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children
our heritage*,
the earthy
90.7 FM
/1PRILI-I4 1963
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VOL. FOUR, NO. 19
tU cov**>
is a combined donation of artist/teacher LUCIA PEARCE
and her husband photographer PETER PEARCE.
MONDAY, April 1
7:00 A.M. ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
DVORAK Symphony #5 in E minor. Op 95
Chicago Symp/Reiner (39) (RCA 2214)
SCHUMANN Symphony #4 in D minor. Op 120
NY Phil/Bernstein (30) (Col ML 5656)
BEETHOVEN Symphony #3 in Eb. Op 55
Vienna Phil/Solti (50) (Lon 9032)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Hallock Hoffman. (Mar 31)
9:15 SUNSHINE SKETCHES — X: John Drainie
continues his daily reading of the work by
Stephen Leacock. (CBC)
9:45 THE MAN IN THE MAN-MADE MOON: Poet
X. J. Kennedy's comic ballad, read by the
author. (Mar 19)
10:00 THE WEAVERS SING: The perennial folk
group with Lee Hays, Fred Hellerman, Ronnie
Gilbert, and Eric Darling. (Vanguard)
10:45 A PRIEST LOOKS AT DESEGREGATION:
One of the best-known freedom riders, Malcolm
Boyd. Episcopal chaplain at Wayne University
in Detroit, tells a young Los Angeles audience
about the social fragmentation that results from
the double standard used by most whites.
11:30 MODERN AMERICAN MUSIC I: In this
Folio we will present six concerts of music from
the Columbia series. They will be heard each
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at this time.
PETER MENNIN Quartet #2
Juilliard String Quartet (20)
ROBERT PALMER Quartet for Piano & Strings
Kirkpatrick. piano; members Walden Qt. (22)
ANDREW IMBRIE Quartet in Bb
Juilliard String Quartet (24)
ROY HARRIS Sonata for Violin and Piano
Gingold, violin; Harris, piano (20)
The recordings are Columbia ML 4842 and 4844.
1:00 PHYLLIS DILLER VS. HERBERT FEIN-
STEIN: The formidable comedienne, interviewed
by the San Francisco State professor. (Mar 19)
1:30 TEN YEARS WITHOUT STALIN: Henry Sha-
piro, head of the Moscow bureau of UPI, talks
about reporting in Russia. (Mar 18)
2:15 BEETHOVEN TRIOS
Trio #1 in Eb, Op 3
Kogan, violin; Barshai, viola; Rostropovich,
cello (44) (MGM 30007)
Trio in Bb, Op 97 ("Archduke")
Fournier. violin; Janigro. cello; Badura-
Skoda. piano (42) (West 18270)
3:45 REMINISCENCES OF A TECHNOLOGIST:
The "father of radar." Sir Robert Watson-
Watt, recalls the high spots of a varied life
in an interview with Mitchell Harding. (Mar 30)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 5.
6:00 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: Report
and comment by translator William Mandel.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Marvin Schacter. (APR 2)
7:00 THE WARLESS WORLD — I: World Develop-
ment in a World Without War. This address by-
Paul G. Hoffman, managing director of the
Special Fund of the United Nations, opens a
series of programs from the recent conference
on "The Warless World" held at the World
Affairs Institute in Santa Barbara. (For three
more programs in this Folio see listings for
Mondays and Thursdays.) Mr. Hoffman is in-
troduced by his son. Hallock Hoffman, and his
address is followed by questions from the floor.
8:00 BACH: The Art of the Fugue, transcribed for
chamber orchestra and performed by the CBC
Chamber Orchestra. conducted by Leonard
Isaacs and Alexander Brott. (CBC)
9:00 PEYOTE AND THE GREAT SPIRIT: Truman
Dailey, a former officer of the Native American
Church, tells Elsa Knight Thompson about the
use of peyote in the rituals of his church. This
usage has been banned in California on the
grounds that peyote is narcotic.
10:00 MOVIES: Review and comment on films — or
whatever else is at hand — by Pauline Kael.
10:30 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Phillip F.
Elwood with an examination of three jazz
organists, Richard "Groove" Holmes. Shirley
Scott, and Jimmy Smith. (APR 2)
11:00 POEMS OF HERESY: Bay area poet Floyd
Salas reads a selection from his work, includ-
ing two poems on the Black Muslim movement.
11:30 MUSIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES— I: We
conclude each day's broadcasting in this Folio
with a musical visit to one of England's great,
historic houses. Tonight. Hampton Court, built
in 1514 by Cardinal Wolsey. The music is per-
formed by Edgar Fleet, tenor; Roger Stalman,
Page 2
baas: the Ambroslan Singers and die Strines of
idemy of St Martin In the Fields. (BBC)
TUESDAY, April 2
7:00 A.M. POURS ami FIVES
HAYDN Quartet #6 In D
Schneider Quartet (22) (May 9065)
SCHUBERT Quintet In A for Piano and Strings
Horssowskl, Moleux, Budapest Qt (36)
BOCCHERIN1 Quartet In A. Op 39. No. 8
Carmlrella Qt (14) I Lon H54)
SCHOENBERG Quintet for Winds. Op L'6
Philadelphia Quint (43) (Col 5217)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Marvin Schacter. (Apr 1)
.9:15 SUNSHINE SKETCHES — XI: Stephen Lea-
cock's story, read serially by John Dralnle.(CBC)
0:40 SONGS BY HUGO WOLF: Sung by Alfred
p.. II. uiiii Franz Holetschek at the piano.
( w.-si 18696)
10:10 MEMORIES OF LITERARY LONDON AND
AMERICA: John Cournos tells Dick Elman
about Sherwood Anderson, Yeats, E. A. Robin-
son, Colt,-.- Moore, and others. (Mar 21)
I0:ir> THE MATE OF T1IK BALROG: A drama of
the ihkIi seas of outer space by Jim "Tallfang"
Armstrong, produced by John whiting and a
well concealed cast of thousands, (Mar 22)
11:30 MUSIC BIGGEB than I.I IK
HANDEL Musi.- for the Royal Fireworks
win.i and Percussion Ens Mackerras (Pye)
BERLIOZ Funeral and Triumphal Symphony
Great Symphonic Brass and String Orchestra
of the Vienna stale Opera/Graf (27) (Uran
XI Oil I
JOHN LEWIS The Golden Striker
Ens/Lewis (36) (Atl 1334)
1:00 THREE VIEWS OF RUSSIA— I: The first of
three Interviews with persons recently returned
from the USSR, each with different impres-
sions. Elsa Knight Thompson interviews Olive
Mayer, a mechanical engineer and chairman of
the Committee for Friendly International Visits.
2:00 MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Phil Elwood. (Apr 1)
l:M) FREEDOM AND STRUCTURE IN EDUCAT-
ING CHILDREN: Dr. Helmut Wursten, clinical
psychologist for children, discusses limitations
and permissiveness. (Mar 18)
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Page 3
3:30 DIE LUSTIGE WITHE: Franz Lehar's opera
in three acts, also known as The Merry Widow.
The soloists include Elisabeth Schwarzkopf.
Nicolai Gedda, Hanny Steffek, Josef Knapp,
Everhard Waechter. and many others. The Phil-
harmonia Orchestra is conducted by Lovro Von
Matacic. (Angel 3630)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 5.
6:00 RACE RELATIONS NEWS: Daniel Panger
and Maureen Macllroy.
8:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Brooks Walker. (APR 3)
7:00 POEMS BY GALWAY KINNELL: Recorded
exclusively for Pacifica Radio by the author,
poems both in manuscript and from his collec-
tion. What a Kingdom It Was (Houghton
Mifflin).
7:30 ALEXANDER TCHEREPNIN: Mr. Tcherep-
nin's father was a composer, and so are his
sons. He himself is a well-known figure in in-
ternational music circles. With Eric Salzman.
he traces out a career that took him from old
St. Petersburg to the Caucasus to Paris to
China and. finally, to Chicago.
9:00 FROM THE CENTER: The Challenge in Tech-
que. Rico Lebrun, internationally-known
painter, teacher, and writer, and William Gor-
man, editor of the Great Books of the Western
World, discuss their views of technique and
the challenges it makes to an artist's personal
vision and his response to his work and him-
self. (APR 4)
10:00 MUSIC IN KOREA — I: Robert Garfias begins
an eight-part series on the traditional music of
Korea, to be heard at this time each Tuesday
and Thursday evening. Tonight, styles of Korean
court music.
10:30 THINKING OF SUICIDE?: Elsa Knight
Thompson interviews Bernard Mayes, founder
of a center in San Francisco where people
thinking of ending it all can call for help. Not,
of course, in doing it, but by reviewing the
pros and cons.
11:30 MUSIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES — II:
Queen's House. Greenwich. Built in 1433, this
was the birthplace of Henry VIII and Eliza-
beth I and the site of Sir Walter Raleigh's fa-
mous cloak incident. Performances are by April
Canelo. soprano; Maurice Bevan, baritone:
and the strings of the Academy of St. Martin-
in-the-Fields. (BBC)
WEDNESDAY, April 3
7:00 A.M. ORCHESTRAL-VOCAL CONCERT
RAVEL Deux Melodies Hebraiques (Lon 5361)
Danco. Suisse Romande Orch/Ansermet (7)
RACHMANINOFF The Bells. Op 35
Yeend. Lloyd, Harrell, Temple Univ Choir,
Philadelphia Orch/Ormandy (35) (Col 5043)
DEBUSSY La Demoiselle Elue
Sayao, Nadell. Chorus. Philadelphia Orch/
Ormandy (20) (Col 4075)
FOSS A Parable of Death (31) (Col 4859)
Zorina. Stebens. Louisville Orch/Whitney
STRAUSS Four Last Songs (19) (Angel 35084)
Schwarzkopf. Philharmonia Orch/Ackermann
9:00 COMMENTARY: Brooks Walker. (Apr 2)
9:15 SUNSHINE SKETCHES — XII: Actor John
Drainie reads Stephen Leacock's story. (CBC)
9:45 LIMITS OF REALISM: Artist Edward Reep
discusses the nature of reality, the function of
reality in art. and trends in modern painting.
Recorded at the Paul Rivas Gallery in Los An-
geles by Michael Moore.
10:10 PROKOFIEV: Violin Concerto No. 1 in D, Op 19
Stern. NY Phil/Mitropoulos (Col 5243)
10:30 WHY WE DON'T BEHAVE LIKE HUMAN-
BEINGS: Dr. S. I. Hayakawa discusses leftover
customs of human distrust in a talk recorded
at the Beverly Hills High School. (Mar 20)
11:30 MODERN AMERICAN MUSIC II: (Columbia)
LEON KIRCHNER String Quartet No. 1
American Art Quartet (19)
HENRY COWELL Sonata No. 1 for Violin and
Piano. Szigeti. Bussotti (18)
IRVING FINE String Quartet
Juilliard String Quartet-(18)
HAROLD SHAPERO Sonata for Piano Four
Hands. Shapero. Smit (15)
WILLIAM SCHI'MAN Voyage
Webster, piano (22)
The recordings are ML 4841. 4843. 4987.
1:00 THREE VIEWS OF RUSSIA — II: Alice Ham-
burg, one of the women who went to the USSR
on a recent exchange visit, is interviewed by
Elsa Knight Thompson.
1:50 THE POETRY OF PABLO FERNANDEZ:
The young Cuban poet discusses and reads his
poetry, both in Spanish and in translations by
John Gibson. Recorded at the BBC in London
by Mike Tigar. (Mar 20)
2:30 EVENINGS ON THE ROOF: Contemporary
music, with Peter Yates. (Mar 31)
3:30 I)E GAULLE. SKYBOLT. AND EUROPE:
Stanley K. Sheinbaum and Harry S. Ashmore
discuss President Kennedy's decision to drop the
Skybolt project. (Mar 23)
4:00 THE ART OF RUTH DRAPER: Recordings
made at her "farewell New York Engagement"
in January. 1954, of three "dramas." (Spoken
Arts 799. Vol. 3) (Mar 26)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 5.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Phil Kerby. (APR 4)
7:00 FOLK SONGS FROM ALL OVER: Rebroad-
cast by special request. Ewan McColl. Peggy
Secger. Enoch Kent. Bert Lloyd, and others sing
songs of work, drinking, political satire, and
love. Recorded at the Singer's Club, in London,
by Mike Tigar.
8:30 A TORY VIEW OF DE GAULLE'S VERDICT:
Lady Margaret D'Arcy. writer and lecturer,
explains to Elsa Knight Thompson and Ned
Paynter why a large number of British con-
servatives welcomed the General's "No" to
Britain's entry to the EEC.
9:20 BEETHOVEN: Fifteen Variations with Fugue
on a Theme from "Prometheus" in Eb, Op 35,
performed by Alfred Brendel. (Vox 416)
9:45 AFRICAN POETRY — I: The Poetry of West
Africa. Beginning a four-part weekly series
on the traditional and tribal poetry of the
African continent. The readings are by poet
and translator Willard Trask who begins his
series with a general introduction to the subject.
10:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Phil Elwood presents the
early recorded work of Sidney Bechet. (APR 4)
11:00 THE SIMMER MY GRANDMOTHER WAS
SUPPOSED TO DIE: A short story by Canadian
writer Mordechai Richler. author of The Auto-
biography of Duddy Kravitz, The Acrobats.
read for the CBt" by Henry Ramer.
11:30 MUSIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES — III:
Brighton Pavilion, the favorite home of George
IV. Music is performed there by Patricia Clark,
soprano; and Hervey Alan, baritone, both ac-
companied by Clifton Helliwell. and by pianist
Joan Davies. (BBC)
Page 4
THURSDAY, April 4
7:08 A.M. MUSIC FOR CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
BEETHOVEN Beptel In Bb, <»p SO
Bamberg Bna (32) I Vol 11.280)
HUMMEL Septel In D minor
Knseml.lt' < L".D ( West ls.'.s.;)
IRELAND Concertino Pastorale
Bna [tier Solomon (20) (MOM 8074)
JANACEK Concertina
Plrkusny, Phlla Wind Quint (1G> (Col 4995)
PAUL SCHWARTZ Concertino tor Chamber
i u. heal ra
Zurich Radio Orcb Monod (15) (CRI 138)
!):(H) COMMENTARY: Phil BXerby. (Apr 3)
8:10 >l KSHINE SKETCHES— Xin: The conclud-
ing episode of John Dralnie'a reading. (CBC)
u:4.-> LES CHOEPHORES: This Betting of a Paul
Claudel text by Darius Milium. 1 is performed by
the Chorale de L'Unlverslte and the Lamoureux
Orchestra, conducted bj Igor Markevltch. Heinz
Rehfuss sings Orestes, Helene Bouvler sings
Clytemnestra, and Genevieve Moizan sings Elec-
tra. Claude Nollier Is the narrator. To soothe
these Bavage spirits we have followed The Li-
bation Bearers with Handel's Harp Concerto
performed by Nicanor Zabaleta and the Berlin
llo Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Perenc
Prlcsay. I Decca DL 8966, DL B8 B I
10:84) FROM THE CENTER: The Challenge In Tecb-
niuiie. ( Apr 2)
11:30 SVIATOSLAV RICHTER RECITAL
li a vi >N Sun:, i a No, 20 in c minor (23XMK1660)
BRAHMS Quintet In !■' minor < »p 34
with the Borodin Quartet (48) (MK 1616)
BEETHOVEN Sonata No. 28 In K minor. Op 57
(24)
1:00 THREE VIEWS OF RUSSIA— IH: Or. Otto
J. M. Smith is a professor In UC Berkeley's
department of electrical engineering. He is in-
terviewed by Elsa Knight Thompson about his
recent experiences on a car trip through Russia
and at a scientific meeting In Moscow,
2:00 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Phil Blwood. 'Apr 3)
2:30 CONTEMPORARY BRITAIN — POLITICS OF
CONFUSION: A conversation between Graeme
Moodie and Walter Goldstein, on the impact of
economic prosperity on a two— party .system.
(Mar 27)
3:30 KODAI.Y AT EIGHTY: The Hungarian com-
poser is interviewed by Arpad Sandor in Buda-
pest. Among the topics discussed is Mr. Koda-
ly's solemnization system for sight-reading of
Kodaly's music. (Mar 36)
FOR YOUNG PEOPLE
5:00 .MONDAY. April 1
TELL-ME-AGAIN Tale
Sheldon Rudolph
CHANTICLEER AND PERTELOTE
Prom ('hauler's Nun's Priest's Tale
FOREST LORE: The Sea
Josh Barkin
MORE SONGS OF THE AFRICAN VELD
Mara is and Miranda (KL-1180)
5:00 TUESDAY, April i
TIME FOR RHYME
I la ve Ossman
MUSIC OF MANY LANDS
. ierald Zelinger
YERTLE THE TURTLE and other stories
By Dr. Seuss — featuring Marvin Miller
.->:<>(• WEDNESDAY. April 3
DR. SEUSS'S SLEEP BOOK
A Kuth Prince Production
ISRAELI FOLK DANCES
Martha S. hlamtne and Mort Freeman
THE ALLIGATOR AND THE JACKAL
Ishvanl Hamilton
ENGLISH FOLK SONGS
John Runge (SLP 88)
5:00 THURSDAY, April 4
SIGNPOST: To a Bridge of Colors
J, Nickelsburg — A Sagan
MUSIC FOR YOUNG LISTENERS
Robert Martin. Children's Music ''enter
THE CLEVER WIFE
Read by Toby Halpern
THE STRANGER FROM THE SEA
Joe Hansen sings (TT 2218)
5:00 FKIDAY. April 5
TELL-ME-AGAIN Tale
Sheldon Rudolph
LOS CUATR0 ( ANTANTES DE GUADALA-
JARA. Read m Spanish by Cesar Romero
HORTON HATCHES THE EGG
More of Dr. Seuss (LPM 2454)
10:00 A.M. SATURDAY, April $
PECOS BILL: Irwin Shapiro
Reld N'agas reads a Tall Tale
>:00 MONDAY, April 8
TELL-ME-AGAIN Tale
Sheldon Rudolph
THE TORTOISE AND THE HARE
Aesop Kahle
FOREST FORE: Beaver
Josh Barkin
MORE SONGS OF THE AFRICAN VELD
Mar;. is and Miranda
»:00 TUESDAY, April 9
TIME FOR RHYME
Dave Ossman
MUSIC OF MANY LANDS
( l^rald Zelinger
BARTHOLOMEW AND THE OOBLECK
Another Seuss favorite (CAL 1035)
1:00 WEDNESDAY. April 10
THE LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULD: Piper
Head hy Diana Leigh-Williams
HOW DO YOU CATCH — ?
Bruria Colter poses some riddles
ISRAELI FOLK DANCES
Schlamme and Freeman (LP 5/6)
SNEAKERS: Ray Bradbury
Read by Norman Belkin
ENGLISH FOLK SONGS: John Runge
,:()() THURSDAY, April 11
SIGNPOST: To the Red Planet
J. Ni< kelshurg — A. Sagan
MUSIC FOR YOUNG LISTENERS
Robert Martin. Children's Music Center
GOOSE HANS
Read by Toby Halpern
THE STRANGER FROM THE SEA
.:00 FRIDAY. April 13
TELL-ME-AGAIN Tale
Sheldon Rudolph
EL FLAUTISTA DE JAMELIN
i 'esa r Romero
THE SNEETCHES. THE ZAX and two others
By I>r. S.'USS
1:00 A.M. SATURDAY, April 13
OLD STORMALONG
And another
Page 5
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 5.
6:00 SPECIAL REPORT: Background to the news.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: To be announced.
7:00 THE WARLESS WORLD — II: The Economies
of Warlessness. An address by Kenneth Bould-
ing, professor of economics at the University of
Michigan, given at the Santa Barbara World
Affairs Institute.
7:40 MUSIC OF ZOLTAN KODALY
Psalmus Hungaricus, Op 13
Nilsson. London Phil Choir and Orch/Fer-
encsik (22) (Everest 6022)
Te Deum
Jurinac. Wagner, Poell, Christ. Vienna Cho-
rus, Vienna Symph/Swoboda (20) (West 18455)
8:30 THE ELEVENTH HOUR: Reserved for the
best of recent and timely program arrivals.
9:30 CINEMA REVIEW
9:45 OFTEN THE SHORTEST DISTANCE BE-
TWEEN POINTS IS TO GO IN THE EXACT
OPPOSITE DIRECTION: Michael Grieg, whose
Doubleday novel, A Fire in His Hand, was pub-
lished in January, reads an unpublished short
story with a very long title.
10:00 MUSIC IN KOREA — II: Robert Garfias con-
tinues his discussion of Korean court music,
with an emphasis on wind instruments.
10:30 THE POETRY OF YVES BONNEFOY: The
noted French poet reads in the WBAI studios
with the help of translators Jackson Matthews
and Galway Kinnell.
11:30 MUSIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES — IV:
Penshurst Place, once the home of Sir Philip
Sidney. Performances are by sopranos Patricia
Clark and Eilidh McNab, countertenor Grayston
Burgess, tenor Edgar Fleet, and baritone John
Carol Case. Lutenist is Brian Jeffrey. (BBC)
FRIDAY, April 5
7:00 A.M. SYMPHONIC CONCERT
MOZART Symphony No. 35 in D. K 385
Columbia Symph/Walter (27) (Col 5"655)
BEETHOVEN Symphony No. 7 in A, Op 9 2
Philharmonia/Klemperer (42) (Angel 35945)
SCHUBERT Symphony No. 9 in C
Concertgebouw Oich/Krips (48) (Lon 619)
9:00 COMMENTARY: To be announced.
9:15 BANDABERRY — I: If you've never lived
through six episodes of a BBC thriller serial,
you've never lived. This story of adventures and
misadventures with a mixed assortment of peo-
ple and the privately— owned island of Banda-
berry was originally adapted by Nan MacDonald
from the book by Laurence Meynell for children
— but it's too good for the little ones. Starring
Geoffrey Matthews, produced by Trevor Hill.
Remaining episodes daily at this time.
9:45 CREATIVITY IN THE ARTS: Douglas Mc-
Clellan. painter and teacher of art. says crea-
tivity is the struggle to turn meaning into re-
ality, and he discusses the traits that are apt
to produce it in this quietly witty talk recorded
at the Paul Rivas Gallery.
10:15 ARCHANGELSKY: The Divine Liturgy of
Saint John Chrysostom, performed by the Ca-
thedral Choir of the Holy Virgin Protection
Cathedral of New York, conducted by Nicholas
Afonsky. (West 18247)
11:00 POEMS BY J. V. CUNNINGHAM: In this
reading recorded at WGBH, Boston, the poet
reads from his three collections, The Judge is
Fury, The Quest of the Opal, and Doctor Drink.
11:30 MODERN AMERICAN MUSIC III: (Columbia)
PEGGY GLANVILLE-HICKS Sonata for Piano
and Percussion
Bussotti, NY Percussion Group/Surinach (10)
Concertino da Camera for Piano, Flute. Clari-
net, and Bassoon. Bussotti, NY Wind Ens (9)
NIKOLAI LOPATNIKOFF Variations and Epi-
logue
N. Graudan. cello; J. Graudan, piano (16)
EDWARD BURLINGAME HILL Sextet, Op 39
Kallir, piano: NY Wind Quintet (24)
ARTHUR BERGER Duo for Cello and Piano
Greenhouse, cello; Makas, piano (10)
VIRGIL THOMPSON String Quartet No. 2
Juilliard String Qt (20)
Columbia recordings ML 4846. 4987, 4990.
1:00 HUMOR AND SOCIAL CRITICISM: Victor S.
Navasky, editor and publisher of the quarterly
Monocle and of the weekly parody The Out-
sider's Newsletter, talks with Harry Ashmore
about satirical publications. (Mar 23)
1:30 A PROFILE OF LENNY BRUCE: Albert
Goldman, music critic of the New Leader, re-
views the career of the controversial comic,
with recorded illustrations. (Mar 23)
2:15 BRUCKNER: Symphony No. 8 in C minor.
performed here in the Urtext by the Amsterdam
Concertgebouw Orchestra, conducted by Eduard
van Beinum. (Epic 6011)
3:30 THE NATIONALITIES AND THE FUTURE
OF CENTRAL EUROPE: C. Almyer Macartney,
research fellow at Oxford, speaking at the UC
Berkeley campus. (Mar 23)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 5.
6:00 R E P O R T TO THE SUBSCRIBER: Fred
Haines. (APR 7)
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Gene Turner.
7:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC: Continuing our
series from the Koussevitzky Foundation, loaned
to us by the L.A. Public Library.
WALTON Partita for Orchestra
CRESTON Symphony Number Four
TRIMBLE Closing Piece
8:C0 CHINA— RUSSIA'S DILEMMA AND OURS:
China scholar Urban Whitaker discusses the
role China plays in world foreign policy, be-
fore the combined Oakland and Berkeley chap-
ters of the United World Federalists. This is
the topic for Community Discussion Project
groups — for further information, call HO 2—1171.
9:00 MOVIES CONVERSED: Leading film critic
Pauline Kael discusses low-budget productions,
independent filmmaking, big studio operations,
and collegiate cinema in conversation with John
Fles.
9:45 Ml'SICA DE ESPANA: Saetas, cante hondo,
flamenco, folk songs and ethnic music intro-
duced by Dave Ossman. The recordings are all
imported from Spain, and were kindly lent to
KPFK by Frances Besne.
11:15 THE PATH OF OUR VALOR: Dick Elman
reviews a first novel by Thomas Doulis (Simon
& Schuster), about paratroopers in training.
11:30 Ml SIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES — V: Chis-
wick House, built in 1725 by the third Earl of
Burlington. Music is performed by tenor Gerald
English and harpsichordist Roy Jesson, and the
Aeolian String Quartet. (BBC)
Page 6
SATURDAY, April 6
8:00 a.m. CHAMBER CONCERT
BEETHI >VEN Serenade in D, I >p
Baker, flute; J. Fuchs, violin; L. Fuchs, viola
(24) I : ■
SCHNABEL String Trio
Gallmlr, violin; Hurtlg, viola; McCracken,
cello (18) (Col 6 1 17)
BRAHMS Quintet in R minor. Op 116
Fine Aris Qt; Kell, Clarlnel (34) (Decca 9532)
(BERT String Quartet in C
Parrenln Quartet (20) (West 18659)
HINDEMITH String Trio No. 1. Op 34
Pougnet. violin; Riddle, viola; Pini. cello (20)
i w.st 18593)
10:00 FOR Vol no PEOPLE: See pace 5.
10:30 THE RADIO BALLADS— I: The Body Blow.
This latest of the radio ballads produced for
the BBC by Charles Parker, Ewan MacColl, and
Peggy Seeger turns from studies of men and
their work to a study of five people and their
battle with poliomyelitis. On the next three
Saturday mornings we are rebroadcasting three
of the previous ballads and an account of how
they art- produced.
11:30 THE DOCTOR'S SON: The Morley Callaghan
short story, read for the CBC by Alan Kin;,-.
12:00 SCOPE OF JAZZ: Malt Edey presents and
discusses the work of Andre Hodeir.
1:00 THE VOICE OF LABOR: Sam Kalish inter-
views Francis A. Henson. educational director
for the southwest territory of the International
Association of Machinists, about recent airspace
disputes and settlements.
1:30 HAYDN FOR ESTERHAZY: Of the three
symphonies written in 1761 for Prince Paul
Esterhazy, titled Le Matin. Le Midi, and Le
Snir. one is unavailable, so we offer
Symphony No. 6 in D "Le Matin" (19)
Vienna Chamber Orch/Lit.schauer (Hay 1025)
Symphony No. 7 in O "Le Midi"
Philadelphia Oreh/Ormandy (24) (Col 4673)
2:15 GERARD PIEL ON DISARMAMENT: The
editor and publisher of Scientific American
speaks on the economics of disarmament. The
talk was recorded at a recent series on the
subject held at Berkeley High School.
3:30 THE SAGA OF MR. JELLY LORD: Excerpts
from the Library of Congress recordings made
in 1938 by pianist Jelly Roll Morton. Produced
by Joe Boyd.
4:00 THE GREATEST ADVENTURE: Material on
man's entry into space and the philosophy of
sc ience, compiled by Mitchell Harding.
4:30 GOLDEN VOICES: In the first of four pro-
grams on Emilio de Gorgoza (1874-1949). An-
thony Boucher presents the baritone and lin-
guist in his Italian personality, with excerpts
from I Pagliacci, II Trovatore, and other op-
eras, and Neopolitan popular songs.
5:00 THE WIDE-OPEN HOUR: Left open for
anything that presents itself with good recom-
mendations.
0:15 PACTFICA NEWS
6:30 UNCOMMON SENSE: Commentary on the
search for survival by Lawrence Karmen and
Stephen Kandel.
<i:l.-> COMMENTARY: David Hetrick.
7:00 S( III MANN'S "DICHTERLIEBE" : The po-
ems by Heine, upon which this cycle is based,
are read in German by Lotte Lehmann and in
his own translation by Dr. Robert Trotter, who
also discusses the music. Mme. Lehmann and
Bruno Walter perform the entire cycle.
VI
some highlights in
blic affairs
THE WARLESS WORLD
7:00 p.m. Mon 1, Thurs 4
Mon 8, Thurs 1 1
THE U.N., SCIENCE, AND
DEVELOPMENT
8:30 p.m. Sat 6, Wed 10
EDUCATION FOR DEMOCRACY
IN WEST GERMANY
8:00 p.m. Fri 12
THE FELLOWSHIP OF SUFFERING
10:15 a.m. Sun 14
FREEDOM, DEMOCRACY, AND
AMERICAN POLICY
4:20 p.m. Sun 7
8:00 HISPANIC-AMERICAN REPORT: Prepared
by Dr. Ronald Hilton, director of Stanford's
Institute of Hispanic-American and Luzo-Bra-
zilian Studies.
8:30 THE I . N\. SCIENCE. AND DEVELOP-
MENT— I: Problems of British Guiana and
Nigerian Psychiatry. Beginning a series of daily
programs from the recent UN conference on
science held at Geneva, recorded by Pacifica's
European correspondent, Mike Tigar. He first
interviews C. A. Wiltshire, member of the Brit-
ish Guiana delegation, who discusses his coun-
try's industrial, communications, and financial
needs. He then talks with Dr. T. A. Lambo,
who recently conducted research into mental
illness in Nigeria, and who compares his find-
ings with data developed for the US by Dr.
Alexander Leighton of Cornell.
9:00 FOUR VARIATIONS ON A THEME OF
BLARNEY: The KPFA Readers Theatre with
a special presentation on the changing con-
ceptions of Ireland as they are reflected in lit-
erature, beginning with a Yeats fairy story.
This is followed by a selection from Sean O' —
Casey's Purple Dust: a selection from T. H.
White's The Godstone anil the Rlackymor on the
modern Irish wake: and concluding with an
essay by the American writer John McNulty.
9:45 VARIATIONS
MOZART Twelve Variations on a Minuet by
J C. Fisher. K 179
Gieseking (10) (Ang 35070)
BEETHOVEN Seven Variations on a theme
from Mozart's The Magic Flute
Soyer, cello; Wingreen, piano (13) (GoldCrest)
REGER Variations and Fugue on a Theme by
Mozart. I ip 132
Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orch/van Beinum
(34) I Decca 9565)
10:45 THE TR1 Til ABOUT NARCOTIC ADDIC-
TION: Dr. Joel Port, M.D., lecturer at the
University of California School of Criminology,
talks to the Unitarian Fellowship of San Diego
about some of the myths and some of the medi-
cal realities of narcotics and addiction.
Page 7
PHIL KERBY
who broadcasts a regular bi-
weekly commentary on KPFK,
has suggested that listeners
might wish to subscribe to the
monthly magazine he edits,
FRONTIER.
The magazine is devoted to
political and social affairs in
the West, to significant na-
tional and international mat-
ters not found in the daily
journals.
KPFK LISTENERS
may subscribe at the special
price of $2.50, one-half the
regular subscription rate for
one year. We will be happy to
bill you.
Frontier
1434 Westwood Blvd.
Los Angeles 24, Calif.
Please enter my subscription
for the coming year at the
special introductory rate.
Name
Address
City Zone State
□ $2.50 enclosed □ Bill me
Page 8
11:30 MUSIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES — VI:
Hengrave Hall, which dates from before the
Norman conquest. Music by Johnson, Wlbye,
and Byrd is performed there by the Singers in
Consort, directed by Richard Wood, and harpsi-
chordist Charles Spinks. (BBC)
SUNDAY, April 7
8:00 A.M. MUSIC BY HANDEL
Double Concerto No. 3 in F for Two Wind
Choirs and String Orchestra. Saidenberg Little
Symph/Saidenberg (16) (AS1001)
L' Allegro ed il Penseroso
Pears. Morison, Delman, Watts, Harwood,
Alan. St. Anthony Singers. Dart. Philomusica
of London / Willcocks (99) (L'Oiseau - Lyre
50195/6)
10:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER: Fred
Haines. (Apr 5)
10:15 PSYCHOANALYSIS I N CONTEMPORARY
LIFE: A scholarly survey by Dr. Norman Rei—
der of the effects of psychoanalysis on our
views of behavioral problems, morals, and re-
ligion. Recorded last Fall at the School for
Nursery Years by Carlos Hagen.
11:00 SEEN AT THE GALLERIES: Reviews of cur-
rent exhibitions by Earl Carter.
11:30 BACH: St. Matthew Passion. First performed
April 15. 1729. in St. Thomas's Church, Leipzig.
This performance features Dietrich Fischer—
Dieskau, Peter Pears, Elisabeth Schwarzkopf,
Christa Ludwig, Nicolai Gedda. Walter Berry,
Janet Baker, Helen Watts. Wilfred Brown. John
Carol Case. Otakar Kraus. Geraint Evans, the
Philharmonia Orchestra and Choir and the Boys
of the Hampstead Parish Church Choir, con-
ducted by Otto Klemperer. (Angel 3599)
3:20 SQUARES AND CIRCLES: Pauline Kael, in
an address given at Valley State College, puts
down the "auteur" theory of film criticism as
exemplified by the lead article in the current
Film Culture.
4:30 FREEDOM. DEMOCRACY. AND AMERICAN
POLICY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA: John Allison,
professor of government at the University of
Hawaii and former ambassador to Japan, dis-
cusses why the American form of democracy
has been rejected by Asian nations. Recorded in
December at UCLA's Institute of World Af-
fairs by Richard Clausen.
5:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION:
Gunther Schuller continues his year-by-year
survey of modern music. (APR 10)
fi:15 PACIFICA NEWS
0:45 COMMENTARY: Hallock Hoffman (APR 8)
7:00 ORCHESTRAL-VOCAL CONCERT
BACH Cantata No. 21 "I Suffered Greatly"
Soloists, Berlin Phil/Lehmann (43) (Dec 9673)
HAYDN Missa in Tempore Belli in C
Haydn Society Ens (48) (HSLP 2021)
8:30 THE U. N., SCIENCE, AND DEVELOP-
MENT— II: The Role of UNESCO. Dr. Victor
Kovda, director of the natural sciences depart-
ment of UNESCO and leader of the UNESCO
delegation to the UN conference on science and
technology, talks to Mike Tigar about the needs
of developing countries and about UNESCO's
plans to help in the creation of facilities for
training of scientists. Recorded in Geneva.
9:00 THE ORESTEIAN TRILOGY OF AESCHY-
LUS— I: Agamemnon, We present the first play
■ ■I' the massive trilogy first performed in Athens
in 4 f. S BC, detailing the epic misfortunes of the
House of Atreus. Produced for the BBC by Val
Glelgud. the text is from a new translation by
c. a Trypanls, and the music is by John
n. it. tikis. Major rules are taken by Brewster
Mason, Mary Wlmbush, June Tobln, Michael
Gounh. Margaret Whiting*, Qabriel Woolf, and
('wen Fl'r.inp'iin I>:ivies, Parts two anil three
are presented at the same time on successive
evening's.
U):M) MAN ON EARTH: B.P.R. Chart,!- on ecology.
11 KM CONTEMPORARY MUSIC FOB IIAKPSI-.
< HORD AM) RECORDER
HAROLD SHAPERO Sonata No. 1 In I1
Sylvia Marlowe, harpsichord (9) (Deccs 10021)
SEYMOUR BARAB Divisions for Recorder
Blxler, Qruskln, Davenporl im (ClaaEd 1055)
VITTORK ' RIET1 Sonata all 'Antics
Marlowe (10)
ll:S0 Ml >l< FROM HISTORIC HOUSES — VII:
Nettlecombe Court, the Treveleyan Family seat..
frequently visited by the litth century organist.
Vincent Novell,,, whose music is performed by
Soprano Hazel Schmid, and Geralnt Jones, organ
ami piano, along with the Dartington Hall
String Quartet. (BB( :)
MONDAY, April 8
7:00 A.M. MUSIC OF RICHARD STRAUSS
Alpine Symphony. Op 64
Saxon Stat- Orch Hcihm (51) (Dec 9970)
Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme
French Radio Orch Markevitch (34) (Angel
135447)
Metamorphosen
I'hilha rmonia Orch Klemperer (L'8) (Angel
135976)
B:00 COMMENTARY: Hallock Hoffman. (Apr 5)
0:15 BANDABERRY — II: Continuing the BBC
thriller.
9:45 A PORTRAIT OF HENRY MII.I.KR: Charles
Siegforth, a close friend of Miller's reminisces
ahout conversations with Miller. (Mar 28)
10:00 LIKE. WHADDYA MEAN. VARIATIONS?
DUKE ELLINGTON Variations on Grieg's
Peer Gynt Suites 1 and 2
Ellington Orch Ellington (18) (Col 1597)
HAROLD SHAPERO On Green Mountain (Cha-
conne after Monteverdi)
Ens Schuller (10) (Col 127)
DUKE ELLINGTON Variations on The Nut-
cracker Suite
Ellington Orch Ellington (32) (Col 1541)
See what we mean?
11:00 MEANING OF REVOLUTION: Editor and
writer Emile Capouya reviews two recent hooks
on the Cuban revolution, (Mar 19)
11:30 MODERN AMERICAN MUSIC IY: (Colui
STEFAN WOLPE Ten Sonus from the Hebrew
Carmen, alto; Lishner, bass; Tudor, piano (25)
A I. AX HOVHANESS Suite
A. Ajemian, violin; M. Ajemian, piano: Bailey,
percussion (14)
ALEXE1 HAIEFF String Quartet No. 1
Juilliard Qt (16)
SAMl EL BARBEB Hermit Songs
Price, sopr; Ba i ber, piano 'IT)
RUTH CRAWFORD SEEGER String Quartet,
1931. Amati Qt (12)
Columbia recordings ML 49SS. 5179, 5477
Loo FROM THE GROUND IT': A documentary on
Britain's "new towns." the Government— built
communities of 100,000 people designed to lessen
overcrowding in Britain's big induct
i Mar 31)
',>:15 MUSIC
J,
J
some highlights in
rama an
literature
PAULINE KAEL ON MOVIES
10:00 p.m. Mon 1 (Movies)
3:20 p.m. Sun 7 (Movies Conversed)
9:00 p.m. Fri 5 (Squares and Circles)
AFRICAN POETRY
9:45 p.m. Wed 3- I
9:45 p.m. Wed 10 - II
THE ORESTEIAN TRILOGY
9:00 p.m. Sun 7 (Agamemnon)
9:00 p.m. Mon 8 (The Choephoroe)
9:00 p.m. Tues 9 (The Eumenides)
A THROW OF THE DICE
(Stephane Mallarme)
10:30 p.m. Tues 9
TRIBUTE TO STARK YOUNG
7:00 p.m. Wed 10
LIFE OF THE VIRGIN MARY
(Rainer Maria Rilke)
7:30 p.m. Sun 14
3:45 THE SOVIET-CHINA DISPUTE: A discussion
on one of the major problems of the cold war
held by the New York Chapter of the Councils
of Correspondence. Taking part are O. Edmund
Clubb, Si\, and Professor A. S. Kenneth Or-
ganski, as guests; and Roy Bennett. John Mc-
Dermott. and Professor S. Michael Miller.
Chairman was Walter Goldstein. (Mar 22)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 5.
6:00 SOVIET TRESS AND PERIODICALS: Re-
view and comment by William Mandel.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY
be announced. (APR !))
7:00 THE WARLESS WORLD — III: Education on
a Tight-rope. An address by Samuel B. Gould,
in iident Of station WNDT, New York, which
transmits educational television. Dr. Gould is
inti oduced by Hallock Hoffman.
7::;:> RECITAL: CESARE VALLETTI. Recorded at
Town Hall Octobei 16, 1959, Mr. Valletti per-
ms works by Pasqulni, Mozart. Berlioz, Wolf,
and others. (RCA 2 1 1 1 I
8:30 TDK IN, SCIENCE AND DEVELOPMENT
— Ill: The Way Ahead. Dr. Gerald Wendi is in
,hi epa i itiL.- a : ■ ht volume
summary of the proceedings of the UN Confer-
. Technology In the A
L.ss Developed Countries. This job gave him a
unique overview of tie- Conference, and he talks
tu Mike Tigar about his impressions, of the
rence
will have, the hopes of developing countries for
the future, and how the advanced countries can
help Recorded li
Page 9
!):()<) THE ORESTEIAN TRILOGY OF AESCHY-
LUS — II: The Choephoroe. The epic tragedy
takes up seven years later in Argos where
Orestes is faced with a stern moral obligation
to revenge the murder of his father and the
harsh reality that the murderer happens to be
his own mother.
10:00 HOOK REVIEW: John Leonard.
10:15 THE FOUNDING OF LOS ANGELES: The
first settlers are described by John Weather-
wax, who asks why facts have been omitted
from the city school textbooks.
10:30 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Philip F. El-
wood presents the work of tenor man Paul Gon-
ial ves. (APR 9)
11:00 THE MAN WHO DIED — I: Beginning a four-
part reading of D. H. Lawrence's story based
on the events of Easter week, read by John
Ohliger. The remaining episodes will be read
at the same time on successive evenings.
11:30 MUSIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES — VIII:
Elthum Palace, scene of the founding of the
Order of the Garter in 1347. Music is performed
by Ann Dovvdall. soprano; Grayston Burgess,
countertenor; Wilfred Brown, tenor; and the
Pro Musica Sacra, directed by Bruno Turner.
TUESDAY, April 9
7:00 A.M. CONTEMPORARY CONCERT
BEN-HALM Sweet Psalmist of Israel
Marlowe. Stavrache, NY Phil/Bernstein (28)
(Col 5451)
BERNSTEIN Serenade for Violin Solo, Strings
and Percussion. Stern, Symph of the Air/
Bernstein (31) (Col 5144)
ANTHEIL Symphony No. 4 (194 2)
London Symph/Goossens (32) (Ev 6013)
SCHOENBERG Piano Concerto, Op 4 2
CBS Symph/Craft (20) (Col 5739%
9:00 COMMENTARY: To be announced.
9:15 BANDABERRY — III: Continuing the BBC
thriller.
9:45 C. WRIGHT MILLS — II: A personal memoir
by novelist and essayist Harvey Swados, who
prepared this intimate portrait of the sociolo-
gist for Dissent magazine. (Mar 24)
10:15 THE MUSIC OF SALA.MONE ROSSI, HEB-
REO, OF MANTUA: In honor of the first night
of Passover, religious and secular music of the
late 16th century, performed by the New York
Pro Musica. directed by Noah Greenberg. (Col
5204)
10:45 DANNIE ABSE, POET OF GOLDERS
GREEN: The young British poet, whose latest
work is Poems, Golders Green, reads and talks
about his work. (Mar 27)
11:30 CHAMBER SONATAS
HINDEMITH Sonata for Oboe and Piano
Gomberg, oboe; Mitropoulos. piano (12) (Col
5603)
SCHUBERT Arpeggione Sonata in A minor
N. Graudan, cello; J. Graudan. piano (20)
PROKOFIEV Sonata for Flute and Piano. Op 94
Dwyer, flute; Sanroma, piano (24) (Bost 208)
BRAHMS Sonata No. 1 in F minor. Op 120
Wlach, clarinet; Demus, piano (23) (West 18446)
BARTOK Sonata No. 2
S( hneiderhan, violin; Seeman, piano (20)
(Dec 9980)
1:00 SCIENTOLOGY AND THE FIRST AMEND-
MENT: R. H. Thomas, consulting scientologist
in New York City, tells Hamish Sinclair about
the electropsychometer, a device recently seized
from the Church of Scientology in Washington,
D.C.. by Federal Marshals. (Mar 30)
2:00 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Phil Elwood.
(Apr 8)
2:30 THE TOWNLEY PLAY OF NOAH: From the
cycle of miracle plays written and performed
in middle English in 1475, this story of God.
the ordaining of the Flood, and the warning of
Noah. Dramatized for Pacifica Radio in the
original language with appropriate fifteenth cen-
tury music and an introduction by Paul Piehler,
asistant professor of English at the University
of California at Berkeley. (Mar 24)
3:15 U.S. FOREIGN POLICY AND THE SOVIET
UNION: A new talk by Dr. Fred Warner Neal,
professor of international relations and govern-
ment at Claremont Graduate School in Cali-
fornia. Recorded in February at the First Uni-
tarian Church by George Bishop. (Mar 26)
4:00 PASSOVER SEDER: Jan Peerce conducts a
traditional seder, with music selected and com-
posed by A. S. Hyams. (RCA 1971)
5:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 5.
0:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Marshall Neel. (APR 10)
7:00 ISRAEL IN EGYPT: The oratorio based on
the biblical exodus, by G. F. Handel. Miriam
Burton. Betty Allen, Leslie Chabay, Robert
Conant. Bruce Prince- Joseph, soloists; with the
De^soff Choirs and the Symphony of the Air.
conducted by Paul Boepple. (VOX PL 11.6421
8:30 THE U.N., SCIENCE AND DEVELOPMENT
— IY: Problems of Managing Development. Dr.
Milos Macura. who chaired the U.N. science
conference session on the training of managers
for economic development, discusses the sugges-
tions made by less developed countries in this
field, and gives some examples of success and
failure in organizing foreign aid training.
9:00 THE ORESTEIAN TRILOGY OF AESCHY-
LUS— III: The Eumenides. The story of the
House of Atreus concludes in Delphi and Athens.
10:»0 MUSIC IN KOREA — III: Robert Garfias con-
tinues his examination of Korean court music,
especially music for plucked string instruments.
10:30 A THROW OF THE DICE: Poet and trans-
lator Daisy Aldan presents her translation (the
first in English) of Stephane Mallarme's final
poem, "Un Coup de des.*' Anais Nin reads the
work in the original French.
11:00 THE MAN WHO DIED — II: John Ohliger
continues his reading of Lawrence's story.
11:30 MUSIC FRDM HISTORIC HOUSES — IX:
Knole, given by Elizabeth I to her cousin.
Thomas Sackville in 1566, is still the home of
the Sackvilles. The performances are by soprano
Heather Harper accompanied by harpsichordist
Charles Spinks. and the Allegri String Quartet.
WEDNESDAY, April 10
7:00 A.M. CONCERTO CONCERT
VIVALDI Violin Concerto in C minor ("II Sos-
petto" )
Ens. Milstein (10) (Ang 36001)
BACH Two Piano Concerto in C
Haskil. Anda, pianos; Philharmonia/Galliera
(18) (Angel 35380)
MOZART Violin Concerto No. 4 in D. K 218
Francescatti, Orch/Walter (25) (Col 5381)
Page 10
TCHAIKOVSKV Variations on a Rococo Theme
Fournler, cello; Phllharmonla Sargent (18)
(Ansel 86397)
SIBELIUS Concerto In D minor, Op 17
Helfetz; Chicago Symph Hendl (27HRCA
STRAVINSKY Caprlcclo for Piano and Orch.
Haas: RIAS Frlcsay (17) I Dec 9516)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Marshall Neel. (Apr 9)
!):!.-> BANDABERRY — IV: More thrills on the mys-
terious Island, aa dramatised by the BBC,
B:46 POEMS IIV OSCAR MANDEL: The author of
Dance to No Music (to be rebroadcasl Friday
morning at this time) reads a selection of his
new WOrt 'Mar 30)
iii:i:, SCHUBERT: Piano Sonata In l>. Op 53, per-
formed by Artur Schnabel, recorded in January
' Angel Co I. II 83)
10:60 THE MATURE PERSON'S APPROACH TO
YAl.l BS: a lecture by Carl Rogers, professor
of psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin,
delivered al San Francisco's First Unitarian
Church (Mar 31 1
11:30 MODERN AMERICAN MUSIC V: (Columbia)
ELLIOTT CARTER String Quartet
Walden Quartet (40)
VINCENT PERSICHETTI Concerto for Piano.
Four Han. Is. Op 56
V. and l>. Perslchettl (20)
ROGER SESSIONS Second String Quartet
New Music Quartet (30)
Columbia recordings ML 4 9 s !t . 5104. 5105.
1:00 EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE
SCIENTIFIC REVOLUTION: Abba Eban. Is-
raeli Minister of Education and Culture, speaks
before a University of California audience in
Berkeley. <Mar 31)
8:16 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC IN EVOLUTION:
Gunther Sehuller. (Apr 7)
3:15 THE UNMARRIED MOTHER AND HER
i II 1 I I > Pacifica's European correspondent, Mike
Tigar, interviews Mr-s. Margaret Bramall. gen-
eral secretary of Britain*s National Council for
the I'nmarried Mother and Her Child. (Mar 29)
4:00 MUSIC OF CESAR FRANCE
Symphonic Variations for Piano and Orchestra
Gieseking. piano; Philharmonia/von Karajan
(161 (Col 4536)
Symphony in I) minor
NY Phil Bernstein (39) (Col 5391)
6:00 K)K VOUNG PEOPLE: See page 5.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Dorothy Healey. (APR II)
7:00 A MEMORIAE TRIBUTE TO STARK YOUNG:
On February IS. at the Morosco Theatre in
New York, friends and theatre associates of the
late critic, novelist, arid scholar who died early
in January al the age of 81. gathered to recall
the man and his work. In thi.s exclusive Pacif-
ica recording, you will hear readings from So
Red the Rose and The Pavilion by poet John
Hall Wheelock. a letter from Louis Kronen-
berger read by Zachary Scott, personal recollec-
tions by Harold Clurman and Martha Graham,
Mildred Dunnock reading from Glamour and
Immortal Shadows. Franchot Tone reading from
Young's Introduction to Chekhov. Kim Stanley
reading a letter from Young to Eleanor Duse,
anil readings from The Three Fountains, The
Heaven Tree, and the dirge from Cymbeline by
sir .John Gielgrud.
8:00 MUSICAL TRIBUTE TO STARK Mil \c.:
Elegaic works i,y Bach, Trlstano, and Moore,
presented without announcements.
8:30 THE U.N., SCIENCE, AND DEVELOPMENT
— V: Slum Clearance and Housing and Re-
gional Development in Brazil, Mr h. F,
B rough ton, UN consultant on housing, tali
Mike Tlgar about the ways in which developing
countries local materials i<> pro
housing an, I dies statistics about world housing
ii Is. drawing on information given at the
housing .session >>i ih.- UN conferenci In Geneva.
Then Professor Fablo Qulmaraea discusses the
problems of underdeveloped regions within
countries, with special emphasis on Brazil's own
Impoverished Northeast.
9:16 RAGA JOG: An evening raga, "expressing the
yearning of a longing soul." The performi
is by Ravi Sli.ink.u-. silar; Ch.itur Lai, labia;
and Pradyot Sen, tamboura. (Angel
B:45 AFRICAN POETRY — II: The Poetrj of South
Africa. The second in a series ol loin readings
by translator and poet Wlllard Trask.
10:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Big bands of the 20s and
:;us are featured by Phil Elwood. (APR II)
11:00 THE MAN WHO DIED — III: John Ohliger
continues his reading of the work by Lawrence.
11:30 MUSIC FROM HISTORIC HOFSES— X: In—
gallstone Hall, originally an abbey, has been
held sine- 1538 by the Petre family. Music by
Byrd, Gombert, and Oker is performed by the
Ambrosian Singers and Flayers, conducted by
Denis Stevens, with Charles Spinks at the vir-
ginals. (BB( !)
THURSDAY, April 11
7:00 A.M. ORCHESTRAL CONCERT
MAX REGER 1'iano Concerto in F minor Op 114
Phila Orch/Ormandy (36) (Col 5635)
SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No. 1 (34)
French Radio Oreh Markeviteh (Angel 35361)
HAROLD SHAPERO Symphony for Classical
Orchestra
Columbio Symph/Rernstein (44) (Col 4889)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Dorothy Healey. (Apr 10)
9:15 BANDABERRY — V: Adventure surges toward
a climax in this penultimate episode of the BBC
series from a book by Laurence Meynell.
9:45 THE FESTIVE PIPES: Five centuries of
dance music for recorders, including works by
Gervaise. Scheidt. Dowland. and others, per-
formed by the Krainis Recorder Consort. (Kapp)
1(1:1.-) OCR FOREIGN POLICY: Senator Hubert H.
Humphrey, speaking at the recent UAW Ap-
pointment— UN Conference. (Mar -'5)
11:30 MUSIC BY HAYDN
Symphony No. 101 in I>. ("The Clock")
Philharmonia Klemperer (29) (Angel 35872)
The Seven Last Words of Christ
Soloists, Vienna State Opera Orch/Scherchen
(55) (West 19006)
l:C0 A TALE OF TWO JAILS IN MISSISSIPPI:
Told by two students. Ivanhoe Donaldson and
Benjamin Taylor, who were arrested in connec-
tion with integration struggles. (Mar L'4)
2:00 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Phil Elwood. (Apr 10)
2:30 GOVERNOR ROSS BARNETT: Addressing the
Harvard Law School Forum, with questions
from the floor. (Mar 24)
3:46 PIANO. FOUR-HANDS: dr. at any rate, two
of the four hands. Jeorg Demus and Paul
Badura-Skoda have revived the once flourish-
ing art of four-hand music. Half the team —
Mr. Demus — talks about four-hand music and
piano keyboard teamwork. Some recorded ex-
amples follow the discussion. (Mar 18)
6:00 FOR VOUNG PEOPLE: See page 5.
6:00 SPECIAL REPORT: Background to the news.
Page 11
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: To be announced.
7:00 THE WARLESS WORLD — IV: The Psychol-
ogy of Men in a Warless World. An address by
Dr. Judd Marmor. chairman of the committee
on social issues of the Group for Advancement
of Psychiatry. Dr. Marmor is introduced by
Hallock Hoffman. Further programs from The
Warless World conference will be broadcast in
the next Folio.
7:50 NEW RELEASES: Whatever new recordings
come our way during this two-week period will
receive an unscheduled broadcast at this time.
8:30 THE ELEVENTH HOUR: Reserved for inter-
esting post-Folio-deadline programs.
9:30 THEATRE REVIEW
9:45 LINCOLN POEMS: 82-year-old John Cournos
reads selections from his long poem on the 16th
president.
10:00 MCSIC IN KOREA — IV: Robert Garfias con-
cludes his discussion of court music with an ex-
amination of vocal music. He continues with
secular and folk music in the next Folio.
10:30 HEADS I WIN — TAILS YOU LOSE: Char-
lotte Olmsted, author of a study of psychology
and symbolism in gambling games (MacMillan),
is interviewed by Dick Elman.
11:00 THE MAN WHO HIED — IV: John Ohliger
concludes his reading of the Lawrence story.
11:30 MUSIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES — XI:
Darlington Hall, given in 13S8 by Richard II
to his half-brother. Duke of Exeter. Perform-
ances are by the Ambrosian Singers and the
Dartington Hall String Quartet. (BBC)
FRIDAY, April 12
7:00 A.M. CHAMBER CONCERT
SCHUBERT Quartet for Flute, Guitar. Viola,
and Cello in G
Mess, Faiss, Kirchner, Barchet (28) (Per 518)
DVORAK Trio in F minor for Violin, Cello, and
Piano, Op 65
Kaufman, Cervera, Balsam (35)(ConHall 1117)
DOHNANYI Quartet in Db Op 15
Eidus, Graeler, Mankovitz, Ricci (24) (Strad)
SMETANA Quartet No. 1 in E minor
Endres Qt (27) (Vox 10190)
9:00 COMMENTARY: To be announced.
9:15 BANDABERRY — VI: The terrifying and
astounding conclusion of the BBC thriller.
9:45 DANCE TO NO MUSIC: A Pacifica Players
production of the new Oscar Mandel play, di-
rected by Walter Bodlander. technical produc-
tion by Jane Bennett, and Ray Creavy. music
performed by Sam Doublestein. (Mar 31)
11:30 MODERN AMERICAN MUSIC VI: (Columbia)
GEORGE ANTHEIL Ballet Mecanique
NY Percussion Group/Surinach (17)
AARON COPLAND 12 Poems of Emily Dickin-
son. Lipton, mezzo— sopr; Copland, Piano (29)
PAUL BOWLKS .Music lor a Farce
Ensemble (12)
THEODORE CHANLER Nine Epitaphs
Curtin, sopr; Edwards, piano '13)
PAUL CRESTON Sonata for Saxophone and
Piano Op 1!). Abato, sax; Creston, piano (13)
Recordings used: ML 4845. 4956. 5106, 5598
1:00 JEWISH FOLKLORE: Lila Hassid introduces
a program of theatre music from the old Sec-
ond Avenue Jewish theatres, sung by .Morris
Kesner.
1:30 YOUTH AND LEISURE: One of a series of
discussions sponsored by the Berkeley Combined
School District, consisting of three adults who
opine, and students who have back at them.
(.Mar 30)
3:00 LA CENERENTOLA: An abridged version of
Rossini's opera, with Cesare Valletti. Giulietta
Simionato, Miti Truccato Pace and others, with
the Orchestra and Chorus of Radio Italiana
conducted by Mario Rossi. (Cetra Soria 1208)
5:00 FOR YOl X(i PEOPLE: See page 5.
6:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER: Fred
Haines. (APR 14)
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Marshall Windmiller.
7:00 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC: Continuing our
series from the Koussevitzky Foundation, loaned
to us by the LA Public Library.
COWELL Hymn and Fuguing Tune No. 3
BARBER Prayers of Kierkegaard
COWELL Symphony Number 13
8:00 EDUCATION FOR DEMOCRACY IN WEST
GERMANY: Walter Stahl, executive director of
Atlantik-Bruecke and of Atlantica. speaks be-
fore an audience at the University of California
at Berkeley, giving his thoughts of the nature
of the Germans and their devotion to democracy.
This is the topic for the Community Discussion
Project — for information call HO 2-1171.
8:45 THE ROOSEVELT SONG: A dramatic cantata
by Waldemar Hille, to a text by Dan Panger,
in honor of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
9:00 THE RECORDED TREASURY: The Spectacu-
lar Pianist. Glenn Glasow and Byron Bryant
present recordings of pianists from the Good
Old Days. (KPFA)
10:00 THE QUESTION OF CINEMA TRUTH: Still
photographer and documentarian Willard Van
Dyke leads a discussion on new cinematic tech-
niques in the US with Shirley Clarke, director
of The Connection and The Cool World, and
Academy-Award— winning1 documentarian Hilary
Harris. Produced for Pacifica Radio by Radio—
diffusion-Television Francaise for the Inter-
national Cinema Truth Workshop held at Lyon
in March.
10:45 THE ART OF THE NOVEL: Paul Goodman.
novelist, psychologist, essayist, and man-of-let-
ters, discusses the increasing privacy of modern
fiction in a talk given at the University of
Chicago. (Mar 31)
11:30 MUSIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES — XII:
Woblirn Abbey, a Cistercian abbey given by
Henry VIII to the first Earl Russell, who was
Henry's Lord Privy Seal. The performances
here are by Eilidh McNab, soprano, Charles
Spinks, harpsichordist, and the Aeolian String
Quartet. (BBC)
SATURDAY, April 13
8:00 A.M. THE RENAISSANCE AND BAROQUE
CONCERT
MONTEVERDI Sestina-Lagrime d'Amante
NY Pro Musica/Greenberg (14) (Col 5159)
A. GABRIELI Aria Delia Battaglia
Eastman Wind Ens/Fennell (14) (Merc 50245)
TELEMANN Sonata in E minor
E. \V. Mann, harpsichord; Wann, oboe; A.
Mann, recorder (10) (West 18589)
COUPERIN L'Apotheose de Lully
Hewitt Chamber Orch Hewitt (34) (Epic 3383)
TOMASINI Suite for Violetta
Ens M Casadesus (10) (West 18130)
HANDEL Le Rossignol
Lazlo, sopr; Gazzelloni, flute; Robertis. harp-
sichord (10) (RCA 20025)
Page 12
SOLEB Quintet Na 6 In G minor for Organ
and String Quartet
EEna Palllard (26) (Weal 18764)
ni:iMi FOB vol Mi PEOPLE: See page 5.
10:80 THE RADIO BALLADS— II: Sons <>f a Road.
One of the earlier works in this form produced
for ihe BBC by Swan McColl, Peggy Seeger,
anil Charles Parker, This deals with the build-
ing of the London— Yorkshire Motorway. The
program Is followed by another from the RRC.
Singing English, in which the producers describe
the techniques they Invented to create the "radio
ballad."
11:80 AN INTERVIEW WITH HENRI AM. KG: The
editor' of the Algiers Republican is interviewed
in Algiers by Paciflca stringer Marc Schlelffer.
They touch upon the recent banning of the
Algerian Communist Party and other develop-
ments in the newly-independent North African
country.
18:00 TIGHT LIKE THAT: Joe Boyd's biweekly
melange of blues, jazz, boogie, and gospel music.
1:00 THE PEACE TORI'S AND A NEW CON-
STITUTION: Rom Landau, professor of Islamic
and North African Studies at the University of
the Pacific, was in charge of training a group
of young people who have just arrived in
Morocco for Peace Corps Work. He describes
their training, and then goes on to discuss the
new constitution of Morocco in an interview
with Elsa Knight Thompson.
8:00 ADVENTURES IN MUSIC — IV: For young
people of all ages, the last in a series of four
programs about music, presented live from the
Westside Jewish Community Center, conducted
by Myron Sandler, Today. Joining In. a pro-
gram with young people joining professional
musicians in performances.
3:00 THE NEW VOKK REVIEW OF BOOKS: A
new mass circulation publication appeared in
New York in February, during the newspaper
strike. Its purpose was to provide serious re-
views and essays about books which, in the
opinion of the editors, do not receive intelligent
and continuing critical attention elsewhere. In
this interview with Dick Elman. Elizabeth
Hardwick and John Thompson discuss their
plans and the general cultural situation which
makes them necessary
3:30 THE SAGA OF MR. JELLY LORD: Continu-
ing this weekly series of excerpts from the Li-
brary of Congress recordings made in 1938 by
pianist Jelly Roll Morton. Produced by Joe Boyd.
4:00 ARS ARTIS. OR LOSERS ONLY: Richard
Rosent ha 1. president of the Richard and Hindu
Rosenthal Foundation, describes to W. H. Ferry
the purposes of the Foundation's awards for
creative activities, and how the recipients are
chosen. Winners include Bernard Malamud. John
I'pdike, Elizabeth Spencer, as well as painters
and cinema artists.
4:30 GOLDEN VOICES: In the second of four
programs, Anthony Boucher presents the French
personality of baritone and linguist Emilio de
Gogorza, with operatic excerpts by Bizet, Diaz.
Massenet, and Thomas, and songs by Faure,
Franck, Symiane, and Widor.
5:00 THE WIDE-OPEN HOUR: Open time for
timely programs.
6:15 PACIFICA NEWS
6:30 UNCOMMON SENSE: Commentary on the
search f< r survival in a nuclear age by Lau-
rence Kp.rmen and Stephen Kandel.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Hallock Hoffman. (APR 15)
7:00 SCHIBERT: Trio No. 2 in Eb. On 100 for
some highlights in
music
Modern American Music (Columbia)
1 1:30 a.m. April 1, 3, 5, 8, 10, 12
Music From Historic Houses (BBC)
1 1 :30 p.m. April 1 through 1 3
Music In Korea
10:00 p.m. April 2, 4, 9, 1 1
Contemporary Music
(LA Public Library)
7:00 p.m. April 5 and 12
The Radio Ballads (BBC)
The Body Blow 10:30 a.m. Sat 6
Song of a Road 10:30 a.m. Sat 13
Folk songs from all over
7:00 p.m. Wed 3
Musica de Espana
9:45 p.m. Fri 5
St. Matthew Passion (Bach)
1 1 :30 a.m. Sun 7
Parsifal (Wagner/ Bayreuth Fest)
12:30 p.m. Sun 14
Piano, Violin, and Cello, performed by Rudolph
Serkin. Adolph Rusch. and Hermann Busch.
(Angel COLH 43)
7:15 INSANITY AND CRIMINAL OFFENDERS:
A discussion of the findings of a commission
which has recently been studying this subject,
moderated by Klsa Knight Thompson. Partici-
pants are Dr. Karl M. Bowman, professor of
psychiatry, emeritus, at Langley-Porter Clinic in
San Francisco: Arthur H. Sherry, professor of
law and criminology at UC Berkeley; and David
H. Wilson, professor in the School of Crimin-
ology at Berkeley.
8:45 THE POETRY OF MAO TSE-TUNG: From
the edition released by the Foreign Language
Press in English translation. David Ossman
reads 19 poems by the Chairman of the People's
Republic of China.
0:15 THE SAINT OF SLEEKER STREET: A mu-
sieal drama in three acts, by Gian Carlo Menot-
ti. The cast includes David Poleri, Gloria Lane,
and Gabrielle Ruggiero. (RCA LM 6032)
10:45 NOW WE (iOT NOTHIV: Rerman Gibson.
leader of striking miners in southeastern Ken-
tucky, in a speech recorded recently at a rally
in their behalf. (Mar 25)
11:30 Ml SIC FROM HISTORIC HOUSES— XIII: In
this final program in the series, we visit Hat-
Held House, where Elizabeth I learned of the
death of her sister Mary, and her own suc-
cession to the throne. The music is performed
there by the Ambrosian Singers and Players.
SUNDAY, April 14
8:00 A.M. Ml SIC by BACH
The Musical Offering
Path Festival Orch Menuhin (41) (Angel 35781)
bh Will Den Kreuzstab Gerne Tragen
Fischer Dieskau, Orch/Rlstenpart Gil) (Dec
Partita No. 1 in R minor
S/.iget, (28) i Van 627/9)
Page 13
Christ Lag in Todesbanden
Roger Wagner Chorale. Orch/Wagner (23)
(Cap 8535)
10:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER: Fred Haines.
(Apr 12)
10:15 DEAR JUOAS: Robinson Jeffers' controversial
dream play, a psychological study of the Christ
figure from a 20th century viewpoint (written
in 1929) and produced for Pacifica Radio by
Eric Vaughn.
THE CAST
Jesus Eric Vaughn
Judas Patrick Omeirs
Mary Jean Hochberg
Lazarus Dietrich Faehl
12:30 PARSIFAL: 80 years after its first perform-
ance there. Bayreuth's Festspielhaus is again
the scene of this recorded performance of Wag-
ner's final opera.
THE CAST
Amfortas George London
Titurel Matti Talvela
Gurnemanz Hans Hotter
Parsifal Jess Thomas
Klingsor Gustav Neidlinger
Kundry Irene Dalis
with the Chorus and Orchestra of the 1962
Ba.vreuth Festival, conducted by Hans Knap-
pertsbusch.
5:30 FOUR QUARTETS: The elder statesman of
poetry. T. S. Eliot, reads his "Burnt Norton,"
"East Coker." "The Dry Salvages," and "Lit-
tle Gidding." (Angel 45012)
6:30 EVENINGS ON THE ROOF: Joseph Szigeti
plays the Partita No. 2 in D minor for violin
alone by J. S. Bach. And, from the Korean
Broadcasting System, a program of Korean lyric
songs set by Lou Harrison. Produced by Peter
Yates. (APR 17)
6:30 THE LIFE OF THE VIRGIN MARY: A read-
ing of Rainer Maria Rilke's thirteen poems by
Dietrich Faehl in the German, and by Jean
Birney in English translation. Paul Hindemith's
song cycle based on the Rilke texts is sung by
Frances James, accompanied by pianist George
Brough (from the Lyrichord recording LL 97).
9:00 MISSA IN DIE PASCHE: English soloists and
the Pro Musica Sacra, conducted by Bruno
Turner, perform this work from the 13th cen-
tury School of Notre Dame, Paris. (BBC)
10:30 CHRIST RECRLCIFIED: The novel by Nikos
Kazan tzakis, adapted for radio by Derek Carver
from a translation by Jonathan Griffin. The
scene is a Greek mountain village under Turkish
occupation in 1921, and through the device of a
village passion play, the author evokes once
again the events of Easter week. Produced for
the BBC by R. D. Smith and W. A. Glen-
Doepel.
11:00 EASTER, 1916: A collection of speeches,
poems, and songs connected with the fateful
Easter Week Uprising that began in Dublin on
Easter Monday in 1916.
FOLIO CLASSIFIED
No adTertutement in this Folio is to be construed
as endorsement of any organisation or business by
KPFK or Tie* versa.
RATES per insertion: 25c per word, 10-word mini-
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tions: 20c per word. Send printed or typewritten
copy with check or money order to KPFK, Program
Folio. Los Angeles 38. Deadline four weeks prior
to publication date.
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PICKWICK BOOKSHOP, 6743 Hollywood Boulevard
LOCATE ANY BOOK! No obligation. Send "wants"
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Page 14
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FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH OF LOS ANGELES.
2936 West Eighth Street, (just East of Vermont
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and from every creed. Stephen H. Fritchman. minis-
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tions. Weekly newsletter on request.
BURBANK UNITARIAN FELLOWSHIP. 320 East
Magnolia Blvd. Sunday services; church school.
IH • S684.
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
HARPSICHORDS and Baroque Instruments. Sales.
Rentals, Repairs. Discount to KPFK subscribers!
DU 8-3088.
HARPSICHORD for sale. Modern Neupert — Single
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15450 Milldale Dr.. L. A. 24 — GR 2-6864.
FOR LEASE OR SALE-New Yamaha Artist Pianos.
Spinets — Studios — Grands. From $12.95
RI 9-8631
Guitars — 5 string Banjos — Mandolins. Folkmusic
Records & Books. Rentals. Repairs & Trades. Santa
Monica Store. 3015 Pico. EX 5-7717.
Long Beach Store. 4209 E. Anaheim. GE 9-5341
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NO 5-0179
PHOTOGRAPHY
Fine Commercial/Advertising Photography,
assured satisfaction. Camhi/ Bardovi Photography
ST 5-5770
For the grand-parents who "have everything" . . .
a PHOTOBIOGRAPHY of your child; a series of
candid pictures taken at your home.
LOTTE NOSSAMAN CR 5-3506
PIANO TUNING
No matter how lousy you play, it sounds even
worse when your piano needs tuning — and it usually
does! If you're a music lover, call JOE GLOVER.
934-1769
PRINTING AND LITHOGRAPHY
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any description from a letterhead to a catalogue.
Snap-out forms. Estimates without obligation. Jim
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JEAN BENNETT Folk Guitar Instruction. Children
and Adult. Private or Group. NO 1-5258. HO 4-2831
CHARLES LEWIS
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Modern, practical method — encourages creativity.
Studio: STate 8-6454
AS ALWAYS — THE SPANISH GCITAR CENTER
IN HOLLYWOOD FOR QUALIFIED INSTRUC-
TION. Our teachers are all professional musicians
who earn their living lis' recording and performing.
WHY SETTLE FOR LESS THAN THE BEST
TRAINING AVAILABLE? classical guitar — MR.
FREDERICK M. NOAD: Flamenco guitar- MR.
JAMES FAWCETT (Jaime Griffo), and MR. LEO-
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1590 THE CROSSROADS OF THE WORLD.
HO 3-4646
LOU MAl'RY, Class Piano. Fastest way to learn.
one hour per week. ?15 month. 4::r>4 Tujunt_-a, North
Hollywood. TR 7-3847 769-4523.
THE MIDTOWN SCHOOL
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ual." 4155 Russell Avenue. Los Angeles 39.
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Teacher of the 'cello — Victor Sa/.er — Phone 662-4521
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Music. Art. I i.ince. Creativity stressed.
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KPFK. Call oL 6-4925, and see ad elsewhere in
Folio.
When responding to FOLIO ads. please mention KPFK FOLIO.
Page 15
DACIFICA
FOUNDATION
3729 CAHUENGA BLVD., NORTH HOLLYWOOD, CALIF.
Postmaster: Return requested.
1
DATED
PROGRAM
1962 Pacifica Foundation
NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATION
U. S. POSTAGE
PAID
BERKELEY. CALIF.
Permit No. 219
EUGENE R. MARKS
1507| S. BEVERLY DRIVE
LOS ANGELES 35, CALIF.
• All records fully guaranteed
• Charge accounts available
• Open daily 10:00 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.
Fri. -Sat. -10:00 A.M. to Midnight
Sunday-10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M
0hesterfield
MUSIC SHOPS. INC
o
>^ A PISCOUM HC0M WW
All records featured on
KPFK at low discount
prices. ALSO Bestsellers
at discount in our new
BOOK DEPARTMENT.
BR 2-9649 - CR 5-7712 • 9393 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, California
MILDREN'S
MUSIC CENTER. INC.
An international treasure house of records, books and gifts for children of
all ages, and their parents, too! Phone or write us — a staff of experts to
serve you.
5373 West Pico Boulevard • Los Angeles 19 • WEbster 7-1825
Page 16