Indianapolis Times, Volume 36, Number 242, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 February 1925 — Page 15
cruoio gsff bf the Methodist Episcopal *■■■ Church of Pittsburgh will be the principal speaker on the Sunday evening club program that will be broadcast through KYW, Sunday evening starting at 7 p. m., central time. Gorge J. Ryan, president of the New York Boar dos Education, will give a short talk on the New York Public School System from station WOR, Newark, Saturday evening at 9 p. m. this will be followed by a special Washington birthday program by the Corson Commandery Band. Macy and Scott known as the radio aces will offer a special program from WG-BS this evening starting at 10 p. m., lasting for half an hour. This will be folowed by a program oj dance music by the Russian Eagle Orchestra. Vincent Lopez and his orchestra are back on the Job again at WEAF and are broadcasting their regalar programs of dance music every Thursday and Saturday evenings at 10 p. m. Music of the Emerald Ball which will be held In the Grand Ball Room of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel,- New York Friday evening, Feb. 20, will be broadcast by WEAF. Thrilling stones for boys are being told by Fred J. Turner every Saturday evening in front of the microphone of WEAF. The WGY players will present the drama, “Harvest,” from WGY Friday evening. It consists of a pro-
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log and three acts. The WGY orchestra will furnish the music between the acts. .Tonight will be Latin-American night at WRC. The program is given under the auspices of the PanAmerican Union, 'the principal address of the evening will be given by Dr. Julius Klein, director of the bu-~ reau of foreign and domestic commerce, on “The Three Americas.” Music will be furnished by he United States Army band string quartet. An organ recital by Vincent H. Percy will be broadcast by WEAR direct from Public Hall Friday evening. Mr. Percy is a well-known Cleveland organist, who has been heard many times over the radio. Thir program will start at 6 p. m. and continue for one hour and should make an excellent dinner concert fjr those who enjoy organ music. Attention of radio listeners is called to changes in broadcast schedules at Station WOC, at Davenport, which becomes effective from Feb. 22. Owing to anew arrangement with Station WSUI (Btate University of Iowa), the silent night of WOC will be changed from Tuesday to Monday night, so that the 8 p. m. and 10 p. m. musical schedule previously broadcast on Monday nights will In future be broadcast oil Tuesday nights. The nightly visit of the WOC Sandman will be broadcast at 8:80 p. m. instead of 7 p. m., as heretofore (except Monday nights, which will be silent). The regular Wednesday evening organ recital will be broadcast at 9 p. m. instead of 8 p. m. El Jebel Shrine night will be observed over KOA Wednesday evening, Feb. 26, at 9:10 o’clock by ? seventy-piece band concert under the direction of Lewis B. Skinner. The program will be bro?Acast from the First Congregational Church by meane of outside pickups and includes popular instrumental selections by the Shrine band, drum and
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
bugle numbers and a grouping of soloe. James C. Burger, deputy imperial potentate, will make a short address, "The Shrine." The El Jebel band is a widely known musical organization and has been honored on numerous occasions during tours of eastern points. How to make maraschino cherries will be told by J. H. Irish, assistant professor of fruit products, College of Agriculture, University of California. on the Monday night, Feb. 23, educational program at KGO. A talk. “The Ethics of Social Etiquet,” by Edith Stevens Giles, besides regular KGO educational features, will also be broadcast. A radio play, the melodramatic farce, “Seven Keys to Baldpate,” will be broadcast by KGO Thursday evening, Feb. 26. Wilda Wilson Church, director of audio players, will preeent the work in its original form, adapted to radio technique. The Arion Trio, known wherever KGO is known, will play the music between acts, and such incidental music during the play as will be used to create atmosphere and heighten emotional effects. Michel Gusikoff, concert master of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, and one of the best known young violinists of America, will give a radio recital in the studio of station KSD, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, on Thursday evening, Feb. 18, at 10 o’clock. “Going Some,” a comedy by Paul Armstrong and Rex Beach, will be presented by the WGY Players. Thursday evening, Feb. 26. It might be called a “western” or even a college play, as both elements are introduced in the sprightly story. Edward St. Louis will play J. Wallingford Speed, who poees as a tensecond man and is forced at the point of a gun to enter a 100-yard dash to save the wagered wealth of the boys of Flying Heart Ranch. Because so many requests, which it is not possible to grant, come in to station KSD In the course of the week's concerts, this station has decided to preeent a special all-request program on the evening of March 6. beginning at 10 o’clock. Vln James of Belleville, 111., pianist, who is so popular with listeners to the KSD programs, will give the requ<wt feature. It will be piano music entirely and James has promised to play anything asked of him If the music Is obtainable, and if time permits. Capt. Donald B. MacMillan, who has been thrilling hundreds of thousands with his recital of experiences at the north pole, will speak from the Chicago Daily News station. WMAQ, between 8:30 and 9 o’clock Saturday evening, Feb. 28. On that occasion he will tell what radio did to make his last trip so much more endurable than any arctic exploration in history. A concert by the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Rudolph Oanz, will be broadcast by KSD Saturday evening, Feb. 21, direct from the Odeon, starting at 8 p. m. KSD operates on 645.1 meters. Anew feature, which brings a new form of radio program presentation was given by WEAF this week. A half-hour-of old-time music will be given every Monday evening, and as each week goes by WEAF’S listeners will hear during this period of songs and music such selections as "Songs of the Cowboys,". “Songs of the Plantation Days,” “Music of the Civil War,” “The Songs of Weber and Fields,” “Dance Music of the Square and Bara Dance Days,” “Old Mississippi Folk Songs.” “The Ballads of 1900” and “The Songs of the Bowery." Certain of these Monday evening programs will bring a quartet, some an Instrumental trio, and. In the case of a barn dance, several good fiddlers and a man to call off the dances, and in the case of the plantation melodies possibly a negro quartet with banjos. The possibility of radio as a relief
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agent during periods of unemployment in some parts of the world is suggested by the letter of an English correspondent of WGY. The writer asks the Schenectady broadcasting station to announce that he will accept any post at reasonable salary. “I understand that servants are very scarce in America.” he stated, “So if you know of anyone who requires a male servant lot me know.” Pis letter also carried a description as to age, height and weight. On the night of Feb. 19, residents in lonely cottages In the Transvaal, South Africa, will listen to the first radio program ever broadcast from the United States especially for them, according to announcement made today by officials of the WestInghouse Electric Company. The entertainment will be put on the ether from Station KDKA, in Pittsburg. Decision to broadcast especially for the Transvaal dwellers was made when letters were received by the company, stating that KDKA's signals are being picked up nightly in South Africa. Arrangements have been made to have Station JB, at Johannesburg, South Africa, pick up the program and repeat It. In this way, the entertainment will be carried 8,500 miles, almost one-third of the distance around the world. Broadcasting will be started at KDKA at 4 o’clock, centre’, standard time. It will then be midnight in the Transvaal. WCBN ha* Just opened anew studio in the Midway Dancing Gardens, Chicago, from where programs will be broadcast nightly from 10 to 1 a. m. The United States Army Band win broadcast a program through stations WEAF, WCAP and WJAR Wednesday evening, Feb. 25. Maria Dormont and Fabien Sevitzky. former stars of the Russian Grand Opera Company, will be heard in a special program that will be broadcast through station WIP, Philadelphia, Saturday evening. Feb. 21. The inmates of the Eastern State Penitentiary will entertain the radio audience through WIP, Philadelphia Thursday evening, Feb. 26. The program Is varied and will include the prison band, string band and soloists; even dancing is included. The program will start at 6:30 and continue for several hours. Two orchestras'and one band will be maintained by WHT, the superpower radio broadcasting station to open shortly In the Wrigley building, Chicago, according to 'George E. Carlson, general manager. In addition to this, a complete Marimba hand will be imported from San Salvador for the first four months the station Is on the air, Carlson said. Carlson also announced that arrangements have been completed to broadcast a newly written song daily at a certain hour. One new song parody will also be broadcast dally, under similar arrangements. Leon Kourcik, who was a favorite pupil of the great barintono, the late Victor Maurel, will entertain WEAF's audience on Thursday evening Feb. 19. Mr. Kourcik is the cantor of the Union Temple of Brooklyn, one of the foremost Hebrew reformed congregations in America, and has been heard on several occasions from WEAF. Ohm se in Journalism Mercer University, at Macon, Ga., is breadcasting a course in Journalla n through its 100-watt station. WMAZ. History and other subject* also are taught. ’
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