Classical music critic LLOYD SCHWARTZ reviews two recordings of works by the turn-of-the-century black British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. One of them features historical recordings from the 1920s and 30s. (Pearl label) The other includes modern recordings of his chamber compositions and spirituals. (Koch International Cla TUESDAY, FEB 9INT. 1: Biomedical ethicist ARTHUR CAPLAN. Among the topics Marty discusses with him are the right to die and the implications of the doctor-assisted suicides, specifically how Dr. Jack Kevorkianhas been helping patients die. Caplan is Director of Biomedical Ethics and a professor in the Departments of Philosophy and Surgery at the University of Minnesota.INT. 2: WU NINGKUN (WOO NING-kwun), author of a new personal and political memoir, A Single Tear, about surviving three decades of Communist rule in China. Wu was born in China and received his college education in the United States. He left a promising academic career in this country to return to China in 1951 with hopes that the new Communist regime would benefit his country. Instead, he was labeled counter-revolutionary for teaching works by Western authors and was sentenced to serve time at various labor camps and prisons. He now lives in the United States with his family. (Atlantic Monthly Press).REV. : Classical music critic LLOYD SCHWARTZ reviews two recordings of works by the turn-of-the-century black British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. One of them features historical recordings from the 1920s and 30s. (Pearl label) The other includes modern recordings of his chamber compositions and spirituals. (Koch International Cla
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