On Stage: Women at KUVO Share
Throughout March, “On Stage” is celebrating women artists, as they were recorded on the Phyllis A. Greer Performance Studio. The U. S. Congress designated March as “National Women’s History Month” in 1987, and KUVO has been broadcasting women musicians from its studios almost that long.
This Saturday we present performances from drummer Colleen Clark, vocalist Hazel Miller, drummer Clare Church, pianist Carmen Sandim and many others.
Join host and producer Susan Gatschet for “Women at KUVO” on On Stage,
Saturday, March 13, at 10 pm. A KUVO JAZZ exclusive!
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Fannie Mae Duncan and friends stand on the street in front of the Cotton Club in 1955. The neon sign on the building reads “Duncan’s Cafe Bar Lounge.” Duncan graduated from the integrated Colorado Springs High School (now Palmer High) in 1938, the first in her family to get a diploma, according to a Nov. 5, 2018, Gazette article. She went into business for herself at age 26. Duncan bought the building that would become Duncan’s Cafe and later the Cotton Club across from the Antlers hotel, when she was just 28. Photograph by Lew Tilley, Courtesy of Pikes Peak Library District, 099-10714
1 of 5
Fannie Mae Duncan and friends stand on the street in front of the Cotton Club in 1955. The neon sign on the building reads “Duncan’s Cafe Bar Lounge.” Duncan graduated from the integrated Colorado Springs High School (now Palmer High) in 1938, the first in her family to get a diploma, according to a Nov. 5, 2018, Gazette article. She went into business for herself at age 26. Duncan bought the building that would become Duncan’s Cafe and later the Cotton Club across from the Antlers hotel, when she was just 28. Photograph by Lew Tilley, Courtesy of Pikes Peak Library District, 099-10714
MY EDMONDS NEWS Posted: February 9, 2021
Alicia Crank speaks to supporters Monday night via Zoom.
It may be early February, but Edmonds City Council election season is well underway, with Position 1 candidate Alicia Crank holding her campaign kickoff remotely Monday night to an enthusiastic audience gathered via Zoom and Facebook.
The event included several speakers from business owners to community leaders who offered their unqualified support for electing Crank to the council in November.
They included Andy and Kristen Cline, owners of downtown Edmonds’ Cline Jewelers. Kristen Cline said that Crank is “completely invested in our community,” and pointed to the range of efforts the candidate has immersed herself including the upcoming Edmonds International Women’s Day event, which Crank founded three years ago.
MY EDMONDS NEWS Posted: February 1, 2021
Alicia Crank
Edmonds Planning Board vice chair and community volunteer Alicia Crank will officially launch her campaign for Edmonds City Council Position 1 during an online event Monday, Feb. 8.
In announcing the event, Crank said she brings more than 20 years experience as a business and nonprofit leader, most currently as chief development officer for AtWork!.
Crank stressed that cross-community support is the foundation of her campaign, with a focus on fostering consensus across various groups across Edmonds.
“I am not seeking endorsements from any of the current Edmonds City Councilmembers,” she said. I believe in integrity, transparency, and conversations. We’ve seen too much ‘Us vs Them’ during council meetings, inadvertently or otherwise. I’m not running to choose a side. I am running to represent the community as a whole. We can have solid and thoughtful discussions which lead to transparent and honest decisions