ARTS Thursday, February 13, 1986 The Michigan Daily Page 7 WCBN bashes for funds By Noelle Brower GET READY for 88.3 hours of the best in alternative radio programming. Starting this morning at 9 a.m., WCBN kicks off its seventh annual on-the-air fundraiser. WCBN, situated at 88.3 on the FM dial, is the University's own student-run, cam- pus radio station; it's also one of the most daring stations around offering a program list of alternative and highly innovative music. And true to its reputation for being an alternative station, it is offering its loyal following an alternative to most fun- draisers. When public-supported radio stations declare that it's fundraiser time it usually means that their audience is in for several days of D.J.'s adlibbing and begging for donations. Not WCBN. You won't find the D.J.s at WCBN spending all their time asking for money; you will, however, hear the best in alternative radio not to mention live on-the-air acts and special location spots. "For most other stations, fun- draiser time is also the worst time to listen. Ours is the best possible (to listen)," says the station's Program Director Paul Townsend. The culmination of the fundraiser will be the Benefit Bash on Sunday night at the Michigan Union Ballroom. Admission to the Bash is $4, but if you pledge $4 or more your admission is free. Pledges can be made during the next four days by calling 763-3501. Aside from the good feeling that will come from knowing that you have supported your campus station, premiums are attached to the monetary donations; anything from theatre tickets to books to free meals could be yours with a donation. Of course, the most popular premium of all is the one for $10, the perennially popular WCBN t-shirt. Most of WC- BN's budget is determined by the fundraiser proceeds - not University support - so tune in and support your radio station. The following is a schedule of the highlights of the fundraiser and Bash. Thursday: 1:30 p.m. - It's Raining, 8:30 p.m. - Surreal Estate; Friday: 10 a.m. - The Ann Arbor Sax Quintet (comprised of the best Sax players in Ann Arbor, 4 p.m., - the Circle Con- fusion, 8 p.m. - Sleep, 10 p.m. Angry Red Planet, 12 a.m. - Hysteric Narcotics; Saturday: 9 a.m. - New Hope Tabernacle Choir, 1 p.m. - country pickers Garth and David, also The Chenile Sisters, 3 p.m. - Blues singer Queen Ida (tentative); Sunday: 11:30 a.m. - Allison and Thomas Hunter perform classical In- dian music. Sunday evening the doors to the Union Ballroom open at 7:30 p.m. Crucial opens the Bash at 8, The Lunar Glee Club will perform at 9:10, Tracy Lee and The Leonards at 10:20, and Map of the World at 11:35. Co. presents 6 T HE BRECHT Company will open their 1986 season with a produc- tion of Bertolt Brecht's political parable, The Exception and the Rule. The company describes this debut as the hard-earned product of an "inten- sive series of dramaturgical workshops" conducted under the working methods and principles of the German playwright. Originally published in his Gesam- melte Werke in 1938, the play is what Brecht called a Lehrstueck - a lear- ning piece. Director Bob Brown con- strues this as a dialectical process, one that brings both the audience and the actors themselves to question social and dramatic conventions. Brown describes Exception as "the droll tale of a journey, a murder and a free flung trial." Brecht's plot ex- plodes these familiar themes by redefining the terms of what con- stitutes a crime, and what is meant by justice. Brown says that the company striv- es for what Brecht called Ver- -emeungseffekt - the estrangement effect. By overturning a dramatic situation, the effect is said to move the audience to a different, perhaps strange, vision of their environment. The Brecht Company will use several innovative techniques in their interpretation of Exception. Dixieland clarinetist and composer Peter Ferrar will perform an original score that is a combination of Dixieland and traditional jazz. By means of masks, choral speaking, and comic caricature, the ensemble intends to "emphasize social process over character." Having just received a grant from the Michigan Council for the Arts, and plaudits from influential Theatre magazine, the ensemble, explains Brown, is delighted and optimistic. The cast includes Martin Walsh, Barbara Thorne, Franji Minwalla, Mary L. Petit, Deborah Allen, Jeff Safron, Annette Jagner, Jill Ackles, Tom Charbonneau, and Sean Yar- dley. Performancesurun at the Residen- tial College Auditorium Thursday Irama through Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m. from Feb. 13-22. Tickets are $5; half price on Thursday and Sunday. Tickets remaining at curtain time are available to students for $3.00. Ad- vance tickets can be purchased at the Michigan Theatre Box Office on East Liberty. -Peter Batacan STRICTLY ORIGINAL Songwriters Expo Thursday, Feb. 13 1986 in the U Club 9:30 p.m. p- * Daily Photo by MATT PETIIE Map of the World, the WCBN benefit bash headline band, will make the Union Ballroom stage at 11:45 Sunday night, culminating 88.3 hours of on.. air fundraising. = '4- ..- WASIJINqTON INTERN Si Juniors or Seniors with a 3.0 average: interested in Congress? Earn 16 credits on Capitol Hill . Unique Internships based on your in- terest. Work with members of Congress in their offices and on their committees . Seminars with leading government experts, focusing on current policy is- sues. . Washington Faculty headed by the chairman of the Congressional Intern Advisory Council. . Discussion Groups to share informa- tion and opinions with fellow student participants fromaround the country. Filing deadline for Semester I: April 1. 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