Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 7, 1941)
CD THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CHARLES A. SPRAGUE. President Member of The Associated Press" The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use tot news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited Shooting-If not War Obligingly, Berlin has confessed if that is r good word for itthat the submarine which fired torpedoes at an American destroyer was uduuiu. it u t iuu (cuu w juivw uua, tut iu connection with. somewhat similar incidents, dear-seeing Americans have always had in the back of their minds, and fanatical isolationists ; have had on the tips of their tongues, the suspi cion that Englishmen in their frantic need of allids might manufacture such an incident So the Wheelerifes are denied the oppor : tunity to raise such a question In this case. The Germans have simultaneously provided them with a version which is not quite as plausible; that the American destroyer was the aggressor ' and that the U-boat released its torpedoes in self-defense and in ignorance of the destroyer's nationality. It is less plausible because, rather than suspicions to be evaluated after the man ner 'of "circumstantial evidence," we have '. merely the word of the nazis against the word of our own president and our own navy; a con flict involving only the "credibility of witness es." On that basis our judgment is not difficult. If against the proven worthlessness of the nazis word we fail to believe our president and our navy then this nation is a sorry mess. That matter disposed of, we may take note that in 'our progressive identification with this war we have passed another milepost. The Ger mans have fired upon our naval forces and we "have answered with our ownguns. There has i been shooting-but even yet there is not "shoot ing war," The differentiation has nothing to do with, the ,f act. that no blood has been spilled.. It would be; much the same if there had been cas ualties on one side or both. This lis the result which we recognized as inevitable when our patrols were extended far out into the Atlantic. The president took the . risk without consulting public opinion, but no one's eyes were closed to the probabilities. cTheiavy's eyes are not closed to anything. In' the jargon of the prize ring, it has been a 44 M. a a O) . a a M . . warnea to protect liseii ai au limes. Ana - there is no limit to the number of such incidents, nor their seriousness, which may occur while yet we remain nominally at peace with uer many. The initiative for formal war still rests with Hitler. ! Such incidents ai this, and the potentiality of similar incidents in the orient where our tankers carry supplies to the Russians, may however serve to awaken the American people to the precariousness of their situation,. better than any presidential message. We are so close to war that we can already hear the guns. Education in 1941 School bells, even those few that are still in working order, will not ring for another week, so it may appear that we are "rushing the season." But going to school or not going, to school is not a matter to J be decided On the morning of school opening! day.- Education is an individual problem, a com munity problem, a national problem and a world problem. From whichever aspect it is viewed, it presents thai September issues pecu liar to the times. To the mind of the male youth It poses the question "Why go to school when , every circumstance of life, including life itself, ' is so uncertain? Or more bluntly, as it actually was put to the present writer under compara ' ble conditions 24 years ago, "Why bother about college when a year from now your bones may be bleaching on a hillside somewhere?" That of course is a question answered more readily than the one facing Polk county farm ers whose lands may be bought as part of the cantonment site; the question of preparing for another year's crops. There is no harm in plant ing a crop, and there is no harm in getting an education but there is harm in either case in failing to prepare for a future that must in the best of circumstances be taken on faith. The community's educational problem is a matter of give and take. That is, it gives some thing to youth now and is quite conscious of the process; it takes something back later and is less conscious of doing .so. . 'With immediate jobs available, this reciprocal arrangement is in dan ger of contraction; it should be , remembered that the less the community gives, the less it will eventually receive in return.' As a national and world problem, educa tion is affected just now by the evidences of a "new world order" in the making. The question arises, what should be the nature of education for that new order, when we are so uncertain of its nature? In groping for the answer, we need to recognize that the pew orderwill in turn be effected by. present-day education. For if one's study) of world history is broad and deep its leads to a realization that human progress has been paced,' not (by wars, and revo lutions as a superficial study may suggest, but almost wholly by the rising level of general in telligence and knowledge. : Governments and social systems are able to retard the spread of literacy but once the general populace reaches a given educational level, government and the social system are forced to take it into account Education, in other words, is more vital in its impact upon civilization than any war can be. Regardless of present gloomy outlooks, if education is riot neglected the -'new world or-; der" cannof fail to be better than the one which is now being destroyed. -' . Power and Majority Rule Secretary Ickes has spoken his piece at the Public Ownership league convention in Tacoma. He has. added little to his previously outlined case for one-man rule over all electrical power generation and distribution in the Pacific north west, except to state flatly that this is what the president waritsL ;: I In this connection one notes a curious fur- ther extension of the public! tendency to lee in the president a split personality. FDR "now becomes practically a trinity. First there is Roosevelt the man, an- engaging personality r liked by many who aree with nothing he does. "No "Favor sxeayi U$, No Fear Shatt Awe From first Statesman, March 23, 1831 Second, there is President Roosevelt, the chief executive, who establishes a foreign policy which a- certain group of citizens approves. Third, there is New Dealer Roosevelt, whose brand of liberalism delights a group which pre- ponderantly disapproves his foreign policy. "It is all quite confusing, but the immediate signif icance is that the president's alleged endorse ment of the Ickes formula is not likely to cut much, ice in 1 Washington state, which favors public power but wants home rule, nor in Ore gon which is doubtful about public power but also insists upon home rule. If any further evidence is needed that Ickes and home rule are in no way related, we need but to look at San Francisco, whose citizens have eight times rejected public distribution of power though they own the generating facili ties a? Hetch Hetchy. Now Ickes has obtained a federal court injunction to estop sale of Hetch. Hetchy power to the private distributor. The injunction's effectiveness is deferred until the people have opportunity to vote November 4 upon plan nine" for public power. But even this, truce may soon be abrogated, for the San Francisco chamber of commerce proposes at the same time a vote on amendment of its "Raker act" which would permit extension of the pres ent arrangementand that violates an Icket stipulation in connection with the truce. f Fireworks may be expected; plus a prac tical demonstration of "democracy" as defined by Ickes. To judge from the newspaper accounts and the appeals broadcast, Lane county has had al most as serious a harvest labor problem as Mar ion county. Now we read in the Eugene Newa that "O. M. Balcom, WPA field representative from Portland, had promised hop growers the workers now engaged on 115 WPA projects, should the need for pickers become more ur gent" The tag line we are tempted to put oni this item wouldn't go through the mails. News Behind The News By PAUL MALLON " (Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc.. re production in whole or in part strictly prohibited.) WASHINGTON, Sept 6. The gasoline short age bogey has at last been laid low by the Maloney committee, but (he consumer is not out of the woods mil) I ii.ti la M at Immm m Paul MiUon the president of the Association of American Rail roads, the deficiency can be more than met But it is going to cost money, say the oil companies. In fact they have already informally requested Leon Henderson to allow them to raise the price of gas oline again to covrr the use of the tank cars which are more expensive to operate than tanker ships and barges. Henderson has intimated that this in crease in cost can be tacked on to ,the motorist's 1 bill. ' What the companies haven't said; what Hen derson hasn't said; what even "Honest Harold" Ickes hasn't said, is that the companies have al ready increased the gasoline price enough to pay twice the added cost of using tank cars. "Here are the figures: Railroad and oil experts tell me that to get 10 per cent to 20 per cent more gasoline into the east thfough use of tank cars will add between a quar ter and a half cent a gallon to the cost of all gas- oline sold in the east But what isn't generally real ized is that the retail price of gasoline has gradu ally been upped a whole cent a gallon already. And what's more, rib one has given any adequate justi fication for this one cent increase. "Unless Henderson changes his mind, he is go ing to disregard it Reason: The companies comple ted their sneak price rise just before the howl went up from Ickes about a "shortage"; just before Hen derson froze the retail price. Slick, eh? CO. publication of all In this newspaper. by a long shot In fact eastern auto drivers are going to; pay through the nose twice for the alleged shortage if they 'don't watch out The railroads have shoved 20,000 tank cars right under the noses of Petroleum Coor dinator Ickes and the oil com panies, who apparently aren't . much interested in this method of moving gasoline. (On Aug ust 22 . this column said, "The railroads are claiming 20,000 tank cars are available.") In two weeks, according to " Petroleum'Coordinator Ickes is getting his gas oline advice from the big oil companies. If you don't believe it, listen to this. Eight members of the 12-man advisory group for the east, to whom Ickes presents his problems, are officials of the following . eight companies: Texas Co., Socony Vacuum, Sun Oil Co., Shell, Standard of New Jersey; Consolida ted Oil, American Oil, and Wofford Oil Co., a sub sidiary of Pure Oil Co. In addition, Deputy Admin istrator Da vies is from Standard Oil of California, and counsel for the petroleum administrator is from the law inn which represented Standard of California. However, one thing the major companies didn't' get out of Ickes was protection from Trust-Buster Thurman Arnold of the justice department, al though they wanted it badly, i It hasn't leaked out yet but the major com panies are about to surrender in one of the two big suits Arnold has pending against them. , ' . Arnold charged that major oil companies con trolling pipeline companies were getting excessive and illegal rebates, or kick-backs. In other words, pipeline companies would charge high rates to keep competitors out, but would pay dividends, in some cases as high as 38 per cent, to the oil companies which owned them. . Twenty-five companies with several hundred subsidiaries are going to agree to cut these dividends to seven percent The' state department had better watch out or the good will visitors from Latin America are go ing back there with a lot of bad will for Uncle Sam. Senorita Magdalena Petit,' the prize-winning Chil ean novelist, composer and playwright, came to Washington for a visit the other day at the invita tion of the state department ' A friend found her sitting in a dingy room facing the court in a second rate hoteL Senorita Petit could not leave, she said, because a state department official told her to stay there until he phoned her about an appointment with Congressional Librarian Archibald Macleish. She sat there one whole day. ... r September Morn-And ifts for (BireaEttfasft By R. J. HENDRICKS This is the 87th 9-7-41 state fair, the first one held in 1854, with Governor Davis President: m S S (Concluding from yesterday:) "The consideration was the hold ing of its annual fairs on the grounds for 15 years, with c for feit condition in case of failure to do so. It was a warranty deed. The county had paid all the debts of the Marion County Agricultural Society. "It is evident that the mem bers of the Marion county court (all upstanding, honest pioneers) were anxious to make sure the holding of annual fairs here, oil the original grounds. s s s "The consideration in the deed that the county took from the Marion County Agricultural Society, April 1, 1863, was $1600. "But the debts listed as taken over (and assumed) by the county made a larger total than mat on their face. Some -: of them may have been compro mised, or there may have been payments on some of them that did not appear in the listing. The old records do not show; but, any way, the -county warranted the property as free from in cumbrances. S S "If the Marion county tax payers (of that day) stood for more than $1600 in assuring the permanency of annual fairs here, the overplus has been justified, many times. "With all the facts as related in the two former articles in this series, the writer assumes that there was no hiatus in the holding of the annual fair of the Marion County Agricultural So ciety in 1861, on the original and present grounds; this assump tion being based mostly upon the fact that the society was still intact in 1863,! when the deed Japaaese military forces moved threagH the streets "of Salron. French Indo-China, vnder the occupation ' Krreement with the Vichy French government by which the Japanese obtained Indo-China bases. -This picture shows German cavalrymen entering; a bornlag Russian town, according ta Berlin aonrcea, The phete was sent from Berlin to New York via radio, wired to Ctlcaga and airmailed to The Statesman, , , . , - SS With the Ru Issian Winter was made to the county, and in 1864, when the county transfer red the property to the Oregon State Agricultural Society, with the reservation for the use of it by the Marion County Agricul tural Society when "not required for the Use of the Oregon State Agricultural Society. " t b (Also, will the interested reader please recall what was said in the Salem Directory of 1871 and of 1872, in its histori cal sketch by Rev. L H. Judson, when he wrote: "The Society so far have fulfilled their part of the contract" Meaning that fairs had been held each year, ac cording to the contracted agree ment, as they had been, accord ing to the same RELIABLE au thority, since the first one of 1854.) - ; j Many things in present Oregon state fairs differ from the pio neer ones, and one in particular. It is !the comparative scarcity of campers of these times. R. C. Geer,l mentioned heretofore in this series, one of the organizers of the Marion County Agricul tural Society, and its second president, the first school teach er in the Waldo; Hills, one' of the organizers of the Republican party in Oregon; one of the com missioners of the- Oregon & Cal ifornia railroad: (present South ern Pacific), attended the 1876 Oregon state fair, and wrote a newspaper article about it Among many jjther things, he said: : I" ; "Allow me in a small space in your paper to describe the Ore gon state fair of 1876. It is the GREAT GALAS WEEK FOR OREGON. Everybody and his wife, children and friends at tend the fair by TENS OF THOUSANDS, land CAMP ON THE FAIRGROUNDS THE EN TIRE WEEK. J. i " 1? w ) - 1 Coming , i "The Oregon State Agricul tural Society owns nearly. 200 acres, . . . and has about; half of it fenced, . . . and on each side of his enclosure the camp grounds are located, in beautiful oak groves, where can be seen ALL KINDS OF CAMPS, from a wagon sheet up to the comfort able frame house; and all occu pied by the MOST ENTERPRIS ING, GENER0US, FREE HEARTED AND HOSPITABLE iPEOPLE that It j has ever been my lot to find and I have lived clear across the continent, from Connecticut to Oregon." I V j ! f A good many pioneer Oregon Jans who lived up to a few years ago, and some of them still liv ing, have told of being present at that 1876 Oregon state fair. One of them often .said: 1 ' The camp grounds of the 1876 fair, especially; at night. With many hundreds of camp fires burning, made a sight . which no one who witnessed them ever forgot" ' ' Thecamp grounds of mat day are now largely taken up with buildings. The ! scenes ! of the 1876 Oregon state fair can nev er be witnessed again, j' ? The great crowds who came in their wagons arid camped dur ing the 1876 state fair did not dream of the changes that were coming, with the age of the gas oline buggy anil thousands of other modern things. i ; So, in many ways,' the 87th Oregon state fair, held I on the same grounds, with some added acres of land, is the best one yet i And the 88th, next year, should be better, and the 89th. the fol lowing year still better and the ,90th one in 1944 better yet and the centennial one In 1954 very .much betterV ' ! ' By MARYSE RUTLEDGE Chapter 15, Continued ; David hesitated. He liked Bfll 'Wright He'd have to see Garri- . son first though, about the en velope part of any story. "Ill get in touch with you,, he said quickly, and hung up. j :- He sold : a7 pair of, skis to a lean blond man who , reminded him of Kurt Helm, Suddenly, Mat Breanu walked into the shop. His Short, smartly tailored figure, and the gentle swing of the ebony stick in his hand, drew attention. Fan .Rub ley accompanied him. Everyone know hinv Prpprietor Slagan started forward, : with the thought that Farland had possi bly not wasted his time. Breanu usually moved in headlines, and spent accordingly, ffi y But Breanu swept by, his dark liquid eyes fixed only on David. "May, I have a word with you, Farland?" he said pleasantly, and drew David aside, unheed ing; the eyes upon them. Fan closed in, her hand on Bre ami's arm, her round pale face send ing warnings. ,-:' "j-.'" ' Chapter It "Well, young man, you were all for sending me to the chair," Breanu .began genially. He swished; his stick against his leg. "I think we'd better call a truce, don't you?" David glanced at Fan, who nodded imperceptably. He straightened, and said, bis frank blue eyes on Breanu, T never meant you any harm." His origi nal admimtion returned. Breanu was a square , guy, and big ''a big shot," indeed Breanu tapped David on the shoulder with the handle of his stick. It wasn't, the same stick which had been shown at the Inquest David noticed with a peculiar shock. This one had a thin gold ring at the elbow bend of the handle. "Just to show we're friends, then," Breanu pursued, his teeth white against his olive skin, Td like you and your charming fi ancee to dine with Mrs. Rubley and myself tomorrow, at my apartment Or any other night you prefer." Something phoney about this, 'David thought He caught Fan's eyes again, misty, with pain. He remembered the way Breanu had looked at Jane. So that was it! The heel Was after Jane! ; "No!" David exploded. Muscles worked in his face; veins drum med. "Miss Rider wouldn't care to dine with you." , , There was a silence that made its own sound in the polite air of the shop. Breanu's eyes shone on the surface, fathomless behind : hit , look. "-.'?" A. 'i fs "Perhaps you and Miss Rider ''will be glad to dine with me some day," he said, and turned away. Fan went with him. ; David stood rigidly where he was. If Breanu -made one more crack But Breanu didn't Oblivious to the display around him, he went up to Slagan, murmured a few words, walked out with Fan. - Proprietor Slagan, his cheeks empurpled, motioned to David. . He could hardly speak, , as if Rad io IPirograinnis XSLM SUNDAY 139 Kc 8:00 Flowing Rhythm. ' 8:30 Melodic Moods. 9:00 Waltz Time. a JO Popular Concert 100 Sunday Reveries. 11 American Lutheran Church. 12.-00 Singing Strings. 12:30 Newi HUites. 12:45 The Song Shop. 10 Young People's Church. 1:30 Hawaiian Serenade. -S.-08 Military Band. 1 :30 Pentecostal Church. 3:00 Western Serenade. . 1:30 Boy's Town. . -00 Gypsy's Orchestra. 4 :30 Symphonic Swing. 0 Variety Hall. 0 Tonight's Headlines. 8:13 Sacred Music 6:30 Operatic Arias. ' T.-00 Organ Trio. T:30 Strings Serenade.' 8.00 The World Tonight. 8:15 The Eton Boys. : 830 Tango Time. S.-00 News Tabloid. S:15 Music at4he Console. 8:30 Back Home Hour. 10:00 Dream Time. KOIN-CBS SUNDAY 878 K. SAO West Coast Church. 30 Salt Lake Tabernacle. v :00 Church of the Air. 830 News. 8:45 Music for Sunday. 18.-00 Invitation .to learning, 1030 News. 11 0 Columbia Symphony Orchestra 11 .00 Walter Gross Orchestra. 1230-Spirtt Of '41. v -. 1:08 Family Hours. - t '" 1S News. . - , , 130 Melody Ranch, i SS Dear Mom. . 8:19 News. - " -' -8 JO William Wallace, S:45 Art Museum. 40 Pause That Refreshes. 430 Castles In the Air. .' 4:55 Elmer Davis, News. . S. -00 Summer Hour. 8 AO Take It or Leave It' v 430 Columbia Workshop. -7.-00 The Crime Doctor. 7:23 Find the Woman. 7 JO Answer Auction. BA0 Leon F. Drews. 8:15 Charles Spivak Orchestra.. ' 830 Don't Be Personal. . . AO I Was There. 30 By the Way. BUI Henry. 8:43 Cosmo Jones. 18 AO Five Star Final - -11 AO Ken Stevens. 18:45 Defease Today. 1130 Conversation at the Console. : 1135 News. 7 KGW NBC SUNDAY 428 BU. SAO Emma Otero, S infer. 30 Down South. :00 The Church fa Tour Home. 930 Charles Danfs Music 10 AO Stars of Today. - . -1030 Chicago Round Table. 11 AO Concert Petit. -. 11:15 H. V. Kaltenborn. 1130 Sammy Kaye Orchestra. . U AO Chautauqua, Symphonies. 1 AO Home Fires. I J 5 News. 130 SUrs of Today. , . S AO Catholic Hour. - : - 8:30 Great Mr. Gudersleev. - SAO Proiessor PuzslewlU 930 Band Wagon. i. - , : ; 40 What's My Name. j 430 One Man's Family. ' , 8 AO Manhattan Merry -Oo-Round. 80 Album of Familiar Mltsio. .. 80 Hour of Charm. - . 30 Studio X. " " t AS Hotel McAlpln Orchestra. V Taa Deer iohn. - some pressure ' stm strangled him. "You're fired, with two weeks payf he said. He : looked old, ' "I'm sorry, my boy. Mat Breanu could jhurt my business. Per haps later we can fix it up." -Thara all right, sir." David was stunned. Why, old Slagan. really liked him! He straighten ed his shoulders, and gave a ghost of his grin. David knew he certainly was in a jam now. . Through her window, early Wednesday morning, Jane Rider heard a sound which transfixed her. She would know the bleat of that horn anywhere. It car ried in the clear country air. , They were bringing back her car sooner than she expected, after - Monday's inquest "The Rumble Seat Murder," they called the tragedy that had put a violent end to lovely . Carlie Breanu. - What hadnt it done, Jane , thought bitterly, to herself and David! The old farmhouse was silent She and her mother had break fasted soon after dawn, in the cheerful kitchen. But Jane couldnt shake off the lassitude, the numbness she had felt ever since she lashed out at David . before he left for town Monday night; she had driven him away from her. , - ' Tm not his type," she told herself. "He needs' a girl who adores people and thrills. She smothered the dull ache ' that throbbed inside. The horn gave rubbery tongue again, much nearer this time. Jane turned swiftly from the window, arid did her hair pver, with a few. brush strokes on either side of its parted brown waves. She snatched up a brown beret with an orange tassel; a checked sport coat Then she stood breathless, waiting. She had made a decision which was to alter her life. Trooper Ed Blagden had ask ed permission of Sergeant Wayne to return Jane's car when ' tb experts finished their vai search for clues in the rumble seat where the body had been found. Ed arguod that Jane and Mrs. Rider were obviously innocent of a crime that had rocked the county. In its mystery and ab sence of motive, you couldn't pin a knife murder on two kids like Jane and her redheaded boy friend. Thus Blagden staunchly insisted to his superiors, and the stony-faced detectives sent from New York to cooperate with the state troopers. He thought of all this, as he drove the aging coupe at a mild thirty from his headquarters at Bardonia. A feeling of spring moved through the September' day. The brilliant maples, the gold of birches and copper leaves of oaks were like a supreme splurge, a flaunting of color to the evergreens. The trooper swept from the highway onto the dirt road. At least he was giving Jane a chance. She had her job in the library. How could she get there every morning without her bus? (To be continued) These schedules are spplle4 f the respeetivo stations. Any wuia tlons noted bg listeners are 4ao to changes madt by the statioas wtth nt notice to this newspaper. 730 Reglar Fellers. ' 8 AO Walter WlncheU. 8:15 The Parker Family. 830 Carnival. :00 Highway Night Kxpress. S : 1 5 Armchair Cruises. 30 St. Francis Hotel Orchestra. :45 Your Homo Town . News. 10 AO News. 10:15 Bridge to Dreamland. IIAO-Bal Tabarin Cafe Orchestra. : 11 30 riorentine Gardens ; Orchestra . ' j KEXNBC SUNDAY 11M Ko. AO Amen Corner. 830 Radio City Music Hatt. 30 Matiaea With LorteU. 10 AO Hidden History. 10:15 Foreign Policy Assodattosw 1030 The Quiet Hour. 11 AO MaraU African Trek. 11:30 Weekend Cruise. 18 AO Sunday Vespers. 1130 Behind the M.re. 1 AO Lost and Found Items. 1 A3 Ambassador Earl HoteL - 130 Christian Science. i 15 Rhythm by Ricardo. 230 Music for Listening. 2.-45 Edward Tomunsoe. SAO European News. S 30 Pearson & Allen. 85 Jean CaveU. Singer. 4 AO Star Spangled Theatre. 430 Song of the Strings. . 8 AO Southernalres. - 830 A Bookman's Notebook. : :45 Bill stern Sports Newsreet : , AO-Good Will Hour. 7A0 Inner Sanctum Mysteries. 730 Treasure Trails of Song. AS Sherman Bote! Orchestra, , US News. 30 Hawthorne Temple Services. .' AO Beau Soir Musics la. 830 University Explorer. , 10 AO Fantasy m Melody. 1030 Etchings In ttass 11 AO Portland Police Reports. 11 A3 Floyd Wright, Organist 1130 War News Round-Up. '' KALB MBS SUNDAY 1338 Ks. S:00 Tommy Tucker Orchestra, 30 Central Church of Christ. : 00 This Is Fort Dix. ' :30 Voice of Prophecy Chosr. 8:45 Gypsy Violins. 10 AO News. 10:15 Romance of the Hl-waya. I 1030 Canary Chorus. - ll.-45-News. 1230 Swedish Baptist Temple. 1:30 Hancock Ensemble. - -1 AO Canadian Band. ... 230 Sam Brewer Cairo. . " -SAO Portland Bible risssia - 230 life and the Land. . , .: 8:5 Wythe WUhams. 4 AO American Forum. - 4:45 Around the Oock. AO Old Fashioned Revrral Hour. . 4:00 Nobody's Children. :30 Cab Calloway Quizzacale. YAQ-aGabriel Heatter. . . - .7:15 Bands on Parade. T 30 Answering You. -8:00 Hinsoa. Memorial Church. 1 -, 8 AO News. ; JS Vote of Prophecy. . -- 8:45 Music for Sunday. -10:30 News. . T M:4S-Little Concert ' - 11:60 Sunday Nicht at Coceeae . - ' Cwvt - . - - llonday . Radio PrL2l0,eclioal.