Heinl radio business letter (July-Dec 1931)

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CONGRESSIONAL LIBRARY MUSIC TO GO ON AIR / Eleven weekly radio concerts by leading chamber music ensembles of this country and Europe are to be broadcast by the Library of Congress division of music (Eliza¬ beth Sprague Coolidge Foundation), Washington, D. C., beginning Monday afternoon, January 4, over the national networks of the Columbia and the NBC systems, which are cooperating in the broadcast. The schedule follows: Mondays, 2 p.m. , SST, Columbia networkJanuary 4, the Roth String Quartet of Budapest; January 11, the Barrere Ensemble of Wind Instruments; January 18, the Salzedo Harp Ensemble; January 25, the Gordon String Quartet; February 1, the Comp insky Trio. Sundays, 11:30 a.m. , EST , NBC netiTorkFebruary 7, the Musical Art String Quartet; February 14, the Elshuco Trio; February 21, the Kroll String Sextet; February 28, the London String '^ua.rt e t ; Ma rch 6, Nina Koshetz and String quartet; March 13, Ja.cques Gordon and Lee Pattison, sonata program for violin and piano. * * * * * RADIO AGREEMENTS URGED The Radio Commission requested all timesharing broadcast ing stations to cooperate with the stations with which they share time in working out definite agreements under which specified hours of operation nay be inserted in station licenses. "In a large number of causes”, the commis¬ sion wrote, "an inability on the part of the participants to agree compels the commission to set the cases down for hea.ring, with the consequence that both stations must spend con¬ siderable time and money in attending a public hearing and in the prosecution of their cases.” * * * * * -13