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Actors, Journalists, Activists, Scholars and Others Continue the War and Peace Epic
Thirty-five years after WBAI's 1970 War and Peace broadcast, the Pacifica Radio Archive gathered actors, activists, scholars and journalists to read sections of the epic novel. We play excerpts of readings by veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas and writer and death row prisoner Mumia Abu Jamal.
Thirty-five years after WBAI's 1970 War and Peace broadcast, the Pacifica Radio Archive gathered actors, activists, scholars and journalists to read sections of the epic novel.
Veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas was one of those invited. Commonly referred to as "The First Lady of the Press," Helen Thomas is the most senior member of the White House press corps. She has served as White House correspondent for United Press International for nearly 60 years and has covered every President since John F. Kennedy. She is now a columnist for Hearst newspapers.
President Gerald Ford once remarked, "If God created the Earth in six days, he couldn't have rested on the seventh - he would have had to explain it Helen Thomas."
The Pacifica Radio Archives asked the veteran journalist to read an excerpt of Leo Tolstoy's epic work, War and Peace.
* Helen Thomas, veteran White House correspondent reading "War and Peace" and discussing the novel.
She was not the only to read Tolstoy's novel for Pacifica Radio. We end today with some of the voices that continue the War and Peace epic.
* Mumia Abu Jamal and others reading "War and Peace."
LISTEN ONLINE:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/06/152232
We broadcast a documentary produced by the Pacifica Radio Archives about Pacifica Radio station WBAI's 1970 War and Peace broadcast. It includes excerpts from the 1970 marathon reading, interviews with the original producers, new readings performed specifically for this broadcast, and a lot more.
LISTEN ONLINE:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/06/152228
Thirty-five years ago this month, Pacifica Radio station WBAI broadcast a marathon reading of Leo Tolstoy's classic work "War and Peace." For four and a half days ending December 6, 1970, more than 170 people from all walks of life came together for a reading of the great Russian epic "War and Peace." We speak with Professor Andy Kaufman of the University of Virginia about the significance of War and Peace and its author, Leo Tolstoy.
LISTEN ONLINE:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/06/152225
Veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas was one of those invited. Commonly referred to as "The First Lady of the Press," Helen Thomas is the most senior member of the White House press corps. She has served as White House correspondent for United Press International for nearly 60 years and has covered every President since John F. Kennedy. She is now a columnist for Hearst newspapers.
President Gerald Ford once remarked, "If God created the Earth in six days, he couldn't have rested on the seventh - he would have had to explain it Helen Thomas."
The Pacifica Radio Archives asked the veteran journalist to read an excerpt of Leo Tolstoy's epic work, War and Peace.
* Helen Thomas, veteran White House correspondent reading "War and Peace" and discussing the novel.
She was not the only to read Tolstoy's novel for Pacifica Radio. We end today with some of the voices that continue the War and Peace epic.
* Mumia Abu Jamal and others reading "War and Peace."
LISTEN ONLINE:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/06/152232
We broadcast a documentary produced by the Pacifica Radio Archives about Pacifica Radio station WBAI's 1970 War and Peace broadcast. It includes excerpts from the 1970 marathon reading, interviews with the original producers, new readings performed specifically for this broadcast, and a lot more.
LISTEN ONLINE:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/06/152228
Thirty-five years ago this month, Pacifica Radio station WBAI broadcast a marathon reading of Leo Tolstoy's classic work "War and Peace." For four and a half days ending December 6, 1970, more than 170 people from all walks of life came together for a reading of the great Russian epic "War and Peace." We speak with Professor Andy Kaufman of the University of Virginia about the significance of War and Peace and its author, Leo Tolstoy.
LISTEN ONLINE:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/12/06/152225
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