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KPFK Folio June 8-2L 1964
KPFK, 3729 CAHUENGA BLVD., NORTH HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. TRiangle 7-5583,
STate 1-0150. MAILING ADDRESS: KPFK, LOS ANGELES 38.
Robert Adier, Manager and Program Director
The program Folio, a service to KPFK subscribers, is published bi-weekly. KPFK, together
with WBAI and KPFA, is owned by Pacifica Foundation, a non-profit institution which
exists solely to bring non-commercial radio to the community. Each of these stations are
supported by voluntary listener-subscriptions.
Annual subscriptions: S15.00. Student subscriptions: $5.00 for six months. Subscription*
are transferrable to WBAI (30 E. 39th St., N.Y, 16) and KPFA (2207 Shattuck Ayc,
Berkeley 4).
KPFK transmits from Mt. Wilson with 110,000 watts, e.r.p. Broadcast hours: 7:00 a.m. - 12
90 7 FM midnight, Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m - 12 midnight. Saturday and Sunday. Datea
after listings: past or future duplicate broadcasts. Concerts: numbers in parentheses refer
VOL. FIVE, NO. 23 to playing time, in minutes.
The programming for this Folio ivas directed by William Malloch (Music) , John Ohliger (Public
Affairs), Ruth Hirschman (The ^'^rts), Sophie Stein (Young People). Program co-ordinator,
David Ossman. Publications Associate, Sandra Allan. The cover ixoodcut is from the herbal
Commentarii in libros sex Pedacii Dioscoridis by Petrus Andreas Matthiolus, (Venice, 1565),
reproduced from Handbook of Plant and Floral Ornament, (Dover Publications, 1960).
THE FIRST ROSES OF SUMMER
The season of TV reruns, vacation apathy and heat fatigue begins on June 21, but
KPFK plans to fill the next three months with programming of high quality and
events of interest. We look ahead to The Glorious Fourth, when we'll premiere a
brand-new old-time radio mystery series, "Matthew Slade, Private Eye," and take a
look at some American political and literary fireworkers, including Walt Whitman,
Ernest Hemingway and John Philip Sousa. Then, / Remember Mahler, a Folio
Festival devoted to the life and music of the Mammoth Romantic. July 26 marks
KPFK's Fifth Anniversary, which w^ill take you inside the station as it is today,
as well as look back on the years that w^ere.
In this issue, the first summer buds appear. Musically, we offer six programs from
the Spoleto Festival (June 9, 12, 14, 15, 18, 21, with daytime rebroadcasts), Darius
Milhaud's new symphony based on the encyclical "Pacem In Terris" (June 6, 8:45
p.m.), the first two Henry Wood Promenade Concerts (Sunday afternoons), and a
day-long tribute to Igor Stravinsky on June 17, his 82nd birthday.
Public Affairs presents Dr. Hans Morgenthau on "No More Revolutions" (June
9, 7:30 p.m.) and documents "The Changing Mind of the South" (June 10, 8:00
p.m.). "Civil Rights in Orange County" is the subject of a two-part discussion on
June 13, and Rev. Brooks Walker talks about "The Re-creation of Sex" for the
Community Discussion Project on June 19 at 8:00 p.m.
Literature and Drama celebrates Bloomsday (June 16) with a dramatic version
of the "Lestrygonians" portion of Joyce's "Ulysses." Jack Guss's Flayhoy story
"Where Does It Say In Freud?" is done as a radio play (June 11, 11 :00 p.m.), and
Alphonse Daudet's classic "L'Arlesienne" will be presentid in a HHC World Theater
production (June 14, 8:30 p.m.).
Paul Gallico's memorable story about a boy turned cat, "The Abandoned" as read
by original Mercury Theater player John Hoyt begins on Programs For Young People
(June 8, 5:15 p.m.).
Tune in, and watch our garden grow!
Page 2
Monday, June 8
7:00 A.M. RUSSIAN SYMPHONIES
PROKOFIEV Symphony No 1. Op 5 "Clas-
sical"
Pittsburgh Sym Orch/Steinberg (Cap 8290) (15)
SHOSTAKOVICH Symphony No 4
Philadelphia Orch/Ormandy (Col 5859) (61)
TSCHAIKOVSKY Symphony No 2 in C. Op 17
Royal Phil/Beecham (Col 4872) (32)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Hallock Hoffman. (Jun 7)
9:15 THE CONFESSIONS OF FELIX KRILI^-
XI: Klaus Pringsheim continues his reading of
the novel by his uncle, Thomas Mann.
9:45 CONTEMPORARY MUSIC BY BELGIAN
AND DUTCH COMPOSERS
MARCEL POOT Overture "Joyeuse"
HENK BADINGS Variations on a South
African Theme
ARNOLD VAN WYK Symphonic Suite "Pri-
mavera"
The South African Broadcasting Corporation
Symphony is conducted by Anton Harman.
(SABC) (55)
10:45 PUBLIC ATING AFFAIRS: Tavo opposing re-
views of C. G. Jung's autobiography, Memories,
Dreams, Reflections, by Gerhard Adler and
Erich Fromm. The reader is Mitchell Harding.
(May 31)
11:30 CARL MATTHES IN RECITAL: The bril-
liant young Los Angeles pianist in a recital
first broadcast live from Studio D on May 31.
His program includes works by Bach, Mozart,
Novak, Pistin, and Copland.
12:30 NEW YORK THEATER— I: Art Seidelman
interviews Richard York, producer of the off-
Broadway revival of The Boys From Syracuse.
12:45 A NEW YORK TEACHERS' STRIKE IN
'65? Albert Shanker, New York teacher and
officer of the I'nited Federation of Teachers,
talks with Bob Stover of WBAI. (May 30)
1:15 SONGS FROM MODERN CUBA: Excerpts
from a recording not readily available in
this country. (Apr 30)
1:30 POLITICAL ACTION: The Union in Politics:
Members and supporters of the New York City
United Federation of Teachers discuss several
pertinent questions on this panel recorded at
the UFT Spring Conference. (May 30)
2:30 THE CYCLE CYCLE REVISITED: The Celes-
tial Musical Omnibus makes another stop.
MOZART Symphony No 11 in D major, K 84
London Phil/Leinsdorf (West 18863) (9)
BEETHOVEN String Quartet in E flat major.
Op 74 ("Harp")
Budapest Qt (Col SL 173) (30)
SCHUBERT Piano Sonata in C minor. Op
Posth (1828)
Friedrich Wuehrer (Vor VBX 9) (29)
3:45 POLITICS: THE FOLKLORE OF GOVERN-
MENT— VII: Dictatorship. Political scientist
C. Northcote Parkinson in conversation with
Julian H. Franklin. (May 17)
4:45 RAVEL'S QUARTET IN F: The Stuyvesant
String Quartet perform a work received quite
coolly by its dedicatee, Gabriel Faure. (None-
such H 1007) (30)
5:15 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 9.
6:15 LET THEM STAND UNDISTURBED— XII:
Alien and Sedition Act I. Chris Koch.
6:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 CO.MMENTARY: Marvin Schachter. (JUN 9)
7:00 NEW TOSCANINI RELEASES: RCA has
just released a new batch of short works per-
formed by the Maestro and the NBC Symphony
never before commercially released. All are
overtures, and all but one are live performance
recordings. Composers are Cherubini (Ali Baba.
Anacreon, Medea), Cimarosa (Secret Marriage,
Marriage by Tricker>), Gluck (Iphigenia in
Aulis). Mozart (Magic Flute, Marriage of
Figaro, Don Giovanni), Rossini (Italian Girl in
Algiers, Siege of Corinth) and Brahms (Tragic,
Academic). (RCA LM 7026) (125)
9:15 THE LAW AND SOCIETY— XVII: The First
Amendment: Libel and Slander. A discussion
led by Harry Kalven, Jr., of the University of
Chicago Law School. (JUN 11)
10:15 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Phil Elwood
with a Fats Waller Memorial program.
(JUN 9)
10:45 NEWS AND COMxMENTARY: Edward P.
Morgan.
11:00 LORD OF THE FLIES: An Interpretation.
Lee Whiting presents Dr. Kate Macus' view
from the psychological standpoint of William
Golding's much-discussed novel. (JUN 10)
11:40 MUSIC BY LESLIE BASSETT: Charles
Russo, clarinet, Walter Trampler, viola, and
Douglas Nordli, piano, play the Trio for those
instruments composed by the young University
of Michigan Assistant Professor of Composi-
tion. (CRI 148) (16)
Tuesday, June 9
7:00 A.M. CHAMBER MUSIC
SCHUMANN Fantasy Pieces, Cello and Piano
Rostropovich/cello, Britten/pf (Lon 9306) (19)
BLOCH Four Episodes for Piano, Winds and
Strings
Masselos/pf, Knickerbocker Ch Players/Solo-
mon (MGM 290) (14)
RACHMANINOFF String Quartet in G
Guilet String Qt (MGM 3133) (25)
BERG String Quartet. Op 3
New Music Quartet (Bartok 906) (24)
SHOSTAKOVICH Trio in E for Violin, Piano
and Violoncello
Czech Trio (SUA 10019) (27)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Marvin Schachter. (Jun 8)
9:15 THE CONFESSIONS OF FELIX KRULL—
XII.
9:45 HANDEL'S DETTINGEN TE DEUM: The
Telemann Society Festival Chorus and Or-
chestra under Richard Schulze perform at
New York University's St. Paul's Chapel.
(Nonesuch 1003) (42) (May 31)
10:30 SOLITUDE: THE UNKNOWN WORLD: Un-
itarian minister Brooks Walker wonders what
would happen if man faced himself alone,
without mass communication. (May 31)
11:15 INTERNATIONAL ROSTRUM OF COMPOS-
ERS— II: Music from Switzerland. (Jun 5)
12:30 NEW YORK THEATER — II: Lucia Amara,
member of the Metropolitan Opera Company,
talks with Art Seidelman.
Page 3
12:45 SHOULD BOXING BE BANNED? Art Ara-
gon and three medical men. moderated by
Bob Kaufman. Recorded by Rome Ronconi at
the Studio City Unitarian-Universalist Church.
(Jun 7)
2:00 THE MODERN J.\ZZ SCENE: Phil Elwood.
(Jun 8)
2:30 MORE SPIKE MIIXIGAN PRESERVES: The
Sentimental Auctioneer. Another recorded ses-
sion with the star of stage, screen, and Goon
Sfcow. (Parlaphone) (Jun 3)
3:00 EDWARD GERMAN'S MERRIE ENGLAND:
A new English recording of the operetta,
performed by William McAlpine, tenor, June
Bronhill. soprano, Monica Sinclair. mezzo,
Peter Glossop, baritone, the Rita "Williams
singers and Michael Collins and his orchestra.
(Odeon 1376/7) (10) (Apr 25)
5:15 FOR YOING PEOPLE: See page 9.
6:15 SPECIAL REPORT.
6:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 To be announced.
7:00 GOLDEN VOICES: To be announced.
7:30 NO MORE REVOLUTIONS: Dr. Hans Mor-
genthau discusses the difficulties of popular
revolutions in technically advanced nations.
(JUN 15).
8:15 SPOLETO FESTIVAL — I: Beginning a series
of nine programs from the 1963 Spoleto Festi-
val, the Woodwind Quintet performs the
Quintet No 9 in D major for Woodwinds. Op
68, by Franz Danzi, and Brahms' Quartet No 1
in G minor for Piano, Violin. Viola, and Cello
is performed by a group including Los Angeles
pianist John Browning. (JUN 10)
9:15 ALASTAIR REED: The poet and author of
Password is interviewed by Larry Birns about
his recent two— month tour of the west coast
of Latin America. (JUN 12)
9:45 THREE BACH SONS: Kurt Redel conducts
the Munich Pro Arte Orchestra in J. C.'s
Sinfonia in Eb, Op 9 No 2. W.F.'s Sinfonia
in d for flute, oboe, and strings, and C.P.E.'s
Concerto in d for flute and strings. (Dec
10092) (55) (JUN 16)
10:45 NEWS AND COMMENTARY: Edward P.
Morgan.
11:00 MEET YOl' AT THE STATION: Alan Hjerpe
with folk music. (JUN 17)
Wednesday, June 10
7:00 A.M. VOCAL CONCERT
HAHN Art Kong.s
Teyte/sop. Moore/pf (RCA LCT 1133) (8)
GRAUN Aria from Montezuma
Lorengar/aop, Berlin Phil/Benda (Col 91100)
(5)
BRITTEN Serenade for Tenor, Horn, Strings
Pears/ten, Braln/hn, New Sym/Goossens
(Lon 5358) (25)
MARENZIO Madrigals
Gold Age Singors/Field-Hyde (West 18712)
(15)
HANDEL Psalm 109. "Dixit Doininus"
Soloists, Berlin Bach ( )r(h/\V»'nz."l (Cant
72452) (38)
DEBTSSY The Blessed Damozel
de los Angeles/sop. Boston Sym/Munch (RCA
1907) (20)
9:00 To be announced.
9:15 THE CONFESSIONS OF FELIX KRULL
—XIII
1
9:45 SI'OLETO FESTIVAI. — I. Music by Danzi
and Brahms. (Jun 9)
10:45 OVERCO.M.MERCIALIZATION. PACIFICA,
AND PAY TV: FCC Chairman E. William
Henr.v speaking before the National Associa-
tion of Broadcasters in April. (May 30)
11:15 FOl TS'ONG'S SCHUBERT: Yehudi Menu-
hin's son-in-law plays the Austrian's Sonatas
in Bh. D 960 and D 784. (West 19038) (65)
(Jun 6)
12:30 NEW YORK THEATER— III: Art Seidelman
interviews Dorothy Olim. producer of several
off-Broadway productions.
An Interpretation.
12:45 LORD OF THE FLIES:
Dr. Kate Macus. (Jun 8)
1:30 HINDEMITHS FIRST STRING QUARTET:
The Stuyve.'^ant String Quartet plays the late
compo.ser's three-movement Quartet No 1 in f.
Op 10, written in 1919. (Nonesuch H 1006)
(24) (Jun 3)
2:00 STATE DEPARTMENT NEWS POLICY:
Robert C. Manning. Assistant Secretary of
State for Public Affairs. (Jun 5)
2:30 EVENINGS ON THE ROOF
(Jun 7)
Peter Yates.
3:30 STREN(JTIiS AND WEAKNESSES OF THE
SOVIET ECONO.^IY: Alec Noye, professor of
economics at the University of Glasgow. From
the University of Chicago Radio Program
_^ervice. (May 31)
A 4:30/MICIIIO MIYAGI PLAYS THE KOTO: The
\ >Ante Japanese composer — Kotoist performs some
of his works on a Niviko LP specially im-
ported by Kl'FK. (Jun 6)
5:15 FOR YOUNG PEOP
See page 9.
6:15 THE OTHER SIDE OF THE I .N.
Pilkington.
6:30 CALEND.VR OF EVENTS: (Mair Brush.
6:45 CO.M.MENT.ARY: Phil Kerb.v. (JIN II)
Betty
/7:00
7:00 ALBERT Fl LLER PLAYS RA.MEAl : On a
harp.sichord made by William Dowd of Boston.
Mass.. P^uller plays the Pieces in .V (1706)
and the Suite in 'E (1724) on a new t\iml>ridge
recording. (Cam 603) (55) (JUN 18)
8:00 THE CHANGING .MIND OF THE SOI TH:
"If Dixie is not yet ready for its epitaph,
it will be only because Negroes . . . may give it
new life," writes Leslie Dunbar, executive di-
rector of the Southern Regional Council, in
this article frntn the fniversit.N of Fhirida
Journal of Politics, rend by David Wolfe.
(JIN 15)
8:45 I'ACF.M IN TKKKIS: .\ .symplion.v illustrating
the histoilcal enc.vdical "I'.iceni in Terris"
of the late Pope John X.XIII by Darius Mil-
haud, world piemieied on the occasion of tlie
inauguration of the auditorium of the Maison
De Lu K'i'l'" ill I'.iris on Dec. 20, 1963. The
woi-k i.s ix'irdniHMi by the French National
l)r(l)estra :iiid the KTI' (Miorus under the ilirec-
Page 4
tion of Charles Munch. Soloists are Johanna
Peters, contralto, and Louis Gullico, baritone.
(Jl N 19)
J*r3b CINEMA REVIEW: Colin Young. (JUN 14)
10:45 NEWS AND COMMENTARY: Edward P.
MorgTfin.
11:00 PI BMCATING AFFAIRS: The Forrestal
Case and the >Iental Health of Statesmen.
Robert Potts. WHAT News Editor, interviei^'s
Arnold Rogow. associate professor of political
science at Stanford University on his book,
James Forrestal. A Study of Personality,
Politics, and Policy. (JUN 16)
11:35: RACHMANINOFF'S MISERLY KNIGHT:
Ce.'^are Siepi sings, in English, the music to
Act II of this early (1904-5) opera by the
late Romantic, with Thomas Scherman and
the Little' Orchestra Society. Donated by Mr.
and Mrs. Max Ram. (Col 4520) (22) (JUN 17)
Thursday, June 11
7:00 A.M. PIANO CONCERTI
HUMMEL Piano Concerto in a. Op 85
Balsam/pf, Winterthur/Ackermann (CH 1241)
(27)
PROKOFIEV Concerto for Piano No 1 in D,
Op 10
Richter/pf, Mosco%v Sym /Kondrashin (Miro
8002) (15)
MOZART Piano Concerto No 27 in B flat Major
Backhaus/pf, Vienna Phil Orch/Bohm (Lon
1282) (20)
BRAHMS Piano Concerto No 2 in B flat major.
Op 83
Backhaus/pf, Vienna Phil Orch/Schuricht (Lon
628) (47)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Phil Kerby. (Jun 10)
9:15 THE CONFESSIONS OF FELIX KRULI. —
XIV.
9:45 KIYOKO TANAKA PLAYS DEBUSSY PRE-
LUDES: The young Japanese pianist plays the
Frenchman's music on a recording specially
imported by KPFK. (King 3002) (Jun 6)
10:30 THE LAW AND SOCIETY— XVII: The First
Amendment: Libel and Slander. Harry Kalven
Jr. (Jun S)
11:30 HISTORY OF MUSIC — V: The Secular Art
of the Renaissance is the subject of Alan
Rich's continuing series on the history of
music.
12:30 NEW YORK THEATER — IV: Jack Dobson,
acting in the off-Broadway production of Six
Characters in Search of an Author, speaks
with Art Seidelman.
1:00 THE APA AND RIGHT YOU ARE: Stephen
porter, director, and Eric Bentley, with Dale
Minor of "WBAI, in a program concerned with
the Phoenix Theatre's repertory engagement,
Pirandello's Right You Are. (Jun 6)
2:00 GOLDEN VOICES. (Jun 9)
^2:30 ARE VOTERS INTELLIGENT? Mrs. Ruth
"^ Kosakowsky of the League of Women Voters,
and Mort B. Lawrence, of the City Committee
and the Local Candidates Committee of Citizen's
Union, talk with Tom Lauricella of the New
York Young Republican Club.
3:30 TCHAIKOVSKY'S "lOLANTHA": The rare-
ly-heard opera is performed by soloists, chorus,
and orchestra of the Leningrad ilaly Theatre,
under the direction of Eduard Grikurov. (ULP
106/7) (93) (Jun 7)
5:15 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 9.
6:15 PUBLICATING AFFAIRS: Chris Koch of
WBAI discusses Tomorrow's Weapons by Brig.
Gen. J. H. Rothschild, U.S.A. (Ret.), pub-
lished by McGraw-Hill.
6:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 CO.MMENTARY: Earl Walter. (JUN 12)
/7:00 TOY/CLOCK SYMPHONIES: Paul Kuentz
conducts the Paris Chamber Orchestra in
Haydn's "Toy" Symphony and Symphony No
101 in D, "Clock". (Dec 10090) (40) (JUN 17)
/7:4arTHE HOLLYWOOD MUSEUM: Is Alta Loma
V.._^errace another Chavez Ravine? What are
the aesthetics behind the museum? Seymour
Stern reads the article he and Art Kunken
published in a recent issue of Frontier maga-
zine. (JUN 17)
8:00 JULES FEIFFER ON HIM.SELF AND SAT-
IRE: Paul Krassner, editor of The Realist,
talks with Jules Feiffer about satire, the
satirist, and himself. (JUN 17)
(8:15 HAYDN FROM PALMDALE: The Palmdale
\_/'Civic Chorus, Mark J. Darrington, Director,
perform the Croatian-Austrian's The Seven
Last Words of Christ. (Century 18380) (43)
(JUN 12)
(^
9:P0 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBERS: Robert
Adler. KPFK manager. (JUN 14)
9:15 THE ELE>'ENTH HOUR: Reserved for a
topical program.
10:15 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Phil Elwood with Benny
Carter. (JUN 12)
10:45 NEWS AND COMMENTARY: Edward P.
"-Morgan.
ll:00/iVHERE DOES IT SAY IN FREUD? Origin-
^^yally published in the February issue of Play-
boy as a short story, "Where Does It Say in
Freud That a Shrink Has To Be Polite?" and
revamped into a radio play production by its
author Jack Guss. Robert Ball and Davis
Roberts are featured in the production, with
Michael Dayton as technical producer. (JUN 12)
11:25 NEW OFFENBACH: The Suite used by the
Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo in their perform-
ances of the ballet Gaite Parisienne is per-
formed on a new Columbia recording by Eu-
gene Orf^ndy and the Philadelphia Orchestra.
(Col 594CTr(32)
Friday, June 12
:00 A.M. A MOZART MOSAIC
Ca.^sation No 1 in G. K 63
Zimbler Sinfonietta (Decca 8520) (23)
Serenade No 10 for 13 Wind Instruments, K 361
Members Bavarian Radio Sym/Jochum (DGG
18830) (43)
Divertimento No 15 in B flat, K 287
NBC Symphony/Toscanini (Vic 2001) (29)
A Musical Joke, K 522
NDR Symphony Orch/Stepp (Arch 3150) (18)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Earl Walter. (Jun 11)
Page 5
9:15 THE CONFESSIONS OF FELIX KRULI^
XV.
9:45 HOLLAND FESTIVAL 1963 — III: The Neth-
erlands Chamber Orchestra under David Zin-
man in a program of Haydn, Mozart, and
Martin. (Jun 5)
10:45 THE LEGISLATOR'S EIGHTEEN - HOUR
DAY: Senator Hubert H. Humphrey (Minn.).
(Jun 6)
11:45 HAYDN FROM PALMDALE: The Seven Last
Words of Christ. (Jun 11)
12:30 NEW YORK THEATER — V: Bernard Walter
and Irving Bergie, connected with the musical
Ballad for Bimshi. talk with Art Seidelman.
12:45 PLANNED OBSOLESCENCE AND STAND-
ARDIZATION: Colston Warne, President of
Consumers Union. (Jun 6)
1:30 WHERE DOES IT SAY IN FREUD?: A radio
play. (Jun 11)
2:00 JAZZ ARCHIVES: Phil Elwood. (Jun 11)
2:30 ALASTAIR REED: Talking about Latin
America. (Jun 9)
3:00 SONGS OF THE SPANISH RESISTANCE:
On a recording imported from Algeria. (May 2)
3:1^ FIVE WAYS OF RUINING POETRY: A do-
it-yourself talk by the English poet, novelist,
and translator of Greek tragedy, Paul Roche.
3:45 YOUNG CONCERT ARTISTS SERIES — II:
Soloists Margaret Strum and Paula Sylvester,
flutes, and Jamesette Holliman, piano, re-
corded by WBAI at Judson Hall in New York.
(Jun 4)
5:15 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 9.
6:15 CREDIT CO-OPS FOR RURAL DEVELOP-
MENT: Chris Koch of WBAI talks with David
Sweet, field representative of the Rural Devel-
opment Associates.
6:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Theodore Edwards.
n':00 HOLLAND IN ART AND MUSIC: This weeks
^ wooden shoe features the Dutch String Quartet
touring the USA, a talk with the Dutch author,
Simon Vestdijk, who celebrates his 65th birth-
day, the violin builder Max Moeller, and some-
thing called the Grand Gala du Disque. Guus
/- Feist and John van der Steen comment.
(8:00 COMMUNITY DISCUSSION PROJECT: Dia-
^ — logue on Democracy. Former French President
Pierre Mendes-France talks with D. Calleo,
assistant professor of political science at Yale
University, in this program produced by Yale
Reports. This is the topic for tonight's CDP
discussion. Please call NO 2-1492 for meeting
locations. (JUN 16)
8:30 TREASURY OF THE 78: A Henry Wood
Memorial Concert. Recordings by England's late
"Windmill" conductor with various orchestras
reissued by English ("oluinl)ia. Works include
Don Giovanni and Roman Carnival Overtures,
one of Wood's transcriptions, and the famous
work used to close the I'rom Concerts, whiih he
organized, his Fantasia on BritiKh Sea Sombh.
(Odeon) (55)
9:30 THE DIXON LINE: Dixon Gayer, a journal-
Ism professor and founder of the anti-extremist
"Webster Quimley Society," tells John Ohllger
about his new adventure in personal Journalism,
a newsletter called "The Dixon Line." (JUN 17)
9:45 SPOLETO FESTIVAL — II: Five early songs
1 y Alban Berg and Six Songs for Soprano,
Clarinet, and Piano. Op 103, by Ludwig Spohr
are sung by Soprano Chloe Ewen. The Sonata
in C minor for Cello and Piano. Op 19, by Ser-
gei Rachmaninoff is perfoi.i^ed by R. La Mar-
china. (JUN 15)
10:45 NEWS AND COMMENTARY: Edward P.
Morgan.
11:00 THE SCOPE OF J.\ZZ: Martin Williams
with the first of two programs on Duke
Ellington.
Saturday, June 13
8:00 A.M. PIANO-GUITAR RECITAL
BEETHOVEN Sonata No 9 in E, Op 1
Bachauer/pf (Mer 50381) (14)
BACH Chaconne (from Partita No 2 in D, solo
violin)
Bream/guitar (West 18428) (16)
MOZART Sonata No 10 in C K330
Gieseking/pf (Ang 35077) (24)
BACH Suite No 3 for solo cello (transcription)
Williams/guitar (Wash 424) (25)
SCARLATTI Sonata L457
Fou Ts'ong/pf (West 19015) (7)
HAYDN Largo assai & Menuet
Segovia/guitar (Dec 10039) (10)
SOLER Fandango
Marvin/pf (Dec 9937) (10)
10:00 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 9.
11:00 UCLA ETHNO SERIES III: Some examples
of The Music of Bali prepared for us by Mike
Moore of the l^CLA Ethnomusicology Dept.
taken from their archives.
12:00 CIVIL RIGHTS IN ORANGE COUNTY— I:
A frank but friendly discussion of housing
problems of Negroes and Mexican-Americans
with representatives from Orange County's
industries, realtors, builders, churches, colleges,
and minority groups. The first of two programs
from a conference sponsored by Chapman and
Orange State Colleges. (JUN 19)
1:00 THE ART OF EZIO PINZA: The late basso
performs mu.sic liy Verdi. Meyerl)eer, Thomas,
Bellini, Gounod. Halevy, and Mozart on re-
cordings made between 1927 and 1939. From
the Charles A. Boynton collection. (Camden
401) (45)
1:45 CIVIL RIGHTS IN ORANGE COUNTY: II:
Education and employment problems for mi-
norities in Orange County are discussed.
(JUN 19)
2:30 CHAMBER Ml SIC BY AARON COPL.VND:
Hilde Somer plays his Piano Sonata (1941). She
is then joined by Carroll tllenn, and together
they perform his Violin Sonata (194 3). These
two are joined in turn by cellist Charles Mc-
cracken to perform the Trio Vitebsk (Study on
a Jewish Theme) (1929). (CRI 171) (r.7)
4:00 SO( I.VL KKSPONSIBIUTY OF SCIKNCE—
EAST -AND WEST: Chris Koch of WBAI talks
with Victor I'aschkis about his recent trip to
Eastern and Western Europe.
4:35 OBKKCIIT'S .MiSS.V FORTINA 1)KSPI<:-
K.VT.V: 'riif h'lfmi.sli Hfnaissani'e composer's
work, liascil upon the Husnois Chanson, For-
tuna deHiH'rata. is performed by soloists,
boys' and men's choir and wind ensemble
of the New York Pro Musica under Noah
Greenl)erg. A new Decca release. (Dec 9413) (38)
Page 6
5:15 THE WIDE OPEN HOUR.
6:15 LETTERS FROM LISTENERS.
6:30 UNCOMMON SENSE: Steve Kandel.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Challenges to Socialism, IT:
Mary Saran of the British Labour Party, with
some questions and answers.
7:00 CIVIL LIBERTIES IN OIR COURTS: A. L.
Wirin, ACLU General Counsel.
7:30 MUSIC FROM GERM.\NY: David Bergers
series from 'SVest Germany continues with a
performance of Hindemith's Clarinet Concerto
in A. played by clarinetist Sepp Fackler and
the Southwest German Radio Orch. The pro-
gram opens with a selection from the com-
poser's song cycle. Die Junge Magd, sung by
Xoemi Souza and accompanied by members of
the SW Radio Orch.
8:00 BURE.\UCR.\CY IS NOT MUDDLING
THROUGH: Newton N. Minow, former chair-
man of the FCC, on the failure to adapt our
institutions to ever more rapid change. The
reader is Norman Belkin. (JUN 16)
8:35 THE ART OF ORLANDO GIBBONS: The
Telemann Society Chorus, Theodora Schulze.
director, performs at least one example of
every form in which the King's virginalist
(158.3—1625) composed: the anthem, madrigal,
instrument fantasia. keyboard music, and
English Church music. (Vox 514010) (40)
9:15 DIRECTING THE FILM: Dilys Powell ex-
amines the work and personalities of some
eminent directors. Among the men heard are
Flaherty, Huston, Renoir, Chaplin, De Sica.
Hitchcock, Lang. Von Stroheim, and Reed.
(BBC)
9:45 STARS FOR FREEDOM FESTIVAL: An
Eaf;ter Sunday festival at the Sports Arena,
featuring Count Basie, Joe Williams, June
Christy. Mahalia Jackson, and Dick Gregory.
Produced by Petrie Mason.
10:45 NIGHTSOUNDS: An Entertainment. pre-
sented by Norman Belkin.
Sunday, June 14
8:00 .\.M. C.\NT.ATA CONCERT
BACH Cantata No 105 "Herr. gehe nicht . . ."
Soloists. Lehmann/Berlin Phil Orch; Berlin
Motet Choir (Dec 9682) (28)
HANDEL Cantata "Nel Dolce Dell' Oblio"
Lamoree/sop. Krainis/Pro Musica Antiqua of
New York (Counterpoint 515) (7)
BrXTEHUDE Cantata "Alles. was ihr tut
mit Worten oder mit Werken"
Greifwalder Cathedral Choir, Pflugbeil/
Berlin Bach Orch (Can 1121) (25)
BACH Cantata No 14 6 "Wir muessen
durch . . ."
Soloists, Prohaska/Vienna Ens; Cho (BG
525) (43)
10:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBERS: Robert
Adler. (Jun 11)
10:15 J.\ZZ — LOS ANGELES: Chico Hamilton re-
cordings early and late are played by Petrie
Mason. (PJ39, CL1619)
10:45 CINEMA REVIEW. (June 10)
11:00 SEEN AT THE GALLERIES: Earl Carter.
11:30 TREASURY OF THE 78. (Jun 12)
12:30 DIVORCE AND "TRIAL RUN" MARRIAGE:
Attorney Louis Litwin tells Unitarian minister
Brooks Walker about his proposals to change
the divorce laws. (JUN 18)
1:00 SCHUBERT AND .MOZART M.\SSES: Her-
bert Froitzheim conducts soloists and the
chorus and orchestra of the Freiburg (Breisgau)
School of Music in the former's Mass in G
(1815) and the latter's Missa Brevis in Bb,
K 275 (1777). (Dec 10091) (47)
-1:45 SELECTED POEMS — STEVIE SMITH: Miss
Smith reads several poems from her recently
published book. Selected Poems (New Direc-
tions).
2:10 MUSIC BY FRANK MARTIN: Dietrich
Fischer-Dieskau. accompanied by the Berlin
Philharmonic under the composer, performs six
monologues from Everyman and two excerpts
from The Tempest, settings of the famous texts
by the Swiss composer. The composer also
conducts his Overture to the latter work.
(DGG 18871) (47)
3:00 THE NEW ENGINEERS: Chris Koch of
WBAI talks with Carl Frey, the executive
secretary of the Engineering Manpower Com-
mission of the Engineers Joint Council — a
coordinating body for professional engineering
societies. (JUN 18)
3:45 HENRY WOOD PROMENADE CONCERT —
I: The 69th Season (via the BBC) opens with
Monteverdi's L'lncoronazione di Poppea in a
concert version by members of the Glyndeboume
Festival Opera Company and the Royal Phil-
harmonic Orchestra, conducted by John Prit-
chard. Soloists include Magda Laszlo, Gerald
English, Richard Lewis, and Hugues Cuenod.
6:15 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS: Wil-
liam Mandel.
6:30 THIS WEEK AT THE U.N.
6:45 COMMENT.\RY: Sidney Lens. (JUN 15)
7:00 TR.WEL THE HIGHLANDS: Josef Marais
d Miranda. (JUN 20).
30 ^THICS AND ENGINEERING: Chris Koch
WBAI with three engineers: Chester A.
Handley (Celanese Corp.), Roland A. Labine
(assoc. editor of Chemical Engineering), and
Alan Griff (consultant, author, chemical en-
gineer), and a lawyer, Julian Weinberg.
8:30 L'ARLESIENNE: The tragedy by Alphonse
Daudet was produced, with an extensive score
by Georges Bizet, in 1872. This BBC World
Theatre production recreates the score aa
originally performed. Rolf Lefebre, Vivienne
Chatterton, Peter Claughton, and others play
the Edward Sackville-West translation; Anthony
Bernard conducts the London Chamber Or-
chestra. Production by Raymond Raikes.
10:00 SPOLETO FESTIVAL— III: Mozart's Sonata
No 5 in E minor for violin and piano, K 304,
and Debussy's Suite for Piano are performed
by Jean Claude Penettier. (JUN 16)
10:30 .AIY WORD: The lively, witty BBC panel
game.
11:00 THE CYCLE CYCLE
MOZART (and MICHAEL HAYDN) Symphony
No 37 in G, K 444
London Phil/Leinsdorf (West 18146) (14)
(intro by Mozart, rest by M. Haydn)
BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No 19 in g. Op-
49 No 1
Page 7
Artur Schnabel (Ang GRM 4005) (8)
SCHUBERT Octet in F, Op 166. D 80:
Berlin Phil Ens (Cap 7112) (49)
Monday, June 15
7:00 A.M. CONCERTO CONCERT
BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No 2 in B flat.
Op 19
Gould/pf. Col Sym/Bernstein (Col 5211) (28)
MOZART Concerto in C major for Flute and
Harp. K 299
Grandjany/harp, Baron/flute. Musica Aeterna
Orch/Waldeman (Dec 10075) (29)
HANDEL Concerto in B flat major for Harp
and Orch. Op 4. No 6
Granjany/harp, Musica Aeterna Orch/Wald-
man (Dec 10075) (13)
"VIVALDI Concerto for Violin and Two Or-
chestras
Milan Chamber Orch/Jenkins (Wash 406) (18)
BACH Concerto No 3 in D major for Harp-
sichord and Orch
Van Der Lyck/Harpsichord. Tonstudio Orch,
Stuttgart/Michael. (Per 547) (20)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Sidney Lens. (Jun 14)
9:15 THE CONFESSIONS OF FELIX KRULL—
XVI.
9:45 THE RIGHT OF TRAVEL: Leonard B.
Boudin. of Boudin and Rabinowitz, New York,
and Larry Birns discuss passport leerislation,
practice, and legal precedent. (May 25)
10:15 SPOLETO FESTIVAL — II. (Jun 12)
11:15 NO MORE REVOLUTIONS: Dr. Hans Mor-
genthau. (Jun 9)
12:00 THE HONEGGER QUARTETS — I: Three
Quartets which never showed up in Schwann
are the subject of this two-program series.
The first quartet is performed this morning
by the Jean Lespine Quartet on Festival FLD
61. (May 20)
12:30 NEW YORK THEATER— VI: Carl Foreman,
director of the film The Victors, talks with Art
Seidelman.
1:00 THE HONEGGER QUARTETS — II: The sec-
ond and third quartets are performed by the
Jean Lespine Quartet. (Festival FLD 60)
1:45 THE CHANGING MIND OF THE SOUTH:
Leslie Dunbar. (Jun 10)
2:30 THE CYCLE CYCLE REVISITED: More un-
coilings from the Musical Mainspring.
MOZART Symphony No 12 in G major, K 110
London Phil/Leinsdorf (West 18863) (12)
BEETHOVEN String Quartet No 11 in F minor.
Op 95
Budapest Qt (Col SL 173) (22)
SCHUBERT I'iano Sonata in A major. Op
Posth (1828)
Friedrich Wuehrer (Vox VBX 10) (35)
3:45 POLITICS: THE FOLKLORE OF GOVERN-
MENT— VIII: The KuNNiun CoinnuiiiiNt Theoc-
racy. (May 24)
4:45 MALIPIERO'S RISPETTI E STKAMIIOTTI:
Music by the Italian composer written to evoke
the flavor of old Italian love poetry. The
Stuyvesant Quartet performs. (Nonesuch H
1006) (31) (Jun 4)
5:15 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 9.
6:15 HELEN NELSON: Governor Brown's Con-
sumer Counsel.
6:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 To be announced.
7:00 THE GROUP FOR CONTEMPORARY MUSIC
— II: Recorded for WBAI at MacMillan Theatre
of C^olumbia ITniversity. During intermission,
the directors of "The Group", Charles Wouri-
men and Harvey Sollberger. talk with John
Corigliano. WBAI Music Director. Included in
the program are works by Couperin. Stewart.
O'Brien. Colgrass, Schoenberg. Martino, and
Luening.
8:30 AFRO-ASIAN SOLIDARITY COUNCIL: A
special report prepared in Algiers and London,
on the sixth session of the Afro-Asian solidar-
ity conference. (JUN 19)
9:00 SPOLETO FESTIVAL — IV: Inger Wikstrom
plays Chopin's Scherzo No 3 in C minor. Op 39,
and Ballad No 1 in G minor. Op 23 and Vi-
valdi's Gloria in D, "Domine Deus" for So-
prano, Oboe, and String Quartet is performed
by soprano Judith Blejen.
9:30 THE MYTH OF THE "PURE" ADMINIS-
TRATOR: Vice-Admiral Hyman G. Rickover
discusses bureaucracy and the American "myth
of the administrator." (JUN 17)
10:15 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE: Phil Elwood
with Sonny Stitt. (JUN 16)
10:45 NEWS AND COMMENTARY: Edward P.
Morgan.
11:00 MORE NEW HOROWITZ: The famed pianist
emerges once more from semi-retirement to
perform his first recordings of Beethoven's
"Pathetitiue" Sonata, three Debussy Preludes.
two Chopin Etudes, and Chopin's Scherzo in
b. (Col 5941) (55)
Tuesday, June 16
Today is Uloomsday.
7:00 A.M. MUSIC BY AMERICAN COMPOSERS
THOMSON The Mother of Us All— Suite
Janssen (Col 4 4 68) (16)
DONOVAN Suite for Oboe & String Orchestra
Genovese/ob. Bait Little Sym/Stewart (Van
468) (19)
IVES Three Harvest Home Chorales
Shaw Chorale, organ. brasses/Shaw
(Rca 2G76) (7)
KIEGGER String Quartet No 2. Op 4 3
Kroll Qt (Col 5589) (18)
BENNETT Suite of Old Anu-rican Dances
Eastman Winds/Fennell (Mer 50079) (17)
HER.N'STEl.N Serenade for Violin Solo. Strings
and Percussion
Stern/vl. Sym of Air/Horn.stoin (Col 5145) (31)
9:0<t To he announced.
9:l.'> TIIK COM ESSIONS Ol
Wll: Ki.iiis l'l■iIl^4.sll..iMl (
..I tlH' Tlu.iua.s .M;mil tu.vcl.
I KLIX KRILL —
nt ludes his reading
9:45 TilK RKillT OF SILENCE: Leonard Boudin
and Larry Hirns di.siuss congressional investi-
gating comniittci'.s ,ind the rl^;hts of witnesses
before them. (May 27)
Page 8
XTTX
PM 90.7 MC Paafica Lisiener Supported Radio ""'Tos AngeTs 38, Cal>forn>a
STUDIOS: 3729 Cahuenga Blvd.
No. Hollywood, California
PHONE:
TRiangle 7-5583
Dear Friends of KPFK:
On July 26, KPFK is celebrating its
Fifth Birthday. We will mark this
occasion with a Special Anniversary
Folio. The folio will contain short
biographies of our staff members,
special copy and several pleasant
surprises ,
We thought you would want to express
your congratulations and greetings to
our five-year old prodigy and a special
section has been reserved in the folio
for this purpose. Whether you send
personal greetings, business boosters
or display ads, each greeting will spur
us on and give us something to grow on.
Please turn the page for details on how
you can join the celebration. Please
remember, to be included in the Special
Anniversary issue, your greetings must
arrive before June 20th.
Many happy returns of the day!
A Robert Adler
/ Station Manager
1
Aoin in celeoratina ^xj-^ ^^\ j "
^iftlt ^^nniuerAaru . . .
Place your Greeting in the
Anniversary Folio:
PERSONAL Your name and up to eight words of greeting:
$5.00
BUSINESS & Your business or profession^ address, and eight-
PROFESSIONAL ivord message: $10,00
DISPLAY Special Anniversary rates:
Full page $150.00
3/4 page 115.00
1/2 page 85.00
1/4 page 55.00
1/8 page 35.00
1/16 page 20.00
COPY DEADLINE June 21, 1964 . . . Please!
ISSUE DATE July 20, 1964
SEND TO: CARL MAY, KPFK, Loh Angeles 38, California
Special ilHeSdaae to
Professionals and Owners
of Businesses
Our records show impressive subscriber
response to our Folio advertisers.
Will you consider us for a permanent, or
at least a trial, position in your advertising
budget? You will then reach 11,000 respon-
sive families concerning your service or prod-
uct. Three-fourths of these hold college and
advanced degrees.
You will, at the same time, help us greatly
toward our goal of a stabilized budget — al-
lowing us to do even more for the community.
Please join us in this Anniversary Issue by sending in
your copy and check now!
For answers to any questions, phone Carl May, KPFK, TR 7-5583.
1^
KPFK YOUNG PEOPLE'S
DEPARTMENT PROGRAM
WINS OHIO STATE AWARD
^^Uj^^B <rv7^ I i^HKi ^^^ photograph shows Gerald Zelinger and
L^^^PI^I ^''N^^'*^^ j|l ffaW Everett Sloane with Sophie Stein during the
T^^^^m A ^^IBlvfli pi'oduction of "One Big Family." Sophie Stein,
i ^^^^^l^k ^l^^rr ■■ ^^^ ^^^ been KPFK's Young People's Director
[■m^^mmif vs. * JKB ^^^ more than two years, originally conceived of
the program idea, and wrote and produced the
program with Gerald Zelinger, who was the technical producer. "One Big Family"
was a special program for young people in observance of United Nations Day. The
program featured Ernie Sheldon (now with the Limeliters), with Laurie, Robbie, and
Butch, aged 9, 7, and 10. Than Wyenn read the Preamble to the U.N. Charter, Everett
Sloane read a story about prejudice, "In Henry's Backyard," and Anthony Franciosa
read an unpublished story "The Wall of Arrogance" by Victor Levine (a parable
about the Berlin Wall.) The program also featured the voices of Presidents Harry
S. Truman and Franklin D. Roosevelt. Ernie Sheldon wrote the song "One Big
Family" especially for this program.
Instituted Education tj/ Radio-lekmsion
2470 North Star Road
THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
• COLUAAfiUS 21, OHIO
TIm AMfkon Exhibition of UbcoHomI
Th» Ohio Sk»H Awtd$
293-6641
•a Cod* 614
May 11, 1964
Ms. Sophie Stein
Director, Young People's Programs
KPFK
3729 Cahuenga Blvd.
North Hollywood, California
Dear Ms. Stein:
It Is a pleasure to report that your entry, "One Big Family," has
been selected as the winner of an "Ohio State Award" in the 28th
American Exhibition of Educational Radio and Television Programs.
Official news release will be made on May 27 at 7 p.m. so we ask
that you keep this confidential until that time. This year we
plan to display certificates in a reception area immediately
following the lERT Awards Dinner on the evening of the 27th. It
is our hope that you or your representative will be able to be
present for this dinner as well as the rest of the sessions of
this year's Institute. Many of the Award-winning radio and tele-
vision programs will be shown on the hotel closed circuit system
during the Inst i tute.
Enclosed is an invitation and advance program of the B^th I ERT as
well as an advance registration card and hotel reservation information.
If circumstances prevent your attendance, please notify us and y
certificate will be mailed to you following the adjournment of t
I ERT.
your
he
Sincerely,
Richard B. Hul I
Director
RBH/tw
Enc.
f[0:15 BACHAUER'S BEETHOVEN: The famous
l_^^^reek lady plays his Piano Sonata No 9 in E.
Op 14, Xo 1; then Stanislaw Skrowaczewski and
the London Symphony join her for Beethoven's
4th Piano Concerto in G. Op 58. (Mer 50381)
(53). (Jun 7)
11:15 PUBLICATING AFFAIRS: The Forrestal
Case and the Mental Health of Statesmen.
(Jun 10)
12:00 SPOLETO FESTIVAL— III. (Jun 14)
12:30 NEW YORK THEATER — VII: Gary Bond and
Dallas Cavall, acting in Arnold Wesker's Chips
With Eversthlng, talk to Art Seidelman.
^.
1:00 THE THEATRE AND ITS CRITICS: A panel
discussion recorded at WBAI on the current
state of dramatic criticism and the role and
problems of the critic in the context of con-
temporary American theatre. (Jun 7)
2:00 THE MODERN JAZZ SCENE, (Jun 15)
2:30 DIALOGUE ON DEMOCRACY: Pierre Mendes-
France and D. Calleo. (Jun 12)
THREE BACH SONS. (Jun 9)
4:00 BUREAUCRACY IS NOT MUDDLING
THROUGH: Newton N. Minow. (Jun 13)
4:45 SPOLETO FESTIVAL— IV. (Jun 15)
5:15 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 9.
6:15 SPECIAL REPORT
6:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Marshall Neel. (JUN 17)
7:00 GOLDEN VOICES: To be announced.
7:30 To be announced.
I 8:15 LESTRYGONIANS: A version by Zack R.
^-^ Bowen of this portion of Ulysses, first per-
formed about 1960 at the State University Col-
i^ lege of Education in Fredonia, New York. Leo-
IB pold Bloom is played by Richard Alan Hughes.
f^ the Narrator by J. Tyler Dunn. (Folkways)
C55 MUSIC FOR BLOOMSDAY: Six Commentaries
from Ulysses by Thomas de Hartmann. per-
, formed by Patricia Neway. soprano, with Rob-
eft Colston, piano. (BBC)
10:15 POEMS IN PRINT: In the first of two pro-
grams on Surrealism. Sandra Hochman and
Daisy Aldan discuss the influence of Surreal-
ism on American Poetry. Readings from works
of various poets are included.
t 10:45 NEWS AND COMMENTARY: Edward P.
Morgan.
11:00 ETHNIC MUSIC: Robert Garfias presents
music of the Tuareg people of the Sahara.
Wednesday, June 17
Today is Stravinsky's Birthday.
7:00 A.M. STRAVINSKY CHORAL MUSIC
Ave Maria (1934)
Neth Ch Cho/de Nobel (Ep 3231) (2)
Cantata (1952)
Tourel/sop. Cuenod/ten, NY Concert Cho. NY
Phil Ens/Stravinsky (Col 4899) (27)
Four Russian Choruses (1914-7, 1954)
Nixon, Horne/sops. Cho & 4 Horns/Stravinsky
(Col 5107) (5)
Canticum Sacrum (1956)
PROGRAMS FOR
YOUNG PEOPLE
Weekdays, 5:15-6:15 P.M. Sat., 10 A.M,
MONDAY. JUNE 8
Tell-Me-As:ain Tales: Maureen Mcllroy
Dance^A-Stor>-: Little Duck (LE-101)
Anne & Paul Barlin — Music, Paul Schoop
Storj- of Jennie — or THE ABANDONED — I
John Hoyt begins 16-part reading of Paul
Galileo's poignant stor>' of boy turned cat.
TUESDAY. JUNE 9
Time for Rhyme
Dogwood Soup: Shep Ginandes (POS 1023)
The Storj- of Jennie — II: Read by John Hoyt
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 10
Rootabaga Stories: Told by author, Carl
Sandburg.
Aesop's Fables: With Louise Vincent and
Norman Belkin.
The Storj- of Jennie — III: by Paul Gallico
John Hoyt reads.
THURSDAY. JUNE 11
A Signpost: To The Armed Ones
Arlene Sagan— Janet Nickelsburg
Music for Y'oung Listeners: Robert Martin
Children's Music Center, Inc.
The Stoo of Jennie — IV
FRIDAY. JUNE 12
Encounters with Animals: Gerald Durrell
Animal Inventors (BBC)
Children's Songs: sung by Johnny Richardson
The Story of Jennie — V
SATURDAY. JUNE 13
Le Coq D'Or: Maureen Mcllroy reads new
adaptation of the Russian tale followed by
the Rimsky— Korsakov music.
MONDAY. JUNE 15
Tell-Me-Again Tales: Maureen Mcllroy
Dance-A-Storj-: Noah's Ark (LE-102)
Anne & Paul Barlin — Music. Paul Schoop
Story of Jennie— or THE ABANDONED— VI
John Hoyt continues Paul Gallico story.
TUESDAY. JUNE 16
Time for Rhyme
Dogwood Soup (POS 1023)
The Storj of Jennie — VII
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 17
Rootabaga Stories: Carl Sandburg
To be announced
The Storj of Jennie — VIII
THURSDAY. JUNE 18
A Signpost: To the Turtles
Janet Nickelsburg — Arlene Sagan
Music for Young Listeners: Robert Martin
Children's Music Center, Inc.
The Storj- of Jennie — IX
FRIDAY. JUNE 19
Encounters with Animals: Gerald Durrell
Vanishing Animals
Children's Songs: Richardson (FC 7036)
The Story of Jennie — X: John Hoyt reading-
SATURDAY. JUNE 20
Love for Three Oranges: Maureen Mcllroy
reads new adaptation of old tale followed
by Suite from Prokofiev's opera.
Page 9
Robinson/ten, Chitjian/bar. LA Fest Sym &
Cho/Stravinsky (Col 5215) (17)
The Flood (1962)
Soloists. Col Sym & Chorus/Stravinsky, Craft
(Col 5757) (23)
Pater Noster (1926)
Neth Ch Cho/de Nobel (Ep 3231) (2)
Les Noces (1923)
Soloists, Am Cone Cho, Col Sym/Stravinsky
(Col 5772) (25)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Marshall Windmiller. (Jun
16)
9:15 THOMAS MANN — I: Beginning a three-part
lecture on Mann by Klaus Pring-sheim. Mann's
nephew, presently with the Political Science
Department at the University of Kansas. (Jun 6)
9:45 STRAVINSKY PIANO MUSIC
Serenade in A (1925)
Rosen/pf (Ep 3792) (13)
Movements for Piano and Orchestra (1958-9)
Rosen/pf, Col Sym/Stravinsky (Col 5672) (9)
Concerto for Two Solo Pianos (1935)
Gold. Fizdale/pfs (Col 5733) (19)
Sonata for Two Pianos (1943-4)
Gold, Fizdale/pfs (Col 5733) (11)
Concerto for Piano and Winds (1924)
Lipkin/pf. NY Phil/Bernstein (Col 5729) (21)
Sonata for Piano (1924)
Rosen/pf (Ep 3792) (11)
Capriccio for Piano and Orchestra (1929)
Haas/pf. RIAS Orch/Fricsay (Dec 9515) (17)
11:45 THE DIXON I.INE: Dixon Gayer. (Jun 12)
12:00 RACHMANINOFF'S MISERLY KNIGHT.
(Jun 10)
12:30 NEW YORK THEATER — VIII: Paul Shaffer
interviews Julian Beck, co— director of the Liv-
ing Theater, recently closed due to tax diffi-
culties.
1:00 THE HOLLYWOOD MUSEUxM: Seymour
Stern. (Jun 11)
1:30 TOY/CLOCK SYMPHONIES: Haydn. (Jun 11)
2:15 JULES FEIFFER ON HIMSELF AND SAT-
IRE. (Jun 11)
2:30 MEET YOU AT THE STATION. (Jun 9)
3:30 THE MYTH OF THE "PURE" ADMINIS-
TRATOR: Vice-Admiral Hyman G. Rickover.
(Jun 15)
4:15 STRAVINSKY THOU ART TRANSLATED:
William Malloch compares Stravinsky's Four
Etude«» and two Suites for orchestra with their
string quartet and keyboard originals. A sur-
prise entry is a recording made here, the only
one in existence, of Stravinsky's Etude for
Piuiiolu, in its original form for player piano.
The instrument's owner. Lenny Marvin, is
briefly interviewed. (Archive)
5:15 FOR VOlJN(i PEOPLE: See page 9.
6:15 THE OTHER SIDE OF THE U.N. Betty
Pilkington.
6:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Bru.sh.
6:46 COM.MENTARY: Dorothy Healoy. (JUN 18)
7:00 THE CIIAN(ilN(J FACE OF STRAVINSKY:
The famed Los Angi-les resident. 82 today, con-
ducted his famous trio of ballets. Firebird,
Petrouchka, and The Rite of SpriiiR, three times
each for Columbia. The three were made with
the Paris Symphony in the '30's. Philharmonic-
Symphony Orchestra of New York in the '40's,
and the Columbia Symphony In the '50'8. Wil-
liam Malloch digs into each of the three, as
well as some other assorted Stravinskiana to
show how performers' attitudes toward the
music, including the performing attitudes of
Stravinsky himself, have changed with the
years. (90)
8:30 ESCAPE FROM ANGOLA: Former NBC and
BBC correspondent in South Africa. Henry
Barzilay, talks with Dr. F. Ian Gilchrist who
provides medical aid for the over one million
Angolan refugees in the Congo. (JUN 18)
9:20 STRAVINSKY IN REHEARSAL: In 1945.
William Malloch. possessed of a sense of His-
tory, recorded the composer rehearsing his new
revision of his Symphonies of Wind Instruments
in Memory of Debussy. The sound is antique,
but the picture of what Stravinsky is striving
for musically comes through clearly enough.
Broadcast through the kind permission of Stra-
vinsky himself
10:30 REVIEW OF RECENT BOOKS: William
Golding's Book The Spire is reviewed by Max-
millian Novak.
10:45 NEW S AND COMMENTARY: Edward P.
Morgan.
11:00 ISRAELITES WITH EGYPTIAN PRINCI-
PLES— I: Howard Meyer reads his article on
Edmund Wilson's popular book. Patriotic Gore,
criticizing Wilson and the academic tradition
which, he argues, has hindered the Negro's
struggle for equality.
11:35 STRAVINSKY JAZZ
Piano Rag Music (1919)
Smit/pf (Dot 3111) (3)
Ebony Concerto (1945)
Woody Herman Orch/Herman (Ev 6009) (9)
Ragtime for 11 Instruments (1918)
Ens/Stravinsky (Col 5772) (5)
Thursday, June 18
7:00 A.M. STRING ORCHESTR.\ CONCERT
HARRISON Suite for Symphonic Strings
Louisville/Whitney (Lou 621) (33)
DE LA VEGA Elegy for String Orchestra
Royal I'hil/Holet (9)
HINDEMITH Five Pieces for String Orchestra
Netherlands Ch Orch/Goldberg (Ep 3356) (14)
PERSICHETTI Symphony for Strings
Louisville/Whitney (Lou 545-7) (18)
BARBP^R Adagio for Strings. Op 11
I Solisti Di Zagreb/Janigro (Van 1095) (6)
VILLA-LOBOS Modinha. from Bachianas Bra-
sileiras No 1
Stadium Sym Strings/Stokowski (Ev 6016) (8)
BKIK; Three Movements from the Lyric-Suite
("..I Sym/Craft (Col 271) (15)
9:00 COM.MENTARY: Dorothy Healey. (Jun 17)
9:16 THOMAS .M.\NN— II: Klaus Pringsheim. (Jun
6)
9:46 THE RUiiiT OF ( ITIZENSHIP: Exputriatlon.
A discu.ssioii bclwccn Lfoiiatd Houdin and I^arry
Hini.s. (Jun 1 )
l!>:15 DELTA HUES: Paul Chevegny with a col-
b'clion of blues by the lowland Negroes. (May
17)
10:45 TIIK NEW KNGINKERS: Curl Frey. (Jun 14)
Pag« 10
11:30 HISTORY OF MUSIC— TI: Alan Rich contin-
ues his series on the histor>' of mualc with an
investigation of The Sacred Music of the Ren-
aissance.
12:35 ESCAPE FROM ANGOLA: Henrj- Barzilay.
(Jun 17)
1:30 VERNON WATKINS: The close friend and
"literary consultant" to Dylan Thomas is inter-
viewed by Colin Edwards about his own poetry
and his concept of the place of poetry In
modern society. (Mar 26)
2:00 GOLDEN VOICES. (Jun 16)
2:30 DIVORCE AND "TRIAL RUN" MARRIAGE:
Louis Litwin and Brooks Walker. (Jun 14)
3:00 ALBERT FULLER PLAYS RAMEAU. (Jun
10)
4:00 THE WRITER AND THE STORY: The sec-
ond in an occasional series hosted by science
fiction author George Clayton Johnson. In this
program, Charles Beaumont reads his short
story "Fair Lady."
4:30 JAZZ — LOS ANGELES: Anthony Garavente
with music from the 13th Annual Intercollegi-
ate Jazz Festival at the Lighthouse.
5:15 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 9.
6:15 SEARCH AND RESEARCH: William Blanch-
ard.
6:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Thomas Francis Ritt. (JUN
19)
7:00 SPOLETO FESTIVAL — V: From the 1963
festival. Dvorak's Four Duets for Soprano and
Piano. Sammartini's Sonata in G minor for
Two Violins and Continue, and Brahms' Trio
No 1 in B major. Op 8. (JUN 19)
7:55 REPORT FROM LONDON: Henry Collins dis-
cusses the Conference on World Trade and
Development held recently in Geneva. Recorded
in London by the BBC for WBAI. (JUN 19)
8:15 A FRENCHMAN IN NEW YORK: Darius
Milhaud was commissioned by RCA to compose
a musical foil to Gershwin called A French-
man in New York, Arthur Fiedler and the Bos-
ton Pops play the new work, which contains
movements called New York with Fog on the
Hudson River, The Cloisters, Horse and Car-
riage in Central Park, etc. The same perform-
ers carry on. of course, with Gershwin's Ameri-
can in Paris. (RCA 2702) (45)
9:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBERS: Robert
Adler. KPFK manager. (JUN 21)
9:15 THE ELEVENTH HOUR: Reserved with a
proper sense of immediacy for a program of
last-minute importance.
10:15 JAZZ ARCHIA'ES: Benny Carter is heard
again. (JUN 19)
10:45 NEWS AND COMMENTARY: Edward P.
Morgan.
11:00 ISRAELITES WITH EGYPTIAN PRINCI-
PLES— II: Howard Meyer.
11:35 MAX NEUHAUS. PERCUSSIONIST: Mr.
Neuhaus and WBAI's Music Director. John
Corigliano. discuss contemporary music, and
Mr. Neuhaus performs Karlheinz Stockhausen'a
Zyklus. (JUN 19)
Friday, June 19
7:00 A.M. SVIATOSLAV RICHTER CONCERT
HAYDN Sonata No 49 in Eb. Op 66
(Van 1102) (23)
MUSSORGSKY Pictures at an Exhibition
(Artia 154) (30)
DEBUSSY Preludes. Book One. Nos 6, 9, 10.
& 11
(Van 1102) (17)
BEETHOVEN Sonata No 17 in D, Op 31. No 2
(Ang 35679) (24)
PROKOFIEV Sonata No 49 in Eb. Op 66
(Miro 8002) (15)
9:00 COMMENTARY: Thomas Francis Ritt. (Jun
18)
9:15 THOMAS MANN — III: Klaus Pringsheim.
(Jun 6)
9:45 THE RIGHT OF CITIZENSHIP: DenatnraU-
zation. The final program in this series of dis-
cussions between Leonard Boudin and Larry
Birns. (Jun 3)
10:15 DELTA BLUES: Paul Chevegny with songs
of the protesting Negro of the '20's and 'SO's.
(Jun 6)
10:45 AFRO-ASIAN SOLIDARITY COUNCIL. (Jun
11:15 PACEM IN TERRIS: Milhaud symphony. (Jun
10)
1:00 CIVIL RIGHTS IN ORANGE COUNTY — I:
Housing problems. (Jun 13)
2:00 JAZZ ARCHIVES. (Jun 18)
2:30 CIVIL RIGHTS IN ORANGE COUNTY— II:
Education and employment problems. (Jun 13)
3:15 MAX NEUHAUS. PERCUSSIONIST. (Jun 18)
3:45 REPORT FROM LONDON. (Jun 18)
4:15 SPOLETO FESTIVAL— V. (Jun 18)
5:15 FOR YOUNG PEOPLE: See page 9.
6:15 To be announced.
6:30 CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Clair Brush.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Roger Kent.
7:00 HOLLAND IN ART AND MUSIC: Guss Feist
narrates this program from the Netherlands.
which includes: Rafael Kublik conducting solo-
ists, choir, and the Amsterdam Concertgebouw
Orchestra in a performance of the first move-
ment of Mahler's Symphony No 8; Beethoven's
Eroica, performed by the Berlin Philharmonic
under Von Karajan. who is interviewed, ex-
cerpts from the opera L'infedelta delusa by
Haydn and H. C. Bobbins Landon giving a talk
called "Haydn Explorer."
Page 11
8.00 C03IMUNITY DISCISSION PROJECT: The
Re-creation of Sex: Unitarian minister Brooks
Walker comments on the need for a modern
sexual ethic and on one attempt to set out such
an ethic, the British publication Towards a
Quaker View of Sex. This is the topic for this
evening's discussion. Please call NO 2-1492 for
meeting locations.
8:30 INTERNATIONAL ROSTRUM OF COMPOS-
ERS: This Folio's entry comes from the Czecho-
slovak Radio, and includes two fragments from
Ilja Zeljenka's ballet, The Cosmos, a piece of
Musique Concrete put together at their Brati-
slava Studios. Ilya Hurnik's Moments musiraux
for eleven wind instruments, played by The
Chamber Harmony Enseml)le under Libor Pesek,
and Vladimir Sommer's Vocal Symphony per-
formed by vocalist Vera Soukupova. reciter
Otakar Brousek. The Czech Choral Society and
the Prague Municipal Symphony Orchestra FOK
under Vaclav Neumann.
9:.35 PUBLICATING AFFAIRS: The Betrayer Re-
visited. Irwin Edelman reviews The Betrayers
by Jonathan Root, and comments on the case,
in which he was intimately involved.
10:15 "NONET" FOR BRASS AND PERCUSSION:
Composed and conducted by William Kraft, the
work is performed by the Los Angeles Brass
Ensemble. Completed in 1959, it was pre-
miered in that year on the Monday Evening
Concerts. It was written at the request of
Lawrence Morton of that organization.
10:45 NEWS AND COMMENTARY: Edward P.
Morgan.
11:00 FROM THE MUSICIANS POINT OF VIEW:
Saxophonist-composer Teo Macero. An inter-
view conducted by musician-composer Bill
Dixon.
Saturday, June 20
8:00 A.M. A CONCERT IN THREES
BACH Concerto in D for Three Pianos & Orch
Robt., Gaby & Jean Casadesus/pfs, Phil Orch/
Ormandy (Col 5895) (17)
LEKEU Trio in C
Ryshna/pf, Baker/vln & FuUer/hps (Wash
402) (45)
VIVALDI Sonata in A for Flute, Bassoon &
Harpsichord
Baron/fl. Garfield/bsn & Fuller/hps (Wash
402) (11)
PISTON Three Pieces for Flute. (Marinet &
Bassoon
Pappoutsakis/fl. Cardillo/cl & Panenka/bsn
(Unic 1029) (10)
COPLAND Trio Vitelusk
Copland/pf, Karinan/vl. Free<l/vc (Col 78)
(12)
BOCCHERINI Trio No 5 in C, Op 35
Schneiderhan. Svv<)l)()(la/vlns. IU>ne.sch/vc
(XWN 18052) (IC)
10:00 FOR VOrN(i I'KOI'I.K: See page 9.
11:00 TRAVEL THE IIKillLANDS. (Jun II)
11:30 (ATHOLIC I' K K S P E("T I V ES ON THE
HOISING INITIATIVE: Three Catholic lay-
men. KPFK (Commentator Thomas Francis Ritt,
Realtor Thomas Weinberg, and the President
of the Catholic Human Relations Council of
Los Angeles, Emil Selige, discuss the proposed
amendment to nullify the Rumford Act.
12:.'i0 HANDEL'S SAMSON: Soloists in this new
rf cording of the 1741-3 oratorio include Jan
i'eerce and Phyllis Curtin. Maurice Abravanel
conducts the I'niversity of Utah Symphonic
Chorale and the I'tah Symphony Orchestra.
(BG 648/50) (160)
3:15 THE CHANGING SCHOOL: Contrastinsr Ap-
proaches. A talk by Professor John Goodlad
of T'CLA to a conference of San Francisco Bay
Area educators.
4:15 MUSIC BY B.\RTOK: A new Counterpoint/
Esoteric recording of the Divertimento for
String Orchestra and the Music for Striners.
Percussion and Celesta. The Cologne Philhar-
monic Orchestra is conducted by Gunter Wand.
5:15 THE WIDE-OPEN HOUR
6:15 SUBSCRIBERS' REPORT: KPFK Supporter
Groups.
6:30 UNCOMMON SENSE: Steve Kandel.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Lewis Parker Miller.
7:00 THE GREATEST ADVENTURE: An explora-
tion of the progress of the race into space
and a compilation of some of the more affec-
tive aspects of science generally. Mitchell Hard-
ing.
7:30 MUSIC FROM GERMANY: David Berger's
series from We.st Germany continues with the
first of Mendelssohn's Die erste Walpurgisnacht
and opens with A Romance and a Cavatina
from Carl Maria von Wel)er's opera Eur^anthe.
The works are performed by soloists and the
Cologne Radio Choir and Symphony Orchestra
under the direction of conductors Joseph Keil-
bert and Hans Schwieger.
8:00 THOMAS H.VRDY: "The Last of the Great
Victorians" is discussed by St. John Ervine,
John Betjcman, Robert Graves, and C. Day
Lewis, among others, in a BBC programme
introduced by Gill)ert Phelps. Then Richard
Burton reads Hardy's poety on a new recording.
9:00 STRAVINSKY VIOLIN MUSIC
Pa.storah" for Violin and Winds
Szlgeti/vl, Ens/Stravinsky (Col 2122) (3)
Duo Concertante (1932)
Dushkin/vl, Stravinsky/pf (Col CM 199) (15)
Divertimento from "The Fairy's Kiss," (arr.
vl & pf Dushkin-Stravinsky)
Shapiro/vl. Smith/pf (Ava) (15) (21)
Russian Maiden's Song (arr. vl & pf from
Mavra. 1922)
Szigeti/vl, Stravin.sky pf (Col 439S) (4)
Violin Concerto in 1) (1931)
Stern/vl, Col Sym/Stravin.sky (Col 5731) (21)
10:15 SPIE(iEI> ON TIIK ClNEM.V: Film producer
S;im ."^pli-;!'! (lisi ii.-^.scs liis pristinal api)r-oach to
tiltii priitluttiiin. illu.strating his remarks with
cxc.'rpts frniii tlic soiindl racks of "The Bridge
on the Uivtr Ku.ii," "On the Waterfront."
"Suddi'Mly Last Sununcr," and "Lawrence of
Araliia." (imr)
Page 12
10:45 NIGHTSOUNDS: For your listening: pleasure,
an audio collage.
Sunday, June 21
The First Day of Summer.
8:00 A.M. BACH CANTATAS
Cantata No 23 "Thou Very God & David's Son"
Thomas/Cantate Orch; Frankfurter Kantorei
& Soloists (Can 641214) (19)
Cantata No 78 "Jesu, der du meine . . ."
Prohaska/Ensemble (BG 537) (26)
Cantata No 140 "Wachet auf"
Soloists. Scherchen/Cho and Orch
(XWN 18394) (32)
Cantata No 169 "Gott soil all . . ."
Heynis/contralto. de Klerk/organ, van der
Honst'Cho Netherlands Bach Soc; Nether-
lands Ch Orch (Epic 3683) (30)
10:00 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBERS. (Jun 18)
10:15 BLACK MASS: Six Tales by Lord Dunsany
is performed by Erik Bauersfeld and Bernard
Mays in a production by John Whiting.
11:00 SIMMER MUSIC
12:00 ART FORUM: The Artist in the Community.
A discussion of the sociological situation of
the artist in the community, particularly with
regard to housing for artists. Discussants are
Robert Henry, Aaron Roseman, and Hall Wins-
low. The moderator is Bruce Glaser.
1:00 HENRY WOOD PROMENADE CONCERT —
II: Sir Malcolm Sargent conducts the BBC Sym-
phony Orchestra in Beethoven's Coriolan Over-
ture and. with Stephen Bishop as soloist, Bee-
thoven's Fourth Piano Concerto. Then, via a
BBC Talking About Music broadcast, we hear
pianist Andor Foldes on interpreting Beethoven
and Ursula Vaughan— Williams discussing her
late husband, Ralph Vaughan— Williams. Sir
Malcolm and the BBC then reappear to per-
form VW's uncompromising F minor Sym-
phony. (BBC) (120)
3:00 SUN CURE: Lee Whiting reads this short
story by Larry Steinberg, former manager of
KPFK.
3:15 R.\ME.A.U B.ALLET SUITES: Marcel Bernard
conducts the Baroque Chamber Ensemble in
suites from Les Indes Galantes and Castor et
Pollux, ballet music from operas dating, re-
spectively, from 1735 to 1737. (Baroque 1825)
(37)
4:00 FIVE SOVIET WO.MEN IN LOS .ANGELES:
Five members of the Soviet Women's Com-
mittee recently repaid a visit to some Los
Angeles members of Women Strike for Peace
who were guests of the Committee in Russia
in 1962. Excerpts of a public meeting at Uni-
versity Methodist Church recorded by Rome
Ronconi.
5:00 MUSIC: To be announced.
6:15 SOVIET PRESS .\ND PERIODICALS: Wil-
liam Mundel.
quote
^^The public is defenseless against
^^nnany hazards. Rachel Carson
warned in Silent Spring that pesticides
are poisoning the earth. She was at-
tacked as an extremist, but a U.S. Sen-
ate committee has just revealed that
10,000,000 fish in the lower Missis-
sippi have been killed by pesticides
washed into the river from agricultural
areas. The pesticide threat to human
life is obvious.
Who opposes labeling cigarettes as
the cause of disease? The makers of
cigarettes. Who opposes building safe-
ty into automobiles? The manufactur-
ers of automobiles, and who opposes
the strict control of pesticides? The
producers of pesticides. It's an old-
fashioned way of putting it, a way
that should inspire amused smiles of
contempt from the cool cats of indus-
try, but their profit is more in^- J )
portant than your life.
This is one of Phil Kerby's pene-
trating comments on socio-political af-
fairs available in the liberal monthly
magazine which he edits. For a limited
time, new subscribers may take ad-
vantage of a special introductory offer
of $2.50 for a one-year subscription.
Frontier
1434 Westwood Blvd.
Los Angeles, Calif. 90024
Please enter my introductory subscrip-
tion for one year at the special $2.50
rate.
Name
Address
City
State
Zip
Page 13
6:30 THIS W££K AT TH£ U.N.
6:45 COMMENTARY: Hallock Hoffman. (JUN 22)
7:00 OPERA TOPICS: Lorenzo Alvary talks with
Thomas Schippers about conducting in the U.S.
and Europe, the conductor's position in over-
all production, opera in the original language
as opposed to opera in translation, and the
authority of the conductor.
7:45 SPOLETO FESTIVAL — VI: John Browning
and Thomas Schippers play Mozart's Sonata
in B flat major for Two Pianos, Op 358; Vi-
valdi's Sonata in G minor for Two Violins and
Continue; and Mendelssohn's Trio in D minor
for Piano, Violin, and Cello are performed by
violinist Charles Libove and cellist Robert La
Marchina with Schippers at the piano.
8:45 FACT IN FICTION: A panel discussion on the
subject recorded at the Theatre for Ideas, Par-
ticipants are: Alfred Kaskin. Robert Lowell,
and Susan Sontag. The moderator is Eric Bent-
ley.
»:46 RUTH 8LENCZYNSKA FLAYS: With Carl
Melles and the "Orchestra of Vienna" she plays
Liszt's Concerto No 1 in Eb: Henry Swoboda
and the Symphony of the Air then accompany
her in Saint-Saens' Concerto No 2 in g. (Dec
10084) (46)
10:30 THE GOON SHOW: In which Professor Crun
must find an antidote to an artificial foreign
fog which makes people think nothing but the
best of each other. Sellers. Milligan, Seacombe,
and the BBC.
11:00 THE CYCLE CYCLE
MOZART Symphony No 38 in D, K 504,
"Prague"
London Phil/Leinsdorf (West 18116) (23)
BEETHOVEN Piano Sonata No 20 in G, Op 49,
No 2
Artur Schnabel (Ang GRM 4005) (15)
SCHUBERT Nocturne in Eb, Op 148. D 897
Ebert Trio (Amadeo 6246) (9)
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AUTOMOBILES
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Mercedes Benz. Below Retail! Bonded Auto Brokers.
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June 20 — 2:00 p.m. until Midnight
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