found: His A Chinaman's chance, c1989:t.p. (Fred Wei-han Ho)
found: Sounding off, c1995:t.p. (Fred Wei-han Ho) p. [4] (Fred Ho)
found: LC database, July 20, 1998(hdg.: Houn, Fred Wei-han; usage: Fred Wei-han Houn)
found: Online copyright file, July 20, 1998(Ho, Fred, 1957- ; Ho, Fred Wei-han, 1957- ; Houn, Fred Wei-han, 1957- )
found: Music index, July 1996:p. 43 (Ho, Fred Wei-han; formerly known as Fred Houn)
found: Asian music, v. 25, 1-2, 1993/1994:p. 90 (Fred Wei-han Ho; b. in Palo Alto, Calif, saxophonist) p. 112 (Houn, Fred Wei-han; the spelling of Houn was changed to Ho in 1989)
found: Int. ww in pop. mus., 4th ed.(Ho, Fred Wei-Han Houn; b. Aug. 10, 1957, Palo Alto, Calif.; composer, musician (baritone saxophone), writer, producer)
found: Grove music online, Feb. 6, 2004:Jazz (Ho (Houn), Fred (Wei-Han); b. Aug. 10, 1957, Palo Alto, CA; composer, baritone saxophonist, and leader; he began using the surname Ho in 1988)
found: New York times (online), viewed Apr. 14, 2014(in obituary published Apr. 12: Fred Ho; b. Fred Wei-han Houn, Aug. 10, 1957, Palo Alto, Calif.; changed his surname in 1988; d. Saturday [Apr. 12, 2014], Brooklyn, aged 56; composer, saxophonist, writer, and radical activist who composed politically charged operas, suites, oratorios, and ballets that mixed jazz with popular and traditional elements of what he called Afro-Asian culture)