'OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF

)CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO

lUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC

JSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU

.FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS

OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF

)CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO

:USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC

JSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU

FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS

OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF

)CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO

:USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC

JSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU

FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS

OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF

)CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO

:USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC

JSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU

FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS

OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF

)CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO

:USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC

JSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU

FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS

OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF

)CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO

:USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC

)SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU

FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS

OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF

)CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO

:USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC

ISFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU

FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS

LISTENER-SPONSORED PACIFICA RADIO FOR SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

FOLIO

HE^FK-FM 99§a»i<msm

So they say that

this is "international Woman's Year" 1975 the U.IM. and the newspaper

and the peace corps, only one minor problem-

and i know im a trouble maker but I was just reading (on the same page in the paper) about a woman in Chile who was a political prisoner

who lost her child and her dreams and was tortured and i know it's a bother

but you who sponsor this "International Women's Year"

as some showy appeasement you also sponsor my sister's pain in the name of dollars in your hands they are only empty promises so please don't smile and tell me

how many women hold high positions in Pinochetl cabinet or about the "liberated" wife of the Shah of Iran and i dont mean to be always finding fault but was it just a month ago that you stopped paying for the death of another sister who knew the truth across the seas in Saigon

at the same time that I skimmed through your slick appraisal of the situation of women in 1975

and oh by the way "international Women's year" will never be a "WO mens Year" while it is yours we must struggle till we are all free, till it is ours Margaret Talbot (age 13)

Highlights

"LADY.. .WOULD YOU MIND MOVING YOUR TRUCK?"

"Lady. . . Would you Mind Moving Your Truck?" The pamphlet cer- tainly had a catchy title. I picked it up from my office floor where it lay among the scattered print debris I had accumulated during my two-week stay at the U.N. International Women's Year Conference in Mexico City. Pamph- lets about Ukrainian women in soviet prisons lone of which con- tained a shiny postcard of a firey Acapuico sunset on one side and a Russian message to someone in Warren, Michigan on the other), stacks of the daily con- ference participants, an old N. Y. Times article about "The Selling of Women's Year 1975," and a complete set of Los Angeles Times clippings on the conference -my own overview article and a ream of others by the Times staffer in Mexico City, a male.

I was trying to piece together my impressions of the conference, hoping that its "literature" would help me focus my views. The event itself was still very much with me. I remembered clearly almost everything from my three- bounce landing at Mexico City's airport to my trip's last relentless case of tourista, which lingered long after my return to the States.

Browsing through that feminist- titled pamphlet, "Lady. . . Would you Mind Moving Your Truck?," I remembered suddenly that I had gotten it at - of all places - the U.S. Embassy, and the scene - a confrontation between a group of American women and the official U.S. delegation - came flooding back. The encounter, like so many others during the international gathering, crystallized political and cultural tensions and obscured what most American women felt to be the conference's central issue - sexism. Not racism, not the implementation of the new world economic order, not the supremacy of one ideology over another. Unfortunately, politics, not feminism, held center stage.

At the U.S. Embassy, the conflict was between women of racial minorities and government-appoin- ted women. At the Plenary, the formal arena for predetermined governmental positions, the con- flict was between Third World

Poster picture by Unidad de Mujeres Contra El Fascismo

countries and the less numerous non-Third World countries. Be- tween East and West, developed and under-developed. Communism and Socialism and the "capitalist" "imperialist" democracies. At the Tribune , the UN-sponsored gathe- ring of non-official delegates from disparate organizations all over the world, the conflict was the same, the only difference being a less official atmosphere which occasionally encouraged more personal communication.

In addition to the confusion and tensions brought about by "isms," the difficulty of women talking freely to women about women's issues was further hampered by the conference's low budget, a crude sexist financial joke which accounted for much of the meeting's chaos and seeming purposelessness.

Many American women, who had expected to explore the problems of improving women's status in a sort of world-wide consciousness- raising session, were stunned by the nationalism, racism and ideo- logy which separated them from their global "sisters." They should not have been. As one male U.N. official expressed it: "This is a U.N. conference on women, not a women's conference." American feminists, in particular, were shocked to find that many of their cherished goals - like equal pay for equal work and control over their own bodies - were totally meaningless to the needs and desires of Third World women.

"We are not interested in your bourgeois needs for 'fulfillment,' for making sure a woman's the- rapist is a woman," one Indian woman explained heatedly to an informal meeting at the Tribune. "We women from underdeveloped nations are concerned with survival problems - food, clothing and shelter."

Regarding my own view of the con- ference, I have retained some of my initial outrage at the lack of com- munication caused by the political barriers at the conference. I also have remained slightly depressed from watching a potentially produc- tive meeting on women's problems turn into an ideological farce and from seeing women - from my country, as well as from others - used as political shills by their male-dominated cultures.

On the "up" side, I have begun to feel lately that the conference, while it will not go down in history as a milestone in feminist - or even female - solidarity, was a hopeful, if somewhat disorganized, beginning towards such unity. What will fol- low the conference, I think, is something that should have pre- ceeded it - regional and then national women's conferences, the kind of homework that could have prevented Mexico City's test-by fire. The next international women's exam will be easier perhaps, for by then women may even have the power to answer their own questions.

^

The series of documentaries and interviews I have produced this month for Pacifica do not, I feel, reflect my personal or political assessment of the conference. If any editing was done, most was accomplished before a tape was even made - in that I had to choose which events to cover - or in a very limited way in the edit booth in eliminating the inau- dible and the repititious. I tried to cover those gatherings - large or small - which would provide the Pacifica listener with a broad segment of opinion and, most of all, a visceral feeling of the excite- ment and frustration, the warmth and the tension of a gathering of thousands of women, of La Con— ferencia Mundial del Anb Interna- tional de la Mujer.

Barbara Cady

[Ail broadcasts and rebroadcasts of the IWY programs are indicated in the Folio by the IWY logo, ed.l

MUSICA PACIFICA CONCERTS AIRED Organized only a little over Organized only a little over two years ago by Paul Vorwerk, the ensemble of singers and players of early music known as Musica Pacifica has rapidly gained recog- nition and stature as a vital contri- bution to Los Angeles' musical life.

The ensemble's first commercial recording ("La Dafne" by Marco da Gagliano) will be released this month on ABC Records, just as the group embarks on its third annual series of concerts.

During September, KPFK will broadcast four programs of live, in-concert, recordings made during the 1974-75 series in which the ensemble, joined on occasion by The Pacifica Singers (a fifty-voice choir—, explored the music of the Baroque era. These concerts will be heard on Friday evenings at 8:00 pm David Cloud hosts. Technical production by David Cloud and Mark Rosenthal.

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 1

KPFK 90.7 fm

THE VOLUNTEERS make the station go on and' off and keep running in between. They produce programs, edit tapes, type and file, stuff envelopes, answer phones, run errands, help with community events—in short, we coujd not function without them. Those not listed elsewhere in the Folio are:

Sarah Anderson, Tom Beal, Roxanne Berger, Susan Birnbaum, Natalie Blasco, Stephen Blum, Dan Bottoms, losette Bryson, Anna Burney, |udy Bush, Roberto Cantu, Barbara Clairchilde, Louise Chevlin. Dean Cohen, Peter Cole, Pete Cutler, David Dochterman. |anel Oodson. Gail Griffin, Greg Gordon, Bob Gowa, Burt Handelsman, Bill Handelsman, Alison Hershey. Alan Kanter, Marjorie Kaufman, Gordon Kent, Dudley Knight, Barbara Kraft, )oel Kurlzman, Bob Lai, Alma Landsberger, Elizabeth Luye, Conrad Malilly, Enric Marello. Maureen Mcllroy, Colin McQueen, Julia Mcndoza, Sam Mittleman, Ben Mlynarski, Bill Moritz, David Morrison, Jim Mossberger, Marsha Necheles, Richard Nielsen, Doug Landauer, Beverly O'Neil, Sandra Orgel, Robert Orndorff, Snnia Roman, Pearl Skotnes, Marcia Slaten, Craig Sporgeon, Madeleine Stem, Scott Sutton, Hendrick Sybrandy, Rick Toscan, Jerry Trowbridge, Debby Crawford and others whose names may have been inadvertantly omitted (like Howard Vanucci and Alan Yoshida).

PACIFICA OFFICERS

•Oscar Hanigsberg Treasur.

Vera S. Hopkins Pearl Skotnes

Julian Stein Mary Mann

Secretary Assistant Secy. Assistant Secy. Comptroller

•R. Gordon Agnew Hon. Chairperson

* Edwin A. Goodman Chairperson

'David B. Finkel President

•Jonas Rosenfield, Jr Vice President

•Danny Samuels 2nd Vice President

•BOARD OF DIRECTORS

Dupuy Bateman III, Joseph C. Belden, Carol A. Breshears, Charles Brousse, Michael R. Davis, Ralph Engelman, Peter Franck, Ken Jenkins, Thelma Meltzer, Peter Tagger, Tracy A. Westen.

KPFK LOCAL ADVISORY BOAkO

Jim Berland, Carol Breshears, Roscoe Lee Browne, Mae Churchill, Geoffrey Cowan, Digby Diehl, David Dworski, Moctezuma Esparza, David Finkel, Peter Flaxman, Sam Francis, Frank Gehry, Leonard Goldman, Brownlee Haydon, Hallock Hoffman, Celes King III, Robert Klein, Roger K. Leib, Warren Lanier, Allen Lenard, Louis Licht, Ronald M. Loeb, Herschel Lymon, Brian G. Manion, Jeffrey Matsui, Isabelle Navar, Frederick Nicholas, Anais Nin, Marshall Perlman, John Phillips, Robert Powsner, Robert Radnitz, Joyce Reed Rosenberg, Jonas Rosenfield, Jr., Paul Saltman, Avery Schreiber, Marvin Segelman, Muriel Seligman, Pearl Skotnes, Frederic Sutherland, Tracy Weston L. Jolyon West, Haskell Wexler, Digby Wolfe, Frank Wyle, Floyd Yudelson, Irving Zeiger

Pacif ica Radio Los Angeles

KPFK STAFF:

General Manager: Will Lewis. Program Director: Ruth Hirschman. Music: David Cloud. Director. Katherine Calkin. Paul Vorwerk. News: David Boxall and Carol Breshears. Co-Directors. Ed Thomas. Public Affairs: Jim Berland. Director. Barbara Cady, Earl Ofari. Cultural Affairs: Paul Vangelisti. Director. Emily Schiller. Production: Peter Sutheim. Director Lucia Chappeile. Tim McGovern. Phil Mendelson. Mark Rosenthal. Steve Tyler. Engineer: Don Wilson. Promotion: Barbara Spark. Program Producer: Clare Spark. Program Assistant: Gael Sapiro. Subscriptions: Roger Zimmerman. Director. Ahna Accountant: Joel Zcserson with Susan Mendel. Community Events: Mario Casetta Chief Bureaucrat: Roy Tuckman Folio: Roy Tuckman, Editor Sue Rebar

The KPFK Folio is not sold; it is sent free to each subscriber supporting our non-profit, non-commercial educational station, and contains the most accurate possible listings of the programs broadcast. Subscription rates are $25 a year for working adults, $15 for students, retired or unemployed etc., and $60 for the 3729 Club. Free subscriptions are given to prison inmates.

Our transmitter is on Mount Wilson. We broadcast in stereo multiplex with an effec- tive radiated power of 112,000 watts. Our broadcasts are Dolby "B" encoded with a 25 microsecond pre-emphasis. We broadcast Dolby calibration tones Monday through Friday at noon and Monday through Saturday at 8pm. Our studios and offices are at 3729 Cahuenga Blvd. West in North Hollywood, Ca. 91604. Phones: (213) 877-2711 and 984-2711.

KPFK is owned and operated by the Pacifica Foundation, a non-profit institution. Subscriptions are transferable to the other Pacifica Stations: KPFA, 2207 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley, Ca. 94704. WBAI, 359 E 62nd St., N.Y. 10021. KPFT, 419 Lovett, Houston, Texas 77006.

SUBSCRIPTIONS

BILLING

Members of the 3729 Club and those being billed monthlv: the computer will bill you when you are due. PLEASE wait for a bill. Returning the bill with your payment will insure crediting your account correctly, and save us the labor and expense of looking up your account to see what went wrong.

Sending in a payment without a bill or renewal form costs more to process than the cost of printing and mailing the form to you. If you do not receive a bill when you think you should, drop us a card about 4t, and we'll check out the account. You may be paid ahead or may not be down for periodic billing.

MOVING

The FOLIO will NOT follow you automatically when you move. It will be returned to us, readdressed. and resent (takes about 3-6 weeks for this). So if you don't want to miss a Folio, fill out the change of address coupon on PAGE 19-1 f we receive it before the mid- dle of the month, you will not miss one Folio. (We get 500-1000 changes of address a month, so your advance notice helps us keep ahead and saves us postage charges.

RENEW.AL AND MAILING-UPDATING PROCEDURES

The Folio is now being mailed between the ISth and 20th of the month. If you have been on the machine-labeled mailing list, have not moved recently, and are not lapsed, you should receive the Folio before the First of the month. If you dont (and do not have an outside ripoffable mailbox) contact your local Postmaster about delivery.

First renewal notices are sent out one month ahead of expiration. You will receive your last Folio with the second renewal notice about the beginning of the month your expiration date is up. This allows you to respond before the 2nd Wednesday of the month.

2nd Wednesdays are the key dates in subscription processing as anything processed by then is sent up to the computer, and all up-dated bills, renewals, and the Folio mailing list for the next month are printed and returned to us the following Monday. Folios are addressed and mailed by the end of that week.

As you can see, an address change or payment received by the 2nd Wednesday will take effect the next month. One day later, the same information will appear one monti later.

ANNOUNCEMENT TO ALL BLIND KPFK SUBSCRIBERS

The Folio is available on reel-to-reel or cassette tape to all blind subscribers to KPFK. If you would like to receive the Folio in this form, please tear off the address label on the back of your Folio and send it along with a note stating that you would like to be on the special blind mailing list. Within two months (hopefully) you will be receiving your complete program guide on tape or cassette.

ItuuujjJOiuaaBBOoivyyiooiiixxmyvvvvyjiiiiiitvtvvvy^

*i

<vyx)fx[

'v^3&;>OBa^;>;xxia;v3(ia&3eo«^^o^^^:y.siv.y>^vLV.\xx.x.\.x.x^

NKW .><l li.SCHIPTION

GIFT Sl'B.SCRIPTION

3729 CM 15 CONNFK.^ION

^.^v.■'^^^^s<^5^.<^B<v^^!v^aoooatv«vvx«x«wvM^:l^

I 1 Regular 1 year $25 1)6 f""*. $13

I ] Student 1 year $15 [ j g ^^^ ,g

[ ) 3729 Club $60

[ ) 3729 Club Payments ($65). $25 enclosed. Bill me at $ ($5 min) per (mo. or qtr)

GIVER

(attach Folio label if subscriber)

Dear KPFK: Please convert me to the 3729 Club. Give bm a $15j trade-in on my current subscription and start me for a new year.'

PASTE PRESENT FOLIO LABEL HERE

TiTT

RECIPIENT

I I Enclosed is $45 full payment.

I I Enclosed is an initial payment of (min. $25)

.(min.lS) per --(month or qtr)

City

Sute Zip

and bill me (toul $50)

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 2

In

5729 CLUB

A^'

A NON PRORT MEMBERSHIP ASSOCIATION

DEDICATED ONLY TO SERVING THE INTERESTS OF THE CALIFORNIA CONSUMER

^^Sf'^,

Listeners and volunteers from Santa Barbara and Bakersfield down to the Mexican border, have been supporting the station and its 3729 Club for 15 years For a tax-deductible contribution of $60 a year, they receive the monthly program guide. The Folio, Film of the Month privileges mounting in a year to over $71 in film admissions, and the benefits of the Community Consumers Council

KPFK IS celebrating its fourth year of association with Community Consumers Council providing a membership ser- vices program for KPFK s 3729 Club Members wishing to participate in KPFK listener-supported and sponsored radio may renew their CCC membership, tax- deductible, for as little as $25 for the first payment, and monthly $5 payments up to $65 (which includes a $5 service fee)

^g^^icCCJorJun

Which CCC Service Do You Need to Know About?

^fx-^^

"^'^A^o

Books:

CCC Carries Most Titles

'^^'

CCC AUTO PROGRAM

FOOD SAVINGS

Group Legal

CCC tRAVet

Charters To Europe & Hawaii Added

S>'

cccQcton

.nC<

CCC Adds Major Medical Group Health Plan

r I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I'

iFiLM OF THE MONTH CLUB

I I I I I I I I I

I I I I I I I I I I I I I I

EXCITING ANNOUNCEMENT!! As of press time (Aug 15) our Film of the Month Club Mommy, Barbara Spark, hasn't scored a film. She is working on it. As usual, as soon as we find our film, we will announce it before morning news, evening news, and monotone news -and nearly hourly throughout the day.

If you ABSOLUTELY tiardly ever listen or are afraid you will miss a week's worth of announcements about tfie film, you may send a STAMPED SELI ADDRESSED postcard to Barbara Spark, Eilm of the Month Tlub, KPFK, Universal City, 91608 and she will jot the name and times down and return it to you.

^'

./^' " ,„w to /'"•*

, nil ^l'-'"''" fthc

,..rt ''^\ uill he- [ „d '<•■ .^' /

me"*"

V-

3729 Club Membership entitles you to membership in the Com- munity Consumer Council and the Film of the Month Club.

The tax-deductible cost Is $45

to CONVERT your present sub

scription (or you can pay $50

in payments). See coupon on

page 2.

Barbara Spark: Promotions Director ; genial host of "Organic Gardening."

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 3

V

Regular Programs & Series

CLASSICAL MUSIC

ETHNIC AND FOLK MUSIC

NEWS AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS

CONSUMER PROGRAMS

Boston Symphony

Tues 8pm

Ballads Banjos Bluegrass

Sat 1:30pm

KPFK Evening News

Daily 6pm

The Car Show

Sat 12:30pm

Chapel Court &

Bluegrass Special

Fri 1:30am

Inside L.A.

Sat 4:30pm

Food for Thought

2+4 W 3pm

Countrysidf

Men 8pm

Folk Dance With Mario

TuTh 10am

Monotone News

M-F 11:30pm

The Health Department

1+3 W 3pm

Cleveland Orchestra

Thur 8pm

Folk Music (Davis)

'Sat 10:30am

Open lournal

MF 7pm

In Fidelity

Fri 9pm

Williatn Malloch

Sat 10pm

Folkscene

Sun 9:30pm

This Morning

M-F 9am

Organic Gardening

Mon 3pm

Noon Concert

M-F 12n

M & F 10am

Read All About It

M-F 9:30am

Survive With Pleasure

Fri 3pm

Sunday Opera ''<^'^'

Sun 1pm

Many Worlds of Music

Sun 10:45am

What in the World

Sun 12:30pm

Sunrise Concert

MF 6am

Latin Quarter

Fri 9:30pm

Tenor of the Times

4th Sun 1pm

Music Black & White

Sun 12m

CONSCIOUSNESS RAISERS

Tesseract

Sat 12m

Tues 4pm

Zymurgv

Sat 8pm

Nommo Preachin' the Blues

Sat 3pm Sat gam

Apogee Bio-Meditation

Thurs 11pm

Richland Woman

Wed 1 0am

COMMENTARY

(Jack Gariss) Carlos Hagen Presents Come to Life Hour 25: sf

Sun 9am Sun 8:30pm Sun 10am Fri 12m

ROCK AND JAZZ

Project Ozma

Wed 2pm'

Dealing

M-F 5pm

Spectrum

Mon 2pm

Barbara Birdfeather

Sun 2am

Dorothy Healey

Sun 11:30am

Trans

1t3 Sat 7pm

Contemporary jazz

IMRU

2+4 Tu 10:30pm

2+4 Fri 2pm'

Workshop

Mon4pm

CULTURAL AFFAIRS

La Raza Nueva

Mon 9pm

Fission

Tues 3am

Lesbian Sisters

IstTu 10:30pm

NONE OF THE ABOVE

Gospel Caravan

Sun 6am

The Big Broadcast

Sun Sam

Charles Morgan

M+W 6:45pm

Goodbye Pork Pie Hat

Fri 4pm

Cultural Journal

1 + 3 Thu 10am

Tu+Th 9:15am

Calendar of Events

M-F 9:55am

Jazz

Thurs 4pm

Kulchur

M-F 11:30am

Newspeak

Fri6:4Spm

M-Sa 5:55pm

Jazz Showcase

Wed 4pm

Morning Reading

M-F 11am

Mon 9:15am*

'/i Way Down the Stairs

Sat 9:30am

Mr. Mystic

Thurs 3am

On Film, In Print,

Sat 6:30pm

Redealing

Tu 10: 30pm

Report to the Listener

Tu 1:55pm

Chuck Raggio

Wed 3am

Poetry Live

2+4 Th 10pm

William Winter

Tu+Th 6:45pm

Fri 6:40pm

Soft Core Phonography

Sat 2am

1 + 3 Fri 2pm'

W+F 9:15am

Steve Tyler

MSa 12m

Sour Apple Tree

Sun 5pm

Woman to Woman

3rdTu 10:30pm

'indicates rebroadcast

MOIMDAY 1 LAPOR DAY

Imperial Valley Farmworkers (LNS Newspholo)

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

10:00 THE 1934 SAN FRANCISCO

WATERFRONT AND GENERAL STRIKE:

Kach Labor Day we air this classic presentation produced in 1964 by Ernest Lowe for KFFA The documentary deals with the paralyzing strike that began with the shooting of two union men by the San ' Police.

11:40 STUDS TERKEL ON WORKING Barbara Cady speaks with author, radio documentarian and everybody's favorite working class hero.

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 4

12:00 SAN DIEGO FOLK FESTIVAL Saturday Evening Part II Featuring Patsy Montana. Sam and Kirk McGee, Tommy Jarrell. the Wright Bros and the Highwoods String Band. (This is the program planned for August 1 and inadvertently dropped . It completes the Festival series.

1:30 DUST TO DUST

A dramatic documentary adapta- tion of the article by Alicia Tyler from the January 1975 issue of the Washington Monthly. The Hawks Nest Tunnel Project in West Virginia during the 30's decimated hundreds of workers. This documentary, produced by Mike Model, tells how - and why.

2:15 JIM MORRISON: ARTIST IN HELL

On this Labor Holiday, we include, perhaps for the first time, the artist. This treatment of the leader of The Doors, is a devastating portrayal of American Society and the symbiotic relationship between the star and the audience. Jim Morrison was a singer, poet, philosopher. Clare Spark weaves a tapestry of his music, poems and . recollections of colleagues and friends. First produced in the fall of 1971, and rebroadcast often by popular request.

6:00 COMING HOME THERE WAS NO

HOMECOMING

This is the 1975 Armstrong Award winning program, produced by our New York sister station, WBAl. The realities of Vietnam veterans speaking out their pain and rage are mixed with the actualities of the war, assembled from past Pacifica programs.

7:00 UNITED FARMWORKERS

From fields, rallies, & convention.

8:00 LABOR DAY CONCERT

Three quintessential pieces of Ivesiana - the early, lyrical String Quar- tet No. 1, the massive and monumental Symphony No. 4, and the cosmically transcendental Unanswered Quest/on. With a few verbal asides by Ives and David Cloud. Stereo.

9:30 DEATH OF A SALESMAN

Arthur Miller's quintessential Ameri can play that speaks to the tragedy of all the Willie Lomans in the land. From an original Broadway cast recording starring Thomas Mitchell and directed by Elia Kazan.

11:00 MUSIC FROM THE AMERICAN

FOLK FAIR!

Roz and Howard Larman focus on highlights from the live entertainment at the Santa Monica Civic on July 10-13. Artists include Holly Near, Bruce U. Utah Phillips, Peter Yarrow and others.

Dorothy Healey: Volunteer Commenlati

tuesday 2

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

9:00 THIS MORNING

News with Carol Breshears and Ed Thomas, commentary by Charles Morgan, "Read All About It" and the Tuesday calendar, read and compiled by Teny Model

10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIOI

11:00 MORNING READING

Laughtble Lorts. by Milan Kun- dera. Dark comedies of eroticism by one of Czechoslovakia's most important writers. Read by Peter Sutheim.

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

American Music: Old & New 19th Century American ballroom music performed on authentic instruments from the Smithsonian Institution and George Crumb's Music for a Summer Eve- rting (Makrokosmos 111). The Smithsonian Social Orchestra and Quadrille Band conduc- ted by James Weaver; Gilbert Kalisch and James Freeman, pianos; Raymond des Roches and Richard Fitz. percussion; Nonesuch H 71313 and H 71311. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.

¥#

2:00 WrLL THE REAL U.S. DELEGA- TION PLEASE STAND UP?

At the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City, the U.S. delegation squared off against those Americans at the U.N. International Women's Year Conference who vociferously denied the legitimacyof America's official representatives. After the hasty departure of Daniel Parker, co-head of the delegation-amidst hisses and boos-the protesters won their right to the ' mike and, along with numerous other non- disruptive women, spent the morning-at 5 minutes apiece-painting a verbal, moving picture of the women's movement's variety. (Rebroadcast Wed, 3rd, 10pm)

3:45 THE PRESS IN CHILE

Barbara Cady and Peggy Holter talk with a refugee Chilean journalist, now working for Mexican television, about the plight of the press in Chile since Allende's assassination. (Rebroadcast Sun, 7, 6:30)

4:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE

Nawana Davis plays novelty blues, bluegrass, and strange things.

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

News and views of varying hues.

5:55 TUESDAY CALENDAR

Compiled and read by Terry HodeL

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

LIVE IN CONCERT

HA YDN: Symphony No. 99. MO- ZART: Piano Concerto No. //—Leonard Bernstein, soloist. HAYDN: Symphony No. too. Leonard Bernstein conducts. William Pierce hosts. Recorded with the Dolby "A" noise reduction system in Columbia SQ Four-Channel Sound.

10:00 REDEALING: Barbara Cady The best of "Deahng."

10:30 LESBIAN SISTERS

News and views of the lesbian community. Music, discussion, poetry, guests, sometimes open phones. Host is Evan Paxton.

1 1 :30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steven Tyler

12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT

3:00 CHUCK RAGGIO AND THE RESEARCHETTES

mrednesday 3

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

9:00 THIS MORNING

News with Carol Breshears and Ed Thomas, Analysis by William Winter, "Read All About It," and the calendar compiled and read by Terry Hodel.

10:00 RICHLAND WOMAN

Folk music selected by Roberta Friedman.

4:00 JAZZ SHOWCASE

Interviews with some of the most important artists in contemporary music.

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

News and views of many hues.

5:55 WEDNESDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Mortan

7:00 OPEN lOURNAL

KPFK's nightly magazine looks for reality behind the headlines. Features, interviews, panels, debates, open phones. Hosted by Public Affairs Director, Jim Berbnd.

8:00 NHK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA- LIVE IN CONCERT AKIRA MIYOSHI; FettinI Onr- ture; FELIX MENDELSSOHN: Sym- phony No. 4, ("Italian"); MATSUAKI HAY AM A: Symphonic Metamorphosis for Piano and Orchestra (Hitoshi Kobay- shi, soloist). Tadashi Mori, Kazuyoshi Akiyama and Hiroshi Wagasuki conduc- ting. Program material courtesy Japan Broadcasting Corporation. Stereo.

BIG SHOTS: I to

Asst Secretary, Board M(

Pacifica Comptroller.

uman, Pacifica Secretary; Pearl Skotnes, nber & Volunteer Extraordinaire; Mary Mann,.

11:00 MORNING READING

Laughable Loves, by Milan Kundera. Dark comedies of eroticism by one of Czechoslovakia's most important writers. Read by Peter Sutheim.

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Music of Varese

Integrates: Hyperprism; Paris Instru- mental Ensemble for Contemporary Music; Konstantin Simonovich conducting; Angel S 36788; lonisation; Offrandes: Contem- porary Chamber Ensemble; Arthur Weiss- berg conducting; Nonesuch H 71269; AmeriQues; Utah Symphony Orchestra; Maurice Abravanel conducting; Vanguard S274; Arcana; Chicago Symphony Orches- tra; Jean Martinou conducting; RCA LSC 2914. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.

1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER

2:00 PROIECTOZMA

Originally , a project to listen for sig- nals from outer space. Project Ozma is now the name for the re-broadcast of the best things from Hour 25, the Science and Science Fiction show. Interviews, stories, old radio, it all has to do with Science Fiction. Produced by Mike Hodel.

3:00 THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT

Exploring health care as it is practiced and as it might be. With Al Huebner of the Medical Committee for Human Rights.

¥/

9:00 WILL THE REAL U.S. DELEGATION PLEASE STAND UP?

At the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City, the U.S. delegation squared off against those Americans at the U.N. International Women's Year Conference who vociferously denied the legitimacy of America's official representatives. After the hasty departure of Daniel Parker, co-head of the delegation- amidst hisses and boos-the protesters won their right to the mike and along with numerous other non-disruptive women, spent the morning-at five minutes apiece- painting a verbal, moving picture of the women's movement's variety.

10:45 L. A. WOMEN AT THE IWY CONFERENCE

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler 12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT 3:00 MR MYSTIC: )im Harber

thursday 4

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

9:00 THIS MORNING

News with Carol Breshears and Ed Thomas, Commentary by Charles Mor^n, "Read All About It," and the Calendar.

10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIOI

11:00 MORNING READING

Laughable Lorat, by M3an Kunder*. Dark comedies of eroticism by one of Czechoslovakia's most important writers. Read by Petei Sutheim.

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Music for Brass

JOSQUIN DES PREZ: Royal Fanfares for the Coronation of Louis XII; JOHANN HERMANN SCHEIN: Suite No. 3 from " Banchetto Musicale," MOZART: Diver- timento, K. 187; BEETHOVEN: Three Equali for Four Trombones; PAUL DUKAS: Fanfare from "La Peri;" MALCOLM AR- NOLD: Quintet for Brass; INCOLF DAHL: Music for Brass Instruments; SIR ARTHUR BLISS: Flourish for Two Brass Orchestras. The performers include the Jean-Francois Pailliard Ensemble, the Phillip Jones Brass Ensemble, the Annapolis Brass Quintet, the Berlin Brass Quintet, and the Canadian Brass Quintet; Music Guild MS 120; Decca SDD 274; Crystal S 802 and S 201; Boot BMC 3003. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.

2:00 IN THE CORRIDORS OF THE

METRO

by Alain Robbe-Grillet. From Snapshots, a collection of short pieces written between 1954 and 1962. Robbe- Grillet observes three locations on the Paris subway station; an escalator, a corridor, an electric door. Read by Erik Bauersfeld with sound and technical production by Mick O'Neal

2:25 THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN

THE ARTS

A roundtable discussion hosted by art critic and poet John Perreault with women artists and critics. The topic is women artists, are women artists discri- minated against, and why in the past, have there been so few great women artists? Produced by WBAI.

¥/

3:30 CONTRACEPTION SI!

ABORTION NO!

Barbara Cady and Peggy Holter talk with two Latin American Catholic women who have been busy organizing a pro-contraception organization throughout South America. (Rebroadcast Sun, 28th, 6:30pm).

4:00 )AZZ

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 THURSDAY CALENDAR

Compiled and read by Terr>' Hodel

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

KPFK's nightly magazine looks at reality behind the headlines. Features, interviews, panels, debates, open phones. Hosted by Jim Berland, Public Affairs Director

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 5

The Los Angeles Feminist Federal Credit Union opened August 2, 1975 with 9 feminist organizations in the field of membership, including 7 NOW chapters. Career Planning Center and Power of Women.

^" LOS ANGELES ^" FEMINIST

1434 WESTWOOD BLVD.,SUITE 4

LOS ANGELES, CALIF. 90024

phone:(213) 4753889

HOURS

MON. & THURS 5 - 9 PM

SATURDAY 10 -3 PM

SAVINGS INSURED TO 540,000.00

One of the main purposes behind the formation of the Los Angeles Feminist Federal Credit Union is to fight to end credit discrimination and to strive for equal credit for women by making our own loan policies. The Los Angeles Feminist Federal Credit Union gives feminists the opportunity to put feminist money to work to benefit each other and the movement.

seminars

job referals

Caree

r Planning

Center Inc

workshops

anon

-profit cor

nmunity

legal

^M based

organizat

on, ongina-

consultation

^1 ted c

reer plann

ing for

wome

n and is c

onsidered

H a nat

onal leade

r in provi-

library

■■ dins

'one stop'

service to

resumes

caree

oriented

women.

[213] 273-6633

Career Planning Center 1623 So LaCienega Blvd Los Angeles, Ca 90035

8:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA- LIVE IN CONCERT TCHAIKOVSKY: Romeo and Juliet Overture. STRAVINSKY: Violin Concerto- Kyung Wha Chung, soloist RACHMANI- NOFF: Symphonic Dances, tdo de Waart conducts, Robert Conrad hosts. Recorded in Columbia SQ F-'our-Channcl Sound.

10:00 CULTURAL JOURNAL

11:00 APOGEE: Mitchell Harding

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

1:30 BLUEGRASS SPECIAL

Gentleman Jim Ludwig with more pickin' n' grinnin'.

friday 5

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

9:00 THIS MORNING

News with Carol Breshears and Ed Thomas. Analysis of William Winter. "Read All About It," and the calendar.

10:00 FOLKSCENE; The Larmans

Kajsa Ohman. singer-songwriter from Montana. Best of Sunday night's live "Folkscene" program.

11:00 MORNING READING

Laughable Loves by Milan Kundera. Dark comedies of eroticism by one of Czechoslovakia's most important writers. Read by Peter Sutheim.

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Katherijie Calkin hosts a program of new releases. Stereo.

2:00 POETRY LIVE

God made lots of people but only a few poets. (Paul Vangelisti).

3:00 SURVIVE WITH PLEASURE

Wina Sturgeon's view of things.

4:00 GOODBYE PORK PIE HAT

Tributes to individual artists, histori- cal surveys and spotlights on some of the most influential recordings in jazz.

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

News and views of many hues.

5:55 FRIDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER

6:45 NEWSPEAK

Joseph Webb checks out the media.

7:00 OPEN )OURNAL

KPFK's nightly magazine looks for reahty behind the headlines. Features, interviews, panels, debates, open phones. Hosted by Public Affairs Director, Jim Berland.

8:00 MUSICA PACIFICA-

LIVE IN CONCERT

J.S. BACH: Cantata No. 78. "Jesu. der du Meine Seele:" CLAUD 10 MONTE- VERDI: Concertato Madrigals irom Books VII and VIII. Paul Vorwerk conducts the members of Musica Pacifica and the Pacifica Singers. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.

9:00 IN FIDELITY

A program for audiophiles, with Peter Sutheim, KPFK's Production Director.

9:30 LATIN QUARTER

Antonio Salazar with music, com- munity events, and guests.

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 HOUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION I wanna go to sleep.

2:00 SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY

Join Jay Lacey anytime for 2am— Bad Radio (listening, why are you?) 3am- Old Radio (listening, remember?) 4am- Wax Radio (music & free records) 6:30— Tel Radio (phone talk, news)

Katherine Calkin: Asst. Music Director and Hour 25 host.

Saturday

6:00 PREACHIN' THE BLUES

A meinw pot-pourri of blues, boogie and black gospel music featuring selections from 60 years of recorded rausic. Live guests will be dropping in from time to time.

9:30 '/j WAY DOWN THE STAIRS

Uncle Ruthie (Buell) presents songs. games, stories, and fun for kids of all ages.

10:30 FOLK MUSIC: John Davis

Handsome old Uncle John plays folk music for the folks and presents his version of the Southern California folk music calendar.

12:30 THE CAR SHOW

John Retsek and Jack Kirkpatrick with some help from Doris present their phenomenal program on your car and how- to live with it.

1:30 BALLADS BANJOS & BLUEGRASS!

Tom Sauber and Bill Bryson play | bluegrass music, folk music, lots of banjos and sometimes talk a little.

3:00 NOMMO

Music, poetry and thoughts from the Pan-Afrikan World, with Tambuzi

Nyamavu.

4:30 INSIDE L. A.

Examining social, political and cultural happenings in L.A. with guests, interviews, commentary by Ron Ridenour and jazz.

5:55 WEEKEND CALENDAR

6:00 THE SATURDAY NEWS

6:30 ON FILM : Steve Mamber

6:45 IN PRINT: Bob Peters

KPFK FOUO PAGE 6

7:00 TRANS: Amanda Foulger

A two-part tribute to C.G. Jung: Gnostic of the Modern Age. Commemo- rating the 100th anniversary of his birth, the programs will emphasize the spiritual keynote of Jung's contribution to the enlightenment of the age. With Dr. Stephan Hoeller. Assoc. Professor of Comparative Religions. College of Oriental Studies. Produced by Amanda Foulger. (Rcbroadcast Fri, I2th. 2pm)

8:00 ZYMURGY

Monday Evening Concerts IX Recorded live in concert at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art on March 3, 1975. PAOLO CASTALDI: Aufrage: BELA BARTOK: Suite for Two Pianos; KARL KOHN: Paronyms: GIOVANNI da PALESTRINA: Super Flumina Babylonis; CIPRIANO de RORE: Sfrondate, O Sacre Dive; CARLO CESUALDO di VENOSA: lo Tacero: Invan Dunque o Crudele; CLAUDIO MONTEVERDI: Lamento d'Arianna. Karl and Margaret Kohn, piani;ts; Louise di Tullio, flutes; Pomona College Glee Club. David Cloud hosts. Technical production by Mark Rosenthal. Phillip Mendelson, Ronald "treicher. and David Cloud. Recorded with the Dolby "A " noise reduction system. Stereo.

10:00 WILLIAM MALLOCH

12:00 TESSERACT: Phil Mendelson .'\ program of electronic music.

2:00 BARBARA BKRDFEATHER

Freeform rock.

Sunday 7

6:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN

With the legendary Prince Dixon.

8:00 THE BIG BROADCAST

Golden Age radio classics from around the world.

9:00 BIO-MEDITATION: jack Gariss

An experiential, experimental exploration of states of consciousness, feeling states and body states of the multi-dimensional unity of you.

10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschel Lymon A human growth center of the air. A conversation with Dr. Stanislav Grof. pioneer in LSD psychotherapy, about his new book : Realms of the Human Unconscious-Observations from LSD Research.

10:45 MANY WORLDS OF MUSIC

Today, Mario Casetta plays Yugo- slavian regional dances.

11:30 DOROTHY HEALEY

Marxist viewpoint with guests and open phones.

12:30 TOP SECRET RADIO

An in depth look at items of current affairs, with Tim McGovern and Jeff Kaye.

1:00 THE SUNDAY OPERA

JANACEK: Aus einem Totenhaus. Soloists- Siemen Jongsma. Chris Schaef- fer, Jan van Mantgem, Simon van Trirum- Alexander Krannhals conducts the Choir and Orchestra of the Netherlands Opera (Epic 6005). Fred Hyatt hosts.

5:00 SOUR APPLE TREE

Does art have any redeeming social value? Produced by Clare Spark.

6:00 SUNDAY NEWS: Peter Gordon

^

6:30 THE PRESS IN CHILE

Barbara Cady and Peggy Holter talk with a refugee Chilean journalist, now working for Mexican television, about the plight of the press in Chile since Allende's assassination.

7:15 ARISTOPHANES' LYSISTRATA

One of the earliest, and still most amusing se.xual comedies in Western drama. This production features Hermione Gingold and Stanley Holloway, directed by Howard Sackler.

VIOLETA PARRA, "Woman of the Continent" on "Carlos Hagen Presents"

8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS

A Woman of the Continent: Violeta Parra. A documentary program on this woman, a giant in the art of social and protest song. A Chilean folk-singer of the 1950's and 1960's. her art was widely ignored and rejected. She com- mitted suicide in 1967 just when she was beginning to receive well-deserved recognition. After her death she has become a legend and inspiration through- out the continent.

9:30 FOLK SCENE

Howard and Roz Larman are back with some folks and singers to present live folksinging so don't fret!

12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE

Nawana Davis plays novelty songs, blues, blucgrass, and nitty gritty funk.

monday 8

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT

9:00 THIS MORNING

News with Carol Breshears and Ed Thomas. "Newspeak" with Joseph Webb. "Read All About It" and Terry Hodel with the calendar.

10:00 FOLKSCENE ON RECORD

Howard and Roz play records and tap'fes of folk music, no trumpets and no drums.

11:00 MORNING READING

Laughable Loves, by Milan Kundera. Dark comedies of eroticism by one of Czechoslovakia's most impor- tant writers. Read by Peter Sutheim.

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

The Bach Solo Cantatas Ich habe genug (821; Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau. baritone: Karl Richter conducts the Munich Bach Orchestra (Archive 2722 005). Ich armer Mensch (55); Helmut Krebs. tenor; Kurt Redel conducts the Pro Arte Orchestra (West- minster 18768). Meine Seele ruehmt und preist (189); Helmut Krebs, tenor; Kurt Redel conducts the Pro Arte Orchestra (Musical Heritage Society MHS 566). O holder Tag (210); Delcina Stevenson, soprano; H. Vincent Mitzelfelt conducts the Mitzelfelt Orchestra (Crystal S 95 1 ). Schlage doch (S3). Widerstehe doch der Suende (54); Maureen lorrestet, contralto; Antonio Janigro conducts I Solisti di Zagreb (Bach Guild BGS 70670). Katherine Calkin hosts. Stereo.

2:00 SPECTRUM: Carlos Hagen

Sometimes new programs, some- times rebroadcasts by request.

3:00 ORGANIC GARDENING

Master gardener Will Kinney and geni?.; iiost Barbara Spark kibbitz your way to health, happiness and a cornu- copian crisper. Open phones.

4:00 CONTEMPORARY JAZZ WORKSHOP

Earl Ofari reviews the latest releases.

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

News and views of many hues.

5:55 MONDAY CALENDAR

Compiled and read by Terry Hodel.

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan

7:00 OPEN lOURNAL

KPFK's nightly magazine looks for reality behind the headlines. Features, interviews, panels, debates, open phones. Hosted by Jim Berland. Public Affairs Director.

8:00 CHAPEL COURT AND COUNTRYSIDE

Renaissance and Early Baroque Music. Guest Joseph Spencer joins Katherine Calkin to talk about and play a new Dutch recording featuring harpsi- chords built by Willem Kroesbergen and played by Ton Koopland. Composers include Jan 5weelinck. Frescobaldi. Michaelangelo Rossi and Scarlatti. Stereo.

9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA

Host Moctezuma Esparza discusses politics, culture and music with guests.

10:00 FOR (MORE) INFORMATION More highlights from the MORE Magazine journalism counter-convention held in February in San Francisco. Sub- jects include labor coverage, racism in media, etc. Produced by Anita Frankel. with technical production by Eric Schil- ling (KPFA). (Rcbroadcast Thurs. II. 2:30pm)

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

3:00 FISSION: Joyce Mancini

tuesday 9

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerl.

9:00 THIS MORNING

10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO

11:00 MORNING READING

12:00 NOON CONCERT

French Orchestral Miniatures.

MILHAUD: Five Symphonies for Small Orchestra; SA TIE: Three Pieces after "Gargantua and Pantagruel. " POUL ENC: Two Marches and an Interlude; CTiamber Orchestra of the Leningrad State Philharmonic; Gennady Ro/.hdcstvensky conducting; (Westminster WGS 8310). IBERT: Capriccio; FRANCAIX: Serenade; RAVEL: Le Tombeau de Couperin; IBERT: Suite Symphonique ("Paris"); Chamber Symphony of Philadelphia; Anshel Brushilow conducting; RCA LSC 3089. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.

2:00 THEATRE NOW

Four pioneers of the experimental theatre discuss their political, artistic goals, and the contradictions inherent in obtaining financing. The speakers are Judith Malina (Living Theatre). Joseph Chaikin (formerly of the Open Theatre). Richard Schechner (The Performance Group) and Julian Beck (Living Theatre).

f/

3:00 BETTY FRIEDAN VS. THE THIRD

WORLD

Betty Friedan. co-founder of NOW and author of The Feminine Mystique, spars with Third World women on such issues as the family's future, how American women handle family as well as career, and how Third World women's problems con- trast with those of women from more developed countries. Definitely a title bout. (Rcbroadcast Wed.. 10th. 9:30pm)

4:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 TUESDAY CALENDAR

6:00 KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

KPFK's nightly magazine looks for reality behind the headlines. Features, interviews, panels, debates, open phones. Hosted by Public Affairs Director. Jim Berland.

8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

LIVE IN CONCERT

HANDEL : Water Music Suite. MO- ZART: Symphony No. 35. VAUGHAN WILLIAMS: Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis. HA YDN: Symphony No. 53. Neville Mairiner conducts. William Pierce hosts. Recorded with the Dolby "A" noise reduction system in Colombia SQ Four-Chan nel Sound.

10:00 REDEALING: Barbara Cady

10:30 IMRU

A production of the Gay Radio Collective

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT

3:30 CHUCK RAGGIO AND THE RESEARCHETTES

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 7

Aurelia Morris: Volunteer Programmei

Wednesday 10

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

9:00 THIS MORNING

10:00 RICHLAND WOMAN

11:00 MORNING READING

11:30 KULCHIIR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

First Thoughts and Second Thoughts On this program we will hear Beetho- ven's l/Valdstein Sonata. Op. 53. as he revised and published it, and then, via some adroit tape splicing, as he originally wrote it, with an extended slow movement The pianist is Jacob Lateiner (RCA LSC 3173). Then Mozart's Flute Concerto No. 1, K 313, as it is currently performed, followed by a version with an alternate slow move- ment written to satisfy the patron who commissioned it. The flute soloist is Elaine Shaffer and Efrem Kurtz conducts the Philharmonia Orchestra (Seraphim 60123). David Cloud hosts. Stereo. (Rescheduled from July).

1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER 2:00 PROJECTOZMA

3:00 FOOD FOR THOUGHT

A program on health and nutrition, hosted by Ginny Roe.

4:00 JAZZ SHOWCASE

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady 5:55 WEEKEND CALENDAR 6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

8:00 NHK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA LIVE IN CONCERT J. C. BACH: Sinfonia in B Flat. Op. 18, No. 2: SADAO BEKKU: Con- certo for Violin and Orchestra (Yuriko Kuronuma, soloisti: JOHANNES BRAHMS: Serenade No. 1 in D. Op. 1 1. Hiroshi Wagasugi and Hiroyuki Iwaki conducting. Program material courtesy of Japan Broadcasting Corporation. Stereo.

Ir

9:30 BETTY FRIEDAN VS. THE THIRD WORLD

Betty Friedan, co-founder of NOW and author of The Feminine Mystique, spars with Third World women on such issues as the family's future, how American women handle family as well as career, and how Third World women's problems con- trast with those of women from more developed countries. Definitely a title bout.

10:30 THEATRE NOW

Four pioneers of the experimental theatre discuss their political and artistic goals and the contradictions inherent in obtaining financing.

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

3:00 MR MYSTIC: )im Harber

Carol Breshears: Co News Director

thursday 11

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

9:00 THIS MORNING

10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!

11:00 MORNING READING"

Laughable Loves, by Milan Kundera.

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Music by Bach's Sons

WILHELM FRIEDEMANN BACH: Sinfonia in D Minor for Flute, Oboe, and Strings: Kurt Redel, flute; Claude Maison- neuve, oboe: CARL PHILLIP EMMANUEL BACH: Concerto in D Minor for Flute and Strings: Kurt Redel, flute; JOHANN CHRISTIAN BACH: Sinfonia in EFlat, Op. 9. No. 2; Munich Pro Arte Orchestra; Kurt Redel conducting; Decca DL 710092; JOHANN CHRISTOPH FRIEDRICH BACH Symphony No. 20 in B-Flat; Cologne Cham- ber Orchestra; Helmut Mueller-Bruehl conducting; Nonesuch H 73027. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.

2:00 "SHARDICK"

Richard Adams reads from his second novel and Judith Vivell interviews him about it. (WBAl)

2:30 FOR (MORE) INFORMATION PART II

More highlights from the More Maga- zine journalism counter-convention held in February in San Francisco. Subjects include labor coverage, racism in media etc. Pro- duced by Anita Frankel, with technical production by Eric Schilling. (Rebroad- cast from Sept. 8).

4:00 JAZZ

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

News and views of varying hues.

5:55 THURSDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

8:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA- LIVE IN CONCERT IBERT: Ports of Call. MOZART: Piano Concerto No. /4-John Browning soloist. SCHUMANN: Symphony No. 4. Jacques Delacote conducts. Robert Conrad hosts. Recorded in Columbia SQ Four-Channel Sound.

10:00 POETRY LIVE

From the studios of KPFK, a live broadcast of poets reading their works. (Rebroadcast Fri. 19th, 2pm)

11:00 APOGEE.

Mitchell Harding discharges some bad Karma: the subject for 26 weeks is the problems and sayings of the Native American (the so-called "Indian ").

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

1:30 BLUEGRASS SPECIAL

Gentleman Jim returns!

Susan Mendel: A

friday 12

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

9:00 THIS MORNING

News with Carol Breshears and Ed Thomas. Analysis of William Winter. "Read All About It," and the calendar.

10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans

Look sharp! Steve Gillette, singer, songwriter and author of "Darcy Farrow" and "Back on the Street Again" will re- pete with Roz and Howard Larman.

11:00 MORNING READING

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

FERDE GROFE: Grand Canyon Suite. Death Valley Suite; The composer conducts the Capitol Symphony Orchestra. Piano Concerto; Jesus Maria Sanroma, soloist; The composer conducts the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra. Katherinc Calkin hosts. Stereo.

2:00 TRANS: Amanda Foulger

A two-part tribute to C.G. Jung: Gnostic of the Modern Age. Emphasi- zing the spiritual keynote of Jung's contribution, with Dr Stephan Hoel- ler, one of the early translators of Jung's ? Sermons to the Dead and author of The Royal Road, a work on Kabalistic Meditation, to be re- leased this month. (Rebroadcast from Septi 6. Part II will be broad- cast on Sept. 20 and 261

3:00 SURVIVE WITH PLEASURE

4:00 GOODBYE PORK PIE HAT

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 FRIDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER

6:45 NEWSPEAK

Joseph Webb looks at the media.

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

KPFK's nightly magazine looks for reality behind the headlines. Features, interviews, panels, debates, open phones. Hosted by Pubhc Affairs Director, Jim Berland.

I 8:00 MUSICAPACIFICA-

LIVE IN CONCERT

CLAUDIO MONTEVERDI: Lamen- to d'Arianna (monody and madrigal versions). J.S. BACH: Magnificat (original version in E-Flat including four additional movements not included in the popular later version). Paul Vorwerk conducts members of Musica Pacifica and the Pacifica Singers. David Cloud hosts. Stereo

9:00 IN FIDELITY

A program for audiophiles, with Peter Sutheim, KPFK's Production Director

9:30 LATIN QUARTER

Antonio Salazar with music, com- munity events, and guests.

1 1 :30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 HOUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION

In honor of the International Women's Conference. Katherinc Calkin will appear on tonight's show with John Henry Thong and Mike Hodei— interviews, discus- sions, stories, calendar-all about sf.

2:00 SOFTCORE PHONOGRAPHY

Join Jay Lacey anytime for what- ever crazyness is going on—

-i IM (I

Susan Anderson: Switchboard and program producer.

K3>FK FOLIO PAGE 8

FRENCH FESTIVAL eS

(AUG>27^SEPT.9j

"A BRESSON SPECTACLE'!

It may be called Robert Bresson's spectacle, but it's unlike any conventional film spectacle you've ever seen. A stunning-looKing movie. It is some- times breathtaking In its exterior details. The con- cluding sequence of the film is one of the most beautiful and stranae the dir«-«or has ever

done!" —Vmcent Canby, New York Times

"Signoretand Gabin as thf coupla at oddi with each oth- er are superb!. ..An engrossing "SCENES FROM A IVIAR- RIAGE' a la Fran-

N. Y. D»ilv News

"Gabin. ..the embed- iment of the quiet man. ..and Signoret ...seething with re- call of passion, make the experience of their downfall a dev- astation!..." -Judith Crist, l\jpw York Mag.

my night at maud's

STARRING JEAN-LOUIS TRINTlGNANT AND FRANCOISE FABIAN DIRECTED BY ERIC ROHMER

Jean GABIN Simone SIGNORET

a love/hate so devastating it destroys everything the marriage, the wife, the husband, the house even the cat'

AT 2 LAEMMLE THEATRES

MUSiCl

■}74-«t69

9036WllSHIimUlllll)0mil»J

MOMC i II

IH2 Second Sire Sania Mo

4^1 8686

KATHARINE HEPBURN

PAUL SCOFIELD

in EDWARD ALBEE'S

"A Delicate Balance"

Directed by TONY RICHARDSON

DiTeciea bv PIERRE granier-oeferre

Screenplay By PIERRE GR ANIER-DEFERRE and PASCA COLOR ENGLISHTITLES

CYRIL CUSACK VIVIEN MERCHANT MICHAEL JAYSTON in HAROLD PINTER'S

The Homecoming"

Directed by PETER HALL

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 9

N

S <: g

5* s I

CO

ce CO

c c is

a. 5 .,•

5 >: ^

"C c =::

0

=: 2 O

S ~ o

C3

a.'

c ;:: •=

CO

09 03

CD

CO

0) «9

CO CO

0)

.CO

CO

0)

CO

o

CO

0) -C

C

eg

CO

M

TYP€

'TYPEwriters Elect, from $ 94.- 'Calculators any from $16. 'T Phone-Answering Equ.S 79.- Lg. Selection & SERVICE

IBM BBB /la/OEIIE

353 BANTA MONICA BLVD. 478-7791

LOS ANGELES. CALIF. 90025

the

ACLU Foundation of Southern California

announces

the West Coast Benefit Premiere of

"3 Days of the Condor"

a CIA caper

starring

Robert Redford / Faye Dunaway

fVIann's Village Theatre

961 Broxton Ave., Westwood

Tuesday, September 30—7:30 PM

Followed by a gala supper/dance at the Beverly Wilshlre Holer Proceeds from this benefit support the legal program of the ACLU of Southern California -

Tickets: $15 and S100 per person tax deductible For ticket inlormation call 659-5241

' include<] in $100 ticket only:

Help Take The Boob Out Of The Tube !

UHF

KVST-TV

VIEWER SPONSORED

JOIN US WATCH US

CH. 68

ALSO CAN BE SEEN

THETA CABLE - CHANNEL "J"

THE KIIMD OF TELEVISION YOU'VE NEVER SEEN ON TELEVISION

THE WORLD THIS WEEK WITH WILLIAM WINTER" Fri. Nites at 7:30 P. M.

Social Commentary ... and Controversy

Community Action in Action. Watch Your Favorite Community Organization Involve the Community in Their Affairs.

Intimate ... Exciting ... Human Communications People Talking to People ... How to Solve Problems

KVST-TV CHANNEL 68 1136 No. Highland Ave. Los Angeles, Calif. 90038

COUNT ME INI ENROLL ME AS A CHARTER MEMBER ENCLOSED IS MY CHECK FOR $15.00 FOR ONE YEAR

Name (please print)

Makp Checks Payable: KVST-TV

For Additional Information: 461-391 1

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 12

Saturday 13

8:00 PREACHIN' THE BLUES

Prank Scott plays a pot-pourri of blues, boogie and black gospe! music.

9:30 Vi WAY DOWN THE STAIRS

Uncle Ruthie plays.

10:30 FOLK MUSIC

12:30 THE CAR SHOW

How to change that exploitative metal monster into an intimate friend- wilh John Retsek and Jack Kirkpatrick.

1:30 BALLADS BANJOS BLUEGRASS

Tom Sauber of the Bluegrass Car- dinals and Bill Bryson of Combred play records and maybe live-bluegrass and associated genre.

3:00 NOMMO

Music, poetry and thoughts from the Pan-Afrikan World, with Tambuzi.

4:30 INSIDE LA.

5:55 WEEKEND CALENDAR

6:00 THE SATURDAY NEWS

6:30 ON FILM

6:45 IN PRINT : Bob Peters

7:00 "THE WOMAN WHO COULD

READ THE MINDS OF DOGS"

A radio adaptation of a sequence of poems by one of the most important young poets to appear in quite some time-Leslie Scalopino. Produced by Paul Vangellsti.

8:00 ZYMURGY

Monday Evening Concerts-X Recorded live in concert at the Leo S. Bing Theater of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art on March 17. 1975. Soundtrack from the film The Dreamer That Remains: A Portrait of Harry Partch: CONLON NANCARROW: Player Piano Rolls- Nos. 35 and 40b; MORTON SUBOTNICK: Eclipse; DAVID ROSENBOOM: Is Art Is. The performers are the Electric Stereopticon. David Cloud hosts. Technical production by Mark Rosenthal, Phillip Mendelson. Ronald Streicher and David Cloud. Re- corded with the Dolby "A" noise reduc- tion system. Stereo.

10:00 WILLIAM MALLOCH

12:00 TESSERACT

2:00 BARBARA BIRDFEATHER

Sunday 14

6:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN

With the legendary Prince Dixon.

8:00 THE BIG BROADCAST

Golden Age radio classics from around the world.

9:00 BIO-MEDITATION: lack Gariss

An experiential, experimental exploration of whatever dandelion fluff blows in.

10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschel Lymon A human growth center of the air. A new form of poetry by a business man turned poet; Tobcy Lurie and his wife Jan

10:45 MANY WORLDS OF MUSIC

11:30 DOROTHY HEALEY

Marxist viewpoint with guests and open phones.

12:30 TOP SECRET RADIO

1:00 THE SUNDAY OPERA

STRAUSS: Die Frau ohne Schatten. Soloists Hans Hopf, Leonie Rysanek. Elisabeth Hoengen, Kurt Boehme. Karl Boehm conducts the Vienna State Opera Chorus and Philharmonic Orchestra (Rich- mond SRS 64503). Fred Hyatt hosts. Stereo.

Clare Spark: Program Produc Apple Tree"

5:00 SOUR APPLE TREE

Does art have a redeeming social value? Clare Spark asks and/or answers.

6:00 SUNDAY NEWS: Sanford Fidell

6:30 OPEN TIME

7:15 SOPHOCLES' "ANTIGONE"

One of the most compelling of Greek dramas, epitomizing the conflict between personal morality and the social order. Featuring Dorothy Tutin, Max Adrian, Jeremy Brett. Eileen Atkins and Geoffrey Dunn.

8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS

Women and Poetry. Two young poets, Erika Horn from San Francisco and Velene Campbell-Keslar from Los Angeles read and discuss their poetry and their feelings as young creative women. The poems are complemented with music suited to their poetry.

9:30 FOLKSCENE

In honor of [nternational Women's Year. Roz Larman will be allowed to administrate 5 minutes of the show to- night and maybe some woman will be allowed to smg a little song— live of course, so don't fret!

12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE

Emily Schiller, Switchboard and Cul- tural Affairs. Drawing by Laura Trimble.

monday 15

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT

9:00 THIS MORNING

10:00 FOLKSCENE ON RECORD

11:00 MORNING READING

Laughable Loves by Milan Kundera read by Peter Sulheim.

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

The Bach Solo Cantatas II Liebster Jesu, mein Verlangen f32i; Magda Laszlo, soprano; Alfred Pohl. bass; Hermann Schcrchen con- ducts the Vienna State Opera Orches- tra (Westminster XWN 18391 ). Tritt auf die Glaubensbahn 1152); Dorothy Bond, soprano; Robert Irwin, baritone; Karl Haas conducts the London Baioque Ensemble (Westmmsler XWN 18391 1. Mein Herze schwimmt im Blul 1199). Non sa che sia dolore (2091; Maria Stader. soprano; Helmut Mueller- Bruehl conducts the Cologne Soloists Ensemble (Nonesuch H 71136). Ich bin vergnuegt mit meinem Gluecke (84); Agnes Giebel soprano; Wilhelm Ehmann conducts the Westphalian Chamber Orchestra (Nonesuch H 71273). Katherine Cal- kin hosts. Stereo.

2:00 SPECTRUM; Carlos Hagen

3:00 ORGANIC GARDENING

4:00 CONTEMPORARY JAZZ WORKSHOP

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 MONDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

8:00 CHAPEL. COURT AND COUNTRYSIDE

Renaissance and Early Baroque Music. VICTORIA: Requiem (1605). George Guest conducts the Choir of St. John's College. Cambridge. (Argo ZRG 570). Kathcrme Calkm hosts. Stereo. (Rebroadcast.)

9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA

10:00 THE ECONOMICS OF JAZZ

A look at where the money is and isn't in the jazz music field. Interviews with musicians, club owners, managers, and record company executives, and lots of fine music to illustrate it all. Produced by Lany Bcnsky with techni- cal production by Eric Schilling

10:55 LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI

Highlights from the poet's reading at St. Marks with published and unpub- lished works. (See Thurs., 1 8th, 2pm rebroadcast listing for details.)

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

3:00 FISSION: loyce Mancini Rock, soul and jazz.

tuesday 16

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerl 9:00 THIS MORNING 10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO 11:00 THE MORNING READING

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Piano Music by Women Composers ELIZABETH JACQUET DE LA GUERRE: Suite in D Minor; MARIA SZYMANOWSKA: Etudes in F, C and E; Nocturne in B Flat; LILI BOULANGER: Cortege; D'un Vieux Jardin; LOUISE TALMA: Alleluia in the Form of a Tocatra; GRAZYNA BACEWICZ: Piano Sonata No. 2/ Sister Nancy, piano; Avant AV 1012; AMY MARCY CHENEY: ValseCaprice, Op. 4; Ballad, Op. 6; Four Sketches, Op. 15; Prelude and Fugue, Op. 81; Hermit Thrush at Eve; Hermit Thrush at Morn, Op. 92, Nos. 1 and 2; Nocturne, Op. 107; Five Improvisations, Op. 745/ Virginia Eskin, piano; Genesis GS 1054. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.

2:00 THE TRIAL OF JOSEPH BRODSKY

The dramatization of the trial of present day Soviet poet Joseph Brodsky. accused of being unemployed and therefore a parasite.

1/

3:15 SPEAK-OUT

Finding even the less formal Tribune too constricting for real communication, Non-Governmental Delegates to the U.N. International Women's Year Conference organized "Speak-outs." Even at this first attempt to circumvent the political divisions at the conference, ideological, racial and nationalistic differences emerged.

4:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 TUESDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 13

8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY

LIVE IN CONCERT

SCHUBERT: Symphony No. 5. MOZA R T: Piano Concerto No. 8 - Malcolm Krager. soloist. Piano Concerto No. 23. BIZET. Jeux d'Enfants. David Zinman conducts. William Pierce hosts. Recorded with the Dolby "A" noise reduc- tion system in Columbia SQ Four-Channel Sound.

10:00 REDEALING: Barbara Cady

10:30 WOMAN TO WOMAN

Rosalie Sorrels

An adaptation for radio of the music and poetry anthology of women's works edited by Rosalie Sorrels. Contains live music, recorded music by people like Toni and Terry, Sylvia Tyson. Carmen McRae, and Alice Gerrard. Poetry by Denise Levertov and others, and Rosalie's inimitable stories about her life, and the lives of women in this society. From the book entitled liVhat Woman, and Who, Myself, I Am. Produced by Kathy McAnnally and Rosalie Sorrels, with technical assistance by Eric Schilling.

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 STEVEN MIDNIGHT

3:00 CHUCK RAGGIO AND THE RESEARCHETTES

Wednesday 17

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk 9:00 THIS MORNING 10:00 RICHLAND WOMAN 11:00 MORNING READING 11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

New Releases

David Cloud hosts a program surveying what's new on discs from here and elsewhere. Stereo.

1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER

2:00 PROIECTOZMA

The best from "Hour 25: Science Fiction," produced by Mike Model.

3:00 THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT

Exploring health care as it is practiced and as it might be. With Al Huebner of the Medical Committee for Human Rights.

4:00 JAZZ SHOWCASE

Interviews with some of the most important artists in contemporary music.

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

News and views of varying hues.

5:55 THE WEDNESDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

KPFK's nightly magazine looks for reality behind the headlines. Features, interviews, panels, debates, open phones. Hosted by Public Affairs Director. Jim Borland.

8:00 NHK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA- LIVE IN CONCERT WEBER: Overture to Der Freischuti LISZT: Les Preludes; MICHIO MAMIYA: Piano Concerto No. 2 (Minoru Mojima. soloist). Otmar Suitner. Kazuyoshi Akiyama, and Tadashi Mori conducting. Program material courtesy Japan Broad- casting Corporation. Stereo.

Ruth Hirschman: Program Director

Ir

9:00 SPEAK-OUT

Finding even the less formal Tribune too constricting for real communication, Non-Governmental Delegates to the U.N. International Women's Year Conference organized "Speak-outs." Even at this First attempt to circumvent the political divisions at the conference, ideological, racial, and nationalistic differences emerged.

9:45 INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S

YEAR CONFERENCE: EAST I

MEETS WEST

10:15 THE TRIAL OF JOSEPH BRODSKY

The dramatization of the trial of present-day Soviet poet Joseph Brodsky, accused of being unemployed and there- fore a parasite.

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

3:00 MR MYSTIC: Jim Harber

thursday 18

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

9:00 THIS MORNING

10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!

11:00 MORNING READING

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Piano Music of Stravinsky Four Etudes: Ragtime; Sonata;

Piano Rag; Serenade in A; The Five Fingers;

Three Scenes from "Petrouchka;" Beve-

ridge Webster, piano; Dover 97288-7.

David Goud hosts. Stereo.

2:00 LAWRENCE FERLINGHETTI

Highlights from his poetry reading at St. Marks, edited and produced by Lin Harris. Includes Pardon me. . . (from Mexi- can Night), On the Road to Toktabanpo (from Mexican Night I, Two Silent Water- , birds, lam You, Great American Water- I

front Poem, Analogy on the Death of

Kenneth Patchen, Pound at Spoleto, Mani- ; festo for Poets with Love (the last three ;

all from Open Eye Open Heart. '■

2:40 THE DANCE APACHE !

Artists Joan Schwartz and Donald j Munroe recreate their version of the Apache ' in 3 parts: a lesson with their instructor. Larry Stevens, an historical drama based on the history of the Apaches in turn-of- the century Paris, and an interview with Larry Stevens about the Apache Dance on the stage. (Rebroadcast Mon. 22. 11:10pm.)

3:00 THE ECONOMICS OF JAZZ

A look at where the money is and isn't in the jazz music field. Interviews with musicians, club owners, managers, and record company executives, and lots of fine music to illustrate it all. Produced by Larry Bensky with technical pro- duction by Eric Schilling.

4:00 JAZZ

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 THURSDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

KPFK's nightly magazine which attempts to find the reality behind the headlines: panels, debates, open phones, features. Features Jim Berland. KPFK Pubhc Affairs Director.

Sue Rebar (Asst Folio Editor) and Juli: Mendoza, (Volunteer person).

8:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA- LIVE IN CONCERT MAHLER: Symphony No. 3. Maur- een Forrester, contralto; Women and chil- dren of the Blossom Festival Chorus. Jacques Delacote conducts. Robert Con- rad hosts. Recorded in Columbia SQ Four-Channel Sound.

10:00 CULTURAL JOURNAL

11:00 APOGEE

Mitchell Harding discharges some bad Karma; the subject for 26 weeks is the problems and sayings of the Native American (the so-called "Indian").

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyle 12:00 STEVEN TYLER

1:30 BLUEGRASS SPECIAL

Ludwig plays bluegrass music.

friday 19

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk 9:00 THIS MORNING

10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans

Featuring Jim Connor, a banjo picker and guitar player from Alabama now living in Arizona. Jim is the author of "Grandma's Feather Bed."

11:00 MORNING READING

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

MAHLER: Symphony No. 6 in A Minor. Jascha Horenstein conducts the Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra (Nonesuch HB 73029). Katherine Calkin hosts. Stereo.

2:00 POETRY LIVE

God made lots of poets but only a few poems. (Paul Vangelisti).

3:00 SURVIVE WITH PLEASURE

4:00 GOODBYE PORK PIE HAT

Tributev to individual artists, histo- rical surveys and spotlights on some of the most influential recordings in jazz. Host is Paul Vangelisti.

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 FRIDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER

6:45 NEWSPEAK: Jo;cph Webb A look at the media.

7:00 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!

8:00 MUSICA PACIFICA- LIVE

IN CONCERT

Consort music and English and Italian madrigals-music h\ Lawes. l.upo. Wilbye. Gesualdo. and Monteverdi. Paul Vorwerk conducts the members of Musica PaciFjca. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.

9:00 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!

9:30 LATIN QUARTER

11:00 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 HOUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION

Continuing the celebration of Inter- planetary Woman's Year. Terry Hodel will be featured reading the sf calendar. The show also has John Heruy Thong. Mike Hodel. and Katherine Calkin with all sorts of ways of approaching the sf genre.

2:00 SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 14

Saturday 20

8:00 PREACHIN' THE BLUES 9:30 K WAY DOWN THE STAIRS 10:30 FOLK MUSIC 12:30 THE CAR SHOW

1:30 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!

2:00 BALLADS BANJOS BLUEGRASS

3:00 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!

3:30 NOMMO: Tambuzi Nyamavu

Music, poetry and thoughts from the Pan-Afrikan World.

4:30 INSIDE L.A.

Examining social, political and cultural happenings in L.A.

5:30 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!

5:55 WEEKEND CALENDAR

6:00 THE SATURDAY NEWS

6:30 ON FILM : Steve Mamber

6:45 ONSTAGE

7:00 TRANS: Amanda Fouleer

Part II of a two part tribute to C.G. Jung: Gnostic of the modern age. With Dr Stephan Hocller, Assoc Professor of Comparative Religions. College of Oriental Studies; Lecturer for the Philosophical Research Society: Director of the Center of the Gnostic Society. He is also one of the early translators of Jung's 7 Sermons to the Dead and au thor of The Royal Road, a work on Kabalistic Meditalion to be released by Quest Books this month.

8:00 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!

8:30 ZYMURGY

Monday Evening Concerts XI Recorded live in concert at the Leo S. Bing Theater of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art on April 14. 1975. 1 romm Music Foundation concert. MARC REAM: Rose Mists; PAUL REALE: Mad Ophelia: SHEILA SIL- VER: Past Tense: STEPHEN MOSCO: Night of the Long Knives. The fea- tured soloists are sopranos Kathleen Brown and Marlene Rozofsky. William Kraft conducts the Monday Chamber Players. David Cloud hosts.

10:15 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!!

10:45 WILLIAM MALLOCH PROGRAMME

11:45 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!!

12:00 TESSERACT: Phil Mendelson

2:00 BARBARA BIRDFEATHER

Gail Sapiro, programmer and Elizabeth Luye, super volunteer.

Sunday 21

6:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN

With the legendary Prince Dixon.

8:00 THE BIG BROADCAST

Golden Age radio classics from around the world.

9:00 BIO-MEDITATION: Jack Gariss

An experiential, experimental exploration of you.

10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschel Lymon A human growth center of the air. Marjorie Toomim, psychologist, and Herschel Toomim. electronics engineer, discuss the way bio-feedback equipment is greatly facilitating the treatment of psychoneurosis and stress in their patients

10:45 MANY WORLDS OF MUSIC I-olk festival special!

11:30 DOROTHY HEALEY

12:30 TOP SECRET RADIO

1:00 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!!

':30 THE SUNDAY OPERA

BIZET: Carmen. Soloists- Marilyn Home, James McCracken, Tom Krause, Adriana Maliponte, Donald Gramm. Leonard Bernstein conducts the Manhattan Opera Chorus and the Metropolitan Opera Children's Chorus and Orchestra (DGG 2709 043). Fred Hyatt hosts. Stereo.

4:30 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!

5:00 SOUR APPLE TREE

6:00 SUNDAY NEWS: Peter Gordon

6:30 LIVE FROM THE FESTIVAL!

6:50 CAESAR AND CLEOPATRA

George Bernard Shaw wrote in the preface to his play, "Cleopatra was six- teen when Caesar went to Egypt. . . . The childishness I have ascribed to her, as far as it is childishness of character and not lack of experience, is not a matter of years. It may be observed in our own climate at the present day in many women of fifty." This production features Claire Bloom, Max Adrian and Judith Anderson. Directed by Anthony Quayle.

8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS

Women and Children: A young gifted storyteller, Paula Sigman, offers a sample of her art before children of the University Elementary School at UCLA. She also discusses this ancient art of children's storytelling.

9:30 FOLKSCENE

12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE

monday 22

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT

Paul Vorwerk plays classics.

9:00 THIS MORNING

News with Carol Breshears and Ed Thomas, "Newspeak" with Joseph Webb, "Read All About It," and the calendar read by Terry Hodel.

10:00 FOLKSCENE ON RECORD 11:00 MORNING READING

Laughable Loves by Milan Kundera. Dark comedies of eroticism read by Peter Sutheim.

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

The Bach Solo Cantatas III Selig 1st der Mann 157); Ursula Buckel. soprano; Jakob Staempfli, bass; Karl Ristenpart conducts the Chamber Orchestra of the Saar (Nonesuch H 710 29). Go ff soil allein main Hene haben (169); Maureen Forrester, contralto; Antonio Janigro conducts I Solisti di Zagreb (Bach Guild BGS 70670). Ich weiss das meine Erioeser lebt (1601; Helmut Krebs. tenor; Fritz Werner conducts the Sudwestfunk Orchestra of Baden Baden (Musical Heritage Society MHS 547). Ich will den Kreuzstab gerne tragen (56); Alois Pernerstorfer. bass; Jonathan Sternberg conducts the Vienna Sym- phony Orchestra (Bach Guild EG 502). Vergnuegte Ruh (170); Maureen For- rester, contralto; Anton Heiler con- ducts the Wiener Sohsten (Bach Guild BGS 70683). Katherine Calkin hosts. Stereo.

2:00 SPECTRUM: Carlos Hagen

Sometimes new programs, some- times rebroadcasts by request.

Dorothy Elitz: Volunteer Programi

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 15

Heujorld

The Best of America

Providing ihe West

Coast most definiirve

cov«fagt of the multi

cultural art work).

Exciting insight into

dance, music, titera

tiKC. povtrv, the visual

arts and lh« personal!

ties that make them

Irve. Provocatrve writing, stunning grat^ics.

Yours, 4 tim«s yearly for only $5.00.

SUBSCRIBE

Y«, Enter My Neworld Subscription One Year D $5 Two Years n S8

Address City

Enclose Check or MO and Send To

NEWORLD 1 308 S. New Hampshire Ave.

Los Angeles. Cahf 90006

c*:xjtteRtor3's

Tt«e motr compitu paperback wlec- tion in town ip«ciali<in| in literary forvip, and art periodicals.

A BOOK SHOP

1818 No. Vermont Ave.

Los An|ete>, Calif. 90027

464-3882

3:00 ORGANIC GARDENING 4:00 CONTEMPORARY JAZZ

WORKSHOP

Earl Ofari reviews the latest releases.

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

News and views of many hues.

5:55 MONDAY CALENDAR

Compiled and read by Terry Hodel.

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

KPFK's nightly magazine looks for reality behind the headlines. Fea- tures, interviews, panels, debates, open phones. Hosted by Jim Berland, PubUc Affairs Director.

8:00 CHAPEL, COURT AND

COUNTRYSIDE

Renaissance and Early Baroque Music. Paul Saiamunovich, Los Angeles choral conductor and specialist in music of the Renaissance, comments on various aspects of choral music performances in this country. Music of the period accompanies. Katherine Calkin hosts.

9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA

Host Moctezuma Esparza discusses politics, culture and music with guests.

10:00 PEOPLE ORGANIZE

Flo Kennedy, founder of the Feminist Party and director of the Media Workshop; Patricia Green, or- ^nizer of the Good Food Co-op and People's Warehouse; Pete Seejer, vo- calist and Clearwater volunteer; Flo- rence Rice, co-founder of the Harlem Consumer Education Council and Brent Chaiman, member of the New York Switchboard Collective— take a loose and amusing but informative look at organizing and people who organize. They commeal on the tactics and ability of Ihe power struc- ture to sabotage organizations and the necessity to recognize and understarwl the vulnerability of Ihe enemy.

11:10 THE DANCE APACHE

Artists Joan Schwartz ai>d Donald Munroe recreate their version of the Apache in 3 parts: a lesson with their instructor, Larry Stevens, an historical drama based on the history of the Apache's in turn-of-the-century Paris, and an interview with Larry Stevens about the Apache Dance on the stage.

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

3:00 FISSION: )oyce Mancini Jazz, soul and rock.

tuesday 23

Maureen Mcllroy: Volunteer Progra

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk 9:00 THIS MORNING 10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO! 11:00 THE MORNING READING 11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Music of Sibelius

Night Ride and Sunrise, Op. 55; New Philharmonia Orchestra; Georges Pretre con- ducting; RCA LSC 2996; Symphony No. 6. Op. 104; New York Philharmonic Orchestra; Leonard Bernstein conducting; Columbia M5S 784; Suite from "Belshazzar's Feast," Op. 51; Leningrad Philharmonic Orchestra; Gennady Rozhdestvensky conducting; Melodiya Angel S 40031; Luonnotar, Op. 70; Phillis Curtin, soprano; New York Philharmonic; Leonard Bernstein conducting; Columbia M 30232; Sym- phony No. 3, Op. 52; New York Philhar- monic; Leonard Bernstein conducting; Columbia M5S 784. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.

2:00 THE WOMAN WHO COULD READ

THE MINDS OF DOGS

by Leslie Scalopino. A radio adap- tation of a sequence of poems by one of the most important young poets to appear in quite some time. Produced by Paul Vangelisti.

¥/

3:00 ANATOMY OF A MANIFESTO During the Journalist Encounter, which preceded the U.N. International Women's Year, feminist joumalists- along with conference delegates who had already arrived-got an early sampling of the political divisions that would prove so disruptive during the two-week con- ference in Mexico City. They also got an early starfon combatting such divi- sive factors by holding numerous cau- cuses and formulating a feminist mani- festo, a strangely ambiguous, yet movmg plea for a sisterhood above ideology. (Rebroadcast Wed, 24th, 9:30pm)

4:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 TUESDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

LIVE IN CONCERT

J.C. BACH: Sinfonia in D. J.S. BACH Cantata 51— I*hyllis Bryn-Julson, soprano; Armando Ghitalla, trumpet. CP.E. BACH: Symphony No. 1 in D. J.S. BACH: Cantata 34— Phyllis Bryn-Julson, soprano; Rose Taylor, mezzo-soprano: Kenneth Riege, David Arnold, bass; Tanglewood Festi- val Chorus. Seiji Ozawa conducts. William Pierce hosts. Recorded with the Dolby "A" noise reduction system in Columbia SQ Four-Channel Sound.

10:00 REDEALING: Barbara Cady

10:30 IMRU

A regular bi-weekly production of the Gay Radio Collective. Regular features include a news summary of events within or affecting the local gay community; open phones, reviews of local entertainment of interest to gays, original music, poetry, and comedy sketches.

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

3:00 CHUCK RAGGIO AND THE RESEARCHETTES

ivednesday 24

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk 9:00 THIS MORNING 10:00 RICHLAND WOMAN 11:00 MORNING READING 11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Music of Erich Korngold (1897-1957) Piano Sonata No. 3, Op. 25; Piano Quintet, Op. 15: Harold Gray, piano; Endre Grahat, violin; Sheldon Sanov, vio- lin; Milton Thomas, viola; Douglas Davis, cello: Genesis GS 1063; Symphony in F- Sharp, Op. 40: Munich Philharmonic, Rudolf Kempe conducting; RCA ARL 1-0443. David Ctoud hosts. Stereo.

1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER

2:00 PROIECTOZMA

3:00 FOOD FOR THOUGHT

Ginny Roe with a program on health and nutrition. Open phones.

4:00 lAZZ SHOWCASE

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 THE WEDNESDAY CALENDAR

Terry Hodel: Volunteer calendar maker and reader.

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan

7:00 OPEN )OURNAL

8:00 NHK SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA- LIVE IN CONCERT AKIRA MIYOSHI: Duel for Soprano and Orchestra ^Eiko Seyama, soloistA BEETHOVEN: Fantasia for Piano. Chorus and Orchestra. Op. 80 (Wolfgang Sawallisch, piano; Tok>o Philharmonic Chorus; Tokyo Broadcasting Chorus; Japan Choral Society); TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 3. Op. 29 ("Polish"). Yuzo Toyama. Wolfgang Sawalbsch and Hiroyuki Iwaki conducting. Program material courtesy Japan Broad- casting corporation. Stereo.

¥/

9:30 INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S

YEAR ASSEMBLED FEATURES AND INTERVIEWS

10:30 ANATOMY OF A MANIFESTO

During the Journahst Encounter, which preceded the U.N. International Women's Year, feminist journalists-along with conference delegates who had already arrived-got an early sampling of the poli- tical divisions that would prove so disrup- tive during the two week conference in Mexico City. They also got an early start on combatting such divisive factors by holding numerous caucuses and formu- lating a feminist manifesto, a strangely ambiguous, yet moving plea for a sisterhood above ideology.

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

3:00 MR MYSTIC: |im Harber

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 16

thursday 25

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk

9:00 THIS MORNING

10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!

11:00 MORNING READING

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Music from Germany

To begin, a special I hour presen- tation marking the 20th Anniversary of Music from Germany on the air. Then, HANS SCHROETER: Four Pieces for Three: HANS WERNER HENZE: Di- vertimento for Oboe, Viola and Cello: JOHANN ADOLF HASSE: /Mandolin Concerto: Three Arias from "Arminio." David Berger hosts. Tapes courtesy of the AsjiOciation of German Broadcasters. Stereo.

¥/

2;00 INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S YEAR CONFERENCE

A special rcbroadcast of the IWY interviews brought together from around the month.

4:00 JAZZ

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

News and views of many hues.

5:55 THURSDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

KPI K's nightly magazine looks for reality behind the headlines. Features, interviews, panels, debates, open phones. Hosted by Public Affairs Director. Jim Berland

8:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA- LIVE IN CONCERT TUROK: Scott Joplin Suite. SCHUMAN: New England Triptych. GOULD: Tap Dance Concerfo- Michael Dominico. soloist. GOTTSCHALK: Night of the Tropics. GOULD: Cowboy Rhapso- dy. Morton Gould conducts. Robert Conrad hosts. Recorded in Columbia SO Four-Channel Sound.

10:00 POETRY LIVE

Live broadcast of poets reading their works from KPFK studios, (Re- broadcast in Oct.)

11:00 APOGEE

Mitchell Harding discharges some bad Karma: the subject for 26 weeks is the problems and .sayings of the Native American ithe so-called "Indian").

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

12;00 STEVEN TYLER

1:30 BLUEGRASS SPECIAL

Gentleman James Ludwig with more pickin' n' grinnin' music.

friday 26

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT; Paul Vorwer

9:00 THIS MORNING

10:00 FOLKSCENE:The Larmans

It's starthtie at Folkscene today with Mike Seeger. Maria Muldaur. and Richard Green at KPFK's Studio A, originally taped April 7, 1974.

11:00 MORNING READING

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

PURCELL: The Fairy Queen. Alfred Deller conducts his consort and the Stour Music Chorus and Orchestra (Vanguard SRV 311/2). Katherine Calkin hosts. Stereo.

2:00 TRANS: Amanda Foulger

Part II of the Tribute to C.G. Jung: Gnostic of the Modern Age. Commemorating the 100th anniversary of his birth, (he program will empha- size the spiritual keynote of Jung's contribution to the enlightenment of the age. (Rebroadcast from Sept 20).

Amanda Foulger; Volunteer program producer "Trans. ' '

3:00 SURVIVE WITH PLEASURE Wina Sturgeon's view of things.

4:00 GOODBYE PORK PIE HAT

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 FRIDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER

6:45 NEWSPEAK: Joseph Webb

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

8:00 MUSICA PACIFICA-LI VE

IN CONCERT

HENRY PURCELL: Dido and Aeneas (complete opera), Soloists; Maurita Thornburgh, Mary Rawchffe. Myron Myers, Kimball Wheeler. Susan Judy, and Candace Smith. Paul Vor- werk conducts members of Musica Pacifica and the Pacifica Singers. Stereo.

9:00 IN FIDELITY

Production Director Peter Sutheim presents a program on hi-fi and stereo and allied subjects for the audiophile.

9:30 LATIN QUARTER

Antonio Salazar with music, com- munity events, and guests.

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler

Classified information?

The RECYCLER NEWSPAPER,

it's more tfian that. It's classified advertising.

buy, sell, rent or trade. And to do it for FREE. At the

RECYCLER we publish over 3,000 private party ads

every issue, and we do it completely free of any

charge. We come up with a lot of good stuff.

The RECYCLER sells for 25 cts. and is available at

newsstands and markets all over greater Los

Angeles. To find out more about the RECYCLER or

to place your ad FREE! Call us at: 664-1911 L.A.

or at: 789-1400 S.F. Valley

12:00 HOUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION

The Science Fiction, Science Fact, Science Fantasy, Science Strange, Science Weird program to raise and/or alienate your conscience with Mike Hodel, John Henry Thong. Katherine Calkin and Terry Hodel— stories, interviews, discussion, open phones, and who knows what else.

2:00 SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY Jay Lacey with a new madness. Check Friday, Sept 5. for deUils.

musical

henitaqe society

has an unusual catalog of music

from the Baroque era to the present day,

available by mail order only.

Write for a free catalog,

i*«i BBO^ftwiy. new yosk. n. y. looii

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 17

Wina Sturgeon: Volunteer programmei "Survive With Pleasure" with Andros.

Saturday 27

8:00 PREACHIN' THE BLUES

Frank Scoll plays blues, boogie, and black gospel music.

9:30 V5 WAY DOWN THE STAIRS

10:30 FOLK MUSIC: John Davis

12:30 THE CAR SHOW

1:30 BALLADS BANJOS BLUEGRASS

3:00 NOMMO

4:30 INSIDE L. A.

Examining social, political and cultural happenings in L.A. with guests, interviews, commentary by Ron Ridenour and some jazz. Produced by Earl Ofari.

5:55 WEEKEND CALENDAR

6:00 THE SATURDAY NEWS Larry Moss and crew.

6:30 ON FILM : Steve Mamber

6:45 IN PRINT

7:00 OIL AND WATER

A Study of the Compatibility of Poetry and Music This tour of Western music will be conducted by singer and poet Myron Myers.

8:00 ZYMURGY

Monday Evening Concerts— XII Recorded live at LA. County Museum concert from May 5. 1975. OA VID DEL TREOICI: I Hear An Army: GERHARD SAMUEL: And Marsyas: LUCIAN BE RIO: Labor- intas II. The featured soloists are sopranos Su Harmon, Lorcne Adams, and Sandra Stowe: Mezzo-soprano Karen Yarmat;; narrator Jack Carson. Recorded with the Dolby "A" noise reduction system. Stereo.

10:00 WILLIAM MALLOCH

A musical (mostly classical) treasure hunt conducted by the critic, composer and former Music Director of KPFK.

12:00 TESSERACT

A program of electronic music with Phil Mendelson.

2:00 BARBARA BIROFEATHER Freeform rock.

Sunday 28

6:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN

8:00 THE BIG BROADCAST

9:00 BIO-MEDITATION: lack Gariss

10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschel Lymon

A human growth center of the air. A continuation of the practical use of bio-feedback in psychotherapy, and some personal comments.

10:45 MANY WORLDS OF MUSIC

"Now" sounds of the middle east.

11:30 DOROTHY HEALEY

12:30 TOP SECRET RADIO

1:00 TENOR OF THE TIMES I

Today, Fred Hyatt honors Aureliano I Pertile, the great Italian tenore robusto.

1:30 THE SUNDAY OPERA

BIZET: The Pearl Fishers. Soloists-Janine Micheau. Nicolai Gedda, Ernest Blanc, Jacques Mars. Pierre Dervaux conducts the Chorus and Orchestra of the National Comic Opera Theater (Angel 3603). Fred Hyatt hosts.

5:00 SOUR APPLE TREE

Does art have any redeeming social value? Produced by Clare Spark.

6:00 SUNDAY NEWS: Sanford Fidell

fl

6:30 CONTRACEPTION, SI!

ABORTION, NO!

Barbara Cady and Peggy Holter talk with two Latin American Catholic Women who have been busy organizing a pro-contraception organization through- out South America. (Rebroadcast from Sept. 4).

7:00 PYGMALION

George Bernard Shaw's classic about an attempt to make a duchess out of a flower girl. This production stars Alec McGowen and Diana Rigg as the formidable adversaries Henry Higgins and Eliza Doolittle.

8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS

The Sounds and Soul of Rural America. The favorite sounds and artists of country, rural and working America and the often controversial messages they convey. In this program and on occasion of Women's Month. Carlos Hagcn offers a brief survey of how women of rural and middle America traditionally view themselves, their lives, work, husbands, children and place in society through a number of highly popular country and western songs, all performed by women artists.

9:30 FOLKSCENE

To finish out Women's Month. Roz will be able to select a record tonight to play and will place the needle on the disc.

12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE

Nawana Davis plays some black music and some white music.

Roz Larman: Volunteer programn "Folksccne."

monday 29

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT

9:00 THIS MORNING

10:00 FOLKSCENE ON RECORD

11:00 MORNING READING

11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

Today, a tribute to contralto Kathleen Ferrier. Included are songs by Brahms, Schumann, Schubert, Wolf. Purcell, and Handel (London Richmond R 23183/4/5/7). Kathcrinc Calkin hosts.

2:00 SPECTRUM: Carlos Hagen

3:00 ORGANIC GARDENING

4:00 CONTEMPORARY |AZZ WORKSHOP

%:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 MONDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan

7:00 OPEN )OURNAL

8:00 CHAPEL COURT AND COUNTRYSIDE

Renaissance and Early Baroque Music. Spanish music for organ and guitar. Katherine Calkin hosts. Stereo. (Rebroadcast).

9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA

10:00 A DAY IN THE POLITICAL LIFE OF. . .

What does a city councllperson do, how does she or he do it, and how does it affect the lives of the residents of Los Angeles? A tour of duty with city councilman Dave Cunningham. Produced by Earl Ofari. (Rebroadcast Tues, 30th, 3pm).

11:00 IN THE CORRIDORS OF THE

METRO

by Alam Robbe-Grillet. From Snapshots, a collection of short pieces written between 1954 and 1962, Robbe Grillel observes three locations on the Paris subway station. Read by Erik Bauersfeld with sound and technical production by Mick O'Neal

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyle

12:00 STEVEN TYLER

3:00 FISSION: )oyce Mancini

Joyce Mancini: Volunteer programmer (photo by Doug Hill)

tuesday 30

t to r-Barbara Cady and Nawana Davis ("Dealing" and "Music Black and White")

Ginny Roe: Volunteer programmer— "Food for Thought" and News

6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk 9:00 THIS MORNING 10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO! 11:00 THE MORNING READING 11:30 KULCHUR

12:00 NOON CONCERT

French Chamber Music

FAURE: Piano Quartet No. 2, Op. 45, Guenter Kehr, violin; Erich Sicherinann, viola; Bernhard Braunholz. cello; Jacque- line Eymar, piano; Vox SUBX 5100; SAINT- SAENS: Sonata for Oboe and Piano, Op. 166: Wayne Rapier, oboe; John Perry, piano; Coronet 850 C-3562; DEBUSSY: Sonata

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 18

Looking for a Jewish School that's d/fferenf?

Saturday or Sunday mornings, children at Ihreesecu/ar Jewish schools in Greater Los Angeles learn the history and culture of the Jews as a people and the joys of Jewishness rather than prayers and ritual Emphasis is on living experiences through Jewish music, literature, dance, drama and folklore Family holiday celebrations combine the Jewish past with the present Schools are directed by parents themselves, employ qualified teachers and meet at local Community Centers.

S.F. VALLEY SANTA MONICA WEST LOS ANGELES LONG BEACH « ORANGE COUNTY

Classes Sat. or Sun. Mornings Grades 1 thru 9 Small Groups Car Pools Parent-Run Non-Rellglous Jewish History Culture Holidays Yiddish Classes Spring Semester Classes Now Starting

For information and to visit classes, call after 6:00 PIVI

S.F. Valley Kindershule— 789-8628

Sholem School (Bay Cities-W.L.A.)— 451-3868

Long Beach Kindershule (213) 860-1068

(714) 897-5461

No. 2 for Flute, Viola and Harp: Donot .'Vntfiony Dwyer, flute; Burton Flue, viola; .\nn Hobson. harp; Deutsche Grammophon DG 2530049; Roussel: String Quartet, Op. 45: Lowenguth Quartet;

2:00 OIL AND WATER

A study of the Compatibility of poetry and music. This tour of Western music will be conducted by singer and poet Myron Myers. (Rebroadcast from Sept. 27.1

3:00 A DAY IN THE POLITICAL LIFE OF .. .

What does a city councilperson do. how does she or he do it. and how does it affect the lives of the residents of Los Angeles? These are questions which pro- ducer Larl Ofari sought answers to when he spent several days recording the move- ments and actions of city councilman Dave Cunningham. The microphones went with Cunningham on tours of his district, meetings with supporters, and sessions in the city council chambers. (Rebroadcast from

Roberta Friedman: Volunteer progran mer -"Richland Woman."

8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

LIVE IN CONCERT

MOZART: Serenade No. 4-Joseph Silverstein. violin. MOZART: Symphony No. 41. David Zinman conducts. William Pierce hosts. Recorded with the Dolby "A" noise reduction system in Columbia SQ Four-Channel Sound.

10:00 REDEALING: Barbara Cady

10:30 ENLIGHTENMENT: SHORTHAND FOR A SCURRILOUS LIFE: The rediscovered poems of Gii Casanova, by Art Beck. Read by John Thomas. Produced by Paul Vangelisti.

11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tylei

12:00 CAPTAIN TYLER

3:00 CHUCK RAGGIO AND THE RESEARCHETTES

lane Patrick; News reporter.

4:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE

5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady

5:55 TUESDAY CALENDAR

6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS

6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter

7:00 OPEN JOURNAL

Classified

f«rlAawH*oar«

Oli>n> OallT tnm I tJL mtO, Utm. Ikn rrt. Ina 11:M t.B. ALL CREDIT CIWOS HONOMD IMIS «Mtora IM.. UMua (Mi. TU-Mlt

SCULPTURED HAIR STYLING For Men and Women

Including conditioning, body perms, and coloring. Call Tracic Ray at (213) 466-5590 or come to 7621 Sunset Blvd. in Hollywood. FRLE parking, rear.

PAINTER WHO LIKES HIS WORK

Small repairs. licensed, insured.

John Godel NO 50719 '-66-8874

PAPA BACH BOOK SHOP

11312 Santa Monica Blvd West Los Angeles Open Sunday 'til 9:00 Dial: GRUBERC

WALL-TO-WALL CARPET CLEANING _ ond UPHOLSTERY CLEANING ^Bi^^ 15th Year serving KPFK Listeners

iw,.^A»TswKKV«««vi«fcsf«vwv«»innnnBBBa8

PIANOS-PLAYER PIANOS TUNING-SERVICING CUSTOM RESTORATION

Pasadena Piano Company 5420 Monte Vista Street Los Angeles 254-9865

U.S. POSTAGE STAMPS: Selling entire collection of Commemoratives- Mint Condition; 1930's; Prices: Scott"! Int'l Bluc-Book; Sets of 24 or more; also some plate-blocks. (Please no dealers). Call (213) 731-6060; Mr. Parker.

GUITAR LESSONS

Jazz, Rock. Blues Theory and Improvisation

Alan Yoshida 684-2220

BLUES GUITAR CLASSES FOR INTER- MEDIATES beginning in early September. I am teaching these evening classes: BLUES GUITAR (at UCLA, begins 9/2) SLIDE GUITAR (McCabes Santa Monica) If you are interested in these courses or private instruction call me. BERNIE PEARL. 663-0010 (home number)

THE LONG MARCH BOOKSTORE NEWSREEL DOCUMENTARY FILMS

2706 W. 7th Street Los Angeles, Ca Phone: (213) 384-3856

KPFK Classified Ads-$15 per column inch. For large ad rates, call Roy for a rate card. Support KPFK with your advertising!

moving?

The FOLIO will NOT be automatically forwarded to your new address. It will be sent back to us with your new address on it and remailed— a process which lakes 3 to 6 weeks. So, if you don't want to miss a month, please fill out this coupon and mail it back and be sure your present FOLIO label is pasted on the back. Thank -you.

u. <o

9- o

This is Uncle Ruthle (Buell), volunteer program producer (Halfway Down the Stairs.)

r_ T TT

n

This is Uncle Ruthie (Buell), volunteer program producer (Halfway Down the Stairs.)

KPFK FOLIO PAGE 19

Stll Annual International Folk Festival and Ethnic Bazaar

Featuring the Incomparable ML jUJ J% jJ AMAN FOLK ENSEMBLE

The GflNDY DaNCCRS^HADARIM KALOCSA©PE6URKa

CROflTia Tamburilzans <^^<^ OTEA

JSeffv ®a«oer*2©ALEKO

BOUZOUKEE ORCHESTRAS

Fiesta Mexicana Chavarria

^^SIS^S EXTRA SPECIAL ATTRACTION 'i'f'f't'fS

BESSaRaBia Folk Ballet

Directed by the noted Romanian Dancer, MIHAI DAVID

'Master of Ceremonies: MARIO CASETTA

A FOLK DANCER'S DREAM: MORE THAN 30 HOURS OF DANCING AND SUPERB, COSTUMED EXHIBITION GROUPS. AN INCREDIBLE WEEK-END WITH AUTHENTIC ETHNIC FOOD AND ARTS AND CRAFTS FROM AROUND THE GLOBE. A TOTALLY WILD AND WONDERFUL FOLK DANCE EVENT:

Friday - Opening Night "GREEK GLENOI" 6p.m. to 1 a.m.

Saturday - "MANY WORLDS" - Noon to 1 a.m.

Sunday - "ISRAELI FESTIVAL" Noon to 10 p.m. ADMISSION EACH DAY IS ONLY $2.50 and 50< FOR KIDS (12 and under). TOTAL PRICE FOR ENTIRE WEEKEND IS ONLY SS (KIDS $1) BY ADVANCE SALES ONLY; SEND CHECKS TO: "FESTIVAL" KPFK, UNIVERSAL CITY, CA 91608. DO IT RIGHT NOW AND BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY FOR A TRULY UNFORGETABLE EVENT. AMPLE PARKING UNDERGROUND.

FRI'SAT' SUN 2E©2©29 SEPT 19-20-21

GtsLXkt ULsLXkdLCJrsLft Fair

FOLK DANCE INSTRUCTION!

Beer & Wine & Cider

A BEAUTIFUL KPFK (80.7 FMt BENEFIT PRODUCED BY MARIO CASETTA

raSTIDENA C€NT€R

300 E««f Gre«n Str»»t Paiad.na. Califomi* (213) 577-4343

DATED PROGRAM

Time Value: Must Arrive By

SEPTEMBER 1, 1975

V

pactfica

KPFK

NON-PROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE

PAID

LOS ANGELES, CALIF.

PERMIT NO. 30711

KPFK

3729 Cahuenga Blvd., West North Hollywood, California 91604

FORM 3547 REQUESTED

FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU5FOC L'SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS

FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF( USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO( SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCl raCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU

USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS ISFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFC .FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO( )CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCl )CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU :USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS ISFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFC iFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC )CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCl ICUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU! :USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS] fSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFC iFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC )CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC )CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU :USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS ISFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFC lFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO( ^OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUS CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF( USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC FOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUI OCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCU CUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSF USFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFO SFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOCUSFOC