Educational screen & audio-visual guide (c1956-1971])

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\UDIO by Max U. Bildersee he Inaugural augural Day, 1961, can be used for quick review of what previous presints have said on the parallel occajn, and for a review, too, of immedie and long range accomplishments the occupant of the office of presint. This can be 'triggered' by use of dio or television to hear or watch id hear as the new president takes See and delivers his inaugural adess. The discussion can be intensified by e of recordings recreating past in gurals. It is possible to go back to re Roosevelt inauguration in 1933 to ■ar again his "The only thing we ive to fear is fear itself" speech. This available on a number of records in iding Columbia's / Can Hear It Now d many others. Of more recent vin ^e, Roosevelt's inaugural addresses ( January 20, 1941, and January 20, il 45, are heard on The Spoken Word's J^auguration Address (SW-112) and lese are backed up by Harry S. luman's address beginning his elect • term as president in 1949. I Did your school record the presintial inaugural addresses in 1953 ^d 1957? It may be worthwhile to whether school archives include ise tapes. If they are available, you ve an almost complete history of ingurals from 1933 to the present time d covering a fast moving triple dec te. If these are not available, the ry of national development, involvent and progress can largely be in•ated by the records already menned and my reports on other such (jdresses. And if you did not record earlier addresses for your school hives, there is no better time to be ^1 than in 1961! For the instructor wanting to go Ick to the beginnings of the United ites in this connection, she can find II Begley's reading of George Washlion's First Inaugural Address on I edmon's Great American Speeches ( C 2016) which also contains a readi; by Melvyn Douglas of Thomas )Ierson's First Inaugural Address. I id to needle students into discussion I Jre are several reports of campaigns i which the losing candidate is promI ;nt and which can trigger the quesIn, "If elected, what do you think this man would have said in his inaugural address?" These include Campaign '56 (Yale Sterling Memorial Library), / Can Hear It Now, in which the Dewey-Truman and Dewey-Roosevelt campaigns are summarized and Caedmon's Great American Speeches which includes a reading of WiUiam Jennings Bryan's "Cross of Gold" speech. Shakespeare, W. (1564-1616) There are so many recordings of Shakespeare's works— and so many of them worthy of your attention— that a summary of them is well in order at any time. One reason for this is that Shakespeare wrote for a largely illiterate audience, and he wrote for them to hear rather than see what was going on before them. His plays need minimum-to-no special adaptation for presentation in strictly audio media. Many recordings select from a variety of plays to present an overall picture of the man's genius. One of these, Ages of Man (Columbia OL 5390), includes scenes from "As You Like It," "The Merchant of Venice," "The Tempest," "Romeo and Juliet," "Measure for Measure," "Henry IV, Part I," Shakespeare On Records AS YOU LIKE IT CORIOLANUS HAMLET HAMLET HAMLET HAMLET HENRY V JULIUS CAESAR KING LEAR MACRETH MACRETH MERCHANT OF VENICE MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM MUCH ADO AROUT NOTHING RICHARD HI RICHARD HI (highlights) ROMEO AND JULIET ROMEO AND JULIET ROMEO AND JULIET TAMING OF THE SHREW TWELFTH NIGHT Anew McMaster Anew McMaster John Gielgud Laurence Olivier John Gielgud John Gielgud Laurence Olivier Anew McMaster Anew McMaster Alec Guiness Anthony Quayle Paul Sparer Anew McMaster Laurence Olivier Laurence Olivier Alan Radel John Gielgud Anew McMaster Anew McMaster Anew McMaster Spoken Word SW-A4 SpokenWordSW-Al7 RCA Victor LM 6007 RC A Victor LM 1924 RCA Victor LM 6404 Decca DL 9504 RCAVictoT LM 1924 Spoken Word SW-A15 Spoken Word SW-A9 RCA Victor LM 6010 Caedmon SRS 231 Lexington 7540 RCAVictor LM 6115 Spoken Word SW-A6 RCAVictor LM 6126 RCAVictor LM 1940 RCA Victor LM 2064 Decca DL 9504 Spoken Word SW-A16 Spoken Word SW-A7 Spoken Word SW-A3 A44dia CAROALOO® Record Reviews on Cards Edited by Max U. Bildersee 1103 INDIVIDUAL CROSS-INDEXED CARDS ALREADY ISSUED! SUBSCRIBE NOW $25.00 a year Audio CARDALOG Box 1771, Albany 1. New York A WORLD OF SOUND ON FILE ,. ucATioNAL Screen and Audiovisual Guide — January, 1961 35