CITY EDITION GEORGE WALLACE RUES AND RELISHES THE PAST by Peter Applebome "His thoughts, he says, are more on the next world than this one, but as he lies beneath a brooding cloud of smoke from his Garcia y Vega cigars, George Corley Wallace is still hoping for redemption before death as well as after it." (A1, A26) PLAYA GIRON JOURNAL: AT THE BAY OF PIGS, TOURISTS STORM THE BEACHES by Howard W. French "Not far from the simple wood-frame home of Antinogenes Alvarez, one of this town's few remaining veterans of Cuba's defeat of the American-mounted Bay of Pigs invasion in 1961, a fading billboard announces, 'Welcome to the Site of the First Defeat of Imperialism in the Western Hemisphere.'" (A4) LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM TO KEEP ITS NAME "The Solomon R. Guggenheim name will not be displaced on this landmark building because of Samuel J. and Ethel LeFrak's unrestricted $10 million gift to the museum." Edward Cortese, Vice President, Lefrak Organization (A34) A GOLDEN AGE NEW TO AMERICA by Michael Kimmelman "No jokes, please. An exhibition called 'The Golden Age of Danish Painting' may sound like the one about a cookbook called 'Great English Cuisine.'" "The Golden Age of Danish Painting" and "From Caspar David Friedrich to Ferdinand Hodler: A Romantic Tradition, 19th-Century Paintings and Drawings from the Oskar Reinhart Foundation, Winterthur," will be at the Met through April 24. (C1, C36) ELECTRONIC ARTS' MOVE REFLECTS INDUSTRY TREND by John Markoff "Electronic Arts' planned acquisition of Broderbund Software in a $400 million stock swap, announced late Wednesday, reflects an industry trend likely to influence the balance of power in the emerging interactive television business." (D3) HOME VIDEO by Peter M. Nichols Art Spiegelman's comic-book study of the Holocaust, "Maus: A Survivor's Tale" has been put out on a compact disk to be released Tuesday by the Voyager Company ($59.95). Also, next month the company will release a CD-ROM of "Macbeth" with 1,500 annotations and a 24,000-word commentary, a digitized video of an entire Royal Shakespeare Company production plays on a small patch of screen. "Then there is the 'Macbeth karaoke," which allows the viewer to perform a role during a separate reading." (D17) That's all. Robbin Murphy [log in to unmask]