September 1963 KPFA Folio

Pages 1–8 | Page 9–16


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Russell Jorgensen appointed Pacifica President

Russell F. Jorgensen, 46, will become President of Pacifica Foundation on October 1 of this year. He will take leave from the American Friends Service Committee to which he has given many years of distinguished service. Trevor Thomas, who has been both Foundation President and KPFA manager since 1961, and who had, upon assumption of this inordinately heavy double burden, requested early relief from one or the other, will continue as station manager of KPFA. He joins with me in enthusiastically welcoming Russell Jorgensen to this physically and mentally demanding, soultesting and rewarding field of public activity.

I have no doubt that large numbers of listening participants of KPFA, KPFK, and WBAI will share with the Board of Directors, the station staffs, and advisors a feeling of gratitude to Trevor Thomas for his vision, his creative understanding, and his dependability and honesty as exemplified during the recent U. S. Senate Subcommittee hearings. We are fortunate indeed to have him continue as KPFA manager.

Russell Jorgensen has served continuously on the Pacifica Board of Directors since 1955, and brings to his new position a considerable experience in administration, fundraising, and public relations. As associate executive secretary for the AFSC he has worked in housing, race relations, farm labor, penal reform and several international programs. In 1949 in Japan he helped establish the first International Student Seminar and two seminars for repatriating Japanese. With his wife, Russell has directed a variety of projects in Israel, Mexico, and the U. S. He is one of the founders of the Friends Committee on Legislation for Northern California and from 195962 was clerk of the Berkeley Friends Meeting. In 1961 he and his wife were among the 400 jailed as "freedom riders" in Jackson, Miss., after attending a religious leadership congress called by Martin Luther King. Russell holds a degree in economics from the University of Wisconsin and an M. A. in Christian ethics from the Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley. The Jorgensens have four children: Eric, Lynne, Mark and Paul. Eric is a senior at San Francisco State College.

Russell also finds time for skiing and backpacking into the Sierra and with his camera has produced many perceptive portraits and photographic studies.

It has been my privilege for approximately a decade to be associated with Pacifica. I came to know Lewis Hill intimately and his magnificent vision of communication on lofty levels of intellectual search and of esthetic perception and sensitivity. I have seen the fruits of this vision mature under the skilled hands of Harold Winkler, Trevor Thomas, and so many other colleagues sharing in what, on the death of Lewis Hill, I ventured to call "this audacious and challenging adventure of the mind and heart." Russell Jorgensen, whose work on the Board of Directors has shown understanding and dedication to the purposes and ideals of Pacifica, will be undergirded by the capable staffs of the three stations, by a strong Board and by the support of our listeners. The next years, I am sure, will be nobly productive ones for Pacifica. We shall find this "adventure of the mind and heart" increasingly audacious and ever more challenging.

R. Gordon Agnew, D.D.S., Ph.D
Chairman, Pacifica Board of Directors


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THE KPFA FOLIO
VOL. 14, No. 13
SEPTEMBER 23 OCTOBER 6, 1963

Published biweekly and distributed without additional cost to those whose subscriptions make possible the kind of noncommercial programming described herein. Subscriptions are regularly $12 per year, with introductory subscriptions at $3 for a threemonth period available to newcomers. Contributing subscriptions ore also available at $25, $50 and $100, and lifetime subscriptions at $1,000. Students may subscribe for six months at a special rate of $5.

In certain parts of the East Bay, listeners may prefer hearing the same programs on KPFB, at 89.3 mc.

Broadcast hours for KPFA and KPFB are from 7 a.m. until midnight on weekdays, from 8 a.m. until midnight on Saturdays and Sundays. Sometimes, for special reasons, we stay on later.

A date in boldface capitals after a program listing means that the program will be heard again on the date shown. A date in light face after a listing means that the program is a rebroadcast of one originally heard an the date shown. In musical listings, the parentheses show performers, record label, and the approximate time in minutes of each selection.

Pacifica Radio, which exists solely to bring noncommercial broadcasting to you, also operates two stations in other areas. KPFK (90.7 mc), at 3729 Cahuenga Blvd., North Hollywood, serves southern California. WBAI (99.5 mc), at 30 East 39th St., New York City 16, serves the New York area. Their programming is similar but not identical. Subscriptions are transferable. KPFK's phone number is TRiangle 7-5583. WBAI's is OXford 7-2288.

FM/94.1 mc KPFA
2207 SHATTUCK AVE.
BERKELEY 4
THORNWALL 86767

the cover . . . was taken by Ernest Lowe in Tulare County. The children belong to a farm worker's family.

MONDAY, September 23

7:00 FOR AND ABOUT CHILDREN. The morning concerts in this Folio were selected by John Whiting from his own collection.

  • DEBUSSY ARR. CAPLET Children's Corner (Orchestre Notional de Ia Radiodiffusion Francaise—Cluytens) (Angel 35172) (17)
  • BARTOK For Children II, 15 (Kozma) (Bartok 920) (7)
  • BRITTEN A Simple Symphony (New Symphony Orch. of London—Goossens) (London 9146) (17)
  • BARTOK For Children II, 613 (Kozmo) (Bartok 920) (7)
  • RAVEL Ma Mere l'Oye (Champs-Elysees Orch.—lngelbrecht) (Ducretet 93087) (24)
  • BARTOK For Children Il, 1425 (Kozma) (Bartok 920) (7)
  • DEBUSSY Boite a Jouloux (RIAS Orch.—Perlea) (Remington 199159) (32)

9:00 COMMENTARY. Helen Nelson (Sep. 22)

9:15 WINESBURG, OHIO-XI. Actor Onslow Stevens continues his reading from the Sherwood Anderson work with "Loneliness." (KPFK)

9:40 TIME CYCLE BY LUKAS FOSS. Adele Addison, soprano with the Improvisation Ensemble, and the Columbia Symphony Orchestra conducted by Leonard Bernstein. (Columbia ML 5680).

10:15 TREASURES OF PERU. Critic Al Gene Besser interviews Charles Lindstrom, curator of education at the De Young Museum, about the Peruvian gold work on display there until October 13.

11:00 AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A CATHOLIC ANARCHISTI. Ammon Hennocy speaking at Peter Maurin House in Oakland. (Sept. 14)

11:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Sept. 9) BRUCKNER Symphony No. 5, B major (86) 1:00 THE SHAPE OF MUSIC-I. We begin rebroadcast of a nine-part series from our Archives, produced by composer Robert Erickson. Programs I through IV are concerned with melody, V through VII with harmony, VIII and IX with the fugue.

1:30 BEATING THE GAME. Dr. Timothy Leary, a research psychologist, suggests to students at Washington State College that the role of the college is narcotic. The talk was recorded by KRAB-Seattle.

2:30 MUSIC OF THE ITALIAN MASTERS. Frank de Bellis (Sept. 22)

4:00 CHILDREN'S BOOK SAMPLER. Ellyn Beaty

4:15 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE.

  • Stories for Young People, Toby Halpern reads "Lucky Pierre" by Gerald Beim
  • Prince Caspian-VI: "The People That Lived in Hiding." Jan Dawson continues her reading of the novel by C. S. Lewis
  • The Bear that Wasn't: a story by Frank Tashlin
  • The High Holy Days: Cantor Terry Gredin and Helen Goldberg in a program about the Jewish Holy Days

5:30 CHAMBER SERIES

  • BACH Flute Sonata, A major, BWV 1032 (Rampal, Veyron-Lacroix) (Epic 6045) (12)
  • KIRCHNER Piano Sonata (Fleisher) (Epic 3862) (16)
  • HAYDN Quartet, B minor, Op. 33, No. 1 (Schneider Qt.) (HS 9017) (20)
  • HANDEL Flute Sonata, G minor, Op. 1, No. 2 (Baker, Marlowe) (Decca 9607) (10)

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6:30 KPFA NEWS

7:00 COMMENTARY. Charles Frankel (SEPT. 24)

7:15 I CRY LOVE, LOVE. A memorial broadcast of poems by Theodore Roethke, preceded by critical and personal recollections about the artist.

8:30 FOLK MUSIC WITH ROLF CAHN. (SEP. 28)

9:15 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS. William Mandel, tonight with questions and answers. (SEPT. 24)

9:30 CENSUS TRACT 2031: Problems of Youth. A montage of comments from some young men who live in a rapidly deteriorating Los Angeles neighborhood. Produced by Mike Tigar. (KPFK)

10:35 BERLIOZ REQUIEM. The Boston Symphony Orchestra conducted by Charles Munch with the New England Conservatory Chorus and tenor Leopold Simoneau. (RCA Victor LD 6077)

TUESDAY, September 24

7:00 STRAVINSKY CONDUCTS STRAVINSKY

  • The Fairy's Kiss (Cleveland Orch.) (Columbia 5102) (45)
  • Dumbarton Oaks Concerto (Dumbarton Oaks Fest. Orch.) (Mercury 10014) (14)
  • Persephone (Zorina, Robinson, Westminster Choir, N.Y. Phil.) (54)

9:00 COMMENTARY. Charles Frankel (Sept. 23)

9:15 WINESBURG, OHIO-XII "An Awakening" (KPFK)

9:35 TOM KRAUSE RECITAL. Songs by Sibelius and Strauss sung by a young Finnish baritone still in his 20's. He is accompanied by Pentti Kosimies, piano, and John Williams, guitar. (London 5783)

10:15 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS. William Mandel (Sept. 23)

10:30 MY WORD! (BBC) (Sept. 20)

11:00 WILBUR SPOTTED WOLF OF PARSHALL, N. D. One of the students at the Berkeley Encampment for Citizenship this summer introduces himself to the others. (Sept. 13)

11:30 CHAMBER CONCERT (Sept. 10)

  • BACH Partita for Solo Violin No. 1, B minor (28)
  • M. HAYDN String Quintet, G major (19)
  • BRAHMS Trio No. 1, B major, Op. 8 (40)

1:00 VIET-CONG AND VIET-MINH. A Vietnamese student now living in Berkeley, Huynh Kim Khanh, talks with Ned Paynter (KPFA news director) about Diem, South Vietnam, and the opposition.

2:00 SONGS FROM THE TEMPEST by Henry Purcell are preceded by a trumpet sonata. Anthony Lewis directs the Philomusico of London with soloists Hervey Allen, boss, Jennifer Vyvyan, soprano, William Herbert, tenor, and Dennis Egan, trumpet. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50171)

2:30 EXISTENTIALIST WRITING. Norman Mailer speaking at the University of Chicago. (WBAI) (Sept. 9)

3:15 FOUR NETHERLAND OPERAS-I. Halewijn by Willem Pijper is discussed and performed in excerpted arrangement. Soloists, the Netherlands Chamber Choir, and the Utrecht Symphony are conducted by Felix de Nobel.

4:15 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE.

  • Your Time: a program for the Under 5's from the BBC
  • Tell-me-again Tale Sheldon Rudolph with "Hoping for Elephants"
  • Prince Caspian-VIII: "Old Narnia in Danger"
  • Tidepool Tales: "A New Shell for Henry" and "Gail Helps a Friend," written and read by Dr. Herbert Archibald

5:30 DGG ARCHIVE SERIES

  • HANDEL Organ Concerto, Op. 4, No. 1, G minor (Mueller, Basil orch—Wenzinger) (Arc 3100) (15)
  • TELEMANN Quartet, D minor (Ens—Gorvin) (Arc 3043) (16)
  • LASSUS Motets: "Tristis est anima mea"; "Justorum animae" (Aachener choir—Rehmann) (Arc 3077) (5)
  • TELEMANN Concerto for 4 violins solo (Ens-Seiler) (Arc 3109) (7)
  • HAYDN Divertimento No. 37, C major (Salzburg Baryton trio) (Arc 3120) (11)

6:30 KPFA NEWS

7:00 COMMENTARY. Marshall Windmiller (SEPT. 25)

7:15 ORCHESTRAL MUSIC OF RAMEAU. Orchestral music from ballets and operas played by the Orchestre de Chambre on Concerts Lomareux conducted by Louis de Froment. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50194) (OCT. 2)

8:00 MEANDER'S "MISANTHROPE." A comedy first performed in Athens in 317 B.C. at a festival where it won the prizenow produced by the BBC World Theater in an adaptation by Raymond Raikes. (BBC)

9:00 EDUCATION AND THE UNIVERSITY-I. In the first of two programs from the SLATE conference this summer on the UCBerkeley campus, Profs. Christian Bay and David Rynin analyze the "present failure" and desirable goals of universities.

10:00 ASK AT THE UNICORN. Norman Thomas reads a scene from his recent novel.

10:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES. Philip F. Elwood (SEPT. 25)

11:00 CENSUS TRACT 2031: The Gang Worker. Mike Tigar talks with Anthony Serrato, a group guidance officer who was born in a highdelinquency section of East Los Angeles and returned to it in 1959. (KPFK)

11:30 FOLK SONGS SUNG BY WILFRED BROWN. Traditional songs of several coun-


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tries, sometimes accompanied by John Williams, guitar. (L'Oiseau Lyre
OL 50203)

WEDNESDAY, September 25

7:00 ENGLISH COMPOSERS

  • GIBBONS The Cries of London (Deller—Consort) (Archive 3053) (8)
  • VAUGHAN WILLIAMS A Pastoral Symphony (London Phil. Orch—Boult)
    (London 9063) (36)
  • DOWLAND Lacrimae (Geneva Chamber Ens—Walter)
    (EMS 12) (24)
  • BRITTEN Spring Symphony (Vyvyan, Proctor, Pears, Covent Garden
    Chorus & Orch.—Britten) (London 5612) (43)

9:00 COMMENTARY. Marshall Windmiller (Sept. 24)

9:15 WINESBURG, OHIO-XIII. Onslow Stevens reads "Queer" from the Anderson collection. (KPFK)

9:40 DANCES OF SHAKESPEARE'S TIME-I. Music for the principal dances mentioned by Shakespeare is played by the Boyd Neel String Orchestra directed from the harpsichord by Thurston Dart. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50127)

10:15 MYSTICISM AND MORALS. Alan Watts explores their relationship. (KPFK)
(Sept. 15)

12:15 WEDNESDAY NOON CONCERT. Opening the fall series from the UC-Berkeley campus, Nancy Dols, clarinetist, and David Hemmingway, pianist, with John Spitzer, bassoonist, and Kit Ratchiff, clarinetist, play the Sonata in E-flat major for clarinet and piano by Brahms and the Divertimento No. 2 in B-flat major for two clarinets and bassoon by Mozart. KPFA will broadcast these concerts live throughout the academic year, and rebroadcast a tape recording at about 11:15 the same evening.

1:00 THE SHAPE OF MUSIC-II. Robert Erickson's series continues. (Archives)

1:30 COMMUNICATION AND THE PRESERVATION OF DEMOCRACY. Frank McCulloch, day managing editor of the Los Angeles Times, speaks at the Santa Barbara Adult Education Center.

2:30 JAZZ ARCHIVES. Philip F. Elwood (Sept. 24)

3:00 HIP HAMLET. Harry Chapman talks with Mike Tigar about Willy the Shake. (KPFK) (Sept. 18)

3:30 AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A CATHOLIC AND ARCHIST-II. Ammon Hennacy continues. (Sept. 17)

4:15 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

  • Tell-me-again Tale: Stella Toogood
  • Time for Rhyme: Rachel Weller with some poems about animals
  • Prince Caspian-VIll: "How They Left the island"

5:30 CHAMBER SERIES

  • BACH Flute Sonata, G, BWV 1020 (Rampal, VeyronLacroix) (Epic 6045) (12)
  • HARRIS Piano Sonata (Mariner) (festival) (15)
  • HAYDN Quartet, E-flat, Op. 33, No. 2 (Schneider Qt.) (HS 9017) (15)
  • HANDEL Flute Sonata, C, Op. 1, No. 7 (Baker, Marlowe) (Decca 9608) (11)

6:30 KPFA NEWS

7:00 COMMENTARY. Rabbi Sidney Akselrad (SEPT. 26)

7:15 PREVIEW. Claire lsaacs introduces coming events in the arts, theater, and music. (SEPT. 26)

7:30 MUSIC BY HANDEL. Joan Sutherland, Hervey Allen, and William Herbert sing arias from Alcina and Esther. Sinfonias from Jephtha performed by the Philomusica of London, Anthony Lewis conducting, are also included. (OCT. 3)

8:15 OPERA REVIEW. Another in our series of San Francisco opera reviews.

8:45 DIEM'S OPPOSITION. The former head of the official Vietnam Presse, Nguyen Thai, is interviewed by KPFA's Ned Paynter and Burt White.

10:00 GOLDEN VOICES. Anthony Boucher presents the vibrant Spanish contralto Conchita Supervia (18951936) in songs of Musetta, Cherubino, Frasquita, and Carmen. (SEPT. 27)

10:30 LOUIS LOMAX AT STANFORD. The noted writer delivers the major address at the California Negro Leadership Conference in mid-August at Stanford University.

11:30 THE U. C. NOON CONCERT, rebroadcast from earlier today.

THURSDAY, September 26

7:00 MUSIC OF THE BACH FAMILY

  • J. B. BACH Overture in D (Zimbler Sinfonietta—Burgin) (Boston 4032) (18)
  • J. C. BACH Es erhub sich (Boston U. Chorus, Zimbler Sinfonietta—Burgin) (Boston 402) (10)
  • J. C. BACH Aria Eberliniana (Vider) (Haydn Society 3069) (17)
    J. BACH Unser Leben ist ein Schatten (Zurcher Bach-Chor—Henking) (Cantate T 72 097F) (6)
  • J. C. BACH Organ Concerto in F, Op. 7, No. 2 (Boyd Neel Orchestra—Dart) (L'Oiseau Lyre 50132) (12)
  • K. P. E. BACH Sonata in A (Milinka) (Westminster 18853) (14)
  • J. C. BACH Vauxhall Songs (Vyvyran, Morison, Boyd Neel Orch.—Dart) (L'OiseauLyre 50132) (13)
  • C. P. E. BACH Concerto in E-flat for harpsichord & pianoforte (Malcolm, Salter, London Baroque Orch.—Haas) (Parlophone 1009) (18)

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9:00 COMMENTARY. Rabbi Sidney Akselrad (Sept. 25)

9:15 WINESBURG, OHIO-XIV. "The Untold Lie" and "Drink" (KPFK)

9:50 TWO MASTERWORKS BY ARNOLD SCHOENBERG. Pierrot Lunaire and Die Gluckliche Hand with soloists Bethany Beardslee and Robert Oliver. Robert Craft conducts the Columbia Symphony and chorus. (Columbia M2L 279) (OCT. 4)

10:45 POPE JOHN'S ECUMENICAL COUNCIL. Robert Blair Kaiser, who received the 1963 Overseas Press Club Award for best magazine reporting, talks with Paul Schaffer. (WBAI)

11:30 ORCHESTRALVOCAL CONCERT. (Sep. 15) C. P. E. BACH Magnificat, D major (49) J. S. BACH Magnificat, BWV 243 (34)

1:00 THE TROY LEGEND IN LITERATURE-I. In the first of a series of three programs from a session of the recent Belmont Conference on "Literature: Genre and Tradition," Prof. Keith Aldrich of UCSanta Barbara discusses the Troy theme in Euripides.

1:35 A LOCATELLI CONCERTO. a cinque in F minor, Opus 1, No. 8, performed by I Musici. (Philips PHM 500025)

2:00 THE TROY LEGEND IN LITERATURE-II. Prof. Lawrence V. Ryan of Stanford University describes treatments of the theme in Medieval and Renaissance literature.

2:30 HELEN WATTS SINGS PURCELL. Single songs and songs for the theater by Henry Purcell. Helen Watts is accompanied by harpsichordist Thurston Dart. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50173)

3:00 THE TROY LEGEND IN LITERATURE-Ill. Prof. Emile Snyder of the University of Washington traces the Troy theme through modern literature.

3:30 A RECITAL BY VLADIMIR HOROWITZ. Chopin's Sonata No. 2 in B-flat minor, the Arabesque, Opus 18 of Robert Schumann, several Etudes by Rachmaninoff and the Hungarian Rhapsody No. 19. (Columbia KL 5771)

4:15 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

  • Prince Caspian-IX: "What Lucy Saw"
  • Rhymes and Poems: Introduced, selected and read by Mrs. Alice Benioff
  • The Salt Welsh Sea: A tale by Gwyn Jones read by Diana Leigh-Williams

5:15 PREVIEW. Claire lsaacs (Sept. 25)

5:30 DGG ARCHIVE SERIES

  • HANDEL Organ Concerto, Op. 4, No. 2, B-flat (Mueller, Basil orch—Wenzinger) (Arc 3100) (15)
  • TELEMANN Viola do Gamba Sonata (Koch, Gerwig) (Arc 3043) (10)
  • LASSUS Motets: "Miserere mel" Domine convertere," "Tui sunt coeli" (Aachener choir—Rehmann) (Arc 3077) (8)
  • TELEMANN Concerto, E major (Ens—Seiler) (Arc 3109) (16)
  • HAYDN Divertimento No. 48, D major (Salzburg Baryton Trio) (Arc 3120) (11)

6:30 KPFA NEWS

7:00 COMMENTARY. Sidney Roger (SEPT. 27)

7:15 SPECIAL REPORT By KPFA News (SEP. 27)

7:30 THE MELOS ENSEMBLE PLAYS BEETHOVEN. The Septet in E-flat, Opus 20 performed by the Melos Ensemble of London. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50185)

8:15 CLARK KERR: The Uses of the University, II. In the second of three lectures delivered by Dr. Kerr, president of the University California, at Harvard University as Godkin lecturer for 1963, he discusses "The Realities of the Federal Grant University."

9:15 THEATER REVIEW. R. G. Davis

9:30 DEMOCRACY: LIBERAL OR CONSERVATIVE? John Cogley, of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions at Santa Barbara, speaking to an Adult Education Center group.

10:30 MODERN JAZZ SCENE. Philip F. Elwood (SEPT. 27)

11:00 BOOKS. Kenneth Rexroth (Sept. 22)

11:30 SING ME A SONG WITH SOCIAL SIGNIFICANCE. John Ohliger.

FRIDAY, September 27

7:00 CHAMBER MUSIC BY BRAHMS

  • Fantasias, Op. 116 (Demus) (Westminster 18802) (21)
  • Trio in E-flat for piano, violin, & horn, Op. 40 (Horszowski, Schneider, Jones) (Columbia 4892) (31)
  • Vier ernste Gesange, Op. 121 (Fischer-Dieskau, Demus) (Deutsche Gramophon 18644) (19)
  • Piano Quartet No. 1 in G, Op. 25 (Demus, Barylli Quartet) (Westminster 18773) (40)

9:00 COMMENTARY. Sidney Roger (Sept.26)

9:15 WINESBURG, OHIO-XV. Onslow Stevens reads "Death." (KPFK)

9:40 HELEN WATTS SINGS SCARLATTI. Two cantatas by Alessandro Scarlatti, II Rossignuolo and Clan Vezzosa e Bella, are sung by contralto Helen Watts. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50173)

10:00 MAN ON EARTH. Ecologist S. P. R. Charter (Sept. 22)

10:30 "MRS. G. B. S." A conversation with Janet Dunbar, author of a recently published biography of Shaw's wife. (WBAI)

11:15 SPECIAL REPORT (Sept. 26)

11:30 ORCHESTRAL CONCERT (Sept. 13)

  • BACH Violin Concerto No. 1 (14),
  • BRUCKNER Symphony No. 7, E major (65)

1:00 THE SHAPE OF MUSIC-Ill. Continuing the series by Robert Erickson (Archives)

1:35 WINESBURG, OHIO-XVI. Onslow Stev-


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ens concludes his readings from the Sherwood Anderson collection with "Sophistication" and "Departure." (KPFK)

2:00 MODERN JAZZ SCENE. Philip F. Elwood (Sept. 26)

2:30 LATIN AMERICA: World in Revolution. A talk by Sidney Lens. (KPFK) (Sept. 15)

3:45 GOLDEN VOICES. Anthony Boucher (Sept. 25)

4:15 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

  • Prince Caspian-X: "The Return of the Lion"
  • Sir Launcelot and the Mouse: A Tale of Miss Tiddy, written and read by Else Fagrell
  • What's Going On?

5:30 CHAMBER SERIES

  • BACH Flute Sonata, E minor, BWV 1034 (Rampal, Veyron-Lacroix)
    (Epic 6045) (14)
  • BERG Sonata for Piano, Op. I (Gould) (Col 5336) (13)
  • HAYDN Quartet, Op. 33, No. 3, C major Schneider, Qrt) (HS 9017) (23)
  • HANDEL Flute Sonata, G major, Op. 1, No. 5 (Baker, Marlowe) (Decca 9607) (9)

6:30 KPFA NEWS

7:00 COMMENTARY. Urban Whitaker (SEP. 28)

7:15 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER. Trevor Thomas (SEPT. 29)

7:30 MY WORD! (BBC) (OCT. 1)

8:00 THE FOUR SEASONS. Antonio Vivaldi's programmatic concerti celebrating the four seasons, performed by Karl Munchinger and the Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra. (Richmond B 19056)

8:45 ACADEMIC FREEDOM. Dr. Russell Kirk, author, lecturer, and a visiting professor of politics this summer at Los Angeles State College, discusses limitations on conservative professors. (KPFK)

9:30 THE ELEVENTH HOUR. Time held for new programs.

10:30 JOSEPH KRIPS CONDUCTS MOZART. The D minor Requiem, K626, with soloists Werner Pech, Hans Breitschopf, Walter Ludwig, Harold Proglhof and the Vienna Hofmusikkapelle. (Richmond B 19077)

11:30 THE MIDNIGHT SPECIAL. With no limitations on conservative folksters.

SATURDAY, September 28

8:00 THEATRE MUSIC BY KURT WEILL.

  • Johnny Johnson (Soloists, orchestra—Matlowsky) (MGM 3447) (52)
  • Music for the Stage (MGM Chamber Orch.—Winograd) (MGM 3519) (17)
  • Seven Deadly Sins (Lenya, soloists, orch.—Bruckner-Ruggeberg)
    (Columbia 5175) (37)

10:00 COMMENTARY. Urban Whitaker (Sep. 27)

10:15 THE VIETNAM EXILES. Dr. Helen Lamb, who is working on a book on South Vietnam, talks with Chris Koch. (WBAI)

11:00 MUSIC OF VENZUELA. Robert Garfias in another of his ethnic music series from KRAB in Seattle.

12:30 CONVERSATION: Ignazio Silone. A discussion of the social and political background of Silone's work. (WBAI) (Sept. 15)

1:00 AUTOMATION IN EDUCATION. A program on teaching machines and programmed instruction, produced and edited by Chris Koch. (WBAI)

2:00 FOLK MUSIC WITH ROLF CAHN (Sep. 23)

2:45 MY FATHER'S ORCHARD. Raymond Kennedy reads Chapter 3 from Part II of his novel. (WBAI)

3:15 SOUTHERN LABOR AND CIVIL RIGHTS. A field documentary produced by Dale Minor in Birmingham, Ala., and Jackson, Miss. (WBAI)

4:15 EUDICE SHAPIRO PLAYS STRAVINSKY. The Los Angeles violinist is accompanied by Brooks Smith in Stravinsky's Duo Concertant. (Ava A/AS15)

4:30 NORTHERN LABOR AND CIVIL RIGHTS. James Farmer, executive director of CORE, and Nick Kisburg, education director of Joint Council 16 of the Teamsters. Chris Koch moderating. (WBAI)

5:35 PIERRE MONTEUX CONDUCTS BRAHMS. A new recording by the 88-year-old principal director of the London Symphony Orchestra. He conducts the Academic Festival Overture and the Symphony No. 2 in D major. (Philips PHM 50003'5)

6:30 KPFA NEWS

6:45 PAUL GOODMAN ON EDUCATION-VI. In the last of his series, M.r. Goodman's title is "Synthesis." (WBAI)

7:00 COMMENTARY. Frank Quinn

7:15 HAPPY BIRTHDAY, PIERRE MONTEUX. A rehearsal of the Beethoven Ninth led by Pierre Monteux. The orchestra decides to celebrate his 88th birthday with an impromptu performance of the Marseillaise. (KPFK)

8:15 LABOR, AUTOMATION, AND RACE. A. Philip Randolph is interviewed by Mort Perry and Paul Schaffer. (WBAI)

8:35 WALTER REUTHER ON CIVIL RIGHTS. The president of the United Auto Workers speaks to the 1963 Urban League conference in Los Angeles. (KPFK)

9:10 NEW MUSIC ENSEMBLE CONCERT. From the University of California at Davis, a concert of compositions by faculty members Jerome Rosen, Larry Austin, and Richard Swift.

10:30 HOW QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT? Hollywood director Lewis Milestone discusses movies and performers with Herbert Feinstein.

11:00 THE MATE OF THE BALROG. No. 3 in our rebroadcasts of the Compendium Cliche Co. productions—this one a drama of the high seas of Outer Space, written by Jim


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Armstrong and produced by John Whiting and Mr. A.

SUNDAY, September 29

8:00 RAMEAU Platee (Soloists, Choeurs du Festival d'Aixen-Provence, Crch. de la Societe des Concerts du Conservatoire-Rosbaud) (Pathe 2234) (108)

10:00 BOOKS. Kenneth Rexroth (OCT. 3)

10:30 REPORT TO THE SUBSCRIBER. Trevor Thomas (Sept. 27)

10:45 ABERNATHY, 1960-LOMAX, 1963. On Freedom Road: The Rev. Ralph Abernathy speaking at a rally following the opening of lunch counters to Negroes in Nashville, in November 1960. Louis Lomax addresses a rally in San Francisco in late August, 1963, of the United San Francisco Freedom Movement.

12:00 JAZZ REVIEW

1:30 THE CULTURAL ARTS IN CALIFORNIA-I: Government and University Aid to the Arts. In the first of nine programs in this Folio from the UCLA weekend symposium last April on the arts, Lawrence Lipton discusses what institutions can and/or should do for art and culture. Mr. Lipton is the author of a forthcoming book, "The Growing Edge" (UC Press). (KPFK)

2:00 ORGAN MUSIC BY JOHN BULL. Thurston Dart plays fantasies, preludes, dance pieces and liturgical pieces by John Bull on a Snetzler bureau organ of 1760. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50130)

2:45 TILLICH ON RELIGION, SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY. Dr. Paul Tillich delivers the second of the 1963 Regents' lectures last February at UCSanta Barbara.

4:00 BARBARA DANE IN SONG AND COMMENT. Recorded at the Berkeley Encampment for Citizenship, 1963.

5:00 THE WAY OF THE MASTERS. A short story about a man looking for a meaning, read by the author, Theodore Roszak.

5:45 CLARINETIST GERVASE DE PEYER plays Weber's Grand Duo Concertant, Le Tombeau de Ravel by Benjamina, and Martinu's Sonatino. (L'Oiseau Lyre CL 50197)

6:30 KPFA NEWS

6:45 REVIEW OF THE BRITISH WEEKLIES (BFA)

7:00 COMMENTARY. To be announced (SEP. 30)

7:15 THE CULTURAL ARTS IN CALIFORNIA-II: Culture in America. The speaker is August Heckscher, director of the Twentieth Century Fund, and comment follows from composer Roy Harris, poet Kenneth Rexroth, motion picture producer Stanley Kramer, and poet Lawrence Lipton. (KPFK)

9:30 OPERA REVIEW. Another in our regular reviews of the San Francisco
Opera season.

10:00 LISTENING POST Reserved for longer recorded compositions recently released.

MONDAY, September 30

7:00 MUSIC BY BARTOK

  • Music for strings, percussion, & celesta (RIAS orch.—Fricsay) (Decca, 9747) (30)
  • Piano Improvisations, Op. 20 (Seemonn) (Decca 4085) (13)
  • Contrasts for violin, clarinet & piano (Mann, Drucker, Hambro) (Bartok 916) (15)
  • The Wooden Prince (New Symphony Orch. of London—Susskind) (Bartok 308/208a) (53)

9:00 COMMENTARY. To be announced (Sep. 29)

9:15 NO TIME FOR HEROES. A round table discussion from the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, moderated by John Cogley. (Sept. 12)

10:15 KEYBOARD MUSIC BY GIBBONS AND FARNABY. The harpsichordist is Thurston Dart. The Faranaby pieces are transcribed from the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book, the Gibbons pieces from Parthenia and Cosyn VB. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50131)

11:00 THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A CATHOLIC ANARCHIST-Ill. Ammon Hennacy concludes. (Sept. 20)

11:30 CHAMBER-VOCAL CONCERT (Sept. 14)

  • POULENC Le Bal Masque (19)
  • HONEGGER Le Roi David (72)

1:00 THE SHAPE OF MUSIC-IV. Robert Erickson's series continues. (Archives)

1:30 ON SOCIAL WELFARE. E. P. "Red" Stephenson, director of Neighborhood House in North Richmond, talks with the 1963 Berkeley Encampment for Citizenship.

2:35 COLIN DAVIS CONDUCTS STRAVINSKY. The Dumbarton Oaks Concerto, Dances Concertantes, and the Concerto in D performed by the English Chamber Orchestra. (L'Oiseau Lyre OL 50219)

3:30 CONVERSATION: Margaret Webster. Dame Margaret talks with Theresa Loeb Cone about her career in the theater. (Sept.10)

4:00 CHILDREN'S BOOK SAMPLER. Ellyn Beaty

4:15 PROGRAMS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

  • Stories for Young People: Toby Halpern reads "The Little Igloo" by Gerald Beim
  • Prince Caspian-XI: "The Lion Roars"
  • Some Children's Songs: Sung by RoIf Cahn (Archives)
  • The Fisherman and his Wife With Chuck Levy and Virginia Maynard (Archives)

5:30 CHAMBER SERIES

  • BACH Flute Sonata, C major, BWV 1033 (Rampal, Veyron-Lacroix)
    (Epic 6045) (8)
  • COPLAND Piano Sonata (Fleisher) (Epic 3862) (23)

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