes By zones inhabit the slopes of easy answers. Through in- 7:30 Innerviews with Ernie this 19,340-foot peak. It is a depth interviews, the docu- Manouse: Peter Cetera botanist’s dream -rainforests mentary follows two Rwandan 8:00 History Detectives: Hinden rise out of the savanna, giving women on a journey to make way to moorlands and alpine burg Artifact, John Adams peace with the neighbors who Book, & Birthplace of Hip meadows where rare giant slaughtered their families high-altitude plants thrive. Hop during the 1994 genocide. The 9:00 Frontline: Black Money Atop this peak, a young film, narrated by actor and ac- female geologist takes viewers Frontline investigative cor- tivist Mia Farrow, provides an respondent Lowell Bergman back to the dawn of time and intimate, first-hand view of the the formation of the African examines the shadowy world encounters between genocide of international bribery. The continent. perpetrators and their victims’ [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] story reveals how multinational families as they navigate the companies create slush funds, 9:00 Justice: What’s the Right road to reconciliation. Thing to Do? (see page 5) set up front companies, and 10:00 PBS NewsHour make secret payments, all to 10:00 PBS NewsHour 11:00 In the Life Art, culture, issues, 11:00 Charlie Rose get billions in business. But and news of the gay and these practices are facing a 12:00 Democracy Now! * lesbian community. new international crackdown, 1:00 Best of LINK TV * 11:30 Losing Their Voices? A Look led by prosecutors at the U.S. 16 TUESDAY at Local Radio When small Department of Justice and 7:00 After You’ve Gone town radio first swept the na- allies abroad. At the center of 7:30 Life (Part 2): Boomer Grand- tion, many towns gained their this is a controversial, ongoing parenting voices with a local station. It investigation into the British- [repeats Sunday at 1 pm] was where citizens turned for based multinational BAE 8:00 Nature: Clash: Encounters news, obituaries, and church Systems and allegations about of Bears and Wolves What services, traded junk on the billion-dollar bribes. happens when two great swap shop, and followed 10:00 PBS Newshour predators come face to face in local athletic teams. As the 11:00 Charlie Rose Yellowstone? The grizzly and country changed, so did radio. 12:00 Democracy Now! * the wolf—they couldn’t be In an era of multi-station 1:00 Best of LINK TV * owners, satellite radio and more different. The bear is a 19 FRIDAY loner, ranging far and wide digital, some question whether 7:00 To the Manor Born in search of a rich variety of local AM and FM stations can resources. The wolf hunts to survive. This documentary 7:30 MoneyTrack: The Town that survive and finds its strength looks at those changes and Got Taken in speed and teamwork. Their how some stations in South 8:00 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack strategies have taken them to Carolina have survived while 8:30 McLaughlin Group the very top of Yellowstone, others have failed. 9:00 For Love of Liberty: The and it’s no simple matter when 12:00 Democracy Now! * Story of America’s Black they meet. 1:00 Best of LINK TV * Patriots (see page 8) [repeats 2/22 at 1 pm) 11:00 Charlie Rose 26 Television Listings for February 12:00 Democracy Now! * whom are on the govern- 1:00 Best of KRCB * ment’s secret watch list, now more than half-a-million 20 SATURDAY names long. 7:00 Jacques Pepin: More Fast [repeats Tuesday at 1 pm] Food My Way 9:00 Justice: What’s the Right to 7:30 From the Top: Live from Do? (see page 6) Carnegie Hall: Interlochen 10:00 PBS NewsHour Arts Academy Chamber 11:00 Charlie Rose Orchestra 12:00 Democracy Now! * 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show: 1:00 Best of LINK TV * Fashions & Hits Through the Years McKenzie rejoin the cast in the 23 TUESDAY 9:00 Austin City Limits: R.E.M. acclaimed story of everyday 7:00 After You’ve Gone 10:00 Song of the Mountains life in a small Cheshire market 11:00 Theater Talk town. 11:30 Red Dwarf: Emohawk Poly- 11:00 New Metropolis: A Crack morph II in the Pavement A Crack in 12:00 Best of KRCB * the Pavement unravels the national infrastructure and 21 SUNDAY regional land-use debate 7:00 Antiques Roadshow: Atlantic through the stories of two City, NJ - Hour One public officials from southern 8:00 Donner Party: American 7:30 Life (Part 2): Survive and Ohio trying to save their Thrive Experience Of all the 19th- aging towns from losing century pioneer stories, none [repeats Sunday at 1 pm] residents and businesses to 8:00 Nature: American Eagle exerts so powerful a hold on newer suburban communi- the American imagination as Unique to North America, the ties. The film intertwines their bald eagle is the continent’s the tale of the Donner Party stories with commentary from in the high Sierra Nevadas in most recognizable aerial national experts who examine predator with a shocking white the winter of 1846. That June, the policies and practices that along with thousands of oth- head, electric yellowbeak favor sprawl development over and penetrating eyes. In the ers, George and Jacob Donner revitalizing existing, older and James Frazier Reed led 1960s, this symbol of the communities. United States became an their families west out of 11:30 Best of KRCB * Springfield, IL, and headed emblem of environmental 1:00 for the “Promised Land” in Best of LINK TV * degradation, as the pesticide California, two thousand miles DDT and other human pres- 22 MONDAY sures brought it to the brink away. Theirs was a prosperous 7:00 Out of Ireland caravan that would swell to of extinction. Following their 7:30 My Generation: Sticking to It protection as an endangered more than 87 men, women 8:00 NOVA: The Spy Factory and children. They packed species, bald eagles have For the first time on television, come roaring back. huge wagons (one was NOVA exposes the hidden two stories high), took food, [repeats 3/1 at 1 pm) world of high-tech, 21st- 9:00 Faubourg Treme: The Untold hired servants, and even century eavesdropping carried sewed money between the Story of Black New Orleans out by the National Security New Orleans newspaperman covers of a quilt. When family Agency (NSA). Today, the NSA leaders made the fateful deci- Lolis Eric Elie takes viewers on is the world’s largest intel- a tour of the city. sion to take an untried short ligence agency, three times cut to beat the coming winter, (see page 8) the size of the CIA and far 10:00 PBS NewsHour only half of them would come more secret. Its mission is to out alive. 11:00 Charlie Rose eavesdrop on the world - from 12:00 Democracy Now! * 9:30 Masterpiece Classic: Return cell phones in Europe to pay 1:00 Best of LINK TV * to Cranford - Part Two phones in Afghanistan to email Dame Judi Dench returns in messages from Pakistan to 24 WEDNESDAY the sequel to the Emmy-nom- Baghdad. But since 9/11, it 7:00 Last of the Summer Wine inated Cranford mini-series, has also turned its giant ear 7:30 Between the Lines with based on the novels of Eliza- inward, listening in without beth Gaskell. Imelda Staunton, Barry Kibrick warrant on thousands of [repeats Sunday at 10:30 am] Francesca Annis and Julia American citizens, many of 27 Television Listings for February 8:00 Great Performances: 26 FRIDAY Harlem In Montmartre 7:00 To the Manor Born Harlem in Montmartre tells the 7:30 MoneyTrack: The Naked story of the jazz age in Paris Truth about Investing between the first and second 8:00 Consuelo Mack: Wealthtrack World Wars. (see page 8) 8:30 McLaughlin Group 9:30 Ragtime Cabaret As African, 9:00 For Love of Liberty: The European, and American Story of America’s Black cultures blended, the first truly Patriots American musical genre was (see page 8) born. (see page 8) 11:00 Charlie Rose 10:00 PBS NewsHour 12:00 Democracy Now! * 11:00 Charlie Rose 1:00 Best of KRCB * 12:00 Democracy Now! * of others while neglecting her 1:00 Best of LINK TV * 27 SATURDAY own. Jonny Lee Miller stars 7:00 Jacques Pepin: More Fast as Emma’s stalwart friend, Mr. 25 THURSDAY Food My Way Knightley, with Michael Gam- 7:00 As Time Goes By 7:30 From the Top: Live from bon as her doom-obsessed 7:30 Innerviews with Ernie Carnegie Hall: Rhythm and father. Part One - Unmar- Manouse: Gloria Gaynor Strings ried and glad of it, Emma 8:00 History Detectives: 8:00 Lawrence Welk Show: Woodhouse thinks herself the Mussolini Dagger, Liberia Rhythm is our Business perfect matchmaker for Letter, & N.E.A.R. Device 9:00 Austin City Limits: Kenny others. Her friend Mr. Knightley 9:00 P.O.V. Critical Condition Chesney has his doubts. Undeterred, What happens if you fall sick 10:00 she takes on the matrimonial and are one of 47 million Song of the Mountains 11:00 Theater Talk cause of Harriet Smith, with people in America without unanticipated results. 11:30 Red Dwarf: Rimmerworld health insurance? Critical 11:00 New Metropolis: The New 12:00 Best of KRCB Condition by Roger Weisberg * Neighbors The New Neigh- (Waging a Living, P.O.V. 2006) 28 SUNDAY bors follows a diverse group of puts a human face on the 7:00 Antiques Roadshow: Atlantic residents and public officials nation’s growing health care City, NJ - Hour Two from Pennsauken, NJ as they crisis by capturing the harrow- 8:00 Bombing of Germany: attempt to revitalize their ing struggles of four critically American Experience On “first” suburban town through ill Americans who discover September 1, 1939—the a strategy called “stable that being uninsured can cost first day of World War II in integration.” Working with the Europe—President Franklin Fund for an Open Society, the D. Roosevelt appealed to the town reversed a declining warring nations to “under no housing market and helped circumstances undertake the create a vibrant, integrated bombardment from the air of community. Academy Award- civilian populations.” Just six nominated actress Ruby Dee years later, British and Ameri- narrates can Allied forces had carried 11:30 Best of KRCB * out a bombing campaign of 1:00 Best of LINK TV * unprecedented might over them their jobs, health, home, Germany’s cities, claiming the savings, even their lives. * Available on Cable lives of nearly half a million and Satellite only Filmed in verite style, Critical civilians. Condition offers a moving and * Link TV is an independent 9:00 Masterpiece Classic: Emma television network that broad- invaluable expose at a time - Part One A fiercely funny when the nation is debating casts unseen documentaries four-hour adaptation of Jane from around the world, the how to extend health insur- Austen’s delightful love story ance to all Americans. best of World Music videos, and stars Romola Garai as a young current affairs programming. 10:30 PBS NewsHour woman whose attempts to 11:30 Charlie Rose play Cupid go disastrously 12:30 Democracy Now! * awry. Rich, beautiful and cc 1:30 Best of LINK TV * hopelessly self-deluded, Emma Woodhouse can’t help The majority of our prime time meddling in the romantic life programs are closed captioned. 28 Your ad could FRIENDS HOUSE be here! A Quaker-Inspired Elder Community

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DOWNSIZE THE "SM" WHEN THE USING LOGO ON OVERSIZED APPLICATIONS SUCH OUTDOOR ADVERTISING AND LARGE EXHIBIT DISPLAYS 29 Sponsor Spotlight Advanced Fertility Associates Medical Group Inc. Advanced Fertility Associates Medical Group, Inc. is a fertility practice in Santa Rosa, serving the San Francisco Bay Area and Northern California. Our goal is to understand your reproductive health needs –medical, emotional, and financial—so that we can develop the best treatment plan for you. We have affordable pricing and work to accommodate every individual’s needs. We are a diverse practice and attract an equally diverse patient population. Our use of cutting- edge technology coupled with our personal commitment to our patients results in excellent success rates and high levels of patient satisfaction. With our world-class laboratory expertise, we are able to perform state-of-the-art, assisted reproductive techniques in a warm and personalized environment. Our capabilities include in vitro fertilization (IVF), intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), assisted hatching, and cryopreservation of sperm, eggs and embryos. We are able to offer our patients pre-implanta- tion genetic diagnosis (PGD). Our collaboration with outstanding urology services specializ- ing in infertility allow us to offer sperm extraction techniques to male patients when needed. Our office is located at 1111 Sonoma Avenue, Suite 214, Santa Rosa, CA Tel: 707-575-5831 Fax: 707-575-4379 Email:[email protected]

Business Support Opportunities Kids’ Programming Each week KRCB offers 32 hours of programs designed for preschoolers and elementary school children, including old favorites such as Sesame Street and Mister Rogers and new programs such as WordGirl, SciGirls, and Angelina Ballerina. The Electric Company airing Mondays through Fridays at 4:30 pm is designed to advance the idea that reading is cool. Saturday mornings feature programming for Spanish speaking children. Sponsorhip of these programs is available on a per spot basis throughout the day. These programs can be underwritten individually or as a group. For more information on supporting these and other programs, please call Stan Marvin at 707-584-2010.

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31 Celebrating 10 years of Excellence and just how cool your life can be. can life your cool how just and are, we value great a what you show we’ll and tour, and lunch mentary compli- your schedule to now Call help you want, just when you need it. the exactly get you So a-la-carte. are aretoo.flexible, and cool services All Community Retirement Place field The Assisted Living Services at Spring- ALMOST AS COOL AS ALMOST BOB THINKS OUR THINKS BOB ASSISTED LIVING ASSISTED 101Ely Blvd SouthPetaluma • R E V E N A H T R E T T E B G N I V I L SERVICES ARE SERVICES www.leisurecare.com (707) 769-3300(707) AS HE IS. HE AS LIC#496800799

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