Skip to main content

Full text of "KPFK folio"

See other formats


^^^i«'a 


SSHWL 


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) 


^>c^*«Sf$^*^- 


Posturepedic 


Try  this  superbly  comfortable  mattress  for  40  nights. 
If  you  do  not  enjoy  the  best  rest  you  have  ever  known, 
return  it  for  a  full  refund.  Choose  the  lavish  luxury  of 
either  the  gently  firm  Princess  Posturepedic  or  the 
Standard  firmer  Posturepedic. 


Discover  the  best,  shop  at 

CHILDREN'S 

MUSIC  CENTER 


It's  a  cultural  experience  just  to  walk  in 
and  browse  .  .  .  recommended  records/ 
instruments/books  for  all  ages, 
chosen   by  experienced  consultants 
to   stimulate   eager  young  minds! 
5373  West  Pico  Boulevard/Los  Angeles  19,  Calif./WEbster  7-1825 


FOLIO   CLASSIFIED 

No  advertisement  in  this  Folio  is  to  be  construed  as  endorsement  of  any  orgranization  or  business  by 
KPl^  or  vice  versa. 

RATES  per  insertion:  50c  per  word.  10-word  minimum,  special  rate  for  6  or  more  continuous  insertions: 
40c  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. 


AUTOMOBILES 


1964  Porsche.  Volkswagen  1200  &  1500.  Jaguar  and 
Mercedes  Benz.  Below  Retail!  Bonded  Auto  Brokers. 
AX  5-6122.   I.N.T.C. 

Fair  prices  for  quality  repairs  on  foreign  and  do- 
mestic automobiles.  Air  conditioning  sales  and  serv- 
ice. Ruth  and  Bert's  Automotive,  4:{58  Woodman 
Ave.,  Sherman  Oaks.   ST  8-0347. 


BOOKS 


PICKWICK     BOOKSHOP,     6743     Hollywood     Blvd. 
HO   9-8191  New   books  and   paperbacks 


FOR  SALE 


HARPSICHORDS    and    Baroque   Instruments.    Sales, 

Rentals,    Repairs,     Discount    to    KPFK    subscribers! 

DU     8-3088. 

RECORDERS  (flutes)  Lutes.  Harpsichords.  Gambas, 

Heoorder  Shop.   432  S.  Hill.   Los  Angeles  13. 

MA  8-4102. 

CLASSICAL  Monaural  LP  record  shop,  9043  Santa 
Monica  Blvd.,  West  Hollywood.  Open  Men. -Sat.  10- 
6.    CR    6-3993. 


Sl'MMKIl  CAHI.N  —  MAMMOTH  LAKES 
W  lOLI.-FrR.MSHEI).  BARC.AI.N.  SY  6-31' 
SY    ;{-7'J50    EVlO.M.N'tlS — WEEKENDS. 


NEW, 
DAYS, 


When  responding  to   FOLIO    ads.   please   mention    KPFK    FOLIO. 


Page   14 


FOR   RENT 


SERVICES 


NEUTRA    DESIGNED??? 

Space  &  privacy  &  style  and  serendipity* 

Everything  naturally  built-in 

Sundecks,  gardens,  indirect  lighting, 

closetssss&ss 

$130  Heated  pool 

and  down  *more 

For  adult  subscribers  PO   5-9797 


ORGANIZATIONS 


Join    L..A.     Funeral    Society,    Inc.    (Non    Profit)    To 
Fight  the  High  Cost  of  Dying:.  Plan  now  to  Protect 
Your  Survivors. 
Call    732-0491.    Write    1714    So,    Ardmore,    L.    A.    6 

International  Linguist  Club  expanding  Conversa- 
tional evenings.  French.  Spanish,  German  experts 
leading.    762-1410. 


PLACES 


DISCOVERY   INN  —  TOPANGA 

Natural  Foods  to  a  Gourmet's  Taste.  GL  5-8290 

Rich  and  Marj  Dehr 

The  Nine  Muses  Restaurant  serves  an  International 
Menu  from  5:30  until  11  daily.  6609  Santa  Monica 
Blvd.  HO  2-0819. 

Al   Kaiser's  AWARE   INN — Valley 

13623     Ventura    Boulevard        STate     3-9158 

COMPLETE    DINNERS    FROM    $2.25 

POTPOURRI,  an  exciting  "mixture"  of  gifts  — 
jewelry  —  fashions  —  original  designs,  couture  fin- 
ishing, unique  fabrics — sensible  prices.  816  Jeffer- 
son   Blvd.    near    USC.    RI    7-3830. 

SCHOOLS  AND   INSTRUCTION 

FOLK    GUITAR    FOR    BEGINNERS 

Stevson  Phillips,  AVA  recording  artist. 

875-5670 

Charles  Lewis,  Teacher  of  Piano.  Modern,  Creative 
methods  for  career  or  pleasure.  Extensive  training. 
Valley  987-1613 

Small  classes  in  drawing  &  painting  —  emphasizing 
individual  approach.  Children's  &  adult  groups. 
Judy   Katter  OL   6-3000 

Special  teacher  for  children  with  severe  learning  and 
behavior  problems  will  tutor  this  summer. 
NO   2-5102 

WESTLAND  SCHOOL.  Integrated  school  for  chil- 
dren 5-12.  Non-graded;  20  per  group.  Visitors  wel- 
come.   10345    W.    Pico    Blvd.     CR    5-9397. 

High  school — college  Math  tutor — UCLA  graduate 
student.     David    Resnil^,    GR    3-7119. 

GERMAN    LESSONS.    ANY    LEVEL.     $4.00/hour. 
NO  4-1019  after  6  p.m. 


Specialists    in    foreign    brands    Hi-Fi's    and    phonos 

HOLLYWOOD  RADIO  &  TV»22  years  in  Hollywood 

CAR  RADIOS   REPAIRED 

While  U  wait 

7742    Santa    Monica    Blvd.  OL  4-6000 


ARMEN    HAIG     CARPET    SERVICE 

Carpet  Laying  and  Repairs 

NO   5-5111,   HO  5-8459 

HI-PACIFICA  listeners  Benev  Electronics  rents 
tape  recorders  and  services  your  Hi-Fi  components. 
Call  KPFK  supporter:  AT  8-2555. 

LICENSED   GENERAL    BUILDING    CONTRACTOR 

FROM    CONCRETE    TO    CABINETS 
CITY     WEST     CONSTRUCTION    CO.  VE     7-4741 

Fine  Commercial/Advertising  Photography 

assured  satisfaction.  Camhi/Bardovi  Photography 

ST  5-5770 


Unhappy  with  your  present  tuner?  Next  time  try  an 
Organization  Man.  Member:  ACSC,  ACLU,  AFM. 
ASCAP,  ASMA,  PTG.  If  you're  a  music  lover,  call 
JOE  GLOVER,  WE  4-1769. 

For     Good     Plumbing     Service     DIAL     Plumbing     & 
Heating.    4802    Santa    Monica    Blvd.    NO    3-9216. 
24-Hour  Emergency  Calls 


Guaranteed  camera,  light  meter  repairs. 
Precision  Camera   Service.  398-2498   any  time. 

CARPET  AND   UPHOLSTERY  CLEANING 

*   *   *   QUALITY  WORK   GUARANTEED   *  *  -A" 

if  -A-   Phone   RALPH   MEYER,    787-1964   *  * 

PREFERRED  RISKS  FOR  KPFK  LISTENERS 

20%   discount  on  business  insurance. 

H.    Stair  OLive  3-6380 


PAINTER    WHO    LIKES    HIS    WORK 

Licensed,   Insured  —  John  Godel 

NO  5-0179 


*   YES,    INDEED! 

We  give  very  special 
attention  to  KPFK'ers — 
All  branches  real  estate 

FRANCHI REALTY 

NO    3-9561,    NO    2-6017 


WANTED 


KPFK  needs  a  good  truck  and  a  good  station  wagon. 
The  contribution  may  be  worth  more  to  you  as  a  tax 
write-off  than  as  a  trade-in.  Call  TR  7-5583  or 
ST   1-0150. 


ANYONE  who  worked  with,  player  under,  knew,  or 
saw  Gustav  Mahler  professionally  or  personally 
please  contact  KPFK's  Music  Director,  Bill  Mal- 
loch,    at    TR   7-5583   or   ST   1-0150. 


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. 

'iscount  Records,  Inc. 

(CHESTERFIELD   MUSIC   SHOP) 

BR  2-9649 -CR  5-7712      •      9393  Wilshire  Blvd.,  Beverly  Hills,  California 


o 


All  records  featured  on 
KPFK  at  low  discount 
prices.  ALSO  Bestsellers 
at  discount  in  our  new 
BOOK  DEPARTMENT. 


WE  ACCEPT  BANKAMERICARD 


Page   15 


DACIFICA 
pOUNDATlON 


3729  CAHUENGA  BLVD  ,   NORTH   HOLLYWOOD,   CALIF. 
Postmaster:  Return  requested 
1 


NON-PROFIT 

ORGANIZATION 

US    POSTAGE 

DATED 

PAID 

PROGRAM 

(R)    1963    Pacifica    Foundation 

BERKELEY.  CALIF. 
Pcrtnit  No.  219 

Qntat  qaia  K(P7K 

S^^'i  ^£-6ttLualf  -  -  dieack  (Parity 

on  a  private  beach  in  Malibu  at  Paradise  Cove 

June  20  —  2:00  p.m.  until  Midnight 

ALL  THIS  FOR  ONLY  $5.00— 

Sun 

Swimming 
Sand 

Sailing 
Singing 


Dancing 

Barbecued 

Chicken  Dinner 
Celebrity 
Jazz  Concert 


Doh*t  miss  this  exi^itin^  event! 
Send  in  this  coupon  ivith  your  check. 


Name. 


sjMicI tickets 


Address Enclosed    $.