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The Gazette from Montreal, Quebec, Canada • 19

Publication:
The Gazettei
Location:
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
19
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE LIVELY ARTS THE GAZETTE, SATURDAY, JANUARY 11, 1969 19 Bernard Dulic Ljungh At v25' 0 vvC i the same rigid adherence to format. Treatment is much freer. Drama music has changed immensely too. We no longer use it as a backdrop or setting as we did when piays had 40 to 60 background cues. Today we use music with tremendous discretion and for the distinct purpose of accenting an event." Ljungh said the "old professional" was still the mainstay of the Stage troupe," the key to the tempo and style of performance, and it's gratifying to note that there are still a great number of them available.

CBC Stage will mark its silver jubilee with three months of special presentations, including works by the most prominent and prolific writers for the series over the years. Conrad's Heart of Darkness, adapted by Andrew Allan, will be presented Jan. 19. A week later, the program will broadcast Mont-reaier Alvin 1 a 's adaptation of Francoise Lan-glois' Encore Cinq Minutes, winner of the Governor General's Fiction Award in 1967. eventually and wisely returned to more prosaic occupations but their success average has been extremely good.

Together they've done a great deal to focus attention, through adaptations, on Canadian novels end short stories. That radio exposure often meant the difference between survival and oblivion for much Canadian writing. "The Canadian novel may not be worthy of a Nobel Prize." Ljungh said the other day, "but it's honest, sincere and simple and represents the birth of a nation in its own way. Whether it's by a Callaghan, a Boyle or a Mitchell, it's something individually Canadian and Stage has been instrumental in drawing attention to it. "I consider the series within the Stage series, the adaptations of Canadian novels, the most important event in my regime, just as Andrew had the pleasire of starting on their way a number of people who are still with us." Allan concentrated on what he called "a report to listen Jl' l'7 if i -in Hi--i Vi T- fiiT fr 1 1 WrtitlWwiiiA teJsfcA 4 FAMILY PORTRAIT: Sebastion Cabot, Brian Keith, Whitaker, Cthy Garver and Anissa Jones, thd happy members of Family Affair, seen in color on Channel 12, Mondays at 7 p.m.

(On Ch. 3, at 9.30 p.m.) GEORGE WASHINGTON: Peter Lawford ploys the role of Father of his Country, when he joins Judy Carne and the rest of the gang on Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In, Monday 7.30 p.m. in color on Channel 12. (On Ch. 5, at 8 p.m.) reekend TV Teekend radio SATURDAY SATURDAY No.

1. String Quartet in Major, Op. 54, No. 2, The Juilliard String Quartet. Sunday, January 12, 4 a.m.

to 7 a.m. (CKVL-FM) Sonatas. Beethoven: Sonata No. 32 in minor, Op. Ill, piano by Hans Richter-Haaser.

Philharmonia Orchestra. Puccini: Act 3, Manon Lescaut. Verdi: Prelude, Act 3, La Tra-viata. Leoncavallo: I Pagli-acci. Mascagni: Act 3, L'Amico Fritz.

Schmidt: Notre Dame. Berlioz: The Trojans, Royal Hunt and Storm, Act 3, Herbert Von Karajan conducting. Virtuosity. Debussy: Reverie. Tchaikovsky: Mel-odie, Op.

42, No. 3. Kreisler: Schon Rosmarin, Tchaikovsky: Dance of the Sugar Plum Fa'ry, from The Nutcracker. Almeida: Discantus. Albniz: Tango Espanol, Laurindo Almeida, Alto Guitar.

Dukas: Vilanelle, with Gerald Moore, piano. Mozart: Divertimento in Flat Major, Minuet. Dit-tersdorf: Partita in major. Haydn: Symphony No. 31 in Major, Denis 'Brain, horn, the Philharmonia Orchestra cond.

by Walter Susskind. Beethoven. Septet Op. 20, in Flat Major. Sonata for Bas 7 st Jboofc in ers of the state of dramatic writing in Canada." Ljungh said he "always believed in the living novel," and he feels radio "can play a tremendous part in drawing attention to the impressions a i makes of moods and morals of his time." Radio can, indeed, play a great-part, but today it must first tear a lot of people away from television in the evening.

Especially the younger generation whose members might make up a large part of the audience for popular on radio during the day, but who are foreign ts drama in words and music only without a moving picture. Standards Better Ljungh said he felt Che standard of radio writing and production has improved and matured with the years, but the old-time writers were still around. "They've kept pace with new language, new demands, new treatment imposed on us by better electronic equipment. Styles have changed quite a bit. We no longer have phony Orchestra conducted bv Istvan Kertesz.

4.00 p.m. (CBM-FM) New Records: Peter Haworth reviews new releases of the Requiem by Delius, the Siring Quartet in minor, MacMil-, lan, and Carnaval by Schumann. 6.30 p.m. (CBM-AM) Indian Magazine: An inquiry into medical services for Indians in Saskatchewan, with special reference to the "Medicine Chest" clause of Treaty No. 6.

1 Johnny Yesno is host. 7.03 p.m. (CBM-AM) On Stage: Oscar Peterson in concert, with Sam Jones, bass, and Bobby Durham, drums. 8.00 p.m. (CBM-FM) Saturday Evening: The Double, a play by Friedrich matt.

Cast: Peter Haworth, Roy Brinsoil, David Hughes and Peter Brockington. Sonata for unaccompanied violin, Bartok, Lorand Fenyves. Montreal novelist Mordecai Richler in conversation with David Watmough. 8.00 p.m. (CJFM).

Highlights-James Last, Ronnie Aid-rich, Paul Mauriat, Percy Faith, the Brass Ring, Kai SUNDAY Spritzer. Today: Oriental music, particularly its tradition of improvisation. Bud Shank, flute, and Ravi Shan-kar, sitar, play music from the film Pather Panchali. Yehudi Menuhin also plays a duet with Shankar. 2.03 p.m.

(CBM-AM) CBC Stage: A Special 90-minute production. Joe Katona, a dramatized version of a novel by Len Peterson. The story is set in the Depression, and concerns a young harvester who takes lodging with a farmer, his wife and his two daughters. 2.30 p.m. (CBM-FM) En-Core: Part I Tom Kines sings music of the sea.

Part II Days of Sail: Pier-Head Yarns. First-person accounts of the days of the square-riggers by seafarers in Maritime ports. Part III Lois Marshall, soprano, and the Gabora String Quartet per form works by Coulthard and Respighi. 4.03 p.m. (CBM-AM): CBC Showcase: Part I I Said It and I'm Glad, a revue for radio from CBC Halifax.

Part II Songs by Theodore Bikel, produced by CBC Montreal. 5.30 p.m. (CBM-AM) Cross 1 CBC Stage CBC Stage, the network's major radio drama series, marks its 25 anniversary this month. That's a long time for any program to last on radio, aid especially for a dramatic program. To mark the anniversary, CBC will offer a special 90-minute presentation at 2.03 tomorrow afternoon.

It's an adaptation by Len Peterson of his novel j'oe Katona, scheduled for publication this fall. Peterson has bridged the two 'regimes' of CBC Stage the one of Andrew Allan who started the series with Stage '44 and the one of Esse W. Ljungh who took over in 1955 when the series became CBC Stage. Peterson, as an officer in the Canadian Army, was one of the first contributors to Stage '44. He's been a tremendous writer for it since.

Dominating Pair Allan and Ljungh have been dominating forces in CBC drama. They've discovered and encouraged a great many promising writers and actors as well as many who third annual Super Bowl Game. Curt Gowdy, Kyle Rote and Al DeRogatis report in English, Yves Letourneau gives the story in French. (Live, and other programming is pre-empted). 4.00 p.m.

(x12) Films. The Loon's Necklace, and The Seasons. 5.00 p.m. (x3) Jean-Claude Killy. Killy tests a pair of maid-to-order skis in the Sierras at Mammoth Mountain, Bob Landers is narrator.

I 5.00 p.m. (x12) Untamed World. Armand and Micaela and the Animals. A visit to the home of Armand and Micaela Denis, in Nairobi, Kenya, whee they have spent 20 years filming Afican wildlife. 5.30 p.m.

(x8M) Tom Jones Special. Welshman Tom Jones, with guests Juliet Prowse, Dick Cavett, Mireille Mathieu and the 5th Dimension put sparkle into an hour of music and song. 6.00 p.m. (x6) Walt Disney. Those Calloways.

One of Disney's 1964 movies, a good family film starring Brian Keith, (Uncle Bill, in Family Affair) Brandon de Wilde, Vera Miles, Walter Brennan, Ed Wynn and Linda Evans. (On 5, at 7.30 p.m.) 7.00 p.m. (10) Le Rideau S'ouvre. Variety program with Les Jerolas, Madeleine Cormier and Yvon Dupre, host Jacques Normand. 7.00 p.m.

ZOOM. Special guest tonight is Gil- bert Becaud. 7.30 p.m. (xl2) The Smothers Brothers Show. The guests tonight are the show's entire crew of writers.

(On Channel 3, at 9 p.m.) 8.00 p.m. Ed Sullivan. From Circus in Las Vegas. Guests tentatively scheduled: Gina Lollobrigida, Don Jerry Vale, the Chambers Brothers, the Nitwits and Roy Cardenas. 8.30 p.m.

(x2tx7) Les Beaux Dimanches. A 1 a Theatre Night, with Maurice Brad-dall's comedy, Baby Hamilton, the French version by Marianne Andre, starring Guy Hoffman, Yves Letourneau, Janine Sutto and Gisele Schmidt. 9.00 p.m. Movie. Zulu (U.K.

1964) Vivid and exciting historical drama of a Zulu War in 1879. Filmed on location, narration by Richard Burton and starring Stanley Baker, Jack Hawkins, Michael Caine, Ulla Jacobsson and Nigel Green. 10.00 p.m. (xi) The Way It Is. Air traffic congestion and the causes of flight accidents.

10.00 p.m. (xl2) Trudeau Abroad. News Special. Regu-1 ar programming is preempted for this occasion. 11.30 p.m.

(5) Movie. Sorrowful Jones. Good comedy about a gambler who receives a little girl as security for a debt. Starring Lucille Ball, Bob Hope, and William Demarest. 11.30 p.m.

(6) Movie. Sherlock Holmes in Washington (1942) Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce solve the mystery of a stolen document. 11.30 p.m. (7) Movie. La Dame et le Toreador (1951) Drama starring Robert Stack and Joy Page.

12.00 midnight (x2) Movies. 1. a ternelle Amazonie. Documentary by Paul Lambert on the year he spent with primitive tribes in the jungles of S.A. 2.

Salut les Cubains. A salute to the Cuban revolutionaries, by Agnes Varda, with Michel Piccoli. 12.00 midnight (8M) Movie. Torch Song (1953) Drama, with Joan Crawford and Michael Wilding. 1.00 p.m.

Golf. CBS Goif Classic, ayed ai Ak.on, Ohio. The Knudsen-Henning team vs. Archer-Lunn, from the Firestone Country Club. Jean-Maurice Bailly and Jacques Barette are the commentators.

On Channel 3, at 4 p.m. with English commentary by Jack Whitaker and Gary Middlecoff.) 2.00 p.m. (x5) Senior Bowl Football Special. The 20th Annual Senior Bowl, telecast from Mobile, Alabama. The South vs the North.

Jim Simpson and Elmer Angs'man report. (Live, and regular programming is pre-empted.) .2.00 p.m. (x3) Skippy. Adventure program, filmed in the Waratah National Forest in Australia. Today's episode finds Kathy Troutt, a beaufi-ful marine biologist, recruiting Mark, Sonny and Skippy, the Bush Kangaroo, to help her on a job in the Flinders ftiver.

Kathy Troutt, plays Kathy Lucas, and others in the cast are Ken James, Garry Partkhurst, Ed Deve-reaux and of course the hero, Skippy. This program is carried on Channel at 4.30 p.m. and on Channels 2 and 7, at p.m. 2.00 p.m. (xl2) Let's Find Out.

Steve Montague is host for a program on Ireland. 3.C0 p.m. (2,7) Images En Tete. Double programme. Cuba Si.

-(Fr. 1962) Documentary on the Cuban revolution. 2. Bande a Bebel Biography of a -P a 1 Bel-mondo, with Belmondo and Nicole Sonneville. 4.30 p.m.

(xl2) Sports Hot Seat. Johnny Esaw talks to Owens, former U.S. track and field star, about the controversial attitudes towards black athletes. Jim Hunt, Red Fisher and Russ Taylor are the panelists. 5.00 p.m.

World of Golf. Arnold Palmer, Gay Brewer and Chi Chi Rodriguez challenge Puerto Rico's El Conquistador course over-: looking the village of Las Croabas. Jimmy Demaret and Gene Sarazen report. 5.00 p.m. Wide World of Sports.

1. Women's International Alpine Skiing Championships at Oberstaufen, West Germany. 2. Mexican 1,000 mile Crosscountry Road Racing Cham 10.00 a.m. The Music of Haydn: Svmphony no.

90 in and Symnhony No. 92 in G. The Orchestra of Naples, conducted by Denis Vauehan. 1.10 p.m. (CBM-FM) Fourth Estate: The world of newspapers.

Today, a compilation by Bruce Kidd of reports on the 1968 Olympic Games, 2.00 p.m. (CBM-AM) Metropolitan Opera: The Barber of Seville, Rossini, with Roberta Peters as Ros'ina, Luigi Alma as Count Almaviva, Mario Sereni as Figaro, Fernando Corena as Dr. Bartolo and Giorgio Tozzi as Don Basi-lio. Conductor: Richard Bo-nynge. 2.03 p.m.

(CBM-FM) BBC Concert: Concerto Grosso, Op. 3, No. 4, Handel; Concerto in a minor for viola d'amore and strings, Vivaldi, soloist Walter Trampler; Symphony No. 10 for strings, Mendelssohn. Academy of St.

Martin-in-the- Fields. String Quartet No. 2, Alan Raws-thorne, Alberni String Quartet; Quintet for piano and winds, Rawstorne, The Melos Ensemble; Symphony No. 2 in Brahms, London Sym- 8.00 a.m. (CKVL-FM) Songs of the Synagogue.

Presented by Larry Fredericks, featuring, The Rev. Dr. William F. Rosenblum, Jan Peerce, Maurice Ganghoff, Voices of Israel, and others. 8.05 a.m.

(CBM-FM) Music for a Sunday Morning: Symphonic Variations, Franck; Songs of the Forests, Shostakovich; Images for Orchestra, Debussy; Gloria, Poulenc. 9.00 a.m. (CBM-AM) Sunday Morning Magazine: Extended to one hour for a special report on the Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference in London. (Repeated on CBM-FM at 10.00 a.m.). 11.00 a.m.

(CBM-AM) Special! A question-and-answer session between Prime Minister Trudeau and Commonwealth students in London, running approximately two hours. 12.00 noon (CBM-FM) Some Links in a Chain: A series on the mass media. Today: Eurovision, discussed by Clifford Brown and Neville Clark. 1.30 p.m. (CBM-FM) Fin-gers and Frets: A series about the lute, the harp and related instruments, with Montreal guitarist Louis THE WORLD AT LARGE: International Fiction and Poetry A reading-discussion course over television channel 12, Sunday mornings, 10 to 10.30 Is "Beer In The Snooker by Waguih Ghali to be discussed tomorrow, Sunday, January 12 Warner, Raymond Lefebvre.

Jerry Vale, Andy Williams, Harry Belafonte, Dean Martin, Matt Monro, Claudine Longet, Nancy Sinatra, Francoise Hardy. The Gunter Kallman Chorus, The Brothers Four, Ray Conniff Singers, Pozo Seco Singers. 8.03 p.m. (CBM-AM) CBC Metronome: Renaissance music played on instruments of the period. Also an item on Winnipeg Symphony's plans to tour Northern Manitoba.

9.00 p.m. (CKVL-FM) Opera. Bizet: Carmen, with Leontyne Price, Franco Corel-li, Robert Merrill, Mirella Freni, Monique Linval, Genevieve Macaux, Jean-Chris-tophe Benoit, Maurice Besan-con, Frank Schooten, Bernard Demigny, The Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Herbert Von Karajan, Vienna State Opera Chorus, and the Vienna Boys Choir. 10.03 p.m.- (CBM-AM) Anthology: Poems and a short story, The House of the Whale, by Gwendolyn McE wen. 11.03 p.m.

(CBM-AM) What's Guests: Pop singers Glen Brown and Dee Higgins. From the Colonnade Theatre, Toronto. 11.30 p.m. (CKVL-FM) Chamber Music. Haydn: String Quartet in major, Op.

54, Country Checkup: Should Canada remain within the British Commonwealth or not? Will upholding the Commonwealth connection inevitably result in undermining Confederation? Betty Shapiro's guest is John Holmes of the Canadian Institute of International Affairs. 7.00 p.m. (CBM-AM) NHL Hockey: Oakland at Detroit. 7.30 p.m. (CKVL-FM) Ru-binstein.

Chopin Waltzes: No. 7 to 14 and No. 1. 7.35 p.m. (CBM-FM) Opera Theatre: La Gioconda, by Ponchielli.

Chorus and orchestra of the Academy of St. Cecilia, Rome. Cast includes Renata Tebaldi, Marilyn Home and Robert Merrill. 8.00 p.m. (CKVL-FM) Boston Symphony: Prokofieff: Violin Concerto No.

2 in minor, Op. 63, with Jascha Heifetz, violin. Orch. cond. by Charles Munch.

Stravinsky: Suite from The Firebird. Rimsky-Korsakoff Suite from Le Coq d'Or. Orch. cond. by Erich Leinsdorf.

8.00 p.m. (CJMS-FM) Popular Concert with Yolande Du-lude. Haydn: Concerto No. 1, in Major for Lyre, with Hugo Ruf. Beethoven: Concerto No.

3 in minor, Op. 37 for Piano, with Rudolf Ser-kin and the New York Philharmonic, with Leonard Bernstein. Verdi: Extracts from Luisa Miller, with Monserrat Caballe, Carlo Bergonzi, Sher-rill Milnes, with the RCA Italian Opera Orchestra, cond. by Georges Pretre. 9.00 p.m.

(CKVL-FM) Opera. B'zet: Carmen, with Leontyne Price, Franco Co-relli, Robert Merrill, Mirella Freni, Monique Linval, Genevieve Macaux, Jean-Chris-tophe Benoit, Maurice Be-sancon, Frank Schooten, Ber-na-d Demigny, The Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Herbert Von Karajan, Vienna State Opera Chorus, and the Vienna Boys 11.30 p.m. (CKVL-FM) Chamber Music. Haydn: Siring Quartet in Major, Op. 54, No.

1. String Quartet in Major, Op. 54, No. 2, The Juilliard String Quartet. I soon and Violoncello in Flat Major, K.

292, Alfred Malecek, violin, Dietrich Gerhardt, viola, Heinrich Majowski, violoncello, Manfred Braun, bassoon Gunter Kopp, horn. Sacred Music. Schutz: bone, 0 dulcis, Jesu. Salve Re-; gina. De Padilla: Exsultate justi in Domino Franco: Magnificat, The Roger Wagner Chorale cond.

by Robert Wagner. Voices of the Opera. Highlights from Carmen, with Elise Kahn, Tony Poncet, Jean Borthayre, Ir(ne Jaumil-lot, Angela Kotthoff, Maria Graf, Chrous and L'Opera de Karlsruhe cond. by Marcel Couraud. A CHRISTIAN SCIENCE RADIO SERIES Sundays 9.45 a.m.

CKVL Dial 850 Conductor ALEXANDER BROTT Two two pianos by J. S. Bach Concerto Grosso for four violins by Locatelli Concerto Grosso for four violins by Vivaldi MONDAY JANUARY 27 8:30 p.m. ADULT TICKETS $3.50 STUDENT TICKETS $2.00 Information Reservation 935-4955 10 to 12 noon registration forms. for 0 schedule of books and viewing dotes ond ond information on applying this course toward a B.A.

degree, please telephone THOMAS MORE INSTITUTE, 842-5076 pionships, held in November at Baja California, Mexico. Jim McKay reports. 7.30 p.m. The Jackie Gleason Show. Guests tonight include George Kirby, Louis Nye, Sonny Sands and British music hall performer Max Bygraves.

8.00 p.m. Hockey Night in Canada. The Boston Bruins meet the Canadieris in Montreal. Danny Gallivan cails the and Dick Irvin and Ted Darling give the English commentary. Rene a a lier, Jean-Maurice Bailly, Richard Garneau and i 0 el Duval report in French.

8.30 p.m. (xl2) Movie. The Pleasure of His Company. (1961) Daffy drawing room comedy about a father who tries to break up his daughter's wedding plans so he can take her on a trip to Europe. Starring Fred Astaire, Debbie Reynolds, Lilli Palmer, Tab Hunter and Charles Ruggles.

9.00 p.m. (x5) Movie. Bird-man of Alcatfaz. (1962) Excellent drama, about Robert Stroud, a convict who became an authority on diseases of caged birds during his years of solitary confinement. Burt Lancaster stars as Stroud in a great performance, others include Karl Maiden, Thelma Ritter, Betty Field and Ed-mond O'Brien.

11.15 p.m. (x2) Movies. 1. Le Triporteur. (Fr.

1957) Comedy drama, with Dairy Cowl and Beatrice Altariba. 2. Tu Ne Tueras Point. (Fr. Yugoslavia, 1961) Drama with Laurent Terzieff and Suzanne Flon.

11.15 p.m. (8M) Movie Doctor in the House. (U.K. 1955) Wild comedy about young graduating medical men, (some of them never do seem to graduate,) starring Dirk Bogarde, Kay Kendall, Kenneth More and Muriel Pavlow. 11.30 p.m.

(x6) Movie. All Right, Who's Been Eating the Bluebells? (West Ger. 1962) Comedy with Maria Schell and Paul Christman. 11.40 p.m. (12) Movie.

Secret of Blood Island. (U.K. 1965) World War II drama about British POW'S helping a girl parachutist to escape from the Japanese. Starring Barbara Shelley and Jack Hedley. St.

Louis Blues vs. the North Stars at Minneapolis. Dan Kelly and Bill Mazer report (live). 1.15 p.m. (x6) Gardening.

Mrs. Koyoto Boycott demonstrates Ikebana, the Japanese method of indoor gardening. 1.30 p.m. (x5) Guideline. Second in the series of interviews with Church leaders.

Today, Archbishop John Cody of Chicago. Moderator, Father Donald Connolly of the National Catholic Office for Radio and TV. 1.30 p.m. (12) Talk-In. Is Violence Necessary? Host is Rev.

Ed Vokey. 2.00 p.m. (6) Man Alive. From Radar to Rehabilitation. A visit to the Adult Occupational Centre at Edgar, Ont.

Supt. Ian Wallace and social worker J. G. Moore are interviewed. Host is Roy Bon-isteel.

2.30 p.m. Bowl Pre Game and at 3 p.m. the Game. The AFL's New York Jets meet the NFL's Baltimore Colts in the FucGILL CHAMBER ORCHESTRA Soloists: BOUCHARD MORISSET 3T 'Xi i Duo Pianists "At J4i SUNDAY 3 1 rw.K McGILL UNIVERSITY 10.30 a.m. (x3) Look Up and Live.

Worship in a Secular i Age. A history of Christian music, art, architecture and ritual. First of a four-part series on the changing liturgy. Host is Roger Ortmayer. i 10.30 a.m.

(8M) Movie. The Tanks Are Coming (1951) Good World War II drama, with Steve Cochran, Philip Carey and Mori Aldon. 11.00 a.m. (x3) Camera Three. The Living Theatre is examined by Theatre founders Julian Beck and his wife Judith Malina in an interview with Jack Kroll.

11.00 a.m. (x6) Would You Believe? Homosexuality a Sin or a Crime? Panel discussion, with Rev. Roger Balk and Rabbi Leonard Poller, and two guests who remain anonymous. 12.00 noon (x2) D'Hier a Demain. Les Pheniciens: Carthage et la Route de l'Or.

Documentary bringing the history of the Phoenicians to life, film produced by Jean Mazel. 1.00 p.m. (x3) Pro Hockey. Centre for Continuing Education MUSIC APPRECIATION H6-102. MUSIC APPRECIATION I.

10 lectures of Vi hours. Mondays at 6:30 p.m. beginning January 20. Fei $25.00. Survey of Western Music.

Emphasis is on stylistic, structural and textural comparisons between works of the various periods. Illustrated with recordings. H6-103. MUSIC APPRECIATION II. 10 lectures of 1 Vi hours.

Mondays at 8:30 p.m. beginning January 20. Fee $25.00. Restricted to those who have taken a course in Music Appreciation from Mr. Patrick Blake.

The course will examine specific works of the various periods from the Baroque to the 20th Century, relating them to their times. Illustrated with recordings. Registration by moll until January 17; in person from 9:00 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, until February 7. INDIAN MAGAZINE: Johnny Yesno and John Bar-barash, co-producers of the notional program on Indian affairs, heard every Saturday, at 6.30 p.m.

on CBM-AM radio. Telephone 392-5244 for leaflet and Ujt'dtjrtljWdflU JL.

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Pages Available:
2,182,851
Years Available:
1857-2024