KPFA PROGRAM
RADIO STATIONS KPFA (FM) 94.1 MC AND KPFB (FM) 89.3 MC
MARCH 1 THROUGH MARCH 14, 1959 • VOLUME 9, NUMBER 25
PROGRAM NOTES: An important group of programs will be presented in rather close
order during the first few days of this Folio; they all deal with various aspects of
education, with children and their training. Beginning the series, on Monday, March
2nd at 8:45 p.m. will be an address by Adlai Stevenson, given recently in San Fran-
cisco before the National School Boards' Convention which was held in January. Fol-
lowing this talk, at 9:30 p.m., we will present a discussion of problems of maladjusted
learners by J. E. Wasson. On March 4th, at 10:10 p.m., we will air a panel discussion
on the important local experiment, the East Bay Activities Center, which deals with
problems of disturbed children. On March 5th at 8:55 p.m. we will present material
on another, equally important, problem . . . that of the gifted pupil, in a talk by
Marian Scheifele Conde. Concluding this series will be the address by the Honorable
James Bryant Conant, his Report on American High Schools, which was another of
the addresses given before the School Boards' Convention.
We announce with great pleasure the beginning of a series of concerts recorded
at the Festival Casals, held last summer in San Juan, Puerto Rico. These concerts
were made available to us exclusively in this area by WIPR, the educational television
station in San Juan. The Festival last year was devoted to the music of Mozart, Beet-
hoven, and Brahms. Pablo Casals, showing none of the effects of the illness that had
kept him from the preceding year's Festival, officiated over a series of strenuous and
rewarding programs. The personnel of the orchestra, gathered together from all over
the world, reads like a musical "Who's Who"; Alexander Schneider was the concert-
master; his brother Mischa was first cello; Julius Baker played first flute. Other par-
ticipants included the Budapest Quartet, Victoria de los Angeles, Isaac Stern, Rudolf
Serkin, Jesus Maria Sanroma, Eugene Istomin, Mieczyslaw Horszowski (our favorite
name for announcers' auditions, and, of course, Pablo Casals. The twelve concerts
will be heard on Wednesday evenings and Saturday afternoons.
Adlai Stevenson, James Bryant Conant, Henry Cabot Lodge, Roger Sessions, the
Casals Festival, the BBC Reith Lectures, Norman Cousins, Paul Tillich, James Warburg,
George Kirstein . . . this is only typical of the material that arrives at KPFA regularly
these days; several programs of equal merit had to be held over for lack of space.
May we suggest that this would be a particularly good Folio to send to a friend in
Southern California with the reminder that our new station there, KPFK, will be on
the air in June. If you would like an extra copy or two for this purpose, please let
us know at KPFA, Berkeley 4.
People who like good
music usually like good
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PROGRAM
Published bi-weekly by Radio Station KPF.A, 2207 Shattuck Avenue, Berkeley 4,
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Listeners in certain parts of the East Bay who have difficulty receiving KPFA clearly may hear all of these
programs on KPFB at 89.3 mc.
•
BROADCAST HOURS: 7 a.m. -Midnight, Monday through Friday. 9 a.m. -Midnight, Saturday and Sunday. Dates
of future rebroadcasts appear in BOLD FACE, caps and parentheses. Dates of original broadcasts appear in
light face and in parentheses. * Indicates stereophonic broadcast with KQED.
•
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In Southern California: KPFK, 1153 N. Western Avenue, Room 5, Los Angeles 29. Telephone Hollywood 7-0777.
SUNDAY, March 1
9:00 BAROQUE MUSIC (Feb. 17)
TELEMANN Tafelmusik, Suite No. 3 (23)
BACH Prelude and Fugue, Eb major; Fantasie,
G major; Canzona, D minor (31 )
COUPERIN L'Apotheose de Lulli (30)
10:30 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth. (Feb. 26)
11:10 GREAT STORIES OF THE WORLD: "The Death
of a Gaucho," by the Argentine writer Leopoldo
Lugones, is read by Michael Tigar.
11:40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER: Harold Winkler.
(Feb. 25)
12:00 JAZZ REVIEW: Philip F. Elwood.
1:30 THERESA LOEB CONE INTERVIEWS: another in
the series in which the drama and movie editor
of the Oakland Tribune talks with local and
national theatrical personalities. (MARCH 3)
2:00 THE AMBIGUITIES OF LIFE AND THE QUEST
FOR THE UNAMBIGUOUS: third of four lectures
delivered at Yale University by Dr. Paul Till ich,
noted philosopher, auther and member of the
Harvard Divinity School faculty. Recorded by
WGBH, Boston.
2:50 CHORAL CONCERT
HANDEL Dettingen Te Deum
(Netherlands Bach Society— van der Horst)
(Epic 3540) (52)
MOZART Mass, C minor, K. 427
(Vienna Choir, Orch-Moralt) (Epic 6009) (76)
5:00 THEODORE BIKEL AT HOME: another informal
session with the noted actor and folksinger, and
his guests.
6:15 COMMENTARY: Dr. Mulford Sibley. (MARCH 2)
6:30 IN THE LAST ANALYSIS: Dr. Paul A. Baran and
Robert Schutz. (Feb. 27)
7:00 MUSIC OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS: conducted
by Frank de Bellis. (MARCH 4)
VIVALDI Violin Concerto, G minor, P. 407
(Ales, Ens-de Froment) (OL) (8)
G. GABRIELI Fantasia del Sesto Tono
(Giuseppe de Dona, organ) (Vox) (3)
TESSARINI Flute Sonata, D major, Op. 14 No. 4
(Pampal, Gerlin) (OL) (7)
PAISIELLO Nina, o La Pazza d'Amore, Overture
(Royal Phil-Beecham) (RCA) (6)
CAMBINI Andromaque
(Tyler, Ens-Jenkins) (Haydn) (11)
BOCCHERINI Quintet, D major, Op. 40 No. 2
(Quintetto Boccherini) (Angel) (18)
DeNARDIS Scene Abbruzzese No. 2
(Scarlatti Orch-Argento) (Colo) (22)
8:30 WAY BEYOND THE WEST: another in the series
of talks on oriental philosophy and its con-
temporary impact, by Alan Watts. (MARCH 7)
9:00 THE 1958 REITH LECTURES: each year the BBC
endows a series of lectures by an important
world figure; previous participants have in-
cluded Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer and George
Kennan. The latest series, given last December,
is by A.C.B. Lovell, Fellow of the Royal Society,
Professor of Radio Astronomy at the University
of Manchetser, and director of Jodrell Bank
Experimental Station. The series is entitled "The
Individual and the Universe," and this first
' talk is "Astronomy Breaks Free." (MARCH 6)
9:30 THE FIRST STAGE: part six of the BBC series
offering a chronicle of the development of early
English drama. VI: "Morality Plays," introduced
by John Barton.
11:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
DVORAK Symphony No. 4, G major, Op. 88
(Cleveland-Szell) (Epic 3532) (35)
SCHOENBERG Five Pieces for Orchestra, Op. 16
(Chicago-Kubelik) (Merc 50024) (19)
MONDAY, March 2
7:00 MUSIC BY HAYDN
Symphony No. 46, B major
(Hamburg-Winograd) (MGM 3436) (22)
Harpsichord Concerto, G major
(Veyron-Lacroix, Orch-Horvath) (West 18042)
(15)
Symphony No. 33, C major
(Hamburg-Winograd) (MGM 3436) (23)
Harpsichord Concerto, F major
(Veyron-Lacroix, Orch-Horvath) (West 18042)
(11)
Symphony No. 97, C major
(Cleveland-Szell) (Epic 3455) (25)
"Lord Nelson" Mass
(Vienna Choir, Orch-Rossi) (Vanguard 470)
(40)
9:30 COMMENTARY: Dr. Mulford Sibley. 'March 1)
9:45 THE BOOK SAMPLER (Feb. 28)
10:15 CHAMBER MUSIC
BEETHOVEN Quartet, A major, Op. 18 No. 5
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 4578) (23)
BEETHOVEN Quartet, E minor, Op. 59 No. 2
(Budapest Quartet) (Col 4580) (35)
SCHUBERT Quartet, E major, Op. 125 No. 2
(Konzerthaus Quartet) (West 18476) (20)
BRAHMS Piano Quartet, A major. Op. 26
(Aller, Hollywood Ens.) (Cap 8346) (40)
12:20 THE KPFA WRITERS' WORKSHOP: third in the
series, conducted by Mark Schorer. (Feb. 21)
1:20 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
MENDELSSOHN Symphony No. 3, A minor
(Pittsburgh-Steinberg) (Cap 8192) (34)
SCHOENBERG Piano Concerto
(Brendel, Orch-Gielen) (Vox 10530) (20)
BARTOK Violin Concerto
(Varga, Orch-Fricsay) (Decca 9545) (40)
MAHLER Symphony No. 5, C# minor
(Vienna-Scherchen) (West 2220) (75)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
A "tell-me-again" tale, read by Stella Toogood.
Stories and poems, read by Kathy McCreary.
Forest Lore, with Jack Parker, naturalist for
the east Bay Regional Parks.
5:15 ETHNIC MUSIC: conducted by Al and Judy
Hudson. (Feb. 26)
5:45 CANADIAN PRESS REVIEW (BFA recording)
Page 4
KPFA FOLIO
00 CHAMBER MUSIC
MOZART Divertimento. Eb major, K. 563
(Pasquier Trio) (Vox 6030) (40)
BEETHOVEN "Eroica" Variations, Op. 35; 32
Variations, C minor (Denis Matthews) (Van
1032) (35)
C. H. WILTON Trio No. 6, F major
(Pougnet, Riddle, Pini) (West 18586) (10)
30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: William
Mandel. (MARCH 3)
00 NEWS
15 COMMENTARY: Trevor Thomas. (MARCH 3)
30 MISCELLANY
45 IMPROVING EDUCATION - A FREE PEOPLE'S
RESPONSIBILITY: Adlai Stevenson addresses the
1959 National School Boards Convention in
San Francisco on January 26.
30 MALADJUSTED LEARNERS: J. E. Wasson, Prin-
cipal at Hoover Junior High School in Oakland,
discusses the recent report by the Oakland
Principals' Club on the possibility of setting up
special schools for children in this category.
50 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
GINASTERA Lamentations of Jeremiah
(San Jose Choir) (MusicLib 7065) (11)
KRENEK Lamentations of Jeremiah
(Dresden School Choir-Flamig) (Epic 3509)
(20)
BERNSTEIN Jeremiah Symphony
(Merriman, St. Louis— Bernstein) (Camden
196) (24)
50 NO MORE FRIDAYS: a story by George Blue-
stone, who has had stories published in "At-
lantic Monthly," "New World Writing,"
"Epoch," "Virginia Quarterly Review," etc., and
reviews and poetry in "Sewanee Review,"
"Western Review," and elsewhere. He is also
the author of "Novels into Film" (Johns Hop-
kins Press, 1959). Mr. Bluestone recorded this
story for KPFA.
20 CHAMBER JAZZ: Wilburn Harden (fluegel horn),
John Coltrane (tenor sax). Tommy Flanagan
(piano), Doug Watkins (bass), and Louis Hayes
(drums). (Savoy 12127)
TUESDAY, March 3
7:00 FRENCH MUSIC (Feb. 18)
MILHAUD Le Boeuf sur le Toit (14)
POULENC Piano Concerto (22)
DEBUSSY Images for Orchestra (35)
MILHAUD Les Choephores (40)
9:10 COMMENTARY: Trevor Thomas. (March 2)
9:25 THERESA LOEB CONE INTERVIEWS (March 1)
10:00 CHAMBER MUSIC
HAYDN Quartet, A major, Op. 20 No. 6
(Schneider Qt.) (Haydn HSQ-18) (20)
BEETHOVEN Violin Sonata, D major. Op. 12
No. 1
(Grumiaux, Haskil) (Epic 3400) (17)
SCHUBERT "Arpeggione" Sonata, A minor
(Feuermann, Moore) (Col 4677) (22)
BRAHMS Clarinet Sonata, Eb major. Op. 120
No. 2
(Kell, Horszowski) (Merc 10016) (24)
DVORAK Quartet, Ab major, Op. 105
(Barylli Quartet) (West 18519) (32)
12:00 A PANORAMA OF POLISH MUSIC: two, "the
beginnings of Polish Opera" (Feb. 25)
1:00 THE MEMOIRS OF FIELD MARSHAL MONT-
GOMERY: a BBC program in which Lord Mont-
gomery, Brigadier E. T. Williams, and Charles
Collingwood, former American war correspond-
ent, discuss the book.
1:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
BACH Suite No. 4, D major
(Concertgebouw-van Beinum) (Epic 3332) (24)
MOZART Violin Concerto No. 5, A major, K. 219
(Grumiaux, Orch — Paumgartner) (Epic 3157)
(27)
CHOPIN Piano Concerto No. 1 , E minor
(Anda, Orch-Galliera) (Angel 35631) (38)
JANACEK Sinfonietta
(Vienna Orch-Horenstein) (Vox 9710) (28)
3:40 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: William
Mondel. (March 2)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
A story told from memory: Josephine Gardner.
African Folk Tales (Paul Radin) read by Jack
Taylor.
5:00 LEAP UP, YOU STONES!: poetry by John Haag,
read by the author. Mr. Haag is 32, began writ-
ing at 30, and is winner of the Northwest
Academy of American Poets Award, 1958. His
work has appeared, or will appear in the "New
Yorker," "The Saturday Review," "Northwest
Review," and other literary journals.
5:30 A BOOK REVIEW: E. G. Burrows is joined by
Donald Hall, widely published poet and author
of "The Dark Houses" (Viking), in a review of
three recent books of poetry: "Seeing is Believ-
ing" by Charles Tomlinson; "Patterson Number
Five" by William Carlos Williams,- and "95
poems" by e.e. cummings. From the Univ. of
Michigan Radio Service. (WUOM)
5:45 GERMAN PRESS REVIEW (BFA recording)
6:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
BACH Harpsichord Concerto No. 5, F minor
(Videro, Orch-Friisholm) (Haydn 92) (14)
BACH Two-Harpsichord Concerto, C major
(Videro, Sorensen, Orch— Friisholm) (Haydn 93)
(21)
MOZART Sinfonia Concertante, Eb major, K. 364
(Stern, Primrose, Orch-Casals) (Col 4564) (32)
HAYDN Symphony No. 95, C minor
(RIAS Orch-Fricsay) (Decca 9745) (20)
7:30 GOLDEN VOICES: conducted by Anthony
Boucher. (MARCH 5)
Conchita Supervia (Concepcion Supervia Pascual)
(71895-1936) third of three programs (record-
ings of 1927-1933)
TURINA Triptico: Farruca
GRANADOS Danza no. 5 (Playera) (arr. Munoz
Lorente)
CHAPI La chavala: Cancion gitana
CHAPI Las hijas del Zedebeo: Carceleras
VALVERDE Clavelitos
HERNANDEZ Lamento borincano
VALVERDE Tengo dos lunares
BARTA Los ojos negros, negritos
00 NEWS
15 COMMENTARY: Herbert Aptheker. (MARCH 4)
30 PLAYS AND PLAYERS: David Watmough dis-
cusses plays and the theater in the San Fran-
cisco Bay Area.
8:45 SHAKESPEARE AT WORK: G. B. Harrison, lead-
ing Shakespearean scholar and author of works
on Shakespeare and his time, is heard in the
third program in this series, presenting discus-
cussion and examples of the technique of this
playwright. (WUOM recording).
9:15 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood. The young
Earl Hines: piano solos and band sides from
the 1920's. (MARCH 4)
9:45 MISCELLANY
* 10:00 STEREOPHONIC CONCERT (KPFA and KPFB-
KQED). Chamber music by Mozart.
Oboe Quartet, F major, K. 370
(Still, Fine Arts Qt.) (Con-Disc 204) (16)
Clarinet Quintet, A major, K. 581
(Kell, Fine Arts Qt.) (Con-Disc 203) (28)
10:45 SHOLOM ALEICHEM, A CENTENNIAL: the great
Jewish writer was born 100 years ago today.
In commemoration, Albee Slade reads S. G.
Bloomfield's essay "Sholom Aleichem," followed
by readings in English of two Aleichem stories:
"The Yom Kippur Scandal" and "Dreyfus in Kas-
rilevka," read by Jack Hyams.
WEDNESDAY, March 4
7:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
MOZART Symphony No. 35, D major, K. 385
(Pittsburgh-Steinberg) (Cap 8242) (20)
HANDEL Organ Concerti, Op. 4 Nos. 5, 6
(Biggs, Orch-Boult) (Col K2L-258) (17)
BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No. 5, Eb major
(Backhaus, Orch-Krauss) (Lon 879) (40)
TCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No. 6, B minor
(Pittsburgh-Steinberg) (Cap 8272) (46)
9:10 COMMENTARY: Herbert Aptheker. (March 3)
9:25 BRITISH CARIBBEAN WRITERS: a round-table
discussion recorded by the BBC. (Feb. 28)
10:10 GILBERT & SULLIVAN'S "GONDOLIERS"
(Feb. 28)
12:00 WIND, SAND, AND STARS: another program
rescheduled from the Day the Transmitter Didn't
(Jan. 5). Angela Sullivan, instructor at Oakland
City College, reads from the St. Exupery book,
and provides an introduction.
12:50 CHAMBER MUSIC
BEETHOVEN Trio, D major, Op. 70 No. 1
(Fcurnier, Janigro, Badura-Skoda) (West
18232) (24)
SCHUBERT Violin Sonata, A major, Op. 162
(Kreisler, Rachmaninov) (RCA LVT-1009) (24)
HINDEMITH Cello Sonata, Op. 11 No. 3
(Starker, Pommers) (Period 741) (21)
BRAHMS Trio, B major, Op. 8
(Fournier, Janigro, Badura-Skoda) (West
18450) (35)
2:45 MUSIC OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS: Frank de
Bellis. (March 1)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
"Henry and Ribsy" (Beverly Cleary), read by
Ben Bortin.
"Tall Tale America" (Walter Blair): "Captain
Stormalong, Fighter and Whaler," read by
Bill Crosby.
"Signposts for Young Scientists" (Janet Nickels-
burg), read by Eleanor McKinney.
5:15 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood. (March 3)
5:45 BRITISH WEEKLIES
6:00 FESTIVAL CASALS, 1958: the opening concert
of this festival, recorded at the Theater of the
University of Puerto Rico, San Juan, by Station
WIPR.
BEETHOVEN Cello Sonata, F major, Op. 5 No. 1
(Pablo Casals, Mieczyslaw Horszowski)
MOZART Symphony No. 33, Bb major, K. 319
(Festival Orch— Casals)
BRAHMS Trio, Eb major, Op. 40
(Alexander Schneider, John Barrows,
Mieczyslaw Horszowski)
7:40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER: Harold Winkler,
President of Pacifica Foundation. (MARCH 8)
8:00 NEWS
8:15 COMMENTARY: Victor C. Ferkiss. (MARCH 5)
8:30 STUDIO CONCERT: Margaret Tilly, pianist, in
the first of three recitals to be heard during
March.
MOZART Sonata, G major, K. 283
BLOCH Piano Sonata (1935)
SCHUBERT Sonata, Bb major, Op. Posth.
9:40 IN THE DAYS OF VAUDEVILLE: third in a series
in which Byron Bryant explores, with original
recordings, the origins and various aspects of
this art form. (MARCH 9)
10:10 THE EAST BAY ACTIVITIES CENTER: a panel
discussion on this unique Bay Area experiment
in dealing with disturbed children. Elsa Knight
Thompson moderates, and the participants are
Mrs. Kenneth Hayes, President of the Board of
Directors of the Center; Mrs. Frederic Carpenter,
Director of the Center,- Dr. Elinor B. Harvey,
consulting psychiatrist; Mrs. Norah Barr, psy-
chiatric social worker; and Mrs. David Lemon,
teacher.
11:10 A PANORAMA OF POLISH MUSIC: third in the
series recorded by Radio Warsaw and distributed
by Broadcasting Foundation of America. Polish
instrumental music of the 18th Century.
(MARCH 10)
KPFA FOLIO
Page 5
9:30 TURNING POINTS: Dr. A. B. Friedman interviews
Chester Conklin. (Feb. 21)
10:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Feb. 18)
TORELLI Concerto, G minor (10)
BRAHMS Serenade No. 1, D major (40)
MOZART Piano Concerto, Bb major, K. 450 (26)
DVORAK Symphony No. 2, D minor (40)
12:00 MISCELLANY
12:15 U. C. NOON CONCERT: Welton Lee, violinist,
and Ellen Eisenberg, pianist, in sonatas by
Mozart and Franck, broadcast live from the
U. C. Campus.
1:00 THE COLLEGE STUDENT AS "ORGANIZATIONAL
MAN": fifth in a series of lectures by David
Riesman, given at the University of Chicago and
rebroadcast by request. (Dec. 9)
2:00 ORCHESTRAL-CHORAL CONCERT
TCHAIKOVSKY Serenade for Strings, Op. 48
(Lamoureux-van Kempen) (Epic 3213) (27)
STRAVINSKY Mass (1948)
(Netherlands Choir-de Nobel) (Epic 3231) (21)
SCHUBERT Mass, Ab major
(Vienna Ensemble— Grossmann) (Vox 9760)
(45)
SAINT-SAENS Symphony No. 3, C minor
(Asma, Hague-Otterloo) (Epic 3077) (33)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
"The Wind in the Willows" (Grahame); a re-
quested rebroadcast of the BBC dramatiza-
tion; part one (of eight).
"It's Perfectly True" (Hans Christian Andersen),
read by Jack Taylor.
5:15 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher. (March 3)
5:45 FRENCH PRESS REVIEW
6:00 GLENN GOULD, COMPOSER AND PIANIST
(CBC Transcriptions)
BACH Partita No. 5, G major
(Glenn Gould) (13)
GOULD String Quartet No. 1
(Montreal Quartet) (35)
BRAHMS Piano Quintet, F minor, Op. 34
(Gould, Montreal Quartet) (36)
7:30 REPORT ON MUSIC: Alan Rich reports on recent
concerts and recordings. (MARCH 7)
7:45 THE NEW IMPACT OF SCIENCE: another in the
monthly series of talks by Prof. Albert English,
Department of Electrical Engineering, U.C.
(MARCH 12)
8:00 NEWS
8:15 COMMENTARY: Sidney Roger. (MARCH 6)
8:30 THE BERLIN CRISIS: James P. Warburg, author
and political commentator, offers his solution
of the continuing crisis.
8:55 STUDY PROJECT FOR GIFTED PUPILS: the State
Study on Programs for Gifted Pupils, conducted
by the State Department of Education and an
appointed advisory board, is discussed by Mar-
ian Scheifele Conde, a member of the advisory
board and author of "The Gifted Child in the
Regular Classroom."
9:20 MISCELLANY
9:30 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Philip F. Elwood.
(MARCH 6)
10:00 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth, reporting from Aix-
en-Provence. (MARCH 8)
10:40 ETHNIC MUSIC: conducted by Al and Judy
Hudson; part two of a survey of music of Cali-
fornia Indians. (MARCH 9)
11:10 U. C. NOON CONCERT: a recorded rebroadcast
of the program heard earlier today.
THURSDAY, March 5
7:00 CHAMBER MUSIC
MENDELSSOHN Quartet, Eb major, Op. 12
(Curtis Quartet) (West 18503) (23)
MOZART Quintet, Bb major, K. 174
(Barchet Ens.) (Vox VBX-3) (28)
BRAHMS Sextet, G major. Op. 36
(Konzerthaus Ensemble) (West 18445) (40)
BEETHOVEN Septet, Eb major. Op. 20
(Vienna Octet Members) (London 1191) (36)
9:15 COMMENTARY: Victor C. Ferkiss. (March 4)
FRIDAY, March 6
7:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Feb. 19)
HAYDN Symphony No. 98, Bb major,- Double
Concerto, F major (52)
BEETHOVEN Triple Concerto, C major (30)
SCHUMANN Symphony No. 3, Eb major (38)
9:15 COMMENTARY: Sidney Roger. (March 5)
9:30 THE REITH LECTURES: one: "Astronomy breaks
Free." (March 1)
Page 6
KPFA FOLIO
10:00 CHAMBER-CHORAL CONCERT
SATIE Piano Works
(Francis Poulenc) (Col 4399) (25)
FAURE Songs
(Gerard Souzay) (London 245) (24)
MUSSORGSKY Songs and Dances of Death
(Jennie Tourel) (Col 4289) (21)
GLAZUNOV Five Novelettes
(Hollywood Quartet) (Cap 8331) (29)
WOLF Italian Songbook, Selections
(Irmgard Seefried) (Decca 9743) (40)
STRAUSS Serenade for Winds, Bb major
(Vienna Philharmonic Ens.) (West 18173) (11)
12:40 AGEE ON FILM: a discussion with Pauline Kael,
James Karens, and Christopher Bishop. (Feb. 28)
1:50 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
ARRIAGA Symphony, D minor
(Madrid Symphony— Arambarri) (Decca 9756)
(32)
STRAUSS Oboe Concerto
(Goossens, Orch-Galliera) (Col 4775) (20)
SPOHR Clarinet Concerto, F minor
(Schmid, Orch-Jochum) (Urania 7021) (25)
SIBELIUS Violin Concerto, D minor
(Oistrakh, Orch-Kondrashin) (Bruno 14021)
(27)
STRAVINSKY Le Sacre du Printemps
(Pittsburgh-Steinberg) (Cap 8254) (32)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
The Naturalist: "Bird Ringing," produced by the
BBC for schools.
Fun with Music: Laura Weber and her hootin'
Nannies.
Folk Music from Faraway Lands: Indonesia. Pro-
duced by the BFA.
5:15 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Philip F. Elwood.
(March 5)
5:45 SUPREME COURT DECISIONS: James E. Ratcliff,
San Francisco attorney, who will discuss from
time to time Supreme Court decisions of gen-
eral interest.
6:00 FROM RUMANIA: the first of ten programs re-
corded by the Rumanian Broadcasting System
at the First International Georges Enesco Festi-
val and Competition, held last September in
Bucharest; obtained from Broadcasting Founda-
tion of America. David Oistrakh is soloist, with
the Symphony Orchestra of the Rumanian Radio,
in a program of music by Enesco and Beethoven.
7:30 MEN AND ISSUES: Robert Schutz, with guest
to be announced. (MARCH 8)
00 NEWS
15 COMMENTARY: Robert Tideman.
30 SCIENCE NEWS: Chuck Levy. (MARCH 7)
45 MISCELLANY
00 STUDIO CONCERT: a workshop concert of re-
cent compositions by local composers, presented
under the auspices of the Composer's Forum.
00 REPORT ON AMERICAN HIGH SCHOOLS: Dr.
James Bryant Conant, President Emeritus of
Harvard University and former Ambassador to
West Germany, gives a report summarizing a
two-year study on this subject. This address was
delivered before the National School Boards'
Convention in San Francisco on January 28.
00 INSIDE KPFA: informal insights provided by the
KPFA staff. Tom Hardwick is in charge of this
week's progrom.
SATURDAY, March 7
9:00 MUSIC FOR GUITAR (Feb. 20)
BOCCHERINI Quintet, E minor (25)
SOR Sonata; Mozart Variations (16)
MILAN Musica de Vihuela de Mano (25)
DIABELLI Trio, G major (17)
10:30 SCIENCE NEWS: Chuck Levy. (March 6)
10:45 REPORT ON MUSIC: Alan Rich. (March 5)
1 1 :00 WAY BEYOND THE WEST: Alan Watts. (Mar. 1 )
11:30 THE BOOK SAMPLER: a program of discussion
of new and significant books, with passages
read therefrom, conducted by David Watmough.
(MARCH 9)
12:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
BACH Violin Concerto, E major
(Grumiaux, Guller Ens.) (Epic 3342) (23)
GOUNOD Petite Symphonie, B minor
(Wind Ens-Poulteau) (London 1407) (21)
KALINNIKOV Symphony No. 1, G minor
(USSR Orch-Rakhlin) (West 18658) (32)
1:30 TURNING POINTS: Dr. A. B. Friedman of the
Dept. of Theater Arts, UCLA, in another con-
versation with stars of yesterday and ... in
this case . . . today. In this program his guest
is Cornelia Otis Skinner.
2:10 A FESTIVAL FOR VANCOUVER: Peter Bennett,
Executive Director for the Second International
Vancouver Festival, which begins on July 11,
discusses some of the plans and problems of
such an undertaking with Alan Rich.
2:30 FESTIVAL CASALS, 1958: second concert of this
festival, recorded at San Juan by WIPR. A
Beethoven program conducted by Pablo Casals,
with Isaac Stern, violinist.
Overture "Leonore" No. 3
Violin Concerto, D major, Op. 61
Symphony No. 3, Eb major, Op. 55
4:15 THE FALLOUT SUITS: David C. Walden is re-
sponsible for the coordination and financing
of the various lawsuits on nuclear testing now
in progress. He is interviewed by Elsa Knight
Thompson.
4:45 NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CALENDAR OF
EVENTS: compiled and reported by Charles
Susskind.
5:00 THE COMPOSER'S FORUM: a program presented
under the auspices of this active and admirable
local chapter of the I.S.C.M., in connection with
their concert in San Francisco tomorrow night.
Included will be an interview with William O.
Smith and Ingolf Dahl, conducted by Lawrence
Morton, and recordings of music by these two
composers.
6:30 NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Ralph Izard.
7:00 THE ELEVENTH HOUR: reserved for last-minute
program arrivals of topical importance.
8:00 THE KPFA WRITERS' WORKSHOP: a program of
discussion by new and established writers and
literary figures. This program is conducted by
Wiiliam Hogan, Book Editor of the San Francisco
Chronicle. (MARCH 16)
9:00 THE RECORDED REPERTORY: a guide for collec-
tors. Alan Rich in another of his programs com-
menting on various available performances of
specific works. Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.
(MARCH 13)
10:30 THE PARIS REVIEW INTERVIEWS: the Art of
Fiction. An informal reading of another of the
well-known interviews, by kind permission of
the literary-art quarterly "The Paris Review."
Shaun Gordon and Bill Butler read the interview
of the controversial British writer, Henry Green.
11:00 THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL: folksongs and assort-
ed diversions, with Gertrude Chiarito and
guesties.
SUNDAY, March 8
9:00 CHAMBER MUSIC (Feb. 19)
BACH Gamba Sonata No. 3, G minor (15)
BEETHOVEN String Trio, D major, Op. 8 (30)
ARRIAGA Quartet, A major (24)
CLEMENTI Trio No. 6, D major (11)
10:30 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth. (March 5)
11:10 PACKING A PHOTOGRAPH FROM FIRENZE:
William H. Matchett, one of the founders of the
Poets' Theater, Cambridge, and former assistant
to Archibald MacLeish at Harvard, author of
"Water Ouzel and Other Poems" (Houghton
Mifflin, 1955), reads from his work. He has
appeared in "New World Writings," "The New
Yorker," "Furioso" (winning the "Furioso"
poetry award in 1952), and in many other
journals.
11:40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER: Harold Winkler.
(March 4)
12:00 JAZZ REVIEW: Philip F. Elwood.
1:30 THE BOOK MARK: another in the series of
discussions by Betty Ford on the international
literary scene. (MARCH 10)
2:00 THE SELF-MANIFESTATION OF LIFE: last of
four lectures delivered by Dr. Paul Tillich at
Yale University, recorded by WGBH, Boston.
3:00 TIEFIAND: the opera by Eugene d'Albert (1903),
still a great favorite in Mittel Europa, is per-
formed under the direction of Rudolf Moralt,
with Paul Schoeffler and Gre Brouwenstein
prominent in the cast. (Epic 6025)
5:00 THEODORE BlkEL AT HOME
6:00 NEWS
6:15 COMMENTARY: William Buckley. (MARCH 9)
6:30 MEN AND ISSUES: Robert Schutz. (March 6)
7:00 MUSIC OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS: Frank de
Bellis. (MARCH 11)
VIVALDI Double Concerto, Bb major, P. 388
(Ales, Albin, Ens-de Froment) (OL) (10)
A. GABRIELLI Toccata
(Giuseppe de Dona, organ) (Vox) (3)
TORELLI Trumpet Concerto, D major
(Leclair Ens-Paillard) (Haydn) (7)
MONTEVERDI II Combattimento di Tancredi e
Clorinda
(Amadini, Giancolo, Ferrein, Ens— Ephrikian)
(Period) (22)
MALIPIERO Sonata a 5, for Harp and Strings
(Newell, Stuyvesant Qt.) (Phil) (15)
PARELLI La Fontana delle Ninfe, from "Marcel-
lina's Day"
(RAI Orch-Tansini) (Cetra) (4)
8:30 WAY BEYOND THE WEST: Alan Watts.
(MARCH 14)
9:00 THE 1958 REITH LECTURES: second in this BBC
series by Professor A. C. B. Lovell, F.R.S., O.B.E.
"The Origin of the Solar System." (MARCH 13)
9:30 KING LEAR: a performance by the Theater of
the Oregon Shakespearean Festival at Ashland,
made at an actual performance at the outdoor
theater at Ashland. (Jan. 22)
KPFA FOLIO
Page 7
6:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
BONPORTI Concerto, D major, Op. 1 1 No. 8
(I Musici) (Epic 3542) (10)
TELEMANN Concerto for Three Oboes and Three
Violins, Bb major (Ens-Seiler) (Archiv 3109)
(15)
LEOPOLD MOZART Cassation, G major
(Berlin Orch-Gorvin) (Archiv 3093) (21)
W. A. MOZART Piano Concerto No. 20, D minor
(Fischer, Philharmonia Orch) (Angel 35593)
(30)
SCHUBERT "Italian" Overture, D major
(Hamburg-Winograd) (MGM 3362) (10)
7:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: William
Mandel. (MARCH 10)
8:00 NEWS
8:15 COMMENTARY: Donald Henry. (MARCH 10)
8:30 MISCELLANY
8:45 STUDIO CONCERT: the noted Canadian pianist
Reginald Godden in the second in an occasional
series of lecture-recitals; this one is on "pro-
gram music" for piano, and includes works
of Beethoven, Debussy, Ibert, Grieg, and
Godden.
9:45 NEW WRITERS: J. A. Rose. Mr. Rose currently
teaches English at the University of Washington,
and was a student ot Johns Hopkins and the
Sorbonne. He has been published in "Audience"
and has a story coming out in "Western Review."
He reads his story "The Leeches."
10:30 A SURVEY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE: fifteenth
in a series conducted by Dr. Byron Bryant, Assist-
ant Professor of English at St. Mary's College.
XV: Herman Melville. (MARCH 13)
11:15 DIZZY GILLESPIE, WORLD STATESMAN: a con-
cert by the Gillespie Big Band. (Verve 8174)
TUESDAY, March 10
MONDAY, March 9
7:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Feb. 20)
HAYDN Symphony No. 83, G minor (23)
NIELSEN Flute Concerto (22)
BRAHMS Violin Concerto, D major (38)
STRAUSS Also sprach Zarathustra (32)
9:00 COMMENTARY: William Buckley. (March 8)
9:15 THE BOOK SAMPLER: David Watmough.
(March 7)
9:45 CHAMBER MUSIC
HAYDN Divertimento, Bb major
(Paris Wind Ensemble) (Epic 3461) (11)
MOZART Cassation, Eb major
(Paris Wind Ensemble) (Epic 3461) (28)
MARCELLO Sonatas for Gamba, Nos. 1-3
(Scholz, Sartori) (Epic 3260) (28)
BACH-VUATAZ The Musical Offering
(Nonet-Scherchen) (West 18375) (50)
12:00 IN THE DAYS OF VAUDEVILLE: conducted by
Byron Bryant. (March 4)
12:30 MUST WE HAVE THE DEATH PENALTY?: a panel
discussion held under the auspices of the Friends'
Committee on Legislation. Panelists: Mary Ellen
Leary, Associate Editor, San Francisco News,-
Dr. Austin MacCormick, Professor of Criminology,
U.C.; queriers: Byron Bryant, Matgaret Miller,
and William O. Weissich. Rabbi Sidney Akselrad
was the chairman.
1:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Feb. 20)
MOZART Serenade, D major, K. 203 (43)
SCHUBERT Rosamunde, Incidental Music (50)
MENDELSSOHN Symphony No. 5, D minor (32)
3:45 MEET THE WRITER: Donald Keene. A discussion
by this author of the influence of Western
writers on Japanese literature. (Feb. 15)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
A "tell-me-again" tale: Stella Toogood.
Stories and poems, read by Kathy McCreary.
Forest Lore, with Jack Parker.
5:15 ETHNIC MUSIC: Al and Judy Hudson. (March 5)
5:45 CANADIAN PRESS REVIEW (BFA)
7:00 CHAMBER MUSIC A TROIS
BEETHOVEN Trio, Bb major. Op. 97
(Fournier, Janigro, Badura-Skoda) (West
18270) (45)
HAYDN Trios, F# minor and C major
(Goldberg, Pini, Kraus) (Decca DX-104) (35)
SCHUBERT Trio, Eb major. Op. 100
(Busch-Serkin Trio) (Col 4654) (42)
9:10 COMMENTARY: Donald Henry. (March 9)
9:30 THE BOOK MARK: Betty Ford. (March 8)
10:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Feb. 16)
HAYDN Symphony No. 100, G major (26)
MENDELSSOHN Piano Concerto No. 2, D minor
(21)
RAVEL Piano Concerto, G major (23)
DVORAK Symphony No. 5, E minor (43)
12:00 A EUROPEAN SCHOOLING: recollections of a
French education by Gerard Mansell, narrated
for the BBC by Anthony Jacobs.
12:30 CHORAL CONCERT
BACH Cantata No. 198 "Trauer Ode"
(Vienna Ensemble-Scherchen) (West 18395)
(40)
MAHLER Symphony No. 8, Eb major
(Rotterdam Choirs, Orch-Flipse) (Epic 6004)
(85)
2i45 A PANORAMA OF POLISH MUSIC: part three.
(March 4)
3:45 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: William
Mandel. (March 9)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
A story told from memory by Josephine Gardner.
African Folk Tales (Paul Radin), read by Jack
Taylor.
5:00 HOW THE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE SERVES:
Dr. G. L. Dunnahoo, Western Director of the
U. S. Public Health Service District, discusses
the work done by this government agency.
5:30 IRVING HOWE, CRITIC AND POLITICAL HIS-
TORIAN: Mr. Howe joins E. G. Burrows in a
discussion of his books "The American Commun-
ist Party: A Critical History" ond the anthology
"Modern literory Criticisms," of which he is
editor. From the University of Michigan Radio
Service. (WUOM)
Page 8
KPFA FOLIO
5:45 GERMAN PRESS REVIEW (BFA)
6:00 TREASURE OF THE 78: another in the series
devoted to historic performances unavailable
on 78. Pianists: Edwin Fischer plays Bach and
Wilhelm Backhaus plays Brahms. (RCA, HMV)
7:30 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher. (MARCH 12)
Emilio de Gogorza, baritone (1874-1949) a pro-
gram of duets (recordings of 1906-1928)
FLOTOW Marta: Solo, profugo (Ellison Van
Hoose)
MOZART Don Giovanni: La ci darem; Die Zau-
berfloete: La dove prende (Emma Eames)
THOMAS Hamlet: Doute de la lumiere (Marcella
Sembrich)
SAINT-SAENS Samson et Dalila: Vengeance at
last! (Louise Homer)
ANTON Y MICHELENA A la luz de la luna
(Enrico Caruso)
FOLK Los rumberos (Tito Schipa)
8:00 NEWS
8:15 COMMENTARY: To be announced. (MARCH 11)
8:30 THE ABC OF ATOMIC ENERGY: last of seven
BBC talks by Sir Christopher Hinton.
8:45 SHAKESPEARE AT WORK: fourth in the series
of discussions by Professor G. B. Harrison, with
dramatic examples. (WUOM)
9:15 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood. "The Hotsy
Totsy Gang," a studio group from 30 years ago
which often included Goodman, Teagarden, and
other young jazz greats. (MARCH 11)
9:45 MISCELLANY
*10:00 STEREOPHONIC CONCERT (KPFA and KPFB-
KQED)
COPLAND Appalachian Spring
(London Sym-Susskind) (Everest 3002) (23)
PROKOFIEV Lieutenant Kije, Suite
(Chicago-Reiner) (RCA 2150) (21)
10:45 EQUIPMENT REPORT: Bob MacCollister.
11:15 MOZART CONCERT ARIAS: a group sung by
Magda Laszlo. (West 18545)
WEDNESDAY, March 11
7:00 PIANO CONCERT (Feb. 16)
BACH Partita No. 4, D major (27)
BEETHOVEN Sonata, A maior. Op. 2 No. 2 (25)
CHOPIN Etudes, Op. 10 (33)
SCHUBERT Sonata, G major. Op. 78 (35)
9:15 COMMENTARY. (March 10)
9:30 THE PARIS REVIEW INTERVIEWS: Nelson Algren,
read by Dale Minor and Bill Butler. (Feb. 21)
10:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
MENDELSSOHN Sinfonia No. 9, for Strings
(Ensemble-Winograd) (MGM 3668) (28)
VAUGHAN WILLIAMS "London" Symphony
(London Phil-Boult) (Lon 569) (40)
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 6, F major
(Pittsburgh-Steinberg) (Cap 8159) (45)
12:00 D'ALBERT'S "TIEFLAND" (March 8)
2:00 FAVOURITE CHARACTERS: Bessie. Charlotte
Bronte's character from "Jane Eyre" is discussed
by the English writer Pamela Hansford John-
son. (BBC)
2:30 MISCELLANY
2:43 MUSIC OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS: Frank de
Bellis. (March 8)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
"Henry and Ribsy" (Beverly Cleary), read by
Ben Bortin.
"Tall Tale America" (Walter Blair): "Jonathan
Slick, Yankee Peddler," read by Bill Crosby.
"Signposts for Young Scientists" (Janet Nickels-
burg), read by Eleanor McKinney.
5:15 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Philip F. Elwood. (March 10)
5:45 BRITISH WEEKLIES
6:00 FESTIVAL CASALS, 1958: third in a series re-
corded by WIPR, San Juan, Puerto Rico, at the
Festival last summer.
BRAHMS Quartet, Bb major, Op. 67
(Budapest Quartet)
BEETHOVEN Sonata, F major, Op. 17 (originally
for horn, arranged for cello)
(Pablo Casals, Mieczyslaw Horszowski)
MOZART Divertimento, D major, K. 251
(Festival Orchestra— Casals)
40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER: Harold Winkler.
(MARCH 15)
00 NEWS
15 COMMENTARY: Herbert Hanley. (MARCH 12)
30 MISCELLANY
40 NORMAN COUSINS VISITS BERKELEY: the editor
of the Saturday Review, who came to this area
to deliver the Earl Lectures at the Pacific School
of Religion, is interviewed by Marshall Wind-
miller and Robert Schutz.
30 MUSIC BY ISRAELI COMPOSERS: performed by
Amiram Rigai, pianist. (MusicLib 7083)
M. H. RUGER Piano Sonata
A. U. BOSKOVICH Semitic Suite
MARK LAVRY Five Country Dances
00 AMERICAN COMPOSERS IN RUSSIA: last Sep-
tember four American composers . . . Roy
Harris, Ulysses Kay, Peter Mennin, and Roger
Sessions . . . spent a month in Russia visiting
Soviet composers, hearing Russian music, and
participating in performances of their own
works. They are heard giving their impressions
of this trip to an audience at the Juilliard School
of Music, New York, at a meeting chaired by
William Schuman.
00 A PANORAMA OF POLISH MUSIC: fourth in the
BFA series, recorded by Radio Warsaw. "Moni-
uszko, father of Polish opera." (MARCH 17)
THURSDAY, March 12
7:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Feb. 16)
MOZART Symphony No. 29, A major (21)
THOMSON Cello Concerto (22)
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 7, A major (40)
8:45 COMMENTARY: Herbert Hanley. (March 11)
9:00 NEW POETS: Julian White, poet, pianist, and
composer, appears in his first-named guise.
(Feb. 27)
9:30 MUSIC BY BACH
Brandenburg Concerto No. 6, Bb major
(Munich Ens-Redel) (West 18647) (25)
Two-Violin Concerto, D minor
(Stern, Schneider, Ens-Casals) (Col 4351) (18)
Four Motets
(Leipzig Choir-Ramin) (Archiv 3040) (45)
Five Chorale-Preludes
(Helmut Walcha) (Archiv 3022) (22)
Cantata No. 79 "Gott der Herr"
(Berlin Ens-Lehmann) (Archiv 3065) (20)
12:00 MISCELLANY
12:15 U. C. NOON CONCERT: a concert of medieval
music performed by an ensemble conducted by
Theodore Grudzinski, broadcast live from the
U. C. Campus.
1:00 THE SEARCH FOR CHALLENGE: last of six lec-
tures by David Riesman, recorded by WFMT at
the University of Chicago. (Dec. 16)
2:00 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Feb. 17)
HEROLD Zampa Overture (9)
TCHAIKOVSKY Violin Concerto, D major (30)
ARTUR SCHNABEL Piano Concerto (23)
PROKOFIEV Symphony No. 6, Eb minor (40)
4:00 THE NEW IMPACT OF SCIENCE: Albert English.
(March 5)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
"The Wind in the Willows," part two of the
BBC dramatization.
"It's Perfectly True" (Andersen), read by Jack
Taylor.
5:15 GOLDEN VOICES: Anthony Boucher. (March 10)
5:45 FRENCH PRESS REVIEW
6:00 CHAMBER MUSIC
TELEMANN Sonata, a Tre, D major
(Wenzinger Ensemble) (Archiv 3043) (12)
TELEMANN Quartet, D minor
(Wind Ens., Gerwig) (Archiv 3043) (16)
J. C. BACH Four-Hand Sonata, G major
(Demus, Badura-Skoda) (West 18025) (14)
MOZART Two-Piano Sonata, D major, K. 448
(Badura-Skoda, Demus) (West 18044) (24)
BEETHOVEN Trio, Bb major, Op. 1 1
(Kell, Miller, Horszowski) (Decca 9543) (20)
7:30 REPORT ON MUSIC: Alan Rich. (MARCH 14)
7:45 CHINA PRESS REVIEW: Chalmers Johnson.
8:00 NEWS
8:15 COMMENTARY: Marshall Windmiller.
(MARCH 13)
8:30 THE U. S. AMBASSADOR TO THE U. N.: Henry
Cabot Lodge, speaking and answering questions
at a luncheon meeting of the Radio and Tele-
vision Executives' Society of New York. Record-
ed by Station WBAI.
9:30 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Philip F. Eh
(MARCH 13)
10:00 BOOKS: Kenneth Rexroth. (MARCH 15)
10:40 ETHNIC MUSIC: Al and Judy Hudson.
KPFA FOLIO
Paqe 9
logging pi
vood.
Par
three of a survey of music of the California
Indians. (MARCH 16)
11:10 THE U. C. NOON CONCERT: a recorded rebroad-
cast of the program heard earlier today.
FRIDAY, March 13
7:00 CHAMBER MUSIC (Feb. 17)
MOZART Sonata, G major, K. 379 (20)
HAYDN Three String Trios (29)
BEETHOVEN Quartet, Bb major, Op. 18 No. 6
(25)
SCHUBERT Three Violin Sonatinas, Op. 137 (40)
SCHUMANN Piano Quartet, Eb major (28)
9:30 COMMENTARY: Marshall Windmiller. (March 12)
9:45 A SURVEY OF AMERICAN LITERATURE: Byron
Bryant discusses Melville. (March 9)
10:30 ORCHESTRAL-CHORAL CONCERT (Feb. 24)
BEETHOVEN Two Romances (17)
SCHUBERT Two Choruses (10)
BRAHMS Schicksalslied (14)
MAHLER Songs of a Wayfarer (20)
BRUCKER Te Deum (23)
12:00 THE BBC REITH LECTURES: two, "The Origin of
the Solar System." (March 8)
12:30 THE RECORDED REPERTORY: Alan Rich goes
a-tromping upon Beethoven's Ninth. (March 7)
2:00 MUSIC FOR WINDS, MOSTLY (Feb. 23)
HAYDN Divertimento, Bb major (10)
BEETHOVEN Octet, Eb major (22)
MOZART Divertimento No. 3, K. A. 229 (14)
SCHUBERT Octet, F major (50)
BRAHMS Serenade, A major, Op. 16 (35)
4:15 PROGRAMS FOR CHILDREN
The Naturalist: "The Future for Animals," a
BBC school production.
Fun with Music with Laura Weber with . . .
Folk Music from Faraway Lands: Israel; pro-
duced by Broadcasting Foundation of America.
5:15 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Philip F. Elwood.
(March 12)
REPORT ON ASIA: Colin D. Edwards.
FROM RUMANIA: second in a series presenting
the Enesco Competition and Festival, recorded
by the Bucharest Radio and distributed by BFA.
A program of Lieder and quartets by Georges
Enesco, performed by Rumanian artists.
THE PROPER FUNCTION OF AN ARCHITECT:
R. Buckminster Fuller has been a controversial
figure in the world of Ipanning and design for
many years. He is interviewed by Elsa Knight
Thompson.
NEWS
COMMENTARY: Park Chamberlain.
SCIENCE NEWS: Chuck Levy. (MARCH 14)
MISCELLANY
5:45
6:00
STUDIO CONCERT: Julian White, poet, composer,
and pianist, heard now in his latter guise.
BACH Partita, C minor
BRAHMS Three Intermezzi, Opus 117
SCHUBERT Fantasy, C major, Op. 15,
"Wanderer"
METROPOLITAN AFFAIRS: John Blayney inter-
views Aaron Levine, Philadelphia redevelop-
ment expert, on Son Francisco':
gram.
10:30 THE IMPORTANCE OF DISSENT: George G.
Kirstein, publisher of "The Notion," in an
address at the University of California on
January 9.
11:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
SCHOENBERG Variations for Orchestra, Op. 31
(Los Angeles Ens-Craft) (Col 5244) (19)
BARTOK Concerto for Orchestra
(Chicago-Reiner) (RCA 1934) (40)
SATURDAY, March 14
10:30
10:45
11:00
11:30
12:00
4:45
5:00
6:30
6:45
7:00
8:00
8:40
10:00
BAROQUE MUSIC (Feb. 28)
MONTEVERDI Lamento d'Arianna (two set-
tings) (35)
GEMINIANI Concerto Grosso, Op. 7 No. 1 (11)
BACH Cantata No. 21 "Ich hatte viel
Bekummernis" (40)
SCIENCE NEWS: Chuck Levy. (MarcS 13)
REPORT ON MUSIC: Alan Rich. (March 12)
WAY BEYOND THE WEST: Alan Watts.
(March 8)
THE BOOK SAMPLER: conductor to be an-
nounced. (MARCH 16)
AN IGOR STRAVINSKY CONCERT: the com-
poser conducts the BBC Symphony Orchestra.
(BBC) Agon; Symphony in three Movements,-
Apollon Musagetes; Firebird, excerpts.
CRITICS' CIRCLE: "Youth and the Human Situ-
ation," a panel discussion produced and
moderated by Hal Bronstein, with Florence
Mittelman, 16, Michael Martin, 15, and Munro
Strong, 17, all of Drew High School, San
Francisco, and Daniel Goldstine, 18, Univer-
sity of California.
FESTIVAL CASALS, 1958: fourth in a series
recorded by WIPR, San Juan, at last summer's
Festival. Pablo Casals conducts the Festivol
Orchestra, with Jesus Maria Sanroma, pianist.
MOZART "Magic Flute," Overture
BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No. 5, Eb major
BRAHMS Symphony No. I, C minor
FAMILIES ON THE MOVE: Michael Young is
Director of the Institute of Community Studies,
Bethnal Green, London; he is presently at the
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral
Sciences, Stanford. This recording was made
for the BBC by Mr. Young, interviewing Cock-
ney residents of Bethnal Green, where a large-
scale slum clearance is being carried out.
(Rescheduled from Jan. 29)
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA CALENDAR OF
EVENTS: Charles Susskind.
CHORAL CONCERT
LULLY Miserere
(Deller, Ens-Lewis) (OL 50166) (25)
PURCELL Come, Ye Sons of Art
(Deller, Ens-Lewis) (OL 50166) (30)
PROKOFIEV Alexander Nevsky
(Vienna Ens-Rossi) (Vonguard 451) (33)
NEWS
COMMENTARY: Claude Fawcelt.
THE ELEVENTH HOUR
GESANG 1ST DASEIN: The Poetry of Rainer
Maria Rilke. Hans P. Guth, teacher and author
of several scholarly articles in American ond
German periodicals, discusses Rilke and reads
from his poetry in German and English.
RECENT RELEASES: important new recordings
chosen for advance hearing.
THE IMPERSONAL HAMLET: a talk by F. V.
Committee of the Royal Society and the Nuf-
field Foundation, England. Recorded at the
University of California last December.
THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL
Page 10
KPFA FOLIO
MARY ANN POLLAR PRESENTS
Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee—Folk Music Concert
• Saturday, March 14 — 8:30 p. m. — Admission $1.35 and $1.70
Berkeley Little Theater, Grove and Allston Way, Berkeley
Tickets: Pan Pipes — San Francisco; Record City, Off the Record — Berkeley
Theo. Bikel—Folk Music Concert
•Thursday, March 19 — 8:30 p. m.— Admission $1.80 and $2:20
Palo Alto Sr. High School Auditorium, Embarcadero & El Camino Real
Tickets: Hi Fidelity Unlimited, 935 El Camino Real, Menlo Park
Bell's College Book Shop, 536 Emerson, Palo Alto
• Saturday, March 21—8:30 p. m.— Admission $1.55 and $1.80
Garfield Jr. High School Auditorium, Rose & Grant Sts., Berkeley
Tickets: Pan Pipes— San Francisco; Record City, Off the Record — Berkeley
For mail orders and information: OL 3-6328
(RATI: 15c per word per issue. Cheek must accompany order. Send printed or typewritten copy and check to
KPfA Program Folio, Independent Printing Company, 168 Tenth Street, Richmond, California.)
TO SHARE: Large, pleasant house and garden 15th Ave.
near Lake St., S. F. Two large rooms available, prefer
men. SK. 2-4345.
ABRACADABRA! Slaxon presents his enchanting Magic-
Show for all ages (moppets to octogenarians). Bunny
vanishes— Audience participates— even the Joneses re-
member. UNderhill 3-7933.
RICHARD W. LEONARD: ARTIST, definitive PORTRAIT
PHOTOGRAPHY: $10 the setting $2 the print. 10 proof
prints included you are satisfied or no payment. HI.
4-4890-921 York Street, Oakland.
DON SCOTT-AUDIO SERVICE AND FM ALIGNMENT-
TH. 1-4937.
PROF. MAN WANTS TO SHARE S.F. view apt. with
same, GR. 4-3459.
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY with imagination. A picture
story that captures the personality of the occasion.
Formal poses, too, if you prefer. Samples shown. John
Laf ler, TH. 8-3449.
EDITH HAMLIN, San Francisco muralist, announces a
six weeks course in mosaics, beginning March 2nd and
7th. Telephone JUniper 6-2180.
SHARE 5-room flat, $35. Mission 7-2568.
NOW IS THE TIME-only Bay Area tax expert with pony
tail will prepare income tax returns in your home.
Coke Gromme, OLympic 3-5954.
HAVE YOUR interior house painting done by a Sub-
scriber, app. ten cents a sq. ft. for smooth, professional
work and highest quality material. JU. 7-5121.
MISSION COOPERATIVE NURSERY SCHOOL, 362 Capp
Street, San Francisco, now has enlarged quarters and
a few openings for parents and their children, age
2'/2-5 years, for creative play on an inter-faith, inter-
racial basis. Telephone Mrs. Rainier at VAIencia 4-7538
for information and to arrange a visit.
KPFA needs a transmitter maintenance technician. An
FCC first class license is required and a car also. The
total number of hours are subject to discussion, but at
least 10 hours per week must be spent when the trans-
mitter is not on the air. You may begin the job at any
time from now until the end of March. Call the Chief
Engineer, AS. 3-6767.
THE CONNOISSEUR-2470 Telegraph, Berkeley 4-JAPA-
NESE WOOD BLOCK PRINTS, 18TH and 19TH CENT.-
Shown by appointment. Phone AShberry 3-8624.
HTJHIJH1
RATE S2 PER LINE PER ISSUE
LIVE and Study at Patri School of Art Fundamentals.
FREE: Send a request for a copy of "The Monthly Re-
Lovely view rooms. Complete EVENING PROGRAM of
view,' an independent socialist magazine, and we will
classes for beginners. WEst 1-0275. 940 Grove St., S.F.
send you our latest issue free of charge. Monthly Review,
SCOTTISH IMPORTS Ltd., 374 GEARY St., San Francisco
2. Headquarters for bagpipers. Instruments— Music— uni-
66 Barrow St., New York 14, N. Y.
forms. We feature a special for beginners, a practice
KPFA spoken here! Professional real estate service that's
chanter and instruction book $10.90 post and tax paid.
in tune with vour needs. Tepping Realty Co., 10751 San
Now's the time to start an interesting and healthful
Pablo Ave., El Cerrito. Berkeley Branch, 1664 Shattuck,
hobby.
LAndscape 6-5353.
EZDTjsnna
Marin's Complete Bookshop
THE COTTAGE BOOKSHOP
1336 Fourth St., San Rafael -
GL 3-2010.
HANDCRAFT FROM EUROPE— an experience I would like to share with you.
Use Wiener
In the Village Fair, Bridgeway — Sausalito — ED 2-1633 — Open Sundays
DIMITROFF'S ART SUPPLIES
64 Throckmorton, Mill Valley - DUnlap 8-1317.
Expert Framing.
COMPOSERS'
FORUM
W. O. Smith, Stravinsky, Swift, Dahl Sunday, MARCH 8(Q ., r ... ■ r. . ,,,„ ~\ c c
Westergaard, Krenek, Hindemith, Bond, Sunday, APRIL I? ) 8:l5 p'm- Callforn|a Club, 1750 Clay, S.F.
Balcom, Berio
de la Vega, Morgan, Schoenberg Friday, MAY I 8:15 p.m. S. F. Museum of Modern Art
Series: Subscriber $ 5.00 Single concert $2.00 Write: C. F. c/o Music Dept.
Student $2.50 Student $1.00 University of California
Donor $15.00. Berkeley 4, or call TH 8-4156
12th ANNUAL CONCERT SERIES
K'KH;«*HMK«l'IZfcrt
GULL BOOK SHOP
35 Washington Ave., Point Richmond - BEacon 2-5212.
New and Used Books. Will order or advertise for any book.
BEN'S SEVEN ARTS BOOKSHOP
1364 Locust St., Walnut Creek. YEllowstone 5-3384. Best Paper bound Books
—Children's Books— Mail and phone orders taken. Open evenings 'till 10.
Dmna
THE BERKELEY PUPPETEERS
Puppet Shows for all occasions, all ages. Anywhere in Bay Area.
Studio visits by appointment — THornwall 5-6531
THE BARREL-Folk Music and All That Jazz
2506 Haste, Berkeley— Open only Saturday 9-6 and Thursday 7-10 P. M.
A complete folk music center run by Barry and Helen Olivier.
CAMPUS SMOKE SHOP-
2300 Telegraph Ave., Berkeley-THornwall 3-3656
G. B. D. British Pipes: Imported Tobaccos, Albert E. Braver.
THE BLACK SHEEP RESTAURANT-
2550 Bancroft Way - TH. 5-9170
In Berkeley serving good food since 1925
Paperbacks and Periodicals— U. S., French, German, British.
CODY'S BOOKS, 1838 Euclid Ave., near North Gate. Open Evenings.
A Bookstore Full of Sustaining Fare for Lively Minds.
iKumsia
FM TUNER ALIGNMENT
By the Distortion Null Method. Hours by appointment.
R. S. MacCollister, 333 Louisburg Street, San Francisco — DEIaware 3-4855
Headquarters for All Paperbound Books — KPFA Depot in S. F,
THE CITY LIGHTS POCKET BOOKSHOP
Columbus 8< Broadway, San Francisco — DO 2-8193 — Daily & Sunday to Midnight.
THE ARTISANS - Custom Framing
1964 Union St., San Francisco
WAInut 1-0456
ANTIQUE ART RESTORING-Arlyn C. Petersen
341 Broadway, San Francisco 1 1 , EXbrook 7-3538
Restoring of all art pieces, furniture, oil paintings and jewelry.
iiiiumi.wi
BELL'S COLLEGE BOOK SHOP
536 Emerson — Palo Alto
The Peninsula's Largest General Book Store
HOUSE OF TODAY-
550 University Avenue, Palo Alto-DAvenport 5-4253. Good design at
moderate cost: furniture, lamps, tableware, imports, useful gifts.
K P F A
2207 Shattuck Ave
BERKELEY, CALIF.
Postmaster: If addressee has
removed, notify sender on
Form 3547, postage for which
is guaranteed.
DATED
PROGRAM
<»€^ •
NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATION
U. S. POSTAGE
PAID
BERKELEY, CALIF.
Permit No. 219
0% S^*'
Gil*?
"Ser
i&&&*
Won't you send this Folio, with this message, to a friend in Southern California?
Dear
For ten years Pacifica Foundation's listener-subscription station, KPFA, has brought the
best in music, drama, and discussion, without commercials, into homes like ours in Northern
California. Over 7000 of us keep the station on the air by subscribing to it at a basic rate
of $12.00 a year, and by making further tax-deductible contributions as we can. This bi-
weekly program Folio is our tangible reward for this support, but the intangibles are measure-
less. The investment has been, to say the least, worth it.
The new Southern California Pacifica Foundation Station, KPFK, will go on the air in
June, operating on the same non-commercial subscription basis, and offering the same high
cultural return for an investment. They need charter subscribers now in order to complete
construction of the initial modest facilities. We ask you to subscribe, and, if you can, to make
an additional contribution. The KPFK address is: 1 153 N. Western Ave., Room 5, Los Angeles
29. If you would like further information about the new station, they will send it to you from
that address.
Sincerely,