Skip to main content

Full text of "WBAI folio"

See other formats


WBAI  Folio 

from  the 

Pacifica  Radio  Archives 


1  his  co\  cr  sheet  created  b\  Internet  Arehi\  e  for  fomiattina. 


«^ 


I 

1 
r 


DECEMBER  1-20.   1964 


WBAI-FM  99. 


5  m,c. 


30  East  39  Street  IS.  Y.  16,  IS.  Y. 

Program  Folio    DECEMBER  7-20,  1964 


Oxford  7-2288 
Vol.  5.  I\o.  23 


WBAl's  program  listings,  in  the  form  of  this  Volio,  are  published  each  two   ueeks  as  a  service  to 

subscribers  irho  support  our  non-profit,  non-commercial  station  at  the  yearly  rate  of  $12.00   (student 

subscriptions,  $6.00  for  9  months).  All  donations  are  tax-deductible. 

On   the   air:    Mon—Thurs,    7:00   a.m.— 1:00   a.m.;    Fri:    7:00   a.m.— 3:30   a.m.;    Sat:    8:00   a.m. — 

3/30  a.m.;    Sun:   8:00  a.m.— midnight,    transmitter  located  at   10  Fast   40  Street,    10.3   KW   e.r.p. 

650'  above  av.  terr. 

WBAl  is  owned  by  Pacifica  Foundation,  a  non-profit  institution.  Other  Pacifica  stations  are  KPFA, 

Berkeley  4,  California,  and  KPFK,  Los  .-Angeles  3S,   California.  Subscriptions  are  transferable. 

The  duration  of  programs  scheduled  is  approximate.   Dates  after  each  listing  indicate  past  or  future 

duplicate  broadcast.  In  the  case  of  concerts.   ' m'  indicates  playing  time;    '*'  indicates  new  recordings. 


MONDAY  December  7 

7:00  MORNING  CONCERT  Four  four-part  songs  by 
Hoydn;  and  Milhoud's  'The  Four  Seasons'. 

8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

8:15  INDIAN  OPERA  Robindronath  Tagore's  folk 
opera  Shyama',  based  on  a  well  known  Bud- 
dhist legend,  utilizes  musical  forms  practiced  In 
India  for  2,000  years,  and  is  based  on  the  Raga- 
system.  Yehudi  Menuhin  introduces  the  opera  on 
an  Odeon  release  (ALP  1855).  The  Tagore  work  is 
followed  by  songs  with  Venna  accompaniment  by 
Swami  Vidyananda  on  Folkways  FR  8903.       Dec.  17 

9:15  COMMENTARY  Thomas  Francis  Ritt,  former  Na- 
tional Director  of  the  Catholic  Council  on  Civil 
Liberties,  former  board  member  of  the  National 
Catholic  Social  Action  Conference  and  currently 
on  the  staff  of  The  Catholic  Worker. 

9:30  THE  VIRTUOSO  VIOLINIST  Ruggiero  Ricci  ploys 
showpieces  by  Paganini,  with  Louis  Persinger, 
Ricci's  teacher,  accompanying  at  the  piano:  'Le 
Streghe'  (The  Witches'  Dance)  ;  'A  Fantasia  on 
the  G  String';  'Moto  Perpetuo';  'Variations  on 
Nel  cor  piu  mi  senlo'.   (London  LL  10051        Dec.  17 

10:00  FROM  THE  CFNTER  New  Utopias:  Looking  Back- 
ward or  Brave  New  World?  Is  no  group  in  the 
U.S.A.  sufficiently  moved  by  the  conditions  of  its 
existence  to  dream?  Michael  Harrington,  author 
of  The  Other  America,  W.  H.  Ferry,  Vice-President 
of  the  Fund  for  the  Republic,  and  Frank  Keegan, 
Associate  Dean  of  the  College  of  Arts  and  Sci- 
ences at  Georgetown  University,  in  a  lively  hour 
of  talk  about  Utopias  and  cocotopias.  Recorded 
at  the  Center  for  the  Study  of  Democratic  Institu- 
tions in  Santa  Barbara. 

11:00  BEETHOVEN  Music  for  Goethe's  'Egmonf:  the 
overture  and  the  complete  incidental  score  per- 
formed by  Natania  Davroth,  soprano,  and  Wal- 
ther  Reyer,  speaker,  with  the  Utah  Symphony  Or- 
chestra under  Maurice  Abravanel.  (Van  1101) 
Dec.  18 

11:45  CONVERSATION  WITH  A  DUTCH  ACTOR  Henk 
van  Ulsen,  who  has  played  many  roles  in  mony 
languages  throughout  the  world,  discusses  motion 
pictures  and  theater  in  The  Netherlands  with 
Herbert  Feinstein.       Dec.  11 

12:15  TEACHER-PIANISTS     llona     Kobos    and    Rosina 
Lhevinne  are  best  known,  as  teachers  —  but  they 
nre  also  performers.       Dec.  18 
LISZT  Variations  on  the  Prelude  'V^einen,  Klagen' 

(Kabos,  piono)   (Bariok  BRS  910)  16m 
MOZART    Piano    Concerto    No.    21    in    C,    K.    467 

(Lhevinne,    piano    with    Juilliard    Orch/Morel) 

(Col  ML  5582) 


1  :00  SCIENCE  CRITIC  Chemical  theories  of  aging  dis- 
cussed by  Marshall  Deutsch. 

1 :30  STEPPENWOLF  The  Expressionist  novel  by  Nobel 
Prize  winner,  Hermann  Hesse,  in  the  translation 
by  Basil  Creighton  (Unger).  This  is  the  first  of 
sixteen  ports,  read  by  Bob  Alexander  assisted  by 
Berjourie  Bowler.  (KPFA) 

2:00  UNCLE  SHELBY'S  ABZ  BOOK  Shel  Silverstein's 
anti-children  book  is  produced  and  read  by  Dana 
Cannon.  (KPFA)  Dec.  9 

2:15  SALZBURG  FESTIVAL  IX  A  concert  of  music  by 
Mozart,  Strauss  and  Beethoven,  ployed  by  the 
Vienna  Philharmonic  Orchestra  under  Karl  Bohm. 
Dec.  9 

MOZART  Symphony  in  G  minor,  K.  550 
STRAUSS  Don  Juan,  Op.  20 
BEETHOVEN  Symphony  No.  7  in  A  major.  Op.  92 

4:00  THE  GOON  SHOW  Ye  Bandit  of  Sherwood 
Forest  How  Wallace  Greenslade  joined  ye 
bonde  of  Robin  Hood  and  was  placed  under 
locke,  key  and  sinker  by  ye  Sheriff. 

4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  listing  on 
page  13. 

5:30  'INDIAN'  MUSIC  The  first  work  is  on  a  new  re- 
lease.      Dec.   15 

•BUSONI  Indian  Fantasy,  Op.  44  (Mitchell,  piano 
with  Vienna  State  Opera  Orch/Strickland) 
(Decca  DL  710100)  22m 
MACDOWELL  Suite  No.  2  in  e.  Op.  48  ('Indian') 
(Eastman-Rochester  Sym/Hanson)  (Mer  MG 
40009)  33m 

6:30  ROSEN  PLAYS  STRAVINSKY  The  Serenade  in  A 
and  Sonata  for  Piano  (1924)  performed  by  Charles 
Rosen  on  Epic  LC  3792.       Dec.  8 

7:00  news' Robert  Potts 

7:15  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET  PRESS  by  William  Man- 
del,  tronslator  from  the  Soviet  press  and  author  of 
several  books  on  the  U.S.S.R.       Dec.  8 

7:30  JAZZ  ARCHIVES  with  Phil  Elwood. 

8:00  RACE  AND  LITERATURE  IN  ENGLAND  AND  THE 
INDIES  George  Lamming,  West  Indian  novelist, 
author  of  In  the  Castle  of  My  Skin  and  other 
novels,  talks  about  the  problems  and  pleasures 
of  being  a  novelist  and  a  West  Indian  in  contem- 
porary England  in  an  interview  with  Ted  Roszak, 
editor  of  Peace  News.       Dec.  8 

9:00  HOVHANESS'  SAINT  VARTAN  SYMPHONY  is  in 

five  parts,  subdivided  inot  twenty-four  sections. 
The  mosaic  texture  that  results  from  this  elabo- 
rately sectional  work  invokes  a  Byzantine  quality. 
Carlos  Surinnrh  lends  the  MGM  Chamber  Orrhes 


tra  in  this  MGM  recording  (E  3453) .       Dec.  15 
9:45  ART  FORUM  The  Cubist  Decade,  Then  and  Now. 

A  lecture  by  Jacques  Barzun  given  at  the  Guggen- 
heim  Museum   during   the  Albert  Gleizes  exhibi- 
tion.      Dec.  9 
10.45  NEWS,  COMMENTARY  Edward  P.  Morgan 
H:00  STRAVINSKY-INFLUENCED  MUSIC  Three  worlds 
utilizing  Strcvinskian  principles.       Dec.  16 
HAIEFF    Symphony    No.    2    (Boston    Sym/Munch) 

(Vic  LM23521  19m 
BARBER  Capricorn  Concerto  (for  flute,  oboe,  trum- 
pet and  strings)    (Eastman-Rochester  Sym/Han- 
sonl    (MerMG  50224)  15m 
DAHL    The    Tower    of    Saint    Barbara     (Louisville 
Orch/Whitney)    (LOU  562)  24m 
12:00  COUNTRY  MUSIC  Tom  Whitmore  presents  some 

Southern,  bluegrass  and  hillbilly  music.       Dec.  9 
12:30  'MUSIC  FOR  HARP  Niconor  Zabaleta  plays  on 
a  new  release.  (DGG  LPM  18  890)       Dec.  9 
CORELLI  Sonata  in  d 
SPOHR  Variations  for  Harp,  Op.  36 
ALBENIZ  Sonata  in  D;  Malaguena 
1:00  SIGN  OFF 

TUESDAY,  December  8 

7:00  MORNING  CONCERT  A  Haydn  piano  sonata; 
Bach's  Suite  No.  1   in  C;  and  Hindemith's  Sonata 
for  Solo  Violin,  Op.  31  No.  1, 
8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 
8:15  TWO  SYMPHONIES      Dec.  10 

•HAYDN  Symphony  No.  83  in  g   ('The  Hen')    (New 
York  Philharmonic/Bernstein]    (Col  ML  6009)  21m 
TOSHIRO  MAYUZUMI   Nirvana-Symphonie    (NHK 
Symphony     and     Chorus/Wilhelm      Schuchter) 
(Time  58004)  34m 
9:15  REVIEW  OF  THE  SOVIET  PRESS  by  William  Man- 
del.       Dec.  7 


Page   3 

9:30  WHO  WROTE  SHAKESPEARE?  Rene  Cutforth, 
well-known  broadcaster  and  writer  questions  sup- 
porters of  claims  that  Francis  Bacon,  Christopher 
Marlowe,  William  Stanley,  Edward  de  Vere, 
Queen  Elizabeth  I  and  Edward  VI,  among  others, 
wrote  the  plays  and  sonnets.  (BBC)  Dec.  13 
10:00  ROSEN  PLAYS  STRAVINSKY  The  Serenade  in  A 
and  the  Sonata  for  Piano  (1924)  performed  by 
Charles  Rosen  on  Epic  LC  3792.       Dec.  7 

10:30  AN  OUTSIDE  AGITATOR  Ben  Legere  was  proud 
of  being  one  for  each  of  the  dozen  or  so  unions 
he  joined  and  worked  for.  In  this  reminiscence  he 
talks  about  some  of  his  activities  on  behalf  of  the 
IWW  and  the  Canadian  One  Big  Union.  (KPFA) 
Dec.  10 
11 :00  PAUL  TEMPLE  AND  THE  JONATHAN  MYSTERY  3 
The  Ring.  Continuing  the  thriller-serial  of  radio's 
most  famous  sleuth,  Paul  Temple  and  his  wife 
Steve  Trent.  (BBC).  Dec.  12 
11 :30  ETUDES  FOR  PIANO      Dec.  17 

CHOPIN  Eight  Etudes  from  Op.  10  (Arrou,  piano) 

(Ang  35413)  19m 
DEBUSSY  Etudes,  Book  1    (Ericourt,  piano)    (Kapp 

9068)  21m 
THOMSON     Ten     Etudes     for     Piano     (Schapiro, 
piano)    (DL4083)  18m 
12:30  RACE  AND  LITERATURE  IN  ENGLAND  AND  THE 
INDIES  Novelist  George  Lamming  talks  with  Ted 
Roszak.  See  Dec.  7. 
1 :30  STEPPENWOLF  Part  2  of  this  radio  version  of  the 

Expressionist  novel  by  Hermann  Hesse. 
2:00  THE  ADVENTURES  OF  GAMMA  GLOBULIN  Will 
Gamma's  citizenship  be  threatened  if  he  accepts 
the  rumored  knighthood?       Dec.  11 
2:15  EFFORT  NOTATION  An  interview  with   Irmgard 
Bartenieff  who  discusses  a  new  tool  for  the  arts 
and  sciences  with  Baird  Searles.       Dec.  12 
3:00  SALZBURG    FESTIVAL    X    An    all-Brahms    lieder 


YOU  CAN  STILL  BUY  A  CIGAR  FOR  A  NICKEL - 
BUT  WOULD  YOU  SMOKE  IT? 

The  price  we  pay  for  our  pleasures  and  luxuries  has  kept  well  up  with  rising 
costs  in  most  other  areas.  If  high  standards  of  quality  in  a  luxury  product  are  not 
maintained  on  a  superior  level,  it  becomes  a  poor  substitute  and  no  longer  gives 
us  pleasure  or  pride. 

High  standards  in  broadcasting,  as  an  ideological  principle,  depend  upon 
a  number  of  very  non-ideological  realities:  financial  obligations  and  the  costs 
of  mechanical  operation.  WBAI  has  been  operating  under  the  most  stringent 
conditions  of  austerity  for  some  time  now,  and  we  must  not  take  those  steps 
which  would  compromise  our  quality.  Pacifica  Foundation  has  asked  that  we 
follow  the  example  of  KPFK,  our  sister  station  in  Los,  Angeles,  California,  and 
raise  our  sponsorship  minimum  from  $12.00  to  $15.00  o  year.  This  new  tax- 
deductible  rate  will  be  effective  as  of  midnight  on  January  12th,  1965  ~  WBAI's 
fifth  anniversary  of  listener-sponsored  broadcasting  in  New  York. 

WBAI  is  a  luxury  for  you,  our  sponsors  who  support  it  because  you  consider 
your  lives  richer,  fuller  and  more  satisfying  as  a  consequence  of  your  listening 
pleasure.  We  are  dedicated  to  sustain  and  encourage  the  freshness,  variety  and 
vitality  of  our  broadcasts  for  your  future  enjoyment. 


Page   4 


program    sung    by   Dietrich    Fischer-Dieskau,   with 
Gerald  Moore  at  the  piano.       Dec.  12 

4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 

5:30  MOVIE  MUSIC  BY  PROKOFIEV  Dec.  16 

Lieutenant   Kiie   Suite    (Philharmonic   Orch/Leins- 

dorf    with    Dan    Lordachescu,    baritone)     (Cap 

P8508)  20m 
Alexander  Nevsky    (Legostoyeva,  mezzo-soprono 

with   Chorus   and   Orch   of   USSR    State    Radio/ 

Samosud)    (West  SWN  181441  40m 

6:30  'MUSIC  FOR  PIANO  AND  BAND  Friedrich 
Guide's  career  as  a  jazz  pianist  is  augmented,  in 
this  new  release,  by  his  gifts  as  a  composer-con- 
ductor. The  three  movement  work,  entitled  Music 
for  Piano  and  Bond'  combines  the  pianist's  virtu- 
osity with  his  unique  feeling  for  jazz.  (Col  CL 
2251)  Dec.  18 

7:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

7:15  KING-HALL  LONDON  LETTER  Commander  Sir 
Stephen  King-Hall's  fortnightly  analytical  report, 
prepared  specially  for  Pacifica  Radio.       Dec.  9 

7:30  REMEMBER  RADIO?  Selections  from  Terry  and 
the  Pirates,  Lorenzo  Jones,  and  FDR's  speeches 
evoke  nostalgia  in  this  eleventh  program  In  the 
series  produced  by  Leslie  Darren  for  WGHB-FM. 
Dec.  10 

8:00  CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  IN  EVOLUTION  Gun- 
ther  Schuller  and  music  from  the  years  1940-41. 
Dec.  11 

COPLAND  Quiet  City 
WEBERN  Variations  for  Orchestra 
HONEGGER  Symphony  No.  2  for  Strings 

9:00  THE  LAST  MINUTE  Time  left  open  for  programs 
of  immediacy  prepored  after  this  Folio  is  printed. 
Dec.  11 


10:00  SYMPHONY  FOR  CLASSICAL  ORCHESTRA  Har- 
old   Shapero's    vigorous    neo-classicism    is    inter- 
preted by  Leonard  Bernstein  leading  the  Colum- 
bia  Symphony  Orchestra  on  Columbia  ML  4889. 
Dec.  14 
10:45  NEWS,  COMMENTARY  Edward  P.  Morgan 
1 1 :00  SALZBURG  FESTIVAL  —  XI  A  concert  of  music  by 
Brahms,  Beethoven,  Chopin,  Gounod  and  Strauss. 
Van  Cliburn  is  the  piano  soloist  and  the  Salzburg 
Wind  Instrument  Society  is  under  the  direction  of 
Rudolf  Klepac.       Dec.  12 
BRAHMS  Klavierstucke,  Op.  118 
BEETHOVEN  Sonata  in  F  minor,  Op.  57 

(Appossionata) 
CHOPIN  Serenade  in  B  minor.  Op.  58 
GOUNOD  Petit  Symphonic  in  B  flat  major 
STRAUSS  Serenade  for  13  Wind   Instruments  in  E 
flat  major.  Op.  7 
1:00  SIGN  OFF 

WEDNESDAY,  December  9 

7:00  MORNING  CONCERT  A  Beethoven  song  cycle 
sung  by  Eleanor  Steber;  a  Fantasia  for  Glass 
Harmonica  by  Tomaschek;  and  Roy  Harris'  Third 
Symphony. 

8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

8:15  'SCHUBERT  MASS  The  Mass  No.  6  in  E  flat, 
heard  in  a  new  release  with  Frederic  Woldman 
conducting  the  Musica  Aeterna  Chorus  and  Or- 
chestra and  soloists  Helen  Boatwright,  Betty 
Allen,  Alva  Tripp,  Leo  Goeke,  and  Chester  Wat- 
son on  Decca  DL  79422.       Dec.  14 

9:15  KING-HALL  LONDON  LETTER      Dec.  8 

9:30  TWO  OPERAS:  Sigurd  and  The  Barber  of  Seville. 
The  former  is  heard  in  a  setting  by  the  French 
composer,  Ernest  Reyer;  the  latter  in  one  by 
Giovanni  Paisiello. 


•^ 


WBATs   GREETING   CARDS 


iJ. 


,^^^  s|, 


ly 


-;■> 


S    No.  1  by  Bobkin 
red  on  cream 

Inside  each:  "Greetings". 
10c  each;  12  for  $1.00 

approx.  4"  by  4" 

^  No.  2  by  gans 

Black  on  white 


We  are  sincerely  grateful  to  the  artists  for  making  their  designs  available  to  benefit  WBAI. 


Please  send  me: 


No.  1  by  Dobkin  No.  2  by  Gans 

(Angels)  (Hippo  and  Man) 


Quantity 
Name:  


I  enclose: 


Addr 


NB     All  orders  must  be  prepaid,  checks  made  payable  to  WBAI-FM,  and  mailed  to  us 

at  30  East  39  Street,  New  York,  N.  Y.  10016 


REYER:  Sigurd 

Sigurd  Gustave  Botiaux 

Brunehild Lyne  Cumia 

Hilda  Jacqueline  Silvy 

Gunther  Rene  Blonco 

Hagen  Felix  Giboud 

(with  chorus  and  orchestra  under  Jesus  Etche- 
veryi    (Orphee  LDOE  51 .057/8)  62m 
PAISIELLO  11  Barbiere  di  Siviglia 

Rosino  Elena  Rizzieri 

Count  Almaviva  Juan  Oncina 

Bartolo Fernando  Capecchi 

Figaro  Sesto  Bruscanini 

(Ensemble  of  the  Collegium  Musicum  Italicum/ 
Fasano)  2  hrs. 
12:55  OPERA  TOPICS  Lorenzo  Alvory  talks  to  publi- 
cist Marilyn  Levine  about  the  need  for  publicity 
in  an  artist's  career. 
1:30  STEPPENWOLF  Part  3  of  the  novel  by  Hermann 

Hesse. 
2:00  COUNTRY  MUSIC  presented  by  Tom  Whitmore. 

Dec.  7 
2:30  'MUSIC    FOR    HARP    Niconar    Zobaleta    plays 
works  by  Corelli,  Spohr  and  Albeniz.  For  details 
see  Dec.  7. 
3:00  ART  FORUM  The  Cubist  Decade,  Then  and  Now. 

A  lecture  by  Jacques  Borzun.  See  Dec.  7 
4:00  CONTEMPORARY    BELGIAN    PIANO    MUSIC    1 

Works  by  Jean  Absil.       Dec.  12 
4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 
5:30  SHAKESPEARE  MUSIC  BY  BERLIOZ  See  Dec.  20 
6:30  'HARP  AND   ORCHESTRA  A   new  release  with 
harpist  Marie-Claire  Jomet  and   the  Paul   Kuentz 
Chamber  Orchestra  on  Vox  PL  12.730.       Dec.  18 
DEBUSSY  Danses  Sacrees  et  Profanes  9m 
BOIELDIEU  Harp  Concerto  in  C  22m 
7:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

7:15  THE  OTHER  SIDE  OF  THE  UNITED  NATIONS  by 
special  correspondent  Betty  Pilkington,  who  dis- 
cusses some  aspects  of  UN  affairs  overlooked  by 
the  mass  media.  Dec.  10 
7:30  REPORT  TO  THE  SUBSCRIBER  Dec.  13 
7:45  THEATRE  REVIEW  Isaiah  Sheffer  reviews  current 
theatrical  productions.       Dec.  10 

8:00  THIS  LITTLE  LIGHT  III  Harmony.  The  third  pro- 
gram in  a  series  on  Mississippi  during  the  sum- 
mer of  1964.  This  one  explores  a  leading  Negro 
community,  one  which  instituted  the  Leak  County 
desegregation  school  suit.  The  series  is  produced 
by  Chris  Koch  from  recordings  made  in  Missis- 
sippi.      Dec. 10 

8:30  LIKE  A  BUTTERFLY'S  WING  A  program  on  the 
poetry  of  Edna  St.  Vincent  Millay,  including  read- 
ings of  some  of  her  poems.  (WGHB)  Dec.  1 1 

9:00  A  SHOW  OF  FORCE  A  recorded  repeat  broad- 
cast of  last  Sunday's  live  explosion  planted  and 
set  off  by  Richara  C.  Neulweiler  and  Bill  Alton. 


Page   5 


2^="  ANNOUNCEMENT  *=^1 
^  IN  view  of  the  imminent  ^^  in- 
crease in  sponsorship  rate,  we  wish  to 
^  urge  and  admonish  ^  you  to  renew 
your  present  subscription  now,  CS-  be- 
fore midnight  January  12,  1985.  Don't 
keep  it  a  't;v°  secret  your  ^  friends 
have  a  right  to  know^.  "^"^ 

New  subscriptions  are  available  at  the 
present  rate  until  the  deadline. 


10:00  MORE  STOCKHAUSEN  This  interview  between 
Stockhausen  and  David  Berger  took  place  in 
Cologne.  It  is  followed  by  performances  of  his 
music,  including  'Study  No.  1',  'Study  No.  2',  and 
'Gesang  der  JiJnglinge'.       Dec.  14 

10:45  NEWS,  COMMENTARY  Edward  P.  Morgan 

11 :00  SALZBURG  FESTIVAL  IX  The  Vienna  Philharmonic 
Orchestra  under  Karl  Bohm.  Program  on  Dec.  7 

12:45  UNCLE  SHELBY'S  ABZ  BOOK  Shel  Silverstein's 
anti-children  book,  produced  and  read  by  Dana 
Cannon.       Dec.  7 
1:00  SIGN  OFF 

THURSDAY,  December  10 

7:00  MORNING  CONCERT  A  one-act  comic  opera 
by  Cluck  (Der  Betrogene  Kadi)  is  followed  by 
Stravinsky's  'Four  Etudes  for  Orchestra'. 

8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

8:15  MOZART'S  'A  LITTLE  MASON  CANTATA,  writ- 
ten in  1791,  is  his  last  complete  work.  It  is  per- 
formed by  tenors  Kurt  Equiluz  and  Friedrich 
Graupe,  and  bass  Franz  Wimmer,  with  the  Vienna 
Symphony  Orchestra  and  Academy  Choir  under 
MaxGoberman.  (LRM  503)  Dec.  15 

8:35  MOTETS  BY  BRAHMS  AND  BRUCKNER  German 
a  capella  choral  works  performed  by  the  Stuttgart 
Madrigal  Choir  under  Wolfgang  Gonnenwein  on 
Cantate  640  230.      Dec.  15 

9:15  THE  OTHER  SIDE  OF  THE  UNITED  NATIONS 
Betty  Pilkington.       Dec.  9 

9:30  THE  CONFEDERACY  A  comedy  by  John  Van- 
brugh,  as  it  was  acted  in  1705,  depicts  a  society 
rebelling  against  puritanism,  and  all  that  it  holds 
sacred,  in  strong  and  witty  language.  (BBC) 
Dec.  20 


Columbia  Artists  Management  presents 

ANNUAL   CARNEGIE  HALL    recital  of 

SERKiN 

TUES.,  DEC.  8-8:30  P.M. 

SCHUMANN  •  BEETHOVEN  -  MENDELSSOHN  -  BRAHMS  •  CHOPIN 


Tickets:  $5.95,  $4.00,  $3.00, 
^     $2.50,  $2.00  on  sale  af  Car- 
negie  Hall   Box  Office.  Mall 
orders    to    Judson    Hall    Box 
^     Office,  165  W.  57  St.  Please 
enclose  self-address  stamped 
envelope. 
'J^     Steinway  Piano 
Columbia  Records 


Page   6 


10:30  THIS  LIHLE  LIGHT  III  Harmony.  This  program 
explores  a  leading  Negro  community  in  Missis- 
sippi during  the  summer  of  1964.        Dec.  9 

11:00  MAHLER'S  SECOND  SYMPHONY  in  a  perform- 
ance by  the  Philharmonia  Orchestra  and  Chorus 
conducted  by  Otto  Klemperer,  with  Heather  Har- 
per, soprano  and  Janet  Baker,  contralto.  (BBC) 

1:00  REMEMBER  RADIO?  II  Here  are  selections  from 
Terry  and  the  Pirates,  Lorenzo  Jones  and  FDR's 
speeches.       Dec.  8 

1:30  STEPPENWOLF  Part  4  of  the  novel  by  Hermann 
Hesse. 

2:00  VIENNA  FESTIVAL  XVII   Soloists   Fritz  Wunder- 
lich,  tenor,  and  Dietrich  Fischer-Dieskau,  baritone, 
witfi  the  Vienna  Symphony  Orchestra  directed  by 
Josef  Krips.       Dec.  1 1 
SCHUBERTSymphony  No.  3 
MAHLER  Das  Lied  von  der  Erde 

3:45  THEATRE  REVIEV/  by  Isaiah  Sheffer.      Dec.  9 

4:00  CONTEMPORARY  POETRY  III  The  poems  of 
Louis  Zukovsky  introduced  and  read  by  Paul 
Blackburn.      Dec.  13 

4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 

5:30  'MORE   NEW  VIVALDI    The   epidemic   spreads. 

This  time  the   performers  are   I   Solisti   di  Zagreb 

under  Antonio  Janigro  on  Bach  Guild   BG  665. 

Concerto  in  G  for  Tv^o  Mandolins,  Strings  and 
Organ    (Ganoci  and  Pavlinek  mandolins)    11m 

Concerto  in  g  ('La  Notte')  for  Flute,  Bassoon, 
Strings  and  Harpsichord  (Baker,  flute;  Hoff- 
man, bassoon)  10m 

Concerto  in  A  for  Strings  and  Harpsichord  8m 

Concerto  in  g  for  Bassoon,  Strings  and  Harpsi- 
chord (Klepac,  bassoon)  11m 

Concerto  in  C  for  Violin,  Strings  and  Harpsi- 
chords ('Per  La  SS.  Assunzione  di  Maria  Ver- 
gine'l    (Stanic,  violin) 

6:30  MUSIC   FOR   V/IND    INSTRUMENTS   Two   works 

by  Stravinsky,  in  contrasting  moods.       Dec.  17 

STRAVINSKY     Symphonies    of    Wind     Instruments 

(1920-21)    (Eastman  Symphonic  Wind  Ensemble/ 

Fennell)    (Mer  MG  50143)  9m 

STRAVINSKY   Octet  for  Wind    Instruments    (1922) 

(Wind    Group/Stravinsky)     (Col    ML    5672)     15m 

7:00  NEV^S  Robert  Potts 

7:15  LARRY  BIRNS   INTERVIEWS  Thomas  Aitken,  Jr., 

vice-president  of  Infoplan,  and  author  of  'Poet 
in  the  Fortress".  He  talks  about  the  early  youth 
and  later  career  of  Puerto  Rico's  architect  of 
commonwealth  and  first  elected  Governor,  Luis 
Mufioz  Marin.       Dec.  11 

8:00  STRAVINSKY  IN  REHEARSAL  In  1947,  William 
Malloch  recorded  a  rehearsal  of  Stravinsky's  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  musi- 
cally comes  through  clearly  enough.  It  is  followed 
by  a  complete  performance  of  the  work. 

9:00  BENTLEY  ON  BRECHT  The  Manual  of  Piety. 
Lesson  1:  'Petitions'.  The  first  of  four  programs 
in  which  Eric  Bentley  sings  and  reads  the  five 
lessons.  The  music  is  by  Stefan  Wolpe.       Dec.  11 

9:45  THE  CHRISTIAN  VOCATION  A  discussion  of 
the  Christian  clergy  and  layman  in  the  modern 
world.  The  panel  is  composed  of  Chris  Kearns, 
of  The  Catholic  Worker;  James  Forest,  chairman 
of  the  Catholic  Peace  Fellowship,-  Father  Philip 
Bernigan,   Professor   of   Epiphany   Apostolic   Col- 


lege; and  Thomas  Francis  Ritt,  also  of  The  Catho- 
lic Worker.      Dec.  13 
10:45  NEWS,  COMMENTARY  Edward  P.  Morgan 
11:00  TWO  SYMPHONIES  One  by  Haydn  and  a  con- 
temporary Japanese  symphony.  Details  on  Dec.  8 
12:00  AN  OUTSIDE  AGITATOR  Details  on  Dec.  8 
12:30  JAZZ  LEGENDS  Noted  jazz  authority  and  rec- 
ord producer  Don  Schlitten  presents  The  Legend- 
ary Johnny  Dodds. 
1:00  SIGN  OFF 

FRIDAY,  December  1 1 

7:00  MORNING   CONCERT   Bach's   English   Suite   in 

A  minor;  and   Schumann's  Second  Symphony. 
8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

8:15  CONTEMPORARY    FINNISH    MUSIC    from    the 
Finnish  Radio       Dec.  19 

ERIK    BERGMAN   The   Birds    (Soloists,    percussion 
instruments     and     electronic     effects     with     the 
Akademiska    Saengfoereningen/ Berg  man) 
JOONAS   KOKKONEN   Sinfonio   do  Camera    (Lu- 
cerne Festival  Strings) 
AULIS   SALLINEN    Variations   for   Cello   and   Or- 
chestra    (Seppo     Laomanen,    cello,    with    Fin- 
nish Radio  Sym  Orch/Ehrling) 
OTTO   DONNER  Cantata    Profono    (Soloists   with 
the  Stephen  Porthman  Ensemble) 
9:15  LARRY  BIRNS  INTERVIEWS  Thomas  Aitken,  Jr., 
vice-president    of     Infoplan,    who     talks     about 
Luis  Murioz  Marin.  See  Dec.  10 


JU2T   RELEAXED 

MfiDUVfll   jDflNCES    &   CAROLS 

performed   by    the 
Renaissance  Chamber  Ensemble' 
Paul   Ehrlich,    director 


English,  Prenci?  &.  Spanish  Carols 
Medieval  Estanjpies  k  Dances  fronj 
the  Collections  of  Xusato,  2er~ 
vaise  and  Attaingnant  on  the  Bar- 
oque Record  Label. 


IT 


Available  at  your  local  record 
shop  or  send  check  to: 

Renaissance  Chamber  Players 
924  West  End  flvc  New  York  25 

monaural  $4.95  Stereo  $5.95 


10:00  'WOLF'S  ITALIAN  SONGBOOK,  the  Italieni- 
sches  Liederbuch,  is  heard  in  a  new  release  per- 
formed by  soprano  Erna  Berger  and  baritone 
Hermann  Prey  with  pianist  Gijnther  Weissenborn 
onVoxLDL532.  Dec.  19 
11:15  THE  LAST  MINUTE      Dec.  8 

12:15  BENTLEY  ON  BRECHT  The  Manual  of  Piety: 
Lesson  1 :  'Petifitlons'.  See  Dec.  10 

1:00  NUBIAN  MUSIC  Hamzo  El  Din  accompanying 
himself  on  the  Oud,  sings  a  group  of  traditional 
Nubian   songs  on  Vanguard   VRS  9164.       Dec.    18 

1 :30  STEPPENWOLF  Part  5  of  the  novel  by  H.  Hesse. 

2:00  CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  IN  EVOLUTION  Gun- 
ther  Schuller  and  music  from  the  years  1940-41. 
For  program  see  Dec.  8 

3:00  LIKE  A  BUTTERFLY'S  WING  A  program  from 
WGBH  in  Boston  on  the  poetry  of  Edna  St.  Vin- 
cent Millay,  including  some  poems.       Dec.  9 

3:30  BELTRAFFIO  by  Henry  James,  adapted  as  a 
play  for  radio  with  a  peculiarly  Jamesion  horror, 
a  'respectable'  infanticide.  (BBC)       Dec.  13 

4:00  CONTEMPORARY  BELGIAN  PIANO  MUSIC  II 
Francis  de  Bourguignon.       Dec.  13 

4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 

5:30  HAWAIIAN  COMPOSER:  Dal-Keong  Lee  His 
Symphony  No.  1,  cast  in  a  Hindemithian  mold,  is 
contrasted  with  his  'Polynesian  Suite'  on  a  new 
CRI  release  (1951]  performed  by  the  NiJrnberg 
Symphony  Orchestra  under  George  Barati.  Dec.  17 

6:05  PIANO  RECITAL  Gloria  Whitney,  young   Phiio- 
delphian   pianist,  plays  a   highly  varied  program 
recorded  last  season  specially  for  WBAI.  Dec.  18 
SCHOENBERG  Three  Piano  Pieces,  Op.   11    15m 
IVES  Three  Page  Sonata  7m 
WOLPE  Dance  in  Form  of  a  Chaconne  3m 
BEETHOVEN  Sonata  No.  21   in  C,  Op.  53   (Wald- 
steln)  24m 

7:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

7:15  OPINION  Dr.  Fred  Exner,  Conservative,  radiolo- 
gist, fluoridation  expert,  and  jazz  buff.       Dec.  14 

7:45  CONVERSATION  WITH  A  DUTCH  ACTOR  Henk 
van  Ulsen  with  Herbert  Feinstein.       Dec.  7 

8:15  VIENNA  FESTIVAL  XVII  A  concert  of  music  by 
Schubert  and  Mahler.  See  Dec.  10 

10:00  THE  ADVENTURES  OF  GAMMA  GLOBULIN  He 
again  gives  evidence  of  his  seemingly  super- 
human sovoir-foire.       Dec.  8 

Ad?'t 


Page  7 


tired  of  just  listening 

Join  a  NY  RECORDER  WORKSHOP  group 

BEGINNERS  —  play  Renaissance  &  Baroque 

chamber  music  in  six  months. 

INTERMEDIATE  —  improve  your  musicianship 
while  enjoying  group  playing. 

ADVANCED  —  acquire  performance  level 

technique  &  polish.  Individual  instruction 

included  in  all  classes. 

recorder  ■  viol  -  flute  -  violin   ■  baroque   flute 

CIm  »t  PrlTiu 

ny  recorder  workshop  un  6-1603 

directed  by  Paul  Ehrlich 
formerly  with  NY  Pro  Musica 


some  highlights  in 

PUBLIC  AFFAIRS 

THIS  UniE  LIGHT:        III  Harmony 

Dec.  9th  8  p.m.       Dec.  10th  10:30  a.m. 

IV  The  Invasion 

Dec.  16th  8  p.m.      Dec.  17th  3:30  p.m. 

RACE  AND  LITERATURE  IN 
ENGLAND  AND  THE  INDIES 

Dec.  7th  8  p.m.       Dec.  8th  12:30  p.m. 

Krishnamurti  SELF-KNOWLEDGE: 
Beliefs,  Seeking 

Dec.  13th  9:15  a.m. 

Simplicity,  Ennui,  Impulses 

Dec.  20th  9  a.m. 

THE  CHRISTIAN  VOCATION 

Dec.  10th  9:45  p.m.       Dec.  13th  11:30  a.m. 

THE  FACE  OF  THE  COMING  FASCISM 

Dec.  16fh  9:30  a.m.       Dec.  17th  8:35  p.m. 

HOLLOW  DREAM 

Dec.  12th  11  :30  p.m.       Dec.  15th  12n 

VIOLENCE  AND  LOVE 

Dec  16th  3:45  p.m.       Dec.  19th  10  p.m. 

FROM  THE  CENTER: 
New  Utopias 

Dec.  7th  10  a.m. 

A  Socialist  Knight  at  the  Center 

Dec.  13th  7  p.m.       Dec.  14th  1 1  :30  a.m. 


10:15  NUTRITON  Dr.  Marshall  Deutsch  discusses  pro- 
tein requirements.      Dec.  14 

10:45  NEWS,  COMMENTARY  Edward  P.  Morgan 

11:00  ASPECTS  OF  MUSIC  Seldom  heard  music  intro- 
duced and  presented  by  Leonard  Altman. 
Dec.  13 

12:00  NEGRO  FOLK  MUSIC  Charles  Hobson  and  the 

music  of  Calypso  singer  The  Mighty  Sparrow. 
1:00  SIGN  OFF 

SATURDAY,  December  12 

8:00  THE  CHANGING  FACE  OF  STRAVINSKY  Wil- 
liam Malloch  presents  a  program  sliowing  how 
performance  attitudes  toward  Stravinsky's  music 
(including  those  of  the  composer  himself)  have 
changed  through  the  years,  (KPFK)  Dec.  17 
9:00  CONTEMPORARY    BELGIAN    PIANO    MUSIC    1 

V^orks  by  Jean  Absil.       Dec.  9 
9:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 
10:30  BOOKS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  Ellyn  Beaty 
10:45  SALZBURG  FESTIVAL  XI  Works  by  Brahms,  Bee- 
thoven,  Chopin,  Gounod  and  Strauss   played   by 
Van    Clibern,    pianist,    and    the    Salzburg    Wind 
Instrument  Society  under  the  direction   of  Rudolf 
Klepac.      Dec.  8 
12:45  PROTEUS,   a    satirical    comedy    in    two    acts    by 
Paul  Claudel:  with  John  Sharp  as  Proteus;  Fenella 


Page   8 


Fielding  as  The  nymph  Bryony;  Tony  Britton  os 
MeneiouS;  June  Tobin  and  Helen,-  and  Denis 
Blokelock  OS  a   sort  of  satyr-major-domo.    (BBC) 

2:00  JAZZ  with  Soundra  Sharp 

4:00  TAKING  STOCK  OF  WALL  STREET  by  William 
A    Kent  of  H.  M.  Frumkes  &  Co.       Dec.  14. 

4:30  MUSIC   BY  REVUELTAS 

Homage  to  Garcia  Lorca    (MGM  Chomber  Orch/ 

Surinach)    (MGM  E3496)  14m 
Three   Pieces   for  Violin   ond   Piano    (Anohid   and 

Aiemian)    |MGME3180|  8m 
Sensemoya     (New    York    Philhormonic/Bernsteinl 
(Col  ML  5914)  7m 
5:00  PAUL  TEMPLE  AND  THE  JONATHAN  MYSTERY 

3  The  Ring.  See  Dec.  8 
5:30  AVANT  GARDE  CONCERT  III  Third  in  a  series 
of  concerts  recorded  by  WBAl  this  fall  at  Judson 
Holl.  Cellist  Charlotte  Moorman  is  ossisted  by 
pianist  Nam  June  Poik  and  soprano  saxophonist 
Terry  Jennings.  In  the  cage  opus  she  utilizes  not 
only  her  cello,  but  additional  whistles,  chains, 
balloons  (for  breokingl,  etc.  with  recorded  sup- 
plements such  as  the  Queen  Mary's  departure 
blast  and  sounds  from  Big  Ben.  In  Stockhcusen's 
'Plus-Minus',  Miss  Moorman  is  assisted  by  a  full- 
sized  robot  named  Robot  Opera,  built  by  Nam 
June  Paik.  Dec.  17 
EARLE  BROWN  Synergy    (World  Premiere)    (Tape 

and  Cello)  5m 
JOHN   CAGE  26'    1.1499"   for  a    String    Player  30m 
(with  rubatos) 


GUISEPPE  CHIARI  Per  Arco   (American  Premiere) 

(for  tape  and  reactions  of  a  cellist)  11m 
KORLHEINZ  STOCKHAUSEN  Plus-Minus   (realized 

by  Poik)    (World  Premiere)  6m 
TERRY  JENNINGS  Piece  for  Cello  and  Saxophone 

(the  composer  ploys  soxophone)  3m 
TOSHI  ICHIYANAGI  Duet  II   (American  Premiere) 
13m 
7:00  OLD  JAZZ  with  Chris  Albertson 
8:00  THE   GOON   SHOW   The    Dreaded    Batter   Pod- 
ding  Hurler.   How   young   Ned   Seogoon   tracked 
down  the  Traitor  who  caused  such  havoc  during 
the  blackout  of  1941.       Dec.  14 
8:30  UNITED    NATIONS    DAY    CONCERT    Recorded 
at    the   General    Assembly    on    October  24,    1964. 
Isaac  Stern  is  the  violin  soloist  with  Georg  Soiti 
leading    the    London    Symphony    Orchestra.    The 
concert   concludes   with   on   address   by   UN   Sec- 
retory-General U  Thant.       Dec.  14 
BLISS  Three  Dances  from  'Checkmate'  9m 
BRUCH  Violin  Concerto  No.  1   in  g    (Stern,  violin) 

23m 
BRITTEN    Variations   and    Fugue    on    a    Theme   of 
Purcell  16m 
9:30  EFFORT  NOTATION  An  interview  with   Irmgord 

Bortenieff.       Dec.  8 
10:15  SALZBURG  FESTIVAL  X  Dietrich  Fischer-Dieskau 
sings  Brahms  lieder.       Dec.  8 

11:30  HOLLOW   DREAM  An   extended    interview  with 

on  ex-heroin-addict  in  Hong   Kong,  produced  by 

Patricio  Pern  for  Radio  Hong  Kong.  (KPFA)  Dec    15 

1:00  IN  SIDE  Chris  Albertson  s  weekly  smorgasbord. 

3:30  SIGN  OFF 


Columbia  Artists  Management  Presents 

lEatf  rl|azg  ®rrl|palra 

1964  65  Season  in  TOWN  HALL   following  iirst  national  tour 

David     BLI"!!!     Mus.c   Director 

"A  valuable  contribution  to  musical  culture"— Pablo  Casals 

Wed.  eve.  Dec.  16 

Mezzo  Coloratura 

Handel.  Haydn,  Mozart  anas:  Haydn  Symphony  No   75 
Rameau  Concert  No    5:  Mozart  Divertimento  k    136 

Thurs.  eve.  Jan.  14 
•lolin  OfpllOX 

pianist 

A  Bach  Haydn  program  honoring  ttie  90th  Birthday  of 

DR.  ALBERT  SCHWEITZER 

Proceeds  for  ttie  Lambarene  Hospital 

Wed.  eve.  Feb.  24 
Miirlov  VKIIIIKTT 

Mezzo  Soprano 

Gluck   Orfeo  ed  Eundice  Act  II  with  Esterhazy  Chorus 
Haydn    Ttie  Storm.  Mozart  '  Parto.  Parto  "  from  La  Clemenza  di  Tito 

b.ibscr.piio"   pncrs     3   concerts    Orchestra    center   $8  50     sides   S6  ?5 

LriKPS  ilO  00    Balcony  Front  J6  ?5    Rear  J4  00 

CHrcks    p,(yahl..    tn    ESTERHAZY    ORCHESTRA    FOUNDATION      INC 

JUDSON   HALL   BOX  OFFICE-  165  W    5;ttlSt      NY     19    N     V 

M.iii  Orrti-rs  Enclose  stamped  self  addressed  envelope 


Single 

Tickets 

at  Box 

Office 

$4.00 

$3.50 

$2.75 

$2.00 


SUNDAY,  December  13 

8:00  HINDEMITH'S  'DAS  MARIENLEBEN"  (Life  of 
the  Virgin  Mary)  on  poems  by  Rilke,  is  per- 
formed by  soprano  Frances  James  with  pianist 
George  Brough.  (Lyr  LL  97)       Dec.  18 

9:15  SELF-KNOWLEDGE    III     Beliefs,    Seeking.    The 

third  in  a  series  of  talks  by  J.  Krishnamurti  on 
the  pursuit  of  self-knowledge,  given  at  Ojai  in 
1949.  A  lecturer  and  teacher  throughout  the 
world  for  over  forty  years,  Krishnamurti  is  wide- 
ly respected  for  his  psychological  insights.  (KPFK 
Archives) 
10:00  ASPECTS  OF  MUSIC  by  Leonard  Altman.  Dec.  11 
11 :00  WHO  WROTE  SHAPESPEARE?  See  Dec.  8 

11:30  THE  CHRISTIAN  VOCATION  A  panel  discus- 
sion. Details  on  Dec.  10 

12:30  CONTEMPORARY  POETRY  ill  Louis  Zukovsky. 
See  Dec.  10 

1:00  OPERA  TOPICS  Lorenzo  Alvarys  guests  are 
Dorothy  Pattison,  English  stage  director  and 
opera  teacher,-  and  Martin  Rich,  associate  con- 
ductor at  the  Metropolitan  Opera.       Dec.  16 

1:50  'HANDEL'S  BELSHAZZAR  A  new  recording  of 
the  oratorio  with  the  Stuttgart  Memorial  Church 
Choir  and  Orchestra  of  the  Stuttgart  Kirchenmu- 
siktage  under  the  young  German  conductor  Hel- 
muth  Rilling.  (VOX  VBX  209)       Dec.  16 

Nitocris  Sylvia  Stohlman,  soprano 

Belshazzor Wilfred  Jochims,  tenor 

Cyrus Helen  Raab,  contralto 

Daniel  Heidrun  Ankersen,  contralto 

Gobrias;  Messenger  Helge  Birkeland,  bass 

4:20  REPORT  TO  THE  SUBSCRIBER      Dec.  9 

4:30  CONTEMPORARY    BELGIAN    PIANO   MUSIC    II 

Francis  de  Bourguignon.       Dec.  11 

5:00  A  SHOW  OF  FORCE  in  the  most  ramshackle 
military  tradition:  tactics  and  strategy  from  the 
nightmares  of  Richard  C;  Neuweiler  and  Bill  Al- 
ton, carried  out  by  themselves  and  other  figments 
of  their  imaginations. 

6:00  A  CONCERT  FROM  THE  THIRTY-NINTH  HASLE- 
MERE  FESTIVAL  performed  by  members  and  pu- 
pils of  the  Dolmetsch  family,  with  Ian  Wilson, 
oboe  soloist,  and  Christopher  Wood,  harpsi- 
chord. (BBC)       Dec.  19 

TELEMANN    Overture    in   C   major   for   recorders, 
flute,  oboe,   bassoon,  strings  and   harpsichord. 
LOEILLET  Suite  in  A  major  for  harpsichord 
ALBINONI    Concert   No.    12   in   C,   for   oboe   and 

strings 
VIVALDI  Concerto  in  D  major.  Opus  3  No.  3    (II 

Cordellino) 
CABEZON    Fantasy    for   five    viols    on    the    tradi- 
tional theme  'Suzanne  un  Jour'. 

7.00  FROM  THE  CENTER  A  Socialist  Knighf  af  the 
Center.  W.  H.  Ferry,  Vice-President  of  the  Fund 
for  the  Republic,  asks  his  guest  Sir  Jock  Camp- 
bell how  he  reconciles  his  capitalist  role  as 
Chairman  of  Booker  Bros.  McConnell  Co.  Ltd.,  the 
largest  commercial-industrial  interest  in  British 
Guiana,  with  his  socialist  political  views.  Dec.  14 

8:00  THE    WORLD'S    GREAT    STAGE    by    Calderon. 

This  highly  poetic  work  translates  complex  theo- 
logical and  moral  arguments  into  a  dramatic  alle- 
gory. (BBC)  See  Dec.  19 

9:00  VIOLIN  AND  CELLO       Dec.  15 

KODALY  Duo  for  Violin  and  Cello,  Op.  7    (Hei- 

fetz,  Piatigorsky)   (Vic  LM  2550)  24m 
RAVEL    Sonata    for    Violin    and    Cello     (Shumsky 


Page   9 


some  highlights  in 

MUSIC 

SALZBURG  FESTIVAL  1964 

IX  Dec.  7th  2:15  p.m.       Dec.  9th  11  p.m. 

X  Dec.  8th  3  p.m.       Dec.  12th  10:15  p.m. 
X!     Dec.  8th  11  p.m.      Dec.  12th  10:45  a.m. 

VIENNA  FESTIVAL  1964 

XVII     Dec.  10th  2  p.m.       Dec.  11  th  8:15  p.m. 

XVIII     Dec.  14th  9:45  a.m.       Dec.  19th  10:45  a.m. 

XIX     Dec.  14th  2  p.m.       Dec.  16th  11  :15  p.m. 

XX    Dec.  15th  2  p.m.      Dec.  20th  6:15  p.m. 

RECITALS: 

Raymond  Lewenthal 

Dec.  14th  7:30  p.m.       Dec.  16th  2  p.m. 

Gloria  Whitney 

Dec.  11th  6:05  p.m.       Dec.  18th  9:15  a.m. 

CONTEMPORARY  FINNISH  MUSIC 

Dec.  11th  8:15  a.m.       Dec.  19th  10:45  p.m. 

UNITED  NATIONS  DAY  CONCERT 

Dec.  12th  8:30  p.m.       Dec.  14th  8:15  a.m. 

AVANT  GARDE  CONCERT  III 

Dec.  12fh  5:30  p.m.       Dec.  17th  11  a.m. 

STRAVINSKY  IN  REHEARSAL 

Dec.  10th  8  p.m. 

THE  CHANGING  FACE  OF  STRAVINSKY 

Dec.  12th  10  a.m.      Dec.  16th  9:30  p.m. 

OPERAS 

Tagore'i  SHYAMA 

Dec.  7th  8:15  a.m.       Dec.  17th  1 1  p.m. 

SIGURD  and  THE  BARBER  OF  SEVILLE 

Dec.  9th  9:30  a.m. 

Berlioz'  BEATRICE  AND  BENEDICT 

Dec.  20th  2  p.m. 


Greenhouse)    1IRMS1123)  18m 
9:45  HENRY  OF  ANJOU  A  portrait  of  King  Henry  II, 

compiled  by  Nesto  Pain.  (BBC) 
10:30  BELTRAFFIO    An    adaptation    of    Henry    James' 

'The  Author  of  Beltroffio'.  See  Dec.  11 
11 :00  THE  SCOPE  OF  JAZZ  with  Dan  Morgenstern 
12:00  SIGN  OFF 

MONDAY,  December  14 

7:00  MORNING    CONCERT    Beethoven's     Archduke' 

Trio;  and  Ives'  Third  Symphony. 
8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 
8:15  UNITED  NATIONS  DAY  CONCERT  Recorded  at 

the  UN  on  October  24,  1964.  For  Details  see  Dec.  12 

9:15  OPINION  Dr.  Fred  Exner.       Dec.  11 

9:45  VIENNA  FESTIVAL  XVIII  A  concert  of  orchestral 
works  by  Webern,  Ravel,  Dvorak,  and  Smetono; 
Ivan  Morovic  pianist,  with  the  Prague  Philhar- 
monic Orchestra  conducted  by  Vaclav  Neumann. 
Dec.  19 

11:30  FROM  THE   CENTER   A   Socialist   Knighf   ot  the 


Page  10 


Center.  W.  H.  Ferry  and  Sir  Jock  Campbell.  See 
Dec.  13 
12:30  BRESS    PLAYS    BLOCH    The    Canadian    violinist 
is  heard  performing  Ernst  Bloch's  'Violin  Sonata' 
on  Folkways  FM  3357.       Dec.  16 

1:00  NUTRITION    Protein    requirements   by   Dr.   Mar- 
shall Deutsch.       Dec.  11 

1 :30  STEPPENWOLF  Port  6  of  the  novel  by  Hermann 
Hesse,  More  details  on  Dec.  7 

2:00  VIENNA  FESTIVAL  XIX  The  Prague  Philharmonic 
Orchestra  conducted  by  Karel  Ancerl.       Dec.  16 
KLUSAK  Variations  on  a  Theme  of  Gustov  Mahler 


Classified  —  Personals 

INeeded  —  WANTED  —  your  old  tape  recorder(s) 
donation  or  loan  for  English  tutoring  experiment  at 
an  East  Harlem  Neighborhood  House.  GR  3-1084 

The  first  Trio  Flauto  Dolce  recording,  with 
ROBERT  WHITE,  Tenor,  Martha  Bixler,  recorder; 
Eric  Leber,  Recorder  &  Harpsichord;  Morris  New- 
man, recorder  &  bassoon.  Music  by  Henry  VUI, 
Corn>sh,  Lupo,  Gibbons,  Schultz,  Dowland  & 
Campra.  Available  now  at  $4.50,  plus  25c  postage 
&  handling:  Trio  Flauto  Dolce,  .300  Riverside 
Drive,  New  York  10025. 

PICTURE    FRAME, S 
W     idest  Selection 
B     est  Buys 
A     bracadabra  Service 
i     mported  Moulding.s 
GAINE.S-AMERICAN   MOULDING   CORP. 
145  West  27  Street  (nr.  7th  Ave.) 
20%  discount  with  this  ad 
Long    live    WBAI 

Stereo/monaural  equipment  serviced  at  reasonable 
rates.  Also  Television.   Nat  Weintraub  IN   1-7459. 

Draftsman  available.  Patent  drawings,  technical, 
catalog  illustrations.  Ben  Newman,  8.1  Washington 
Place,  NYC  1001  I. 

STUDY  MOVEMENT  THROUGH  EFFORT 
ANALYSIS  For  information  call  Irmgard  BarteniefT 
TR  3-5690. 

PACIFICA  PROGRAM  DUBS  —  WBAI  will  pro- 
vide interested  listeners  with  tape  recordings  of  any 
Pacifica  produced  programs,  at  a  total  cost  of 
$7.50  per  half  hour;  $3.50  per  quarter-hour  there- 
after. Minimum  order  $4.00.  AH  tapes  wiU  be 
dubbed  on  first-quality  virgin  stock,  half  track  IVi 
ips.  Other  head  and  speed  configurations  available 
upon  special  arrangements.  For  further  information 
call  OX  7-2288.  (AU  orders  pre-paid.) 

THE  KING-HALL  NEWSLETTER:  published 
monthly.  An  independent  survey  of  current  events. 
Subscription  airmail  $5.00.  Specimen  copy  on  re- 
quest from  Sir  Stephen  King-Hall,  162  Buckingham 
Palace  Road,  London,  S.  W.  1.  England. 

Let    POSTHORN    RECORDINGS    preserve    your 
next   concert   or  private  performance  on  tape  or 
disks.    Professional    recordings    recommend    them- 
selves —  and  you.  Rate  sheet  on  request. 
POSTHORN  RECORDINGS 
207  West  106th  Street        New  York  25,  New  York 

Telephone  ACademy  2-0898 
Francis  Daniel  Jerry  Bnick 

Classified  Rales  per  insertion:  30c  per  word,  10- word 
minimum.  Special  rate  for  5-9  continuous  insertions: 
28c  per  word;  10  or  more  insertions:  25c  per  word. 


DEBUSSY  La  Mer 
MAHLER  Symphony  No.  1  in  D  major 

3:45  THE  GOON  SHOW  The  Dreaded  Boffer  Pud- 
ding Hurler.  How  the  Hurler  was  finally  cornered 
in  North  Africa  by  young  Ned  Seogoon.       Dec.  12 

4:15  THE  BABY'S  FAMILY  by  Heitor  Villa-Lobos, 
played  on  the  Siena  pianoforte  by  Morisa  Re- 
gules. 

4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 

5:30  SYMPHONY  FOR  CLASSICAL  ORCHESTRA  Har- 
old Shapero's  vigorous  neo-classicism.  See  Dec.  8 

6:15  MORE  STOCKHAUSEN  An  interview  with  the 
composer,  and  some  of  his  music.       Dec.  9 

7:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

7:15  CRITICAL  VIEWS  OF  THE  NEWS  by  Robert 
Potts,       Dec.  15 

7:30  RAYMOND    LEWENTHAL  AT  TOWN    HALL   His 

recital  on  September  22,  1964,  included  some 
of  the  works  which  he  performed  and  explained 
on  WBAI  in  a  previous  program,  and  some  new 
pieces.  As  one  would  expect,  Alkan  was  well  in 
evidence.       Dec.  16 

LISZT  Praeludium  on  a  Theme  of  Bach  11859)  3m 
CHOPIN  Sonata  No,  3  in  b.  Op.  58  (1844) 
ALKAN  Symphonic  (for  piano)    iPub.  1887)  23m 
ALKAN  La  Vision  (Pub.  1861)  3m 
ALKAN  Le  Feslin  d'Esope  (Pub,  1857)  9m 
ALKAN  Barcarolle,  Op,  65  No,  6  (Pub.  1861)  3m 
ALKAN    Quasi-Faust    (from    Grande    Sonata    Op. 
33)    (Pub.  1847)  12m 

(encores  by  Saint-Saens/Godowsky ;  Moszkow- 
ski;  Chopin/Godowsky  and  Dohnanyi) 

9:15  ART  FORUM  England's  New  Generation  of  Ar- 
tists. A  discussion  with  English  artists  now  in  the 
United  Stotes:  Allen  Jones,  Peter  Phillips  and 
Richard  Smith  talk  with  Bruce  Glozer.       Dec.  17 

10:15  TAKING  STOCK  OF  WALL  STREET  William  A. 
Kent,       Dec.  12 

10:45  NEWS,  COMMENTARY  Edward  P.  Morgan 

11 :00  'SCHUBERT  MASS  No,  6  in  E  flot.  See  Dec.  9 

12:00  COUNTRY  MUSIC  Southern,  bluegross  and  hill- 
billy music  presented  by  Tom  Whitmore,     Dec.  17 

12:30  'COUPERIN'S  LES  NATIONS  was  written  in  the 
1690's.  Selections  from  it  are  performed  on  a  new 
release  by  the  Stuttgart  Boroque  Ensemble  under 
Marcel  Couraud,  (Merc  MG  50402)       Dec.  17 

1:00  SIGN  OFF 


TUESDAY,  December  15 

7:00  MORNING  CONCERT  Twelve  medieval  Spanish 
songs;  followed  by  a  Tchaikovsky  sextet. 

8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

8:15  'INDIAN'  MUSIC  by  Busoni  and  MocDowell. 
For  details  see  Dec,  7 

9:15  CRITICAL  VIEWS  OF  THE  NEWS  Robert  Potts. 
Dec,  14 

9:30  THE  FILM  MAKER'S  FESTIVAL  A  discussion.  For 
details  see  Dec,  19 

10:45  -THE  BIRD  FANCYER'S  DELIGHT  Or,  Choice  Ob- 
servations and  Directions  Concerning  ye  Teoching 
of  all  Sorts  of  Singing  Birds.  This  collection  of 
recorder  and  harpsichord  pieces  written  by  a  Mr, 
Hill  about  1717,  is  divided  into  sections  such  as 
'Tunes  for  the  Bullfinch'  or  'Tunes  for  the  Linnet'. 
A  new  Vox  release,  with  Richard  and  Theodora 
Schuize  on  winds  and  percussion,  and  Dorothy 
Walters  on  Harpsichord  and  virginal.   (PL  12  750) 


11:30  PAUL  TEMPLE  AND  THE  JONATHAN  MYSTERY  4 
The  Encounter.  A  further  installment  of  the  thriller- 
serial  from  the  BBC.       Dec.  19 
12:00  HOLLOW   DREAM  An   extended    interview  with 
on   ex-heroin-addict  in   Hong   Kong.   See   Dec.   12 

1 :30  STEPPENWALF  Par  7  of  the  novel  by  H.  Hesse. 

2:00  VIENNA    FESTIVAL    XX    Kurt    Ropf    directs    the 
Vienna  Symphony  Orchestra.       Dec.  20 
STRAVINSKY  THistoire  du  Soldat 
MILHAUD  rHomme  et  son  Desir 
La  Creation  du  Monde 

3:45  COMMITTEE  PIANIST  An  interview  by  Chris 
Albertson  with  Ellsworth  Milburn,  pianist  for 
San  Francisco's  satirical  group,  and  some  sam- 
ples of  his  playing  with   them.       Dec.   18 

4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 

5:30  HOVHANESS'  SAINT  VARTAN  SYMPHONY  For 
more  details  see  Dec.  7 

6:15  VIOLIN  AND  CELLO  works  by  Kodoly  and 
Ravel.  Details  on  Dec.  13 

7:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

7:15  OPINION  Hallock  Hoffman,  Director  of  the 
Study  of  Political  Affairs  at  the  Center  for  the 
Study  of  Democratic    Institutions.       Dec.   16 

7:30  REMEMBER  RADIO?  Sgt.  Preston  of  the  Yukon, 
Fred  Allen  and  Porltand  Hoffa,  and  Sammy  Kaye 
ore  the  nostalgic  personalities  revived  in  this 
program  produced  by  Leslie  Darren  IWGBH) 
Dec.  17 

8:00  CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  IN  EVOLUTION  Gun 

fher    Schuller    with    music    in    the    years    1941-42. 

Dec.  18 

HARRISON  Canticle  No.  3 

CAGE-HARRISON  Double  Music 

CAGE  Wonderful  Widow  of  18  Springs 

SCHOENBERG  Piano  Concerto 

9:00  THE  LAST  MINUTE  Time  saved  for  programs 
not  prepared  before  printing  this  Folio.       Dec.  18 

10:10  AMERICAN    FILMS    AND    AUTEUR    CRITICISM 

Seven  French  film  directors,  including  Truffout, 
Chabrol  and  Luc-Goddard,  participated  in  a 
symposium  on  American  movie-making  which 
was  published  in  the  December-January  issue 
of  Cahiers  du  Cinema.  John  Fell  reads  from  the 
article  and  comments  on  it.  (KPFAl       Dec.  19 

10:45  NEWS,  COMMENTARY  Edward  P.  Morgan 

11.00  MOZART'S  A  LITTLE  MASON  CANTATA".  De- 
tails on  Dec.  10 

11:20  MOTETS  BY  BRAHMS  AND  BRUCKNER  Details 
on  Dec.  10 

12:00  THE  ADVENTURES  OF   GAMMA   GLOBULIN    Is 

Albert  Portcullis  but  a  pseudonym?       Dec.  18 

12:15  THE  RENEGADE  Erik  Bouerfeld  in  a  virtuoso 
performance  of  Albert  Camus'  story  about  a 
missionary  driven  mod  by  the  natives  he  was 
sent  to  convert.  (KPFA)  Dec.  19 

1:00  SIGN  OFF 


adv 


Page  1 1 


RUTH  ABRAMS  -  paintings 

December  16  through  January  6 

Personal  selection  of 

IRENA  URDANG      By  appointment 

315  West  70  St.  SU  7-0873 


some  highlights  in 

DRAMA,  LITERATURE 
AND  ART 

Vanbrugh's  THE  CONFEDERACY 

Dec.  10th  9:30  a.m.       Dec.  20th  9:30  p.m. 

Calderon's  THE  WORLD'S  GREAT  STAGE 

Dec.  13th  8  p.m.       Dec.  19th  4  p.m. 

Claudel's  PROTEUS 

Dec.  12fh  12:45  p.m. 

Henry  James'  BELTRAFFIO 

Dec.  11th  3:30  p.m.      Dec.  13th  10:30  p.m. 

POETRY:        Edna  St.  Vincent  Millay 

Dec.  9fh  8:30  p.m.       Dec.  1 1th  3  p.m. 

Louis  Zukowsky 

Dec.  10th  4  p.m.       Dec.  13fh  12:30  p.m. 

Emily  Dickinson 

Dec.  16th  8:30  p.m.       Dec.  18th  4  p.m. 

Ed  Dorn 

Dec.  16th  10:15  p.m.       Dec.  20th  12n 

Hermann  Hesse's  STEPPENWOLF 

Jeginnig  a  new  serialized  radio  adaptation 
at  1  :30  p.m.  weekdays. 

ART  FORUM:        The  Cubist  Decade 

Dec.  7fh  9:45  p.m.       Dec.  9th  3  p.m. 

England's  New  Generation  of  Artists 

Dec.  14th  9:15  p.m.       Dec.  17th  2:30  p.m. 


WEDNESDAY,  December  16 

7:00  MORNING  CONCERT  Beethoven's  'Hammer- 
klavier'  sonata  played  by  Eduardo  del  Pueyo; 
and  Glinka's  String  Quartet  in  F. 

8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

8:15  MOVIE  MUSIC  BY  PROKOFIEV  See  Dec.  8 

9:15  OPINION  Hallock  Hoffman.       Dec.  15 

9:30  THE  FACE  OF  THE  COMING  FASCISM  Novelist, 
biographer  and  critic  Truman  Nelson,  speaking 
at  0  Harlem  rally,  argues  that  those  helping  to 
preserve  the  current  structure  of  American  so- 
ciety are  building  fascism.  Dec.  17 
10:00  'HANDEL'S    BELSHAZZAR  A    new    recording    of 

the  oratorio.  Details  on  Dec.  13 
12:30  OPERA    TOPICS    Lorenzo    Alvory's    guests    are 
Dorothy  Pattison  and  Martin  Rich.       Dec.  13 

1:30  STEPPENWOLF  Part  8  of  the  novel  by  Hermann 
Hesse. 

2:00  RAYMOND  LEWENTHAL  AT  TOWN  HALL  His 
recital  on  September  22,  1964.  Complete  program 
on  Dec.  14 

3:45  VIOLENCE  AND  LOVE  A  lecture  by  psycho- 
analyst R.  D.  Laing,  member  of  the  Tavistock 
Institute  for  Human  Relations  and  author  of  many 
books.  Joseph  H.  Berke,  who  has  worked  with 
Dr.    Laing,    provides    the    introduction.    Dec.    19 

4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 

5:30  STRAVINSKY-INFLUENCED  MUSIC  See  Dec.  7 


Page    12 


AdT't 


SALZBURG  MARIONETTES 

The  renowned  SALZBURG  MARIONETTE  THEATRE,  an  enchanting  Christmas 
attractioin,  will  be  performing  at  New  York's  TOWN  HALL  Dec.  17-Jan.  8. 
By  special  arrangement  with  the  management,  a  percentage  of  the  purchase  price 
of  tickets  ordered  through  WBAI  will  benefit  the  station.  When  ordering  please 
indicate:  1)  number  of  tickets  2)  title  of  performance  3)  time  of  day,  and  4)  an 
alternate  date  should  the  preferred  one  be  sold  out.  Please  send  your  order  to  Marion- 
ettes, WBAI,  30  East  39  Street,  New  York  16,N.Y.  Make  checks  payable  to  Town  Hall. 

Children  performances:  ull  seats  $3.75: 

SNOW  WHITE  ;  p.m.  Dec.  19th,  28th,  2yth.  3  1st.  _'  p.m.  Dec.  2()th 

4  p.m.  Dec.  21st,  22nd,  23rd,  28th,  29th  5  p.m.  Jan.  3rd 

RUMPELSTILTSKIN  1  p.m.  Dec.  2 1st,  22nd,  23rd,  24th,  26th,  3()th.  Jan.  2nd,  3rd. 
2  p.m.  Dec.  27th,  Jan.  3rd.  4  p.m.  Dec.  19th,  26th,  Jan.  2nd. 

Adull  evening  performances:  all  seats  $4-30: 

THE  MAGIC  FLUTE  8:3U  p.m.  Dec.  17th,  19th.  21st,  29th.  Jan.  7th. 

9  p.m.  Dec.  27th,  Jan.  3rd. 
THE  ABDUCTION  FROM  THE  SERAGLIO  fl:30  p.m.  Dec.  18th,  23rd.  26th,  3()th.  Jan.  2nd,  8th 
DIE  FLEDERMAUS  8:30  p.m.  Dec.  22nd,  28th,  31st.,  Jan.  "ith.  6th. 
9  p.m.  Dec.  2()th. 


6:30  BRESS  PLAYS  BOCH  Program  on  Dec.  14 

7:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

7:15  THE   OTHER   SIDE   OF   THE    UNITED    NATIONS 

Some  aspects  of  UN  affairs  usually  ignored  by 
the  mass  medio  are  discussed  by  special  corre- 
spondent Betty  Pilkington.       Dec.  17 

7:30  JAZZ  ARCHIVES  witfi  Pfiil  Elwood. 

8:00  THIS  LITTLE  LIGHT  IV  The  Invasion.  Tfiis  pro- 
gram presents  tfie  arrival  in  Mississippi  of  almost 
one  thousand  volunieers.  V\/hat  mode  these  large- 
ly Northern,  and  largely  middle-class  Whites 
come  to  Mississippi  and  what  did  they  find? 
Produced  by  Chris  Koch  as  port  of  his  series 
made  from  field  recordings  during  the  past  sum- 
mer.      Dec.  17 

8:30  THE  LEAF  OF  LOVE  TURNED  BACK  A  program 
on  the  poetry  of  Emily  Dickinson  with  examples 
of    some    poems.    (WGBHi    Dec.    18 

9:00  REPORT  TO  THE  SUBSCRIBER  News  of  WBAI. 
Dec.  20 

9:15  A   SHOW   OF   FORCE   by   the    novice   Veterans, 

Richard  C.  Neulweiier,  Bill  Alton  and  others. 
10:15  CONTEMPORARY    POETRY    IV    Ed    Dorn,    intro- 
duced by  Paul  Blackburn.      Dec.  20 
10:45  NEWS,  COMMENTARY  Edward  P.  Morgan 

11:00  THE  LADY  OF  NOHANT  Robert  Baldick,  Fellow 
of  Pembroke  College,  Oxford,  reappraises  here 
the  work  and  personality  ot  George  band.  iBBC) 
Dec.  19 

11 :15  VIENNA  FESTIVAL  XIX  Music  by  Klusak,  Debussy 
and  Mahler.  Program  on  Dec.  14 

1:00  SIGN  OFF 

THURSDAY,  December  17 

7:00  MORNING  CONCERT  Borber  s  Toccata  Fes 
tiva'  for  organ  and  orchestra;  and  Prokofiev's 
Sixth  Symphony. 


8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

8:15  'MORE  NEW  VIVALDI  A  group  of  concert!  for 
diverse  instruments.  Details  on  Dec.  10 

9:15  THE  OTHER  SIDE  OF  THE  UNITED  NATIONS 
Betty  Pilkington.       Dec.  16 

9:30  COUNTRY  MUSIC  presented  by  Tom  Whit- 
more.       Dec.  14 

10:00  'COUPERIN'S  LES  NATIONS  on  a  new  release. 
Details  on  Dec.  14 

10:30  REMEMBER  RADIO?  Here  ore  Sgt.  Preston  of  the 
Yukon,  Fred  Allen,  Portland  FHofto  and  Sammy 
Kaye.       Dec.  15 

11 :00  AVANT  GARDE  CONCERT  III  Third  in  a  series  of 
concerts  recorded  by  WBAI  this  fall  ot  Judson 
Hall.  For  a  detailed  account  of  the  proceedings 
see  Dec.  12. 

12:30  URBAN  TRANSIT  A  discussion  of  New  York's 
transit  problem  with  members  of  the  Committee 
for  Better  Transit:  Stephen  Dobrow,  a  graduate 
assistant  at  N.Y.U.;  Henry  Deutch,  an  estimator 
for  Harris  Stell  Fabricators;  David  Gurin,  a  city 
planner  with  Mobilization  for  Youth;  and  Mayer 
Horn,  a  civil  engineer  with  the  New  York  City 
Transit  Authority  The  moderator  is  Chris  Koch. 
Dec. 20 
1:30  STEPPENWOLF  Port  9  of  the  novel  by  Hermann 
Hesse. 

2:00  MUSIC  FOR  WIND  INSTRUMENTS  Two  works 
by  Stravinsky.  For  details  see  Dec.  10 

2:30  ART    FORUM     England's    New    Generation    of 

Artists.  See  Dec.  14 
3:30  THIS  LITTLE  LIGHT  IV  The  Invasion.  A  program 

on  the  reasons  for  almost  a  thousand  volunteers' 

going  to  Mississippi  during  the  past  summer,  and 

of  what  they  found  there.       Dec.  16 
4:00  CONTEMPORARY   BELGIAN   PIANO  MUSIC   III 


Works  by  Joseph  Jongen.       Dec.  20 

4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 

5:30  THE  VIRTUOSO  VIOLINIST  Ruggiero  Ricci  plays 
showpieces   by   Poganini.   Program   on   Dec.   7 

6:00  ETUDES  FOR  PIANO  Study  pieces  by  Chopin, 
Debussy  and  Thomson.  Details  on  Dec.  8 

7:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

7:15  LARRY  BIRNS  INTERVIEWS  Peace  Corps  people: 
the  director,  a  trainee,  and  two  who  have  re- 
turned  otter  two  years   in   Peru.       Dec.    18 

7:45  AT  THE  DROP  OF  A  STETSON  Michael  Flanders 
and  Donald  Swann  discuss  with  Sidney  Carter 
their  record-braking  two-man  revue  and  its  suc- 
cessful  tour  of  America.       Dec.  20 

8:00  HAWAIIAN  COMPOSER:  Dai-Keong  Lee  See 
program  on  Dec.  1 1 

8:35  THE  FACE  OF  THE  COMING  FASCISM  Truman 
Nelson,  novelist,  biographer  and  critic,  speaks 
at  a  Harlem  rally  held  under  the  ouspices  of  the 
Harlem  Defense  Council.  He  argues  that,  at  its 
core,  American  society  is  rotten,  and  that  those 
who  work  to  preserve  the  current  structure  are 
building  fascism.       Dec.  16 

9:00  BENTLEY  ON  BRECHT  The  Manual  of  Piefy. 
Lesson  2:  Spiritual  Exercises.  Eric  Bentley  sings 
and  reads  the  second  of  Brecht's  five  lessons  in 
his  Manual   of  Piety.       Dec.   18 

9:30  THE    CHANGING    FACE    OF    STRAVINSKY.    A 
program    about   changed    performance   attitudes. 
William  Malloch  comments.       Dec.  12 
10:45  NEWS,   COMMENTARY   Edward   P.  Morgan 
11:00  INDIAN     OPERA    Rabindronath    Tagore's    folk 

opera  "Shyamo."  Details  on  Dec.  7 
12:00  ONE-SHOT  A  program  created  from  the  tope 
scraps  and  unbroadcastable  records  accumulated 
on  the  shelves  of  Jack  Nessel,  Drama  and  Litera- 
ture Director  of  KPFA,  who  writes:  I  promise 
nothing  and  I  am  a  man  of  my  word'.  (KPFA) 
Dec.  19 
12:30  JAZZ  LEGENDS  Tenormon  Fronkie  Socolow, 
presented    by   Don   Schlitten. 

1:00  SIGN  OFF 

FRIDAY,  December  18 

7:00  MORNING    CONCERT    Music    from    the    Anna 

Mogdolena       Notebook;       Webern-orchestroted 

Schubert  dances,-  and  Florent  Schmitt's    Lo  Trage- 

die  de  Salome'. 
8:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 
8:15  PIANO  RECITAL  Gloria  Whitney  plays  a  highly 

varied  program.  Complete  program  on  Dec.  11 
9:15  LARRY  BIRNS  INTERVIEWS  Peace  Corps  people 

See  Dec.  17 
9:45  HINDEMITH'S   DAS  MARIENLEBEN'  See  Dec.  13 
11:00  THE  LAST  MINUTE  Dec.  15 
12:00  'MUSIC    FOR    PIANO    AND    BAND     Friedrich 

Gulda  on  a  new  release.  Details  on  Dec.  8 
12:30  BENTLEY    ON    BRECHT    The    Manual    of    Piety. 

Lesson  2:  Spiritual   Exercises.       Dec.  17 
1:00  'HARP    AND    ORCHESTRA    A    new    release    of 

works  by  Debussy  and  Boieldieu.  See  Dec.  9 
1:30  STEPPENWOLF  Port  10  of  this  radio  version  of 

the  Expressionist  novel  by  Hermann  Hesse,  which 

will   be  continued  on   Dec.  21 
2:00  CONTEMPORARY    MUSIC    IN    EVOLUTION 

Gunther  Schuller  with   music  of  1941-42.   Program 

on  Dec.  15 


Page  13 


PROGRAMS  FOR 
YOUNG   PEOPLE 

4:30  —  5:30  P.M. 

MONDAY.  DECEMBER  7 

"Magic  or  Not"  by  Edward  Eager,  read  by  Baird 

Searles.  Part  One. 
•'The  Little  Prince"  -  Part  One  of  the  St.  Exupery 

story  read  by  David  and  Jean  Birney. 
Piano  Music  for  Children  by  Dimitri  Shostakovitch. 

TUESDAY,  DECEMBER  8 

Magic  or  Not  —  Part  Two. 

Let's  Join  In  (BBC) 

The  Little  Prince  —  Conclusion. 

WEDNESDAY,  DECEMBER  9 

Magic  or  Not  —  Part  Three. 

Tales  from  the  East  -  Chrystabel  Weerasinghe. 

Adventures  of  a  Zoo  —  an  orchestral  excursion. 

THURSDAY,  DECEMBER  10 

Magic  or  Not  —  Part  Four. 

A  Signpost  to  a  Ribbon  Maker. 

"The  Dheeps  and  the  Dillycods"  -  a  story  by  Elsa 

Bailey  read  by  Don  Calfa. 
Children's  Songs  —  Bonnie  Dobson. 

FRIDAY,  DECEMBER  11 

Magic  or  Not  —  Part  Five  (Continued  Monday) 
Gumdrop  Follies  —  Jim  Copp  and  Ed  Brown. 

SATURDAY,  DECEMBER  12  9:30  -  10:30  a.m. 

The  Adventures  of  Clara  Chuff  —  Conclusion. 

MONDAY,  DECEMBER  14 

Magic  or  Not  —  Part  Six. 

Danny  Kaye  tells  a  story  from  Scotland. 

The   Singing   Lady   tells   "Beauty   and  the   Beast". 

Sam  Hinton  sings. 

TUESDAY,  DECEMBER  15 

"Why  the  Owl  Behaves  as  It  Does"  —  a  story  in  a 
series  entitled  'How  The  Whale  Became'  by  Ted 
Hughes,  read  by  Frances  Barry. 

Magic  or  Not  —  Part  Seven. 

Let's  Join  In  (BBC) 

WEDNESDAY,  DECEMBER  16 

Magic  or  Not  —  Part  Eight. 

Tales  from  the  East  —  Chrystabel  Weerasinghe. 
Vivien  Leigh  tells  the  "Tale  of  Mrs.  Tiggy-Winkle" 
by  Beatrix  Potter. 

THURSDAY,  DECEMBER  17 

Magic  or  Not  —  Conclusion 

A  Signpost  to  Rocks  Made  by  Dripping  Water. 
The  Badmen  —  Songs  and  stories  of  the  Wild  West. 
Afternoon  in  Amsterdam. 

FRIDAY,  DECEMBER  18 

"Boxes"  —  a  story  by  Jean  Merrill. 
"The   Man   Who  Could   Work   Miracles"  —  Mary 
Alan  Hokanson  reads  the  story  by  H.  G.  Wells. 

SATURDAY,  DECEMBER   19  9:30  -   10:30  a.m. 

"Moonfleet"  —  Parts  One  and  Two  of  a  new  BBC 
serial  about  smugglers,  excisemen  and  a  villain- 
ous tide-race  that  has  cau.sed  the  wrecking  of 
many  a  tall  ship. 


Page    14 


WBAI  IS  HAVING 

A 
BIRTHDAY  PARTY 

January  10th  1965 

Y'ALL  COME! 

For  details 
see  your  next  Folio 


3:00  THE  ADVENTURES  OF  QkhAfAA  GLOBULIN  For 

whom?       Dec.  15 

3:15  MUSIC  BY  CHARLES  IVES  Chamber  and  or- 
chestral works,  including  'Over  the  Pavements', 
'The  Rainbow',  'Tone  Roads  No.  1',  'The  Indians', 
'The  Pond',  'Tone  Roods  No.  3',  'Hymn',  and 
'Hallowe'en',  all  performed  by  the  Boston  Cham- 
ber Ensemble  under  Harold  Farbermon,  and 
'Three  Places  in  New  England',  performed  by 
the  Eastman-Rochester  Symphony  under  Howard 
Hanson.       Dec.  20 

4:00  THE  LEAF  OF  LOVE  TURNED  BACK  The  poetry 
of  Emily  Dickinson.       Dec.  16 

4:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 

5:30  TEACHER-PIANISTS  llona  Kobos  and  Rosina 
Lhevinne  ore  best  known  as  teachers  —  but  they 
are  also  performers.  See  program  on  Dec.  7 

6:15  BEETHOVEN   Music  for  Goethe's  'Egmonf.  De 

tails  on  Dec.  7 

7:00  NEWS  Robert  Potts 

7:15  COMMENTARY  Thomas  Francis  Ritt,  former  Na- 
tional Director  of  the  Catholic  Council  on  Civil 
Liberties,  former  board  member  of  the  Notional 
Catholic  Social  Action  Conference  and  currently 
on  the  staff  of  The  Catholic  Worker. 

7:30  MUSIC   BY  GORDON   BINKERD  Works   loaned 
to  WBAI  by  the  composer. 
Nativitos  est  hodie;  On  the  Shortness  of  Human 

Life;  Madrigal  (Chamber  Choir/Carter)   11m 
String   Quartet   No.   1     (Walden   Quartet)    30m 
Piano  Sonata    (Claire   Richards)    24m 
String  Quartet  No.  2   (Walden  Quartet)    15m 

9:00  COMMITTEE  PIANIST  Ellsworth  Milburn  talks 
with  Chris  Albertson.       Dec.  15 

9:45  NUBIAN  MUSIC  Hamzo  El  Din  accompanying 
himself  on  the  Oud  on  Vanguard  VRS  9164.  Dec.  1 1 

10:15  SCIENCE  CRITIC  Fads  and  fallacies  in  the  name 
of  science  discussed  by  Dr.  Marshall  Deutsch. 

10:45  NEWS,  COMMENTARY   Edward   P.   Morgan 

11:00  ASPECTS  OF  MUSIC   Seldom   heard  music  pre- 


sented by  Leonard  Alfman,  with  his  comments. 
12:00  NEGRO   FOLK  MUSIC  Charles  Hobson  with  a 

full   hour  of  blues  sung  by  Lightning  Hopkins. 
1:00  SIGN  OFF 

SATURDAY,  December  19 

8:00  A  CONCERT  FROM  THE  THIRTY-NINTH  HASLE- 
MERE  FESTIVAL  Music  by  Telemonn,  Loeillet, 
Albinoni,  Vivaldi  and  Cabezon.  Complete  pro- 
gram on  Dec.  13. 

9:00  AMERICAN  FILMS  AND  AUTEUR  CRITICISM  A 
reading,  with  commentary,  by  John  Fell.       Dec.  15 

9:30  PROGRAMS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  See  page  13 
10:30  BOOKS  FOR  YOUNG  PEOPLE  Ellyn  Beaty 
10:45  VIENNA    FESTIVAL    XVIII    Works    by    Webern, 

Ravel,  Dvorak  and  Smetana.  See  Dec.  14 
12:30  ONE-SHOT    A    program    which    has    been    de- 
scribed   OS     spontaneous    unstifled    creativity'    — 
of  what,  we  shall  see.       Dec.  17 

1:00  LOW,  COLONEL  BLIMP  AND  THE  HORSE.  Car- 
toonist David  Low  in  conversation  with  Robert 
Finnegan.  (BBC)       Dec.  20 

1:20  THE  RENEGADE  Erik  Bauerfeld  reads  Camus' 
story.  Dec.  15 

2:00  JAZZ  with  Bob  Potts. 

4:00  THE  WORLD'S  GREAT  STAGE  Colderon's  dra- 
matic allegory  was  written  in  the  1630s  and  dis- 
plays a  range  of  social  types  in  a  'play-within-o- 
ploy'.  More  information  on  Dec.  13 

5:00  THE  LADY  OF  NOHANT  Robert  Baldick,  Fellow 
of  Pembroke  College,  Oxford,  reappraises  the 
work  of  George  Sand.       Dec.  16 

5:15  'WOLF'S  ITALIAN  SONGBOOK  See  Dec.  11 

6:30  PAUL  TEMPLE  AND  THE  JONATHAN  MYSTERY 
4  The  Encounter.  See  Dec.  15 

7:00  NEW  JAZZ  with  Don  Heckman 

8:00  THE  GOON  SHOW  Lurgi  Strikes  Again.  This 
story  opens  when  poor  Arnold  Fringe  is  suddenly 
striken  with  the  dreaded  Lurgi  in  a  Lancashire 
bus,  baffling  even  Dr.  Neddie  Seogood. 

8:30  ART  OF  THE  FUGUE  Bach's  fifteen  fugues  and 
four  canons,  in  a  performance  by  the  Cologne 
Soloists  Ensemble  under  Helmut  Miller-Bruhl's 
direction,  on  a  German  Radio  tape. 
10:00  VIOLENCE  AND  LOVE  A  lecture  by  psycho- 
analyst R.  D.  Laing.  More  details  on  Dec.  16 

10:45  CONTEMPORARY  FINNISH  MUSIC  See  Dec.  11 

11:45  THE  FILM  MAKER'S  FESTIVAL  Gregory  Mork- 
opoulis,  maker  of  'Twice  a  Man',  and  Jack  Smith 
('Flaming  Creatures'  and  'Normal  Love'),  two  of 
the  iudges  of  the  third  Los  Angeles  Festival,  dis- 
cuss movie  criticism,  the  New  American  Cinema, 
obscenity,  and  other  subjects  with  'underground' 
film  star  Dennis  Hopper  and  Dave  Ossman. 
(KPFK)       Dec.  15 

1 :00  IN  SIDE  or,  spelled  backwards,  Edis  ni. 

3:30  SIGN  OFF 


SUNDAY,  December  20 

8:00  SHAKESPEARE  MUSIC  BY  BERLIOZ  Sir  Hamilton 
Harty  is  heard  conducting  on  some  dubs  from 
KPFK,  with  comment  by  William  Malloch.  See 
Dec.  9 

9:00  SELF-KNOWLEDGE  IV  Simplicity,  Ennui,  Im- 
pulses. The  fourth  in  the  series  of  talks  by  J. 
Krishnamurti.  More  information  on  Dec.  13 


10:00  MUSIC  BY  CHARLES  IVES  Chamber  and  orches- 
tral works.  Details  on  Dec.  18 
10:45  REPORT  TO  THE  SUBSCRIBER      Dec.  16 

11:00  ASPECTS  OF  MUSIC  presented  by  Leonard  Alt- 
man.      Dec.  18 
12:00  CONTEMPORARY  POETRY  IV  Ed  Dorn.      Dec.  16 

12:30    CONVERSATION    WITH    SIR    JULIAN    HUXLEY 

The  distinguished  biologist  answers  questions 
about  his  many  interests,  which  include  the 
study  of  animal  behavior,  philosophy,  and  popu- 
lation growth.   (BBC] 

1:00  OPERA  TOPICS  Lorenzo  Alvary's  guest  is  tenor 
Mario  del  Monaco,  who  talks  about  his  recovery 
and  experiences  since  his  automobile  accident 
last  year. 

2:00  BERLIOZ'  'BEATRICE  ET  BENEDICT'  written  in 
1860-1,  uses  the  composer's  adaptation  of 
Shakespeare's  'Much  Ado  About  Nothing.'  In 
this  recording,  the  soloists,  chorus  and  London 
Symphony  Orchestra  are  conducted  by  Colin 
Davis.  (L'Oiseou-Lyre  SOL  256/7) 

Beatrice Joseph  Veasey 

Hero  April  Contelo 

Ursula  Helen  Watts 

Benedict John  Mitchinson 

Claudio  John  Cameron 

Don  Pedro  John  Shirley 

Semarone Eric  Shilling 


Page   15 

3:45  LOW,  COLONEL  BLIMP  AND  THE  HORSE  David 
Low  talks  with  Robert  Finnegan.       Dec.  19 

4:00   PRIMITIVE  SURVIVALS    IN    EUROPEAN   MUSIC 

compiled  and  introduced  by  A.  L.  Lloyd  who  has 
travelled  extensively  recording  these  songs  which 
celebrate  rites  far  less  innocent  than  modern 
Christian  interpretations  would  suggest.  (BBCl 

5:00  A  SHOW  OF  FORCE  or  the  Murray  Hill  Mas- 
sacre, with  Richard  C.  Neulweiler  and  Bill  Alton 
leading  their  tattered  bond. 

6:00  AT  THE  DROP  OF  A  STETSON  Sidney  Carter  in 
discussion  with  Michael  Flanders  and  Donald 
Swann,       Dec.  17 

6:15  VIENNA  FESTIVAL  XX  Works  by  Stravinsky  and 
Milhaud.  Details  on  Dec.  15 

8:00  URBAN  TRANSIT  A  discussion  on  New  York's 
transit  problems.  See  Dec.  17 

9:00  CONTEMPORARY  BELGIAN  PIANO  MUSIC   III 

Joseph  Jongen.       Dec.  17 

9:30  THE  CONFEDERACY  The  Restoration  comedy  by 
Jan  Vanbrugh.  See  Dec.  10 

ll:00THESCOPEOF  JAZZ  with  Ira  Gitler 

12:00  SIGN  OFF 


Give  WBAI  For  Christmas 

Be  an  inspired  Santa  and  give  a  Special  Christmas  sponsorship  to  WBAI-FM.  For  a 
limited  time,  6-month  gift  sponsorships  for  $6.00  are  available  to  present  and  new 
subscribers  only. 

Please  send  Special  Gift  Sponsorships  to  the  following  people  in  my  name.  Enclosed 
is  my  check  for ,  for 6-month  sponsorship  gifts  at  $6.00  each. 


Gift  #1. 
Name:  ... 


Gift  #2. 
Name: 


Address:  Address: 


FROM:  {Name  and  Address) 


NB:  To  insure  Christmas  delivery  of  your  gift  card,  no  Special  Christmas  sponsorships 
will  be  accepted  after  December  19th. 

i ! 


Cover  drawing  by  Pavlof  Giovanopolous  from  thr  collection  of  Irena  Urdnng. 

i'N ASSISTED  BY  ANY  BALANCING  APPARATUS  AND  WITH  NO  NET 
BENEATH  HIM  TAKEO  USUI  WALKS  BAREFOOTED  ON  A  CABLE  .  .  . 


t 

E 

H 

l^-- 

IT 

g 

01 

^ 

i^HH  ■ 

^ 

z  w 

o 

Ci 

s5 

rO 

TO 

^ 

Zw 


WBAI  Folio 

from  the 

Pacifica  Radio  Archives 


1  his  co\  cr  sheet  ereated  b\  Internet  Arehi\  e  for  fomiatting.