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Full text of "KPFK folio"




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KPFK FOLIO >4PRIL 1972 



PACIFICA RADIO • LOS ANGELES • 90.7 FM 



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j^P PACIFICA RADIO LOS ANGELES 



Cover drawing by Efram Wolff, based on Castle Church 
in Dresden where Heinrich Schuetz did much of his work. 



THE VOLUNTEERS 

are all those people who donate their time and energy 
to keep this place going. They produce programs, review 
Los Angeles cultural events, edit tapes, gather news, 
type, file, answer phones— in short, without them we 
wouldn't be here. Thanks. 

Bonnie Cardon. Alvaro Cardona-Hine, Dawn Chatty, Ridgely Cummings, 
Judith Dancoff, Madeleine Deutsch, Mark Ellenbogen, Michael Elliot, 
Paul Faulkner, Gil Ferrer, Sandford Fidel/, Steve Futterman, Cy Gius. 
J. B. Goode, Bob Gowa, Marjorie Grayson, Georg Gugelberger, Tom Halle, 
Ethlie Herman, Doris Herrscher, Charles Higham, Peggy Hotter, Jay Jensen, 
Larry Levin, Stephen Mamber, Sue Marshall, Petrie Mason, Dave McDonald, 
Leo McElroy, Dave McGregor, Maureen Mcllroy, Mike Moberly, Charles 
Morgan, Richard Nielson, Earl Ofari, Leah Orlin, Constance Pfeifer, Brian 
Rosenberg, Paul Schrader, Dave Simpson, Mark Smith, William 
Strother, Juris Svendsen. Richard Toscan, Joe Triscari, Varda Ullman, 
Bill Vestal, Paul Vorwerk, Charles Waite, Brian Walker 



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 listing of the programs broadcast. 

Our transmitter is on Mount Wilson and we broadcast in stereo multiplex 
with an effective radiated power of 1 12,000 Watts. Our studios and offices 
are located at 3729 Cahuenga Boulevard, West, North Hollywood, California 
91604. Our mailing address is KPFK, Los Angeles, CA 90038, and the 
telephone numbers are 877-27 1 1 from Los Angeles and 984-27 1 1 from the 
San Fernando Valley and beach cities. 

KPFK is owned and operated by thePacifica Foundation, a non-profit 
institution. Other Pacifica stations are KPFA, Berkeley, CA 94704; WBAI. 
New York, N.Y. 10021; and KPFT, Houston, TX 77002. An application 
for a fifth station is pending in Washington, D.C. Subscriptions are 
transferable. 



PACIFICA NATIONAL BOARD: Honorary Chairman-R. Gordon Agnew, 
D.D.S., Ph.D.; Chairman of the Board-Rudy Hurwich (KPFA); 
President-Carolyn Goodman, Ed.D. (WBAII; Vice President-Ronald M. 
Loeb (KPFK); Secretary-Vera S. Hopkins; Assistant Secretary- Leonard 
Goldman (KPFK); Assistant Secretary-Jo Marks (KPFT); Assistant 
Secretary-Hannah Levin, Ph.D. (WBAI). Treasurer-Henry Elson (KPFA); 
Florence Bonner (KPFT); Hallock Hoffman (KPFK); David J. Nagle 
(KPFT); Max Palevsky (KPFK); Albert Ruben (W8AI); Frank Wyle (KPFK). 

KPFK LOCAL BOARD: Lucretia Cole; Sam Francis; Leonard Goldman; 
Brownlee Hayden; Hallock Hoffman; Celes King III; Robert Klein; 
Ronald M. Loeb"; Wax Palevsky; Robert Powsner; Marvin Segelman; 
Frank Wyle"; Floyd Yudelson. "Co-chairmen 



General Manager 
Will Lewis 

Program Director 
Ruth Hirschman 

Program Assistant 
Barbara Cady 

Public A t fairs 

Mike Hodel, Director 
Mary Bess 
Dennis Mathews 
Don Roeck 
Steven Tyler 

News 

Richard Halmy, Director 
Miriam Bjerre 
Andres Chavez 

Music 

David Cloud, Director 
(Catherine Calkin 

Drama & Literature 

Everett Frost, Director 
Clare Loeb, Associate Director 
Ruth Buell 
Cynthia Sears 

Production 

Paul Fagan, Director 
Jean Vassar, Traffic 
Rick Bralver 
Bruce Gossard 
Mitchell Harding 
Rachel Kurn 
Peter Lert 

Engineering 

Don Wilson, Chief Engineer 
Tom Sandford 

Promotion Director 
Barbara Spark 

Folio 

Susan Bechaud 

Subscriptions 
Hal Thorpe 

Accountant 
Harold Hodge 



El/ERY 



week week-end 





M 


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Good Morning: three hours of serious music, with Peter Lert, 
or, occasionally, Bruce Gossard. 


9 


The Morning News 9-25 : Report to 
the Listener 




The Morning Reading 


IU 


Ethnic Music: Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Mario Casetta, 
Tuesdays. Third World Music with Howard Spector; Thursdays, records. 




Washington 
Report 


Contemporary 

Writing 

(rebroadcast) 




The 
Advocates 




1 1 




The 

Commentaries 


The 
Commentaries 




Caveat Emptor 


Soviet Press 
and Periodicals 


12 
1 


Noon Concert: Two hours of important music, hosted by David Cloud, 
Katherme Calkin, and occasionally others. 

1:55: Report to 
the Listener 


I 


The Sour 
Apple Tree 






Write Onf 




3 


Mus. fr. Germany 


Elwood's Archives 










Martin Luther King 






4 


Jean 
Shepherd 


Two Jean 

on the Dial Shepherd 


Folk 
Scene 


Jean 
Shepherd 


b 


Dealing: music for the body, guest commentators, field reports, phone 
calls, editorial contrasts, and even news, for si*cy minutes each weekday, 
with Barbara Cady and Paul Fagan. 


b 


Life on Earth: the news, the opinions, the background that shape our lives. 
Anchored by Richard Halmy and/or Miriam Sjerre. 6:55: Report to 

the Listener 


1 


The Commentaries 


8 


Music from 
Oberlin 










9 


La Raza Nueva 
with Moctezuma 
Esparza and 
Raul Ruiz 






IU 






On Film 


Murtdo 

Chicano; 

music. 

community 

news and 

events with 

Antonio 

Salazar. 


11 






Carlos Hagen 
Presents 




The Firesign 
Theater 




\z 


Nightangeis: The early morning with a contemporary vengeance. 



SA 



SU 



8 

9 

10 
11 
12 



10 



11 



12 



Early 
Morning Ragas 


Johann 

Sebastian 

Bach 


Trans 


Come to Life: 
Herschel 

Lymon 


Halfway Down 
the Stairs: Ruth 

Buell. 


Gather 'Round 
the Stake: 

Tom Rirt 


Folk Music: 
with John 

Davis. 


Spectrum: 
Carlos Hagen 




Sunday 
Opera: 
Fred 
Hyatt. 


The 

William 
Ma I loch 
Program 


Kent 

in Concert 


Dorothy 
Healey 


Margaret 
Wright 


Student Union for 
Peace & Justice 


Frank 
Greenwood 


The News 


Chicano 
Creative Arts 
with Nativided 

Ctsneros 


Impressions: 
Ed Hamilton 


Music Not 
for Export: 
Joe Cooper. 


Contemporary 
Writing 


Dennis Mathews 


Folk 
Scene 
with 

Howard and 
R02 Larman 


Nommo 
with Ron 

Dhanifu 


Nightangeis 



HIGHUGHTS 



Alternative Radio 

After devoting a month to the best of commercial radio, 
it's only fair that we give equal time to the best of non : 
commercial radio. These Pacifica Radio programs cover 12 
years of history. How many do you remember? 

Tuesday, April 4: Black Friday. The day HUAC came to 
San Francisco (1960). From KPFA. 

Thursday, April 6: Listen, Ofay! Jim Wilcox and a program 
that was ahead of its time (1962). From KPFK. 

Tuesday, April 1 1 : Freedom Now! Dale Minor and Birming- 
ham, Alabama (1963). From WBAI. 

Thursday, April 1 3: The Fire This Time. The Watts up- 
rising of 1965. From KPFK. 

Tuesday, April 18: A Tale of Two Eves. The Sunset Strip 
battles of 1966. From KPFK. 

Thursday, April 20: The Battle of Da Nang. Dale Minor and 
a classic look at Vietnam. From WBAI. 

Tuesday, April 25: A Day in the Park. Not as peaceful as it 
sounds-Chicago, August 1968. From KPFK. 

Thursday, April 27: Pacifica in Retrospect. Mitchell Harding 
and Mike Hodel have produced an original documentary 
about Pacifica Radio itself (1972). 

All Alternative Radio programs will be broadcast at 8:30 p.m. 



Brecht 




On Wednesday April 19, at 8:00 p.m., KPFK will present 
the Pomona College Theater production of Bertolt Brecht's 
77je Caucasian Chalk Circle. This production of Brecht's 
politicized drama of motherhood and justice is one of four 
1972 winners in Region II of the American College Theater 
Festival. Directed by Pomona College theater professor 
Andrew Doe and co-produced for KPFK by Bruce Gossard 
and Everett Frost, the play includes music by Morton 
Subotnick, and was recorded especially for radio under 
studio conditions. 

To complement Chalk Circle, we've scheduled a number of 
other programs of and about Brecht throughout the month. 
On Wednesday the 19th at 2 p.m.. The Poetry of Bertolt 
Brecht. Eric Bentley, Brecht scholar and translator, remin- 
isces about his association with Brecht on Friday the 14th 
at 3 p.m. And on the first three Wednesdays at 10:30 a.m., 
we invite you to Brechtfest: a short lecture by well-known 
Brecht scholar Juris Svendsen on the 12th, and short plays 
by Brecht on the 5th and 19th. 




Schutzfest 



Heinrich Schuetz— Bach's great predecessor— composer of 
spatial, mystical music. We commemorate the 300th anni- 
versary of his death with three live concerts featuring our 
resident choral group, the Pacifica Singers, directed by Paul 
Vorwerk. Join us in person at the First Unitarian Church of 
Los Angeles and/or hear the concerts on the air later. 

Concert 1 : April 1 at 8:30 p.m., broadcast Tuesday the 
17th at 10 p.m. 

Concert 2: April 7 at 8:30 p.m.; broadcast Tuesday the 
25th at 10 p.m. 

Concert 3: April 9 at 8:30 p.m.; broadcast Wednesday 
the 26th at 8:30 p.m. 

Phone-ln Frida/s 

A chance for you to express your views on a variety of 
stimulating subjects. Every Friday at 8:30 p.m.: 

April 7: The Sex Sense. Combinations, varieties, genders, 
designed to open Pandora's Box. 

April 14: Vietnamese Women. American women, members 
of Women Strike for Peace, express their first-hand im- 
pressions from personal contact. 

April 21 : Gestalt Therapy. Express yourself-the time is now. 

April 28: Police. Back by popular demand, a panel of law 
enforcement officers discuss community and enforcement 
problems. 

Please remember, your call will be picked up by a producer. 
If there are calls ahead of you, you will be put on hold and 
asked to wait. If you are listening to the program while 
waiting, turn down your radio when you are put on the air. 
You will be on a tape delay, and totally confused unless 
you turn the radio down. 



NEW SERIES 



Public Affairs 

WELFARE RIGHTS 
Second and fourth Tuesdays, 3:30 p.m. 
The welfare rights movement began in Los Angeles and 
subsequently spread throughout the country. It is devoted 
to helping welfare recipients to know exactly what it is that 
they are entitled to under existing laws, and to aiding them 
in dealing with the most confusing and bureaucratic hier- 
archy ever devised by government. If you know someone 
struggling on or with welfare, why don't you let them know 
about this new program, hosted by Phyllis Frierson. We 
would also like to urge subscribers who are social workers 
to spread the word among their clients. 

TRANS 

Saturdays at 8:45 a.m. 

One idea threads through all races and ages. A person can 
improve. Consciousness can rise. Man evolves. There are 
those with greater awareness, those with less. As the rocks 
and animals have their place, so the elder and younger 
brethren of the race. 

Each epoch has its unique quality. We have heard a lot of 
talk about "the end of the Piscean Age" and the "beginning 
of the Aquarian." Those who balk at the esoteric still admit 
the present flux. Talk to anyone on the bus. 

There are those who understand this transition more fully 
than others. Or at least, they are trying to work in the field. 
Trans will explore this bridging work. Trans will investigate 
all "New Age" cultural, scientific, humanitarian, spiritual 
and esoteric groups who are working toward the emergence 
of a new civilization. Trans will reveal the work of groups 
dedicated to understanding and utilizing the value of the 
individual and the fact of the One Humanity. 



/Music 



Three new music programs debut on KPFK this month. On 
Saturday mornings at 8:00, Early Morning Ragas-music to 
start the day from the great traditions of India. On Saturday 
afternoons at 3:30, Kent in Concert features students and 
faculty of Kent State University, as well as programs of 
classical music from the Blossom Festival, held each year 
outside Cleveland. And on Mondays at 7:30 p.m., Music 
from Oberlin features vocal, chamber and orchestral per- 
formances from that distinguised music school. Complete, 
commercial-free, and in stereo. Let us know how you like 
them. 

Drama & Literature 

WRITE ON! 
Thursdays at 2:00 p.m. 

Bill Margolis, Barba Margolis, Paul Vangelisti, A. P. Russo 
and Everett Frost get together in various combinations to 
read from the work of contemporary writers and to discuss 
current writing and the issues relevant to it. This month: 
problems of translation, California poetry, hoax poetry and 
German poetry. 

TWO ON THE DIAL 
Tuesdays at 4:00 p.m. 

Is musical theater dead? Free-wheeling their way down 
Memory Lane, serious playwright Harvey Perr and madcap 
producer-writer Warren Lyons say "Whoa." Allegro, si; 
Oklahoma, no! Our hosts offer you: songs from their fabu- 
lous personal record collections, interviews with surviving 
stars, insights into the influence of musical comedy today 
PLUS great gossip and unorthodox speculation. 



Wa of the Worlds 



NEW YORK, MONDAY, OCTOBER 31. 1938. 



Radio Listeners in Panic, 
Taking War Drama as Fact 

Many Flee Homes to Escape 'Gas Raid From 

Mars 9 — Phone Calls Swamp Police at 

Broadcast of Wells Fantasy 



A wave of masa hyaterla seized 
thousands of radio listeners 
throughout the nation between 8:13 
and 9:30 o'clock last night when a 
broadcast of a dramatization of 



and radio stations here and in other 
cities of the United States and Can- 
ada seeking advice on protective 
measures against the raids. 
The program was produced by Mr. 



SaturdaK AprW 1 

On Saturday, April 1, you won't hear KPFK's usual 
Saturday programs. The First Annual Old Radiothon— 
marathon month-will end that day, 31 days after 
it began. As a grand finale for the Old Radiothon, and 
an appropriate way to take note of April Fools' Day, 
we present the radio program that made history on 
October 30, 1938: The War of the Worlds, with Orson 
Welles starring in the H. G. Wells fantasy of an invasion 
from Mars. 

The War of the Worlds is followed by several hours of 
documentary aftermath from radio coverage of the 
time, including a 1938 report on the broadcast and its 
effect on the country, and an interview with Welles. 



6:45 THE REVELATION OF ST. JOHN: An Apocalypse 

Apocalyptic writing is, in form, a prophetic genre 
that foresees the end of an age and the establishment of a 
new one. Usually appearing in times of great oppression and 
persecution (hence the revival in our time), it is typically 
filled with graphic and terrifying accounts of the disasters 
that will put an end to persecution and establish a new 
order. Because this form of prophecy is concerned with 
ultimates, beyond space and 
time, and not with history, it 
is written in a universal and 
enriched language of myth 
and archetype. Such elliptical 
language additionally has the 
advantage of disguising histor- 
ical allusions so that they are 
not recognized by the tyrants 
and the unpersuaded or un- 
imaginative. John's revelation 
is perhaps the grandest and 
most comprehensive known 
in the Western world— an 
appropriate way to begin 
Easter Sunday with its theme 
of death and rebirth. Mitchell 
Harding reads from the New 
English Bible. Music by Oliver 
Messaien under it all. 

8:00 THE MUSIC OF 
J. S. BACH 

Cantata No. 31. "Der Himmel 
lacht" (Easter Cantata); Ba- 
roque Chorus and Ensemble 
of Stuttgart conducted by 
Marcel Couraud; Columbia 
ML 5342. 

8:20 LISZT: CHRISTUS 
ORATORIO 

Eva Andor, soprano; Zsuzsa 
Nemeth, mezzo-soprano; 
Joszef Reti, tenor; Sandor 
Nagy, baritone; Joszef Gregor, 
bass; Lajos Basti, speaker; 
Sandor Margittay, organ; 
Budapest Choir; Zoltan 
Kodaly Girls' Choir and Hun- 
garian State Orchestra con- 
ducted by Miklos Forrai. 
HungaratonSLPX 11506/8. 
Stereo. 

11:00 THE FOUR 
QUARTETS 

Burnt Norton, East Coker, The Dry Salvages, Little Gidding: 
T. S. Eliot's apocalyptic/elegaic lament on time, root- 
lessness and the loss of meaning in modern Western culture. 
Ending, perhaps, in a rebirth of vision through art. 

12:00 TWO PLAYS BY WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS 

Purgatory is Yeats' next-to-last play and evokes, 
as he said, "my own convictions about this world and the 



next"-scenes of almost unrelieved bondage and suffering. 
The Resurrection complicates the matter further: the 
bondage is relieved, leading only to new perplexities. As 
hard to face enigmatic answers as the lack of them. 

1:00 THE SUNDAY OPERA 

Richard Wagner: Parsifal. 
Recorded live at the 1971 Bayreuth Festival. Soloists: 
James King, Janis Martin, 



EASTER 




SUNDAY 



Franz Crass, Thomas Stewart, 
Karl Ridderbusch, Gerd 
Nienstedt. Eugen Jochum 
conducts the Bayreuth Fest- 
ival Chorus and Orchestra. 
Fred Hyatt hosts. Tapes cour- 
tesy of Deutsche Welle. 
Stereo. 

5:00 THOSE MEDDLE- 
SOME PRIESTS 

"Who will rid me of those 
meddlesome priests?" asked 
Henry II. In this later time, 
the same sentiment might be 
expressed in some quarters 
about Daniel and Philip 
Berrigan who, along with an 
array of independent sup- 
porters, are the subject of 
this documentary which ex- 
plores the emanent and 
transcendent dimensions of 
their resistance. The program 
was produced by KPFK's 
Mary Bess, and Jo Maynes of 
the Harrisburg Defense 
Committee's Los Angeles 
chapter. 

7:00 SPIRITUALS 

A program of spiri- 
tuals sung by the Tuskegee 
Institute Choir under the 
direction of William Dawson. 
Westminster WGM 8154. 
Stereo. 

8:00 THE TEMPEST 

Shakespeare's great 
comedy is offered in the 
spirit of the ritual of the day: 
a movement from the enigma- 
tid tragedy of Yeats to the 
redemption of fallen society 



through dream or vision— 
which in the beginning and the end speaks through art. 

11:00 ENTER SPRING 

Britten: Spring Symphony, Op. 44; Jennifer 
Vyvyan, soprano; Norma Procter, contralto; Peter Pears, 
tenor; Orchestra and Chorus of the Royal Opera House, 
Covent Garden, conducted by Benjamin Britten. London 
5612. 



3IV/|onday 



M 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Nikolai Gogol, The Diary of a Madman. Read by 
KPFA's Erik Bauersfeld. We promised this Russian tidbit in 
January-you remember? But due to . . . Well, here 'tis for 
real. In two parts, concluded tomorrow. 



10:00 



ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 



8:30 THE 'HYPERKINETIC CHILD 

The recent use of drugs to calm so-called hyper- 
active or hyperkinetic schoolchildren is the subject of this 
talk by Kirkpatrick Dilling, attorney for the National Health 
Federation, given at the NHF convention in Los Angeles in 
January 1972. Produced by Michael Elliott. 



9:00 



LA RAZA NUEVA 

With Moctezuma Esparza and Raul Ruiz. 



10:00 JAZZ AT NIGHT 

William Strother hosts this new monthly music 
program. (To be rebroadcast on Friday the 7th, 2 p.m.) 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 




10:30 WASHINGTON REPORT 

From the Pacifica Washington Bureau. 



11:00 OPEN HOUR 



12:00 NOON CONCERT 

The Music of Heinrich Schuetz— I. 
Selections from the Kleine Geistliche Konzerte (Small 
Sacred Concertos); Katherine Calkin hosts. 

2:00 THE SOUR APPLE TREE 

The program opens with a 20-minute talk by Santa 
Barbara writer Peter Nagourney on artists who genuinely 
change our lives and the environment. Dan Lentz wrote the 
electronic background entitled ABM Music. Produced by 
Clare Loeb; technical assistance from Ron Carson. For the 
rest of the hour, Robert Irwin and Josh Young, directors of 
the Market Street Project, discuss the origins and practices 
of their scheme to help artists control how their work is 
exhibited. They see the project as an alternative to the 
present museum-gallery system. Market Street is funded 
through a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts 
and from donations from dealers and collectors. Interview 
is conducted by Clare Loeb. 

3:00 MUSIC FROM GERMANY 

Mozart: Three Marches, K408. Telemann: Musical 
Geography, part 1; concluded next week. David Berger hosts. 

3:30 MARTIN LUTHER KING SPEAKS 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 The Wayward Press. 

7:15 Consumer Report, with Ida Honorof. 

7:30 MUSIC FROM OBERLIN 

Bach: Chromatic Fantasia and Fugue (Barbara 
Burgan, piano). Scboenberg: Suite, Op. 25 (Whitney 
Kellogg, piano). Piston: Three Pieces for Flute, Clarinet and 
Bassoon (Oberlin Woodwind Ensemble). Penderecki: Aus 
dem Psalmen Davids (Oberlin College Choir; Instrumental 
Ensemble, Harriet Simons). Stereo. 



4 Tuesday 



T 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 

9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Nikolai Gogol: The Diary of a Madman, read by 
KPFA's Erik Bauersfeld. Second of two parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

Third World Music: From Central Asia. 
The series begins with music from Turkmenistan, Uzbeki- 
stan, Tajikistan, Kirghizia (USSR) and Sinkiang (China)— 
a region known by its classical name of Turkestan. Howard 
Spector hosts. 

10:30 CONTEMPORARY WRITING 

Deena Metzger, rebroadcast from Sunday, 
February 27 at 8:30 p.m. 

11:30 CAVEAT EMPTOR 

Consumer advocacy and how to do it, from the 
California Public Interest Law Center. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

New Music from Poland. 
Kazimierz Serocki: Sinfonietta for Two String Orchestras; 
Warsaw National Philharmonic Orchestra; Witold Rowicki, 
conductor; Phillips PHS 900141 (14). Krystof Penderecki: 
Anaklasis for Strings and Percussion; Warsaw State Philhar- 
monic Orchestra, Andrezj Markowski, conductor; Mace 
MXX 9090 (8). Tadeusz Baird: Erotica-Six Love Songs for 
Soprano and Orchestra; Stefania Woytowicz, soprano; 
Warsaw State Philharmonic Orchestra; Witold Rowicki, con- 
ductor; Phillips PHS 900141 (14). Penderecki: Fluor- 
escences; Warsaw State Philharmonic Orchestra; Andrzej 
Markowski, conductor; Mace MXX 9090 (18). Grazyna 
Bacewicz: Music for Strings, Trumpets and Percussion; 
Warsaw State Philharmonic Orchestra; Witold Rowicki, 
conductor; Phillips PHS 900141 (19). Penderecki: Capric- 
cio for Oboe and Strings; Heinz Holliger, oboe; Symphony 
Orchestra of the Southwest German Radio, Baden-Baden; 
Ernest Bour, conductor; Wergo WER 314 (6). Kazimierz 
Serocki: Symphonic Frescoes; Polish Radio Symphony 
Orchestra; Jan Krenz, conductor; Wergo 2549015 (14). 
Stereo. 



LAEMMLE FINE ARTS THEATRES 


LOS FELIZ 
NO 4-2169 


FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL 


ESQUIRE 
Pasadena 
SY 3-6149 
MU 4-1774 


Starts April 5 

"THE FRENCH CONNECTION" 


PLAZA 
Westwood 
TR 9-9077 
GR 7-0097 


"GARDEN OF THE FINZI CONTINIS" 


REGENT 
Westwood 
BR 2-0501 
477-0059 


"THE SORROW AND THE PITY" 


THE ROYAL 
West L. A. 
473-1636 
270-4110 


Call theatre for program 


MONICA TWIN THEATRES 
Always a choice of two outstanding programs 


MONICA 1 
451-8686 


Starts April 5 

"THE LAST PICTURE SHOW" 


MONICA II 

451-8686 

451-8688 


Starts April 5 

"THE CAREY TREATMENT" 



EVERYWOMAN 



FEMINIST BOOKSTORE 

Hours: 12-6. Mon.-Sat.; till 9. M-W-F 



MAGAZINE 

Subs: $5 for 12 issues 
Sample copy: 50 cents 



SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA'S FIRST AND ONLY 
WOMEN'S STUDIES BOOKSTORE 

Hardbound . . . paperbacks . . . 
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survival handbooks . . . 

THE WHOLE RANGE OF BOOKS 
IMPORTANT TO WOMEN 

Send 10 cents for mail order catalog 

2083 Westwood Blvd., L.A. 90025/(213) 474-1278 



2:00 A LITTLE BIT OF HONKY TONK 

Three West Coast piers-past and present, people, 
places and Petrie Mason. We hear the on-location sounds of 
the Santa Monica merry-go-round and penny arcade, as well 
as conversations and poetry. Stereo. 

3:00 ELWOOD'S ARCHIVES 

From KPFA in Berkeley, critic and collector 
Phil Elwood's jazz and blues show. 

3:30 WOMEN FOR LEGISLATIVE ACTION 

With Dorothy Eletz. 

4:00 TWO ON THE DIAL 

With Harvey Perr and Warren Lyons. 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 The Long March collective. 

7:15 Lowell Ponte. 

7:30 OPEN HOUR 




8:30 ALTERNATIVE RADIO: Black Friday 

This report on the hearings and student demon- 
stration of May 13, 1960 at the House Committee on 
Un-American Activities earned KPFA (Berkeley) a Silver 
Medal from the California State Fair, Press- Radio-TV 
Awards. 

9:30 PAGANINI ON THE PIANO 

Brahms: Variations on a Theme by Paganini, 
Op. 35; Schumann: Concert Etudes on Caprices by Paganini, 
Op. 10-No. 2, Caprice No. 16; No. 4, Caprice No. 22; 
No. 5, Caprice No. 19; Paganini: Grand Etude in A Minor 
(trs. Liszt). Pianist Lilie Wollin recorded this recital for 
KPFKin 1969. 



10:00 I HAVE A DREAM 

KPFK's award-winning 
tribute to Martin Luther King Jr. 
is rebroadcast on the fourth anni- 
versary of his death. 

11:00 FIRESIGN THEATER 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 




Feedback: The Fourth 
Network, 8:30 p.m. 





9:00 
9:30 



THE MORNING NEWS 



THE MORNING READING 
Franz Kafka: Report to An Academy. Kafkaesque, 
current and right on. Try it out. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

10:30 BRECHTFEST 

A performance of Bertolt Brecht's short play. The 
Trial of Lucullus. 

THE COMMENTARIES 

11:00 Libertarian Alternatives, with Christopher 
Winstanley and Peggy Farrell. 

11:15 Theodore Edwards, of the Socialist Workers Party. 

11:30 Frontiers of Research, with Dr. Dick Huemer. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

The Music of Heinrich Schuetz-ll. 
Selections from the Cantiones Sacrae (Sacred Motets). 
Katherine Calkin hosts. 



1:55 



2:00 



REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 



HOW SICKNESS PREVENTS DEATH 

A challenge to the traditional medical attitude 
that disease is a killer. Speaker is Walter J. Hodson, naturo- 
pathic doctor. He speaks to the National Health Federation 
convention in Los Angeles in January 1972. Pencil and 
paper might be needed. Produced by Michael Elliott. 

3:15 JOUJOUKA: The Pipes of Pan in Morocco 

Mario Casetta plays a provocative release titled 
Brian Jones Presents the Pipes of Pan atJoujouka, and 
interviews Leona Wood on the subject of this pre-lslamic 
rite. Things to listen for: the Master Musicians of Joujouka, 
the Maalmin of Ahl Serif, Joulouka Tatoof-and strong 
opinions from Miss Wood. 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 



THE COMMENTARIES 

7:00 Latin American Press Report, with Dr. Donald 
Bray, Cal State Los Angeles. 



7:15 
7:30 
8:30 



Varda One, from Ever/woman magazine. 
OPEN HOUR 



FEEDBACK: The Fourth Network 
An examination of educational and public tele- 
vision, from the Ford Foundation's first experiments in 
classroom TV to the present national Public Broadcasting 
Service. Comments by PBS president Hartford Gunn; 
Theodore Conant, formerly of the Ford Foundation and 
WGBH-TV; Stuart Sucherman of the Ford Foundation; 
former PBL director Av Westin, now with ABC News; for- 
mer NET producer Al Levin; Robert Dahl, formerly of the 
Samoan TV project; Frederick Bohen, assistant to the 
president of the Ford Foundation; and Bill Greeley, Variety 
reporter. Produced by the Network Project, with WBAI's 
Bruce Soloway and David Rapkin. Stereo. To be rebroad- 
cast on Tuesday the 1 1th, 2 p.m. 

9:30 1971 INTERNATIONAL QUEEN ELIZABETH 
OF BELGIUM COMPETITION-I 

The finals of last year's competition for young violinists. 
Beethoven: Violin Concerto, Op. 61. Soloist is fourth prize 
winner Ana Chumachenco of Argentina. Tapes courtesy of 
Belgian Radio. Stereo. 




10:30 THREE WOMEN 

A verse play for radio by Sylvia Plath, featuring 
Judith Binder as a wife, Ann Bornstein as a secretary and 
Rachelle Towers as a girl, reflecting on their feelings about 
being pregnant and giving birth. The play is followed by a 
discussion of childbirth as depicted in the play and as in 
their own experience by three young mothers, Judy Knupe, 
Alice Abarbanel and Stephanie Hines. Produced by KPFA. 
To be rebroadcast on Wednesday the 12th, 2 p.m. 

11:30 V. A. HOSPITAL 

An impressionistic documentary of life in a 
Manhattan Veterans Administration hospital, produced by 
WBAI. Stereo. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



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9:00 
9:25 

9:30 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 



THE MORNING NEWS 

REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 



THE MORNING READING 

Henry James: The Real Thing, read by Vivian . 
Schaefer. Not ideas about the thing but the thing itself? Or 
not the thing itself but ideas about the thing? Tune in for 
this Jamesian puzzle puzzled Jamesianly. First of two parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

Noted composer and musicologist Henry Cowell 
(1897-1965) discusses music of the world's people. Today, 
songs of Aran and Breton. 

10:30 THE ADVOCATES 

The audio portion of KCET's forum. 

11:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS 

With William Mandel. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

Contemporary Organ Series— I. 
The New Music Project of the Los Angeles chapter of the 
American Guild of Organists has prepared a series of 12 pro- 
grams of contemporary music for organ (and in some cases, 
voices also). They will be heard exclusively on KPFK over 
the next three months. Today, the music of Leo Sowerby: 
Symphony in G Major ( 1 932); T hree Psalms for Bass and 
Organ (1929); and Sonatina for Organ (1947); Michael 
Smith, baritone; David Smith, organ (60). Stereo. Noon 
Concert concludes with two works by Copland: Episode 
for Organ Solo; Richard Ellsasser, organ; MGM E 3064 (5); 
and Symphony for Organ and Orchestra; E. Power Biggs, 
organ; New York Philharmonic conducted by Leonard 
Bernstein; Columbia MS 7058 (25). 

2:00 WRITE ON! 

A new series on contemporary writing. Today, 
Paul Vangelisti and Alvaro Cardona-Hine discues some of 
the problems inherent in translating poetry into English, 
and offer a comparative analysis of translations of con- 
temporary Spanish and Italian verse. 

3:00 A VOICE FOR THE PRISONER 

With former federal prisoner William Carpenter. 

3:30 SANDRA PANALLE 

4:00 FOLK SCENE 

With Howard Larman. 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 News analysis with William Winter. 

7:15 The Berrigan Report, with Jo Maynes of the 
Harrisburg Defense Committee. 



7:30 THE FRENCH CONNECTION 

In February 1972 the World Assembly for Peace 
and Independence of the Indochinese Peoples met in 
Versailles. This review of the speeches and meetings, 
from actualities recorded by Ron Ridenour, was produced 
by Ridenour and Peggy Holter. 

8:30 ALTERNATIVE RADIO: Listen, Ofay! 

The subtle segregation of the urban North and 
West, and the rising frustration of American Blacks, de- 
picted in a montage of voices and music. Produced by 
James Wilcox. 




Igor 
Stravinsky ! 

9:30 A STRAVINSKY MEMORIAL 

On the first anniversary of his death, a memorial 
tribute to the great Russian master Igor Stravinsky. Portions 
of this program were taken from a KPFK broadcast the day 
after Stravinsky's death. Participants include William 
Malloch, Eudice Shapiro, William Kraft, Leonard Stein and 
Gerhard Samuel, all of whom knew or were associated with 
Stravinsky during his years in Los Angeles. Music includes 
Stravinsky's arrangement of The Star Spangled Banner, the 
Ave Maria, Pater Noster and Credo, and the Four Russian 
Peasant Songs from an as-yet-unreleased Columbia album. 
Produced by David Cloud. Stereo. 

11:00 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS 

Pre-Moog, or how it all began. A survey of the 
early beginnings of electronic music, with illustrations of 
early experiments, musique concrete, and early attempts to 
blend conventional music and vocal art with the new elec- 
tronic sounds. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



7 rriday 



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6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Henry James: 77?e Real Thing, read by Vivian 
Schaefer. Second of two parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

10:30 DRAMA & LITERATURE OPEN TIME 



11 



THE COMMENTARIES 
11:00 Medical Report, with H. Rudolph Alsleben, M.D. 

11:30 William Wingfield. 

11:45 Ecology Life-Line, with Warren Jones of the 
Environmental Action League. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

The Festival Players of California in a concert 
recorded live at KPFK on February 4, 1972. Mozart: 
"Cassazione" Quartet (three movements); Toch: Sonatin- 
etta; Bach: Fugue in E Flat; Palestrina: Ricercare; Stamitz: 
Quartet for Winds; Boustead: Three Madrigals; Rossini: 
Quartet No. 1 (first movement). Patricia Garside, flute, 
Donald Ransom, clarinet; Ray Nowlin, bassoon; and Todd 
Miller, horn. Informal commentary about the music and 
the instruments by Dorye Roettger. Stereo. 

2:00 JAZZ AT NIGHT 

William Strother's new monthly program, re- 
broadcast from Monday the 3rd, 10 p.m. 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

6:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 

THE COMMENTARIES 

7:00 The People's 
Lobby, with 
Prof. Jeff Elliot. 



7:15 



Gay Community 
Service Center. 



7:30 OPEN HOUR 



8:30 




THE SEX SENSE \ S, Q 

An open discussion of bisexual ity, hosted by Lee 
Hansen Sisson. The audience is invited to join the discussion 
by phoning in (877-2711 or 984-2711). 




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8:00 EARLY MORNING RAGAS 

Music for the early hours of the day from the 
timeless traditions of India. 

8:45 TRANS 

A new series exploring current work towards a 
new civilization, produced by David and Barbara Saltman 
and Amanda Foulger. 



9:30 



HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS 

For and with young people, hosted by Ruth Buell. 



10:30 FOLK MUSIC 

With John Davis. 

12:30 POETRY FROM VENICE HIGH SCHOOL 

Students in the creative writing program estab- 
lished by Bud Freeman read from their work and discuss it 
with Freeman and Stanley Dyrector. 



1:30 
3:30 



THE WILLIAM MALLOCH PROGRAM 



KENT IN CONCERT 

A new series featuring performances by students 
and faculty of Kent State University, as well as programs 
from the Blossom Festival. Stereo. 



4:30 
5:30 



DOROTHY HEALEY 



STUDENT UNION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE 

The latest information on the antiwar movement, 
locally and nationally. 

6:00 FRANK GREENWOOD 

7:30 IMPRESSIONS 

Jazz, rock and interviews, hosted by Ed Hamilton. 

9:00 DENNIS MATHEWS 

A look at what's happening in the Black community. 



10:00 



MUNDOCHICANO 

With Antonio Salazar. 



12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



10:30 NOMMO 

With Ron Dhanifu. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



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8:00 THE MUSIC OF JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH 

Cantata No. 6, "Bleib bei uns"; Heinrich Schuetz 
Chorale and Pforzheim Chamber Orchestra conducted by 
Fritz Werner; Epic LC 3861 . Preludes and Fugues Nos. 5-8 
from The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II; Malcolm 
Hamilton, soloist; Everest 6134/6. 

9:00 COME TO LIFE 

With Herschel Lymon. 

10:00 GATHER 'ROUND THE STAKE 

With Tom Ritt and open phones. 

12:00 SPECTRUM 

With Carlos Hagen. 



George Antheil 

with an airplane propellor 

and other noisemakers 

for his Ballet Mecanique. 

Tonight at 7:30. 




lO IV /londay 



M 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 



1:00 THE SUNDAY OPERA 

Mussorgsky: The Fair at Sorochinsk. 
Soloists: Gennady Troitsky, Lyudmila Belobragina, 
Antonina Kleshcheva, Aleksei Usmanov, Yuri Yelnikov, 
Boris Dobrin, Aleksander Polyakov and Sergei Strukachev. 
Yuri Aranovich conducts the Moscow Radio Orchestra and 
Chorus. Stereo. 

Rimsky-Korsakov: Mlada (highlights). 
Soloists: Aleksei Korolyev, Tatiana Tugarinova, Vladimir 
Makhov, Nina Kulagina, Aleksei Bolshakov and Anatoly 
Blagov. Yevgeny Svetlanov conducts the Moscow Radio 
Orchestra and Chorus. Stereo. Fred Hyatt hosts. 

5:00 MARGARET WRIGHT 

Telling it like it is, with open phones. 

6:00 KPFK SUNDAY NEWS 

6:30 CHICANO CREATIVE ARTS 

With Natividad Cisneros. 



7:30 MUSIC NOT FOR EXPORT 

From Russia With Like. 
Sibelius: Suite Champetre; A. Dimitrev conducts the 
Leningrad Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra. And the 
following, with Gennady Rozhdestvensky conducting the 
Moscow Radio Symphony Orchestra: Glazunov: Lyric 
Poem and Cortege Solonnelle; Scriabin: Reverie; Liadov: 
Naenia; Tchaikovsky: Law Students March and Solemn 
March; Spendiarov: "Persian March" from A/mast and 
Crimean Sketches; Shchedrin: Symphonic Fanfares. Joe 
Cooper hosts. (Rescheduled from January.) 

8:30 CONTEMPORARY WRITING 

Rosella Pace reads from and discusses her poetry 
with Alvaro Cardona-Hine. Originally scheduled in 
February, this program was preempted by our Irish coverage 
and is reoffered here. (To be rebroadcast on Tuesday 
the 11th, 10:30 a.m.) 



9:30 



FOLK SCENE 

With Howard and Roz Larman. 



9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Virginia Woolf : "Street Haunting: A London 
Adventure," read by Vivian Schaeffer. Remember Mrs. 
Dalloway in February? Here's more. 



10:00 



ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 



12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



10:30 WASHINGTON REPORT 

From the Pacifica Washington Bureau. 

11:00 OPEN HOUR 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

The Music of Heinrich Schuetz— III. 
Selections from the Symphoniae Sacrae (Sacred Sym- 
phonies). Katherine Calkin hosts. 

2:00 THE SOUR APPLE TREE 

Ted Hoffman-former editor of Tulane Drama 
Review, former critic for Westinghouse Radio and professor 
of drama at NYU-discusses educational, regional and radical 
theater in conversation with Clare Loeb. Hoffman is inter- 
ested in the Theater of Change rather than Theater of the 
Bust and sees the shift of theater to the outdoors as a po- 
tential means to change the ways people interact in public. 

3:00 MUSIC FROM GERMANY 

Telemann: Musical Geography, part 2. David 
Berger hosts. 

3:30 MARTIN LUTHER KING SPEAKS 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 The Wayward Press. 

7:15 Consumer Report, with Ida Honorof. 



7:30 HOLY, HOLY, HOLY: 

ANTHEIL'S MAGIC LACUNAE 

On April 10, 1927 (45 years ago tonight), George Antheil's 
Ballet Mecanique, scored for multiple pianos and percussion 
(including airplane propellors and electric doorbells) was 
given its American premiere at Carnegie Hall. A recent dis- 
covery by Mrs. George Antheil of Los Angeles and KPFA's 
Charles Amirkhanian sheds extraordinary light on the genius 
of Antheil's early music. Gathering dust on the shelves of 
Mrs. Antheil's archives has been a set of three player-piano 
rolls of the Ballet Mecanique in its original 35-minute 
version (twice the duration of the 1953 revision which is 
known through current recordings and performances). This 
document, realized mechanically by the Pleyela Company to 
Antheil's carefully notated specifications, conforms to the 
original 1924 version of the work and contains evidence of a 
musicologically significant re-discovery: Antheil was the first 
composer in music history to incorporate lengthy silences as 
compositional material within a movement of a piece of 
music. The effect is hypnotic— here are driving, rapid, 
mechanically precise rhythms and throbbing assaults on 
every key of the instrument, frighteningly juxtaposed with 
sonic vacuums. Our thanks to Sally and Dale Lawrence of 
Kensington, Calif., whose Ampico grand player piano was 
the vehicle for this nostalgic revival. Pacifica Ear Wash Full 
Tilt Stereo Sound by George Craig of KPFA. 



8:30 OPEN TIME 

9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA 

Moctezuma Esparza 
interviews and listens to 
Roberto Miranda playing 
original jazz compositions 
with his ensemble. 








Ida Honorof 
talks with 
Otto Satorius. 



10:00 A BREAKTHROUGH IN BREAST CANCER 

Dr. Otto Satorius, director of the American Cancer 
Society's Cancer Control Clinic at Santa Barbara General 
Hospital, discusses his findings indicating that there may be 
a link between birth control pills and breast cancer. The 
interviewer is Ida Honorof. 

11:00 THE ALTERNATIVE ACADEMY AWARDS 

KPFK pays a less-than-reverent call on Oscar. 
Watch tonight's Academy Awards on (ugh!) TV, then tune 
in to KPFK and find out who really won. This live hour 
will feature the ritual flaying of the Motion Picture 
Academy by a relay team of KPFK critics, and maybe 
even a guest or two. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



11 Tuesday 



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6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Katherine Anne Porter: Noon Wine, read by Rella 
Lossy. First of four parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

Third World Music: from Jhe Central African 
Republic. Music of many different peoples in this isolated 
nation, including several selections played on xylophones. 
African music-except for large towns— is free of Western 
commercializing influences. The Central African Republic 
possesses much old music such as that played on the pit- 
xylophone, resembling a Vietnamese instrument and dating 
back many thousand years. Howard Spector hosts. 



10:30 



CONTEMPORARY WRITING 

Rebroadcast from Sunday the 9th, 8:30 p.m. 



11:30 CAVEAT EMPTOR 

Consumer advocacy and how to do it, from the 
California Public Interest Law Center. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

East Meets West. Enesco: Violin Sonata No. 3; 
Yehudi Menuhin, violin; Hepzibah Menuhin, piano; Angel 
S 36418 (24). Three ragas with Ravi Shankar, sitar; Yehudi 
Menuhin, violin; and Alia Rakha, tabla; Angel S 36418 (25). 
Shankar: Sitar Concerto; Ravi Shankar, sitar; London 
Symphony Orchestra; Andre Previn, conductor; Angel 
SFO 36806 (40). Stereo. (Rescheduled from February.) 



2:00 
3:00 



FEEDBACK: The Fourth Network 

Rebroadcast from Wednesday the 5th, 8:30 p.m. 



ELWOOD'S ARCHIVES 

From KPFA in Berkeley, critic and collector 
Phil Elwood's jazz and blues show. 



3:30 

4:00 

5:00 
6:00 

7:00 
7:15 
7:30 
8:30 



WELFARE RIGHTS 

With Phyllis Frierson and Ann Dancy. 

TWO ON THE DIAL 

With Harvey Perr and Warren Lyons. 

DEALING 

LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 

The Long March collective. 

Lowell Ponte. 
OPEN HOUR 



ALTERNATIVE RADIO: Freedom Now 

The Alabama struggle of Martin Luther King Jr., 
from the pool halls to the steps of "Bull" Conners' jail 
earned Dale Minor of WBAI (New York) the Prix Italia, the 
most coveted European radio award, as America's sole entry 
in 1963. 



KPFK PRESENTS 




wsemwmmn 

Featuring: 

(schedules permitting) 

Grant Green 

Jerome Richardson 

Carmen McRae 

Shelly Manne 

Victor Feldman 

Bud Shank 

Buddy Collette 

Monk Montgomery 

Herb Ellis 

Benny Powe 

Harold Land 

Dave Grusin and Ruth Price 

Many surprise artists 

Comedy Interludes 

Dancing 

Continuous showings of classic jazz 

Master of ceremonies: 

Scott Ellsworth, KFI,- Chuck Niles, KBCA 

3 p.m. 'til? 

Grand Ballroom; International Hotel 

(across from Los Angeles International Airport) 

Tickets: $6, in advance,- $7, at the door 

Available at all Ticketron outlets 

(May Co., Sears, Montgomery Ward, 

Broadway, etc.) 

For further information, call 872-2505 (L.A.) 

783-6006 (Valley & Beach Cities) 

All proceeds to KPFK Radio. 



Please mail ticket order to: KPFK-Jazz 
Los Angeles, Ca. 90038 

Please hold tickets for me at the door. 

I enclose a check for $ @ $6.00 apiece. 

Please make check payable to KPFK-Jazz. 

Name 

Address 

City Zip 



(mail orders must be received by Friday, April 14) 



9:45 1971 INTERNATIONAL QUEEN ELIZABETH 
OF BELGIUM COMPETITION-II 

Prize-winning performances from last year's violin compe- 
tition. Brahms: Violin Concerto, Op. 77; soloist is Andre 
Korsakov from the Soviet Union, second prize winner. 
Wieniawski: Polonaise in A Major, Op. 21; soloist is eleventh 
prize winner Magdalena Rezler from Poland. Prokofieff: 
Five Melodies, Op. 35a; soloist is twelfth prize winner 
Zakhar Bron (apparently a man without a country). Tapes 
courtesy of Belgian Radio. Stereo. 

11:00 FIRESIGN THEATER 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



Rosalie Sorrels, 3 p.m. 





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9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Katherine Anne Porter: Noon Wine, read by Rella 
Lossy. Today, part 2 of four parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

10:30 BRECHTFEST 

A critical examination of Bertolt Brecht's play 
77ie Caucasian Chalk Circle, by Juris Svendsen, well-known 
Brecht scholar and professor of theater at the California 
Institute of the Arts. {The Caucasian Chalk Circle will be 
broadcast on Wednesday the 19th at 8 p.m.) 

THE COMMENTARIES 

11:00 Libertarian Alternatives, with Christopher 
Winstanley and Peggy Farrell. 

11:15 Theodore Edwards, of the Socialist Workers Party. 

11:30 Frontiers of Research, with Dr. Dick Huemer. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

The Music of Heinrich Schuetz-IV. 
Selections from the Geistliche Chormusik of 1648 (Spiritual 
Choral Music). Katherine Calkin hosts. 

1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 



2:00 THREE WOMEN 

A verse play for radio by Sylvia Plath, rebroadcast 
from Wednesday the 5th, 10:30 p.m. 

3:00 TRAVELIN' LADY: Rosalie Sorrels 

Songs, stories and commentary of a lady singer, 
guitarist and songwriter. Produced by Roz Larman; techni- 
cal assistance by Howard Larman. 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 

7:00 African Press Report, with Prof. Michael Lofchie, 
African Studies Center, UCLA. 

7:15 Varda One, from Everywoman magazine. 

7:30 OPEN HOUR 

8:30 IS IT MARXIST FEMINISTS 
OR FEMINIST MARXISTS? 

The interrelationship of radical politics and the women's 
movement is explored by Linda Eldon, Jackie Goldberg, 
Ethel Herring and Pamela Tigar. Such works as 777e Dia- 
lectics of Sex and The Fourth World Manifesto will be 
considered. Produced by Clare Loeb. 

9:30 1971 INTERNATIONAL QUEEN ELIZABETH 
OF BELGIUM COMPETITION-MI 

Dmitri Shostakovich: Violin Concerto No. 1, Op. 99; 
soloist is fifth prize winner Edith Volckaert of Belgium. 
Jean Louel: Violin Concerto in D Minor, Op. 47; soloist is 
seventh prize winner Rudolf Werthen of Belgium. Tapes 
courtesy of Belgian Radio. Stereo. 

10:45 THE STAGES OF SAMUEL BECKETT 

Actor Jack MacGowran is internationally famous 
for his long creative association with Samuel Beckett, who 
wrote Eh, Joe specifically for him. He was recently in Los 
Angeles performing a medley of Beckett's works-and was 
interviewed by KPFK theater critic Richard Toscan, 
assistant chairman of the Theater Department at USC. 

11:45 CONVERSATIONS WITH MR. DOG 

Mr. Dog (Mad Dog-Lubowsky) expatiates on the 
difference between TV, and other mediate topics. Mr. Dog 
has read both McLuhan and Gutenberg, and is guaranteed 
relevant. Produced by KPFT. Stereo. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



Haste & Hirsty Volvo Pacific 

11647 Ventura Blvd., Studio City 
(3 blocks East of Laurel Canyon) 
Phone: 766-3847 or 877-0864 

FACTORY AUTHORIZED DEALER 
FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS 
LEASE PLAN AVAILABLE 
OVERSEAS DELIVERY 
SPECIALISTS 



/S3 

(VOLVO) 



FIAT 



13 T hursc| ciy 



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6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 



9:25 



9:30 



REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 



THE MORNING READING 
Katherine Anne Porter: Noon Wine, read by Rella 
Lossy. Third of four parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

A musical tour of Turkey, Greece, Italy, Sardinia 
and Spain. Part of a series recorded by the well-known 
American composer and musicologist Henry Cowell before 
his death in 1965. 

10:30 THE ADVOCATES 

The audio portion of KCET's forum. 

11:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS 

With William Mandel. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

Contemporary Organ Series— 1 1. 
Music of Marcel Dupre: Chaconne and Musette from 
Triptych (1961); Choral and Fugue (1962); Marcia 
Foxgrover, organ; and In Memoriam, Part I (1965) and 
Trois Hymnes (1963); Irene Robertson, organ (60). Stereo. 
Noon Concert concludes with Charles Marie Widor: Symphon- 
ie Romane. Op. 73; Jean Costa, organ; Classic 991078 (32). 

2:00 WRITE ON! 

A tracery of California poets: an aural glimpse of 
the net words woven by individual strands/poets loosely 
indigenous to California. Development of poetry up and 
down the coast: hightides, pollutions, kelp beds, big and 
little fish (whole schools), the continuing life-cycle-some 
areas, eras, more conducive to poet propagation, but no one 
time/space is It-change the only constant. Future programs 
will wander this shore anew. Produced by Bill and Barba 
Margolis. Stereo. 



3:00 



3:30 



THE VOICE OF LABOR 

With veteran labor reporter Sam Kushner. 



THE HICKORY STICK 

New ideas and problems in elementary and 
secondary education, hosted by Mimi Baer. 

4:00 FOLK SCENE 

With Howard Larman. 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 News analysis with William Winter. 

7:15 The Berrigan Report, with Jo Maynes of the 
Harrisburg Defense Committee. 

7:30 OPEN HOUR 



8:30 ALTERNATIVE RADIO: The Fire This Time 

Pacifica's coverage of the Watts uprising, produced 
by Trevor Thomas in 1965. 

9:30 BRECHT'S THEATER SONGS 

Selections from Mother Courage and The Three- 
penny Opera, sung by Helene Weigel. 

10:00 ON FILM 

10:15 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS 

A survey of the many facets of humor and comedy 
found in Country and Western music, the South and rural 
America-humorous songs, satire, parody and comic 
sketches (some with strong social ahd political protest). 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



14 rriday 



9:00 
9:30 



F 

■ 6:00 GOOD MORNING 
THE MORNING NEWS 



THE MORNING READING 

Katherine Anne Porter: Noon Wine, read by Rella 
Lossy. Last of four parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

10:30 DRAMA & LITERATURE OPEN TIME 

THE COMMENTARIES 
11:00 Medical Report, with H. Rudolph Alsleben, M.D. 

11:30 William Wingfield. 

11:45 Ecology Life-Line, with Warren Jones of the 
Environmental Action League. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

New Releases: a look at and a listen to the best 
of the month. 



2:00 



3:00 



IS IT MARXIST FEMINISTS 
OR FEMINIST MARXISTS? 

Rebroadcast from Wednesday the 12th, 8:30 p.m. 



BENTLEYON BRECHT 

Eric Bentley, Bertolt Brecht's English translator 
and close associate, reminisces about his friendship and 
collaboration with the German poet and playwright, the 
HUAC investigation of Brecht and the like. Produced by 
KPFA. 

3:45 GUYS CAN BE DOLLS 

Mitch Green's microdocumentary on Houston's 
first female-impersonation troupe, from KPFT. 



4:00 
5:00 



JEAN SHEPHERD 
DEALING 



17 






WASHINGTON 
evidence that the 
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trust case was 
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company involve. 
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the Kentucky 

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wi ,h Mitchell and was never a ^ 

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LOS ANGELES 

FREE 
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put most of her of- 
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their being sub- 
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After . 
said, Mitcht 
anti-trust mattei- 
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companies did ITT most 
keep if the anti-trust cases we 

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PAUL MUNGO 



6:00 
6:55 

7:00 
7:15 
7:30 
8:30 



LIFE ON EARTH 

REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 

THE COMMENTARIES 

The People's Lobby, with Prof. Jeff Elliot. 

Gay Community Service Center. 
OPEN HOUR 



VIETNAMESE WOMEN 

A discussion with several members of Women 
Strike for Peace who have met with Vietnamese women in 
Hanoi, Paris and Canada. Listeners are invited to join in 
by phoning 877-2711 or 984-2711. 

10:00 MUNDOCHICANO 

With Antonio Salazar. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 




15 c aturclc, y 



s 



8:00 EARLY MORNING RAGAS 

Music for the early hours of the day from the 
timeless traditions of India. 

8:45 TRANS 

A new series exploring current work towards a 
new civilization, produced by David and Barbara Saltman 
and Amanda Foulger. 

9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS 

For and with young people, hosted by Ruth Buell. 

10:30 FOLK MUSIC 

With John Davis. 

12:30 HOMAGE TO JOHN BERRYMAN 

A tribute to the award-winning author of Homage 
to Mistress Bradstreet, 77 Dream Songs and other outstand- 
ing volumes of verse who committed suicide January 7, 
1972. The program includes Berryman himself reading from 
late Dream Songs (subtitled "Opus Posthumous") and 
portions of a memorial program held at San Fernando 
Valley State College. Produced by Cynthia Sears. (To be re- 
broadcast on Tuesday the 18th, 2 p.m.) 



1:30 
3:30 



THE WILLIAM MALLOCH PROGRAM 



KENT IN CONCERT 

A new series featuring performances by students 
and faculty of Kent State University, as well as programs 
from the Blossom Festival. Stereo. 



4:30 
5:30 



DOROTHY HEALEY 



STUDENT UNION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE 

The latest information on the antiwar movement, 
locally and nationally. 

6:00 FRANK GREENWOOD 

7:30 IMPRESSIONS 

Jazz, rock and interviews, hosted by Ed Hamilton. 

9:00 DENNIS MATHEWS 

A look at what's happening in the Black community. 

10:30 NOMMO 

With Ron Dhanifu. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



16 c unc iciy 



s 



8:00 



THE MUSIC OF JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH 
Cantata No. 117, "Sei Lob und Ehr' dem hoechsten 
Gut"; Gottingen City Chorus and Frankfurt Cantata Orches- 
tra conducted by Ludwig Doorman; Vanguard SRV 241. 
Six Chorale Preludes from the Orgelbuechlein: "Dies sind 
die heil'gen zehn Gebot," "Vater unser im Himmelreich," 
"Durch Adams Fall ist ganz verderbt," "Es ist das Heil uns 
kommen her," "Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ" and "In 
dich hab' ich gehoffet, Herr"; Chorus of the Gedaechtnis- 
kirche, Stuttgart, conducted by organist Helmuth Rilling. 
Nonesuch HD 73015. 

9:00 COME TO LIFE 

With Herschel Lymon. 

10:00 GATHER 'ROUND THE STAKE 

With Tom Ritt and open phones. 

12:00 SPECTRUM 

With Carlos Hagen. 

1:00 THE SUNDAY OPERA 

Bellini: Norma. 
Soloists: Joan Sutherland, Marilyn Home, John Alexander 
and Richard Cross. Richard Bonynge conducts the London 
Symphony Orchestra and Chorus. Fred Hyatt hosts. Stereo. 

5:00 MARGARET WRIGHT 

Telling it like it is, with open phones. 

6:00 KPFK SUNDAY NEWS 



6:30 



CHICANO CREATIVE ARTS 

With Natividad Cisneros. 



20 



7:30 MUSIC NOT FOR EXPORT: English Introversion 

Grace Williams: Sea Sketches; David Atherton con- 
ducts the English Chamber Orchestra. Delius: Air and Dance 
and Warlock: Serenade for Frederick Delius; Norman Del 
Mar conducts the Bournemouth Symphony Orchestra. 
Butterworth: A Shropshire Lad; The Banks of Green Willow 
and Bridge: There Is a Willow Grows Aslant a Brook; Neville 
Dilkes conducts the English Sinfonia. Joe Cooper hosts. 
(Rescheduled from February.) 

8:30 CONTEMPORARY WRITING 

Sid Gershgoren reads from his work and discusses 
it with Alvaro Cardona-Hine. (To be rebroadcast on 
Tuesday the 18th, 10:30 a.m.) 



9:30 



FOLK SCENE 

With Howard and Roz Larman. 



12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



U M 



onday 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 
9:30 

Winick. 
10:00 

10:30 



THE MORNING NEWS 

THE MORNING READING 

William Saroyan: Going Home. Read by Myron 



ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

WASHINGTON REPORT 

From the Pacifica Washington Bureau. 



12:00 NOON CONCERT 

Sacred and secular music of Roland de Lassus, in- 
cluding the Mass in the 8th Tone. Katherine Calkin hosts. 

2:00 THE SOUR APPLE TREE 

Clare Loeb and June Wayne, artist and former 
director of Tamarind Lithography Workshop, play excerpts 
from a recent UCLA panel on collecting moderated by 
Marcia Weisman. Wayne and Loeb comment on the remarks 
of panelists Gifford Phillips, Henry Seldis and others, ex- 
tending the discussion into an analysis of the economic 
predicament of artists. 

3:00 MUSIC FROM GERMANY 

Peter Michael Braun: Transfer for large orchestra. 
Paul Hindemith: Violin Sonata in E Major. David Berger 
hosts. 

3:30 MARTIN LUTHER KING SPEAKS 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 The Wayward Press. 

7:15 Consumer Report, with Ida Honorof. 



7:30 MUSIC FROM OBERLIN 

Aschaffenburg: Proem, Op. 17 (Oberlin Brass 
Ensemble; Gene Young, conductor). Ives: Selections from 
114 Songs (Benjamin Bagby, baritone; Robert Weirich, 
piano). Hindemith: Sonate for flute and piano (Max 
Schoenfeld, flute; Wilbur Price, piano). Barber: Reincarna- 
tions, Op. 16 (Oberlin College Chorus; John Rees, conduc- 
tor). Schoenberg: Drei Klavierstuecke, Op. 1 1 (Steven 
Buchanan, piano). Stereo. 

8:30 'THE LOVE OF POSSESSION 
ISA DISEASE WITH THEM' 

Tom Hayden reads selections from his forthcoming book 
on Vietnam. 



9:00 



LA RAZANUEVA 

With Moctezuma Esparza and Raul Ruiz. 



10:00 THE TIME MACHINE 

Step aboard and suddenly it's 1960, or 1938, or 
sometime in the flabby fifties. Exercise your nostalgia, if 
you are old enough; or discover the past, if you aren't, 
with this montage of music, old radio shows and the 
actual sounds of then. (To be rebroadcast on Friday 
the 21st, 2 p.m.) 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



18 Tuesday 



T 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Ernest Hemingway: The Capital of the World. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

Third World Music: from the Central Mediterranean. 
Today we present music from the islands of Sicily, Sardinia 
and Corsica recorded in the early 1950s. The launeddasof 
Sardinia, reed instruments, are believed to trace back to 
ancient Egypt. Some of the work songs of Sicily originated 
in Classical (Roman) times. Howard Spector hosts. 



10:30 



CONTEMPORARY WRITING 

Rebroadcast from Sunday the 16th, 8:30 p.m. 



11:00 CAVEAT EMPTOR 

Consumer advocacy and how to do it, from the 
California Public Interest Law Center. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

1971 Wurzburg Mozart Festival. 
Divertimento No. 2, K131 (30); Violin Concerto No. 3, 
K216; Yuko Shiokawa, soloist (26); Symphony No. 36, 
K425, "Linz" (29); Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra; 
Rafael Kubelik, conductor. Vesperae Solennes de Confes- 
sore, K339; soloists and chorus of the Saarebruck Conserva- 
tory and Chamber Orchestra of the Saar; Karl Ristenpart, 
conductor; Nonesuch H 71041 (27). Portions of the pro- 
gram courtesy of Deutsche Welle. Stereo. 



2:00 



HOMAGE TO JOHN BERRYMAN 

Rebroadcast from Saturday the 15th, 12:30 p.m. 



21 



3:00 ELWOOD'S ARCHIVES 

From KPFA in Berkeley, critic and collector 
Phil Elwood's jazz and blues show. 

3:30 WOMEN FOR LEGISLATIVE ACTION 

With Dorothy Eletz. 

4:00 TWO ON THE DIAL 

With Harvey Perr and Warren Lyons. 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 The Long March collective. 

7:15 Lowell Ponte. 

7:30 OPEN HOUR 

8:30 ALTERNATIVE RADIO: Tale of Two Eves 

Time: November 18-19, 1966. Place: Sunset Strip. 
This documentary of the events of that weekend, as police 
swept longhairs off the street, won a Major Armstrong 
Award in Public Community Service for KPFK. Produced 
by Peter Bergman (Firesign Theater) and Michael Dayton. 

9:30 ROSA LUXEMBURG 

Dorothy Healey's presentation of the life of the 
extraordinary German Communist leader is rebroadcast for 
those of you who might have missed it the first time around 
in February. 




10:00 SCHUETZFEST-I 

Motets by Schuetz and his contemporary, Johann 
Hermann Schein; Italian Madrigals and the Saint John 
Passion by Schuetz. The Occidental College Glee Club con- 
ducted by Henry Gibbons; the Collegium Musicum conduct- 
ed by Richard Grayson. Recorded live at the First Unitarian 
Church of Los Angeles on April 1, 1972. 

11:00 FIRESIGN THEATER 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 

19 %*#ednesday 

6:00 GOOD MORNING 

9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Bernard Malamud: The First Seven Years. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

10:30 BRECHTFEST 

Excerpts from Eric Bentley's New York produc- 
tion of Brecht's Man Is Man. 



THE COMMENTARIES 

1 1 :00 Libertarian Alternatives, with Christopher 
Winstanley and Peggy Farrell. 

11:15 Theodore Edwards, of the Socialist Workers Party. 

11:30 Frontiers of Research, with Dr. Dick Huemer. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

The masses and motets of Anton Bruckner, in- 
cluding the Mass in E Minor and the Mass in F Minor. 
Katherine Calkin hosts. 



1:55 



2:00 



REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 



POETRY OF BERTOLT BRECHT 

Read both in German and English. Caustic, feeling- 
ful and engaged verse; and of this kind: "The common folk 
know/When war is coming./When the leaders speak peace/ 
The mobilization orders are already written out." 

3:10 AN INTERVIEW WITH NEIL SHEEHAN 

WBAI's Neal Conan talks with New York Times 
reporter Neil Sheehan, who obtained the Pentagon Papers. 
The discussion covers the vulnerability of the press to mani- 
pulation and deception, as evidenced in the Pentagon Papers. 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 



5:00 
6:00 

7:00 

7:15 
7:30 



DEALING 

LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 

Chinese Press Report, with Dr. Richard Baum, 
UCLA. 

Varda One, from Ever/woman magazine. 



BRECHT'S THEATER SONGS 

Selections from Mother Courage and 77je Three- 
penny Opera, sung by Helene Weigel. 






8:00 



THE CAUCASIAN CHALK CIRCLE 

Bertolt Brecht's play, performed by the Pomona 
College Theater Association under the direction of Andrew 
Doe, with music arranged by Morton Subotnick. The pro- 
duction was one of four winners of the Region II American 
College Theater Festival, and is a candidate for performance 
in the national festival at the Kennedy Center in Washington. 
The production was taped under studio conditions, in 
stereo, especially for KPFK. Produced by Everett Frost and 
Bruce Gossard. Following the performance. Frost discusses 
Brecht and theater with Doe, members of the cast, and an 
assemblage of Brecht scholars. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



22 



20 T hursdc, y 



T 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 



9:25 



THE MORNING NEWS 

REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 



9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Philip Roth: Epstein, read by Larry Storch. 
First of two parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

Music of Jamaica, Honduras, Algeria, Bolivia and 
the Fiji Islands, selected and narrated by Henry Cowell, 
well-known composer and musicologist who died in 1965. 

10:30 THE ADVOCATES 

The audio portion of KCET's forum. 

11:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS 

With William Mandel. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

Contemporary Organ Series— III. 
This series of 12 programs, to be heard on KPFK over the 
next three months, was prepared by the New Music Project 
of the Los Angeles chapter of the American Guild of Organ- 
ists. Today, music of Clarence Mader and an interview with 
Mader. Organ Concerto (1968), Ladd Thomas, organ; 
Cantata, The Fifth Mystery (1968); combined choirs of the 
First Congregational Church, Pasadena, and Wilshire Presby- 
terian Church, Los Angeles; Orpha Ochse, organ; and 
Pantomime (1969, composed especially for this broadcast 
series); Karen IVIcKinny, organ (60). Stereo. Noon Concert 
concludes with Rayner Brown: Five Pieces for Organ, Harp, 
Brass and Percussion; members of the Los Angeles Brass 
Society conducted by Lester Remsen; Avant AV 1001 (19); 
and Fisher Tull: Liturgical Symphony; members of the Los 
Angeles Brass Society conducted by Lester Remsen; Avant 
AV 1001 (13). 

2:00 WRITE ON! 

Haux pas. Anthony Russo has produced a program 
dealing with, with . . . well, with the tradition (if it can be 
called that) of hoax poetry. Poets, whole schools of poets, 
cooked up to catch the gullible. Tune in for a critical exam- 
ination of the dupers and the duped. 



3:00 



A VOICE FOR THE PRISONER 

With former federal prisoner William Carpenter. 



3:30 SANDRA PANALLE 

4:00 FOLK SCENE 

With Howard Larman. 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 News analysis with William Winter. 

7:15 The Berrigan Report, with Jo Maynes of the 
Harrisburg Defense Committee. 



1HE eSTOF feEEGDM 

MUST BE SHARED BY 

THOSE WHO WOULD ENJOY IT. 

WE HAVE A S900-A-DAY HABIT. 

FOR APRIL, WE NEED $27,000: 

265 NEW SUBSCRIPTIONS, 

675 RENEWALS. 

Without listener support, this voice cannot 
speak. Our programs don't appeal to 
everybody— it would be a rare' individual 
who liked all of them— but if one of our 
programs tells you something important 
you didn't know before, and one will, 
then the price of your subscription is 
justified. 

If you are not already a KPFK subscriber, 
won't you join us? 



City 

Student/ re tired/ 

unemployed 
Regular 
Family 
3729 Club 



Zip 



[ ] $12for1yr. [ 1 $6 for 6 months 

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KPFK-FM, Los Angeles, California 90038 

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PLEASE LET US KNOW. 



OLD: 



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Address 



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There are now two underground 
papers in Los Angeles. One is 'an in- 
stitution. The other is alive. It's called 
The Staff. It's the best paper in town. 

But don't take oui word for it. 
Just mail us the coupon below and we'll 
send you the latest copy of The Staff 
and a copy of the other paper. Read 
through them both and decide for your- 
self which is the most exciting, best- 
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Then subscribe. 



t enclosed $4 for a six month subscription (24 issues). 
) enclosed $8 for a one veer subscription 152 issues) . 
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(213) 469 3191 



7:30 OPEN HOUR 

8:30 ALTERNATIVE RADIO: The Battle of Da Nang 

Dale Minor, Pacifica correspondent in Vietnam, 
received a Major Armstrong Award for this 1967 documen- 
tary. 

10:00 ON FILM 

10:15 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS 

Crazy Love. Dr. Carl Faber discusses the many de- 
structive ways people have of falling in love. The UCLA 
psychologist offers clues to understanding— and hopefully 
avoiding— irrational and destructive love relationships. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



21 Ciday 



F 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 
9:30 



THE MORNING NEWS 



THE MORNING READING 

Philip Roth: Epstein, read by Larry Storch. 
Second of two parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

10:30 DRAMA & LITERATURE OPEN TIME 

THE COMMENTARIES 
11:00 Medical Report, with H. Rudolph Alsleben, M.D. 

11:30 William Wingfield. 

11:45 Ecology Life-Line, with Warren Jones of the 
Environmental Action League. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

The Songs of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. 
An hour-long exploration by Bill Vestal into the world of 
Mozart's very-seldom-performed songs for voice and piano. 

1971 Wurzburg Mozart Festival. 
Mass in C Minor, K427; soloists, chorus and Symphony 
Orchestra of the Bavarian Radio conducted by Rafael 
Kubelik (531. 

2:00 THE TIME MACHINE 

Rebroadcast from Monday the 17th, 10 p.m. 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

6:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 The People's Lobby, with Prof. Jeff Elliot. 

7:15 Gay Community Service Center. 



24 



/:30 OPEN HOUR 

8:30 GESTALT THERAPY 

Dr. Eric Marcus and Dorothy Ferguson, therapists 
with the Gestalt Institute of Los Angeles, discuss the here- 
and-now, and invite you to join in by phoning 877-271 1 
or 984-2711. 



10:00 MUNDOCHICANO 

With Antonio Salazar. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 




22 C aturc lciy 



s 



8:00 



EARLY MORNING RAGAS 

Music for the early hours of the day from the 
timeless traditions of India. 

8:45 TRANS 

A new series exploring current work towards a 
new civilization, produced by David and Barbara Saltman 
and Amanda Foulger. 

9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS 

For and with young people, hosted by Ruth Buell 

10:30 FOLK MUSIC 

With John Davis. 

12:30 THE ULTIMATE CONSUMER 

Betty Dimond, a former day-care center director, 
discusses day-care centers in the context of the child as 
the ultimate consumer. 



1:30 
3:30 



THE WILLIAM MALLOCH PROGRAM 



KENT IN CONCERT 

A new series featuring performances by students 
and faculty of Kent State University, as well as programs 
from the Blossom Festival. Stereo. 



23 C unc| ciy 



s 



7:45 



THE MUSIC OF JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH 

A special concert recorded live at the 1971 
Ansbach Festival. Brandenburg Concert No. 6 in B Flat; 
Concerto for Two Harpsichords and Strings in C Minor; 
Brandenburg Concerto No. 3 in G; Concerto for Three 
Harpsichords and Strings in C; the Prague Chamber Soloists; 
Hans-Martin Schneidt, conductor. Tapes courtesy of 
Deutsche Welle. Stereo. 



9:00 



COME TO LIFE 

With Herschel Lymon. 



10:00 GATHER 'ROUND THE STAKE 

With Tom Ritt and open phones. 

12:00 SPECTRUM 

With Carlos Hagen. 



1:00 THE SUNDAY OPERA 

Ralph Vaughan Williams: Pilgrim's Progress. 
Soloists: John Noble, Raimund Herincx, John Shirley- 
Quirk, Robert Lloyd, Gerald English and Gloria Jennings. 
Sir Adrian Boult conducts the London Philharmonic Or- 
chestra and Choir. EMI SLS 959 (151). Fred Hyatt hosts. 
Stereo. 



5:00 MARGARET WRIGHT 

Telling it like it is, with open phones. 



6:00 
6:30 

7:30 



KPFK SUNDAY NEWS 

CHICANO CREATIVE ARTS 

With Natividad Cisneros. 



MUSIC NOT FOR EXPORT: French Elegance 

Gabriel Faure: Caligula; Shylock; and Madrigal; 
Michel Senechal, tenor; Paris Opera Chorus and the French 
Radio Chamber Orchestra conducted by Antonio de 
Almeida; Classic 995012. Jean Wiener: Accordion Concerto; 
Gilbert Roussel, soloist; Symphony Orchestra conducted by 
Andre Girard; Arion 30 A 112. Joe Cooper hosts. 



4:30 
5:30 



DOROTHY HEALEY 



STUDENT UNION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE 

The latest information on the antiwar movement, 
locally and nationally. 

6:00 FRANK GREENWOOD 

7:30 IMPRESSIONS 

Jazz, rock and interviews, hosted by Ed Hamilton. 

9:00 DENNIS MATHEWS 

A look at what's happening in the Black community. 

10:30 NOMMO 

With Ron Dhanifu. 



8:30 CONTEMPORARY WRITING 

Harry MacCormack reads and performs excerpts 
from his modern epic, The Displaced Warrior. Integrating a 
movement sensibility, cultural commentary and American 
Indian tribal myths, the poem begins as a straight reading, 
progresses through chant, and concludes with a sound 
experience produced on tape recorders. Recorded live for 
KPFK at a reading/performance in Oregon, where 
MacCormack lives. He has published two books, Call of the 
Mountains and The Revolving Door: Poems of Resistance 
and Reaction, and is currently editing a volume of Indian 
mythology, Teachings from the People. Stereo. (To be 
rebroadcast on Tuesday the 25th, 10:30 a.m.) 



9:30 



FOLK SCENE 

With Howard and Roz Larman. 



12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



25 



24 IV Monday 



M 

I ▼ I 6:00 GOOD MORNING 
9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

E. M. Forster: The Story of the Siren. Read by 
Vivian Schaeffer. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

10:30 WASHINGTON REPORT 

From the Pacifica Washington Bureau. 

11:00 OPEN HOUR 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

The small sacred works of Claudio Monteverdi. 
Katherine Calkin hosts. 

2:00 THE SOUR APPLE TREE 

Clare Loeb continues her travels in Topanga Canyon. 
Can individualism be reconciled with ecological awareness? 

3:00 MUSIC FROM GERMANY 

Carl Loewe: Die Heinzelmaennchen for baritone 
and orchestra. Hans Pfitzner: Cello Concerto. David Berger 
hosts. 

3:30 MARTIN LUTHER KING SPEAKS 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 

5:00 DEALING 

6:00 LIFE ON EARTH 

THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 The Wayward Press. 

7:15 Consumer Report, with Ida Honorof. 

7:30 MUSIC FROM OBERLIN 

Machaut: Se d'Amer Me Repentoie; Je Sui Aussi; 
Phyton, Le Mervilleus Serpent (Mary Ann Bailey, soprano; 
Anne Badger, Ben Bagby, Guy Urban, medieval instruments). 
De Perusio: Pres du So/oil (Mary Ann Bailey, soprano; Anne 
Badger, Ben Bagby, Guy Urban, medieval instruments). 
Boyvin: Premier Livre d'Orgue (Jean Herman, organ). Henze: 
Five Neapolitan Songs (Janet Cobb, mezzo-soprano; Oberlin 
Orchestra, Robert Baustian, conductor). Messiaen: 
L'Ascension (Jean Herman, organ). Stereo. 

8:30 'THE LOVE OF POSSESSION 
IS A DISEASE WITH THEM' 

Tom Hayden reads from his forthcoming book on Vietnam. 

9:00 LARAZANUEVA 

With Moctezuma Esparza and Raul Ruiz. 

10:00 I REMEMBER MALLOCH 

Composer, author and musicologist William 
Malloch delves into his archives. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 
26 




25 Tuesday 



T 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

Aldous Huxley: Nuns at Luncheon, read by 
Vivian Schaeffer. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

Third World Music: from Cuba. 
The musical styles known as conga and rhumba were 
created in the folk art of Africans brought to Cuba as 
slaves. In time, the influences of Spain and other Western 
countries were grafted onto the music, resulting in the forms 
we hear today. Howard Spector hosts. 



10:30 



CONTEMPORARY WRITING 

Rebroadcast from Sunday the 23rd, 8:30 p.m. 



12:00 NOON CONCERT 

1971 Wurzburg Mozart Festival. 
Symphony No. 33, K319 (22); Piano Concerto No. 21, 
K467, Robert Casadesus, soloist (30); Symphony No. 35, 
K385, "Haffner" (21); Bavarian Radio Symphony Orches- 
tra; Rafael Kubelik, conductor. Mass in C, K317, "Corona- 
tion"; soloists and chorus of the Sarrebruck Conservatory 
and Chamber Orchestra of the Saar conducted by Karl 
Ristenpart; Nonesuch H 71041 (26). Portions of the pro- 
gram courtesy of Deutsche Welle. Stereo. 

2:00 CONFUSED ABOUT NUTRITION? 

Asking people about nutrition is like going into a 
small town and asking directions: you're bound to get a 
different answer from everyone you meet. Pavo Airola has 
established himself among his colleagues as a highly re- 
spected nutritionist whose research is replacing myths and 
time-worn ideas with up-to-the-minute developments. He 
has been conducting research at the Max Plank Institute in 
Germany on the need for protein in the human body, and 
part of his discussion deals with the "American protein 
fad." Recorded at the National Health Federation conven- 
tion in Los Angeles. Produced by Michael Elliott. 

2:45 BRONCO NAGURSKI SPEAKS OUT 

Nagurski was in Houston to address a dinner 
honoring wrestling impresario Paul Boesch, but he got sick 
and couldn't make it. Mad Dog Lubowsky interviewed him 
at Bobby Brown's Athletic Club in Houston's famous 
Corporate Building. Nagurski is better known as a profes- 
sional football player. Produced by KPFT. 



3:00 ELWOOD'S ARCHIVES 

From KPFA in Berkeley, critic and collector 
Phil Elwood's jazz and blues show. 



3:30 


WELFARE RIGHTS 

With Phyllis Frierson and Ann Dancy 


4:00 


TWO ON THE DIAL 

With Harvey Perr and Warren Lyons. 


5:00 


DEALING 


6:00 


LIFE ON EARTH 




THE COMMENTARIES 


7:00 


The Long March collective. 


7:15 


Lowell Ponte. 



7:30 OPEN HOUR 

8:30 ALTERNATIVE RADIO: A Day in the Park 

All day, all night, Tuesday, August 27, 1968- 
Chicago's Lincoln Park in the week of the Democratic 
Convention. The whole world was watching; so was William 
Malloch, who produced this program for KPFK and won a 
Major Armstrong Award in the documentary category. 

10:00 SCHUETZFEST-II 

Selections from the Polychoric Psalms of 1619: 
Psalm 84, Psalm 100, and from the Geistliche Chormusik of 
1648: Ich bin eine rufende Stimme and Also hat Gottdie 
Welt geliebt. The Pacifica Singers and instrumental ensemble 
conducted by Paul Vorwerk. Recorded live at the First 
Unitarian Church of Los Angeles on April 7, 1972. 

11:00 FIRESIGN THEATER 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



2:00 WILLIAM BUNDY MEETS HIS CRITICS 

The 1971 convention of the American Association 
for the Advancement of Science was disrupted by members 
of Scientists and Engineers for Social and Political Action. 
On Dec. 30, SESPA confronted former CIA and State 
Department official William Bundy at a question-and-answer 
session. The topic was Vietnam- Knowledge Gaps. The dis- 
cussion revealed other gaps as well. Produced by WBAI. 

3:40 ROY ROGERS: The Man and His Museum 

The King of the Cowboys talks about old times in 
show biz, his Western museum, and how h i had Trigger 
stuffed. Produced by Mike August, KPFT. 

4:10 JEAN SHEPHERD 

5:00 DEALING 

LIFE ON EARTH 



6:00 

7:00 
7:15 



THE COMMENTARIES 

French Press Repurt, witi. C j.ge Cleyet. 

Varda One, from Everywon mag.zine. 



7:30 OPEN HOUR 

8:30 SCHUETZFEST-III 

Schuetz's setting of the Parable of the Pharisee and 
the Publican; various works for soloists and instruments from 
the Sinfoniae Sacrae I and // and the Geistliche Konzerte. 
Soloists, instrumental ensemble and the Pacifica Singers, all 
conducted by Paul Vorwerk. Recorded live at the First 
Unitarian Church of Los Angeles on April 9, 1972. 



INVOLVED? 




9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

D. H. Lawrence: The Man Who Died, read by 
John Ohliger. Part 1 of three parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

10:30 THE EUROPEAN CULTURAL SCENE 

Georg Gugelberger, German born professor of 
Comparative Literature at UC Riverside, discusses contem- 
porary European writing. Today, part three of a series of 
programs devoted to East German poetry. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

French chansons of the 16th century. Katherine 
Calkin hosts. 

1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 



FILMS: 

on woman 

on the Black experience 

on radical sex styles 

on politics 

on music and art 

by leading independent 

filmmakers 

GROVE PRESS EVERGREEN FILMS 

53 East 1 1th St./New York, N.Y. 10003 

write for free catalogues 



27 



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No preservatives are used in the processing of 
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Just lots of T.L.C. (Tender Loving Care) 
Ask your butcher tor Zacky Farms Chicken 

It he can't supply you 

call 283-8481, 443-1349; 784-4050 

In Orange county call: 523-1481. 

or write Zacky, 2325 Loma, S. El Monte 91 733 

tor the address of a Zacky dealer. 



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28 



10:30 ECO PORNOGRAPHY 

A look at ads which use the issue of ecology to 
promote a product or to convince the public that industry 
is concerned about the environment. Produced at WBAI. 

11:00 DOUGLAS TRUMBULL'S SILENT RUNNING 
Mitchell Harding talks with the co-producer and 
director of a major science fiction film dealing with ecology. 
Trumbull was the person most instrumental in the creation of 
the special effects for Kubrick's 2001 as well as The Andro- 
meda Strain. Now he has his own film and it's a stunner. 

12:15 NIGHTANGELS 



5:00 DEALING 



27 Thursday 



T 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 



9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:25 REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

D. H. Lawrence: The Man Who Died, read by John 
Ohliger. Second of three parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

Henry Cowell discusses the music of Korea, 
Kurdistan and Scotland. Part of Music of the World's People. 

10:30 THE ADVOCATES 

The audio portion of KCET's forum. 

11:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS 

With William Mandel. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

Contemporary Organ Series— IV. 
Today, music of Hugo Distler: Partita on "Wachetauf, ruft 
uns die Stimme"; Vorspiel "Mit Freuden zart"; Variations 
on "Frisch auf, gut Gsell, lass rummer gahn"; Organ Sonata; 
Partita on "Nun komm der Heiden Heiland"; Elfrieda Baum, 
organ (60). Stereo. Noon Concert concludes with two 
works by Hindemith: Organ Sonata No. 1; E. Power Biggs, 
organ; Columbia ML 5634 (15); and Concerto for Organ 
and Chamber Orchestra; E. Power Biggs, organ; Columbia 
Chamber Ensemble conducted by Richard Burgin; Colum- 
bia ML 5199 (15). 

2:00 WRITE ON! 

Contemporary German poetry and drama; the 
struggle in East Germany to write socially engaged poetry 
without imposition from the government. The work of 
contemporary writers is translated and discussed by Georg 
Gugelberger. 



3:00 



3:30 



THE VOICE OF LABOR 

With veteran labor reporter Sam Kushner. 



THE HICKORY STICK 

New ideas and problems in elementary and 
secondary education, hosted by Mimi Baer. 



6:00 



LIFE ON EARTH 



THE COMMENTARIES 
7:00 News analysis with William Winter. 

7:15 The Berrigan Report, with Jo Maynes of the 
Harrisburg Defense Committee. 

7:30 OPEN HOUR 

8:30 ALTERNATIVE RADIO: facifica in Retrospect 

An audio history of Pacifica Radio, with special 
emphasis on KPFK. Produced by Mike Hodel and Mitchell 
Harding from tapes found in our archives. This program 

10:00 ON FILM 

10:15 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS 

The Sounds and Soul of Rural America. 
On the last Thursday of each month, we hear the favorite 
sounds and artists of country, rural, working America. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



28 C'day 



F 



4:00 



FOLK SCENE 

With Howard Larman. 



6:00 GOOD MORNING 
9:00 THE MORNING NEWS 

9:30 THE MORNING READING 

D. H. Lawrence: The Man Who Died, read by 
John Ohliger. Last of three parts. 

10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC 

With Mario Casetta. 

10:30 CATULLUS: A LATIN VISION 

Poet Philip Levine reads the Latin originals, and 
playwright Donald Freed reads translations. 

THE COMMENTARIES 
11:00 Medical Report, with H. Rudolph Alsleben, M.D. 

11:30 William Wingfield. 

11:45 Ecology Life-Line, with Warren Jones of the 
Environmental Action League. 

12:00 NOON CONCERT 

New Releases: a potpourri of the latest issues on 
disc from here and abroad. 

2:00 PERSPECTIVES IN THERAPY 

Helen Landgarten examines different approaches 
to self-realization, growth and change. 

3:00 FROM THE CENTER 

Ann Tompkins draws upon her experience as a 
teacher in China to explain the need for, and the goals of, 
the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution. 

4:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 



29 



5:00 
6:00 
6:55 

7:00 
7:15 
7:30 



DEALING 

LIFE ON EARTH 

REPORT TO THE LISTENER 

From Will Lewis. 

THE COMMENTARIES 

The People's Lobby, with Prof. Jeff Elliot. 

Gay Community Service Center. 



ASK THE DOCTOR 

With Dick Huemer, M.D. and H. Rudolph 
Alsleben, M.D. 

8:30 POLICE 

A panel of policemen talk with Public Affairs 
Director Mike Hodel about their work, with open phones 
for some feedback (877-271 1 or 984-271 1 ). 

10:00 MUNDOCHICANO 

With Antonio Salazar. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



29 c aturc lciy 



s 



8:00 



EARLY MORNING RAGAS 

Music for the early hours of the day from the 
timeless traditions of India. 

8:45 TRANS 

A new series exploring current work towards a 
new civilization, produced by David and Barbara Saltman 
and Amanda Foulger. 



9:30 



HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS 

For and with young people, hosted by Ruth Buell 



10:30 FOLK MUSIC 

With John Davis. 

12:30 THE POLITICS OF DAYCARE 

A talk by Ted Taylor, executive director of the 
Day Care and Child Development Council of America. 



1:30 
3:30 



THE WILLIAM MALLOCH PROGRAM 



KENT IN CONCERT 

A new series featuring performances by students 
and faculty of Kent State University, as well as programs 
from the Blossom Festival. Stereo. 



4:30 
5:30 



DOROTHY HEALEY 



STUDENT UNION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE 

The latest information on the antiwar movement, 
locally and nationally. 

6:00 FRANK GREENWOOD 

7:30 IMPRESSIONS 

Jazz, rock and interviews, hosted by Ed Hamilton. 



9:00 DENNIS MATHEWS 

A look at what's happening in the Black community. 

10:30 NOMMO 

With Ron Dhanifu. 

12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



3o c unda y 



s 



8:00 



THE MUSIC OF JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH 

A special concert recorded live at the 1971 Ansbach 
Festival. Sonata for Flute and Harpsichord in E Flat Sonata 
for Flute and Harpsichord in A; Sonata for Flute and 
Harpsichord in B Minor. Jean-Pierre Rampal, flute; Zuzana 
Ruzickova, harpsichord. Tapes courtesy of Deutsche Welle. 
Stereo. 



9:00 



10:00 



12:00 



1:00 



COME TO LIFE 

With Herschel Lymon. 

GATHER 'ROUND THE STAKE 

With Tom Ritt and open phones. 

SPECTRUM 

With Carlos Hagen. 



TENOR OF THE TIMES 

Allessandro Bonci, celebrated lyric tenor of the 
early years of this century, is the subject of Fred Hyatt's 
program today. 

1:30 THE SUNDAY OPERA 

Thomas: Mignon. 
Soloists: Genevieve Moizan, Janine Micheau, Libero de Luca, 
Rene Bianco, Robert Destain, Noel Pierotte, and Francois 
Louis Deschamps. Georges Sebastian conducts the Chorus of 
the Theatre de la Monnaie, Brussels, and the National Or- 
chestra of Belgium. Fred Hyatt hosts. 



5:00 

6:00 
6:30 

7:30 



MARGARET WRIGHT 

Telling it like it is, with open phones. 

KPFK SUNDAY NEWS 

CHICANO CREATIVE ARTS 

With Natividad Cisneros. 



MUSIC NOT FOR EXPORT: Welsh Concertos 

Alum Hoddinott: Harp Concerto and Clarinet 
Concerto. William Mathias: Piano Concerto No. 3. Ossian 
Ellis, harp; Gervasse de Peyer, clarinet; Peter Katin, piano; 
London Symphony Orchestra conducted by David Atherton; 
English Decca SXL 6513. Joe Cooper hosts. 

8:30 CONTEMPORARY WRITING 

Paul Vangelisti reads from and discusses his poetry. 
He is a translator from Italian, editor of Invisible City, and 
one of the producers of KPFK's new series, Write On! (To be 
rebroadcast on Tuesday the 2nd of May, 10:30 a.m.) 



9:30 



FOLK SCENE 

With Howard and Roz Larman. 



12:00 NIGHTANGELS 



30 




There are many ways to support KPFK. If you are a 
subscriber, each month we try to make you aware of 
the 3729 Club, and the advantages of becoming a 
member, supporting KPFK with your $5.00 per 
month and receiving your discount at the participat- 
ing merchants. We have succeeded with about 200C 
of you. 

There are many thousands of you who should also be 
members, not only for KPFK, but for yourselves. If 
you are consumers of any of the products or services 
listed on these pages, you will be able to save the cost 
of your membership in the period of a year, as well 
as helping your station to grow. 

Regardless of your membership status in the 3729 
Club when you need to make a purchase, or use a 
service, check your 3729 Merchant list and where 
ever possible deal with these supporters of KPFK, 
and, more than that, tell them you too are support- 
ers of KPFK. 

It would seem a logical deduction that the more 
merchants offering discounts we have listed, the more 
incentive there would be for present subscribers to 
become 3729 Club Members. So give us a hand. Call 
Lanny Orlin at 877 - 2711 or 984 - 2711 or write 
to KPFK, Los Angeles, California, 90038 and let 
us know you have the time to help. We will supply 
you with contracts and the requirements merchants 
must meet. 



FOLK DANCE CAFES/COFFEEHOUSES 

HADARIM (ethnic dance; ethnic food; ethnic gifts' 

1204 N. Fairfax, L.A. 656-9292 10% 

GALLERIES & CRAFTS 

RICHARD BAUMANN LEATHERCRAFTS 

108 5th St., Huntington Bch; 17141 536-4268 20% 

CANTERBURY FAIRE (handcrafted wares, supplies, classes, books) 

8000 Sunset Blvd., L.A.; 654-5454. Exc. books & fine arts; 10% 

CANYON GALLERY 137 S. Topanga Canyon Blvd.. 455-2108 

8 1 55 Mel rose Ave., 653-5090 1 0% 

SANDY CORBIN HAIRCUTTING 20% 

14322 Ventura Blvd.. Sherman Oaks; 783-9080 

THE CREATIVE COOPERATIVE GALLERY 

1101 E. Walnut, Pasadena; 792-6792 10% 

CREATIVE HAND WEAVERS 3824 Sunset Blvd.. 662-6231 10% 
DAVID'S LEATHER WORKS 

(leather goods, furniture, jewelry, ceramics-to-order) 

33 N. Fair Oaks. Pasadena 91101; 793-7848 10% 

GINGER DUNLAP POTTERY 514 N. Hoover St., LA 666-7966 10% 
THE HIDERY (Leather Shop) 

1 355 1 M Ventura Blvd.. 7898066 10% 

HYBRID VIGOR Ceramics and Crafts Shop 

8 N. First St., Alhambra; 576-8349 10% 

PEOPLE FARM (leather goods) 

Range 2W, Township 14 South, Section 5, Northeast corner, 

San Diego, Rt. 1, Box 983, Escondido. 10% 

CHARLIE TORRANCE PHOTOGRAPHY (discount on portraitsl 

14322 Ventura Blvd., Sherman Oaks; 783-9080 20% 

RESTAURANTS 

COFFEE HOUSE EMPORIUM (meals only) 

1225 N. Vine St.. Hollywood; 463-7789 10% 

THE GARRET 923 N. Fairfax; 656-9223. 763-2124 10% 

H.E.L.P. UNLIMITED VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT 

7910 W. Third St., L.A.; 653-4357 (dinners only) 10% 
HIDDEN HEALTH NATURAL FOODS RESTAURANT 

1 1622 Ventura Blvd., Studio City; 769-9801 (dinners! 10% 

THE NINE MUSES RESTAURANT 

6609 Santa Monica Blvd.; 462-0819 10% 

BOUTIQUES & GIFT SHOPS 



Sign me up... 

The NAME is 

The ADDRESS is 
The ZIP is 



The PHONE is 

CLIPOFF&MAIL 
WITH YOUR CHECK 
3729 CLUB, KPFK 
LOS ANGELES 90038 



JON'S DRAWER 13538'/i Ventura Blvd., 
Sherman Oaks; 783-9507 



10% 
10% 



PLAYMATES 

Ladies' and children's Discount Boutique 

6438 Hollywood Blvd. Hollywood; 

11105 E. Washington Blvd., Whittier; 

124 Golden Mall, Burbank. 
R' BAGG. LTD. 1 16-A Main St.. Seal Beach; 431-4898 10% 

TOMNODDY FAIRE (Gift Shop) 1006 Broxton, W.L. A.; 473-3170 10% 

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 
ANGELES PIANO COMPANY 10800 Washington Blvd., 

Culver City; 839-8714 10% 

GLOBE MUSIC CO. (new and old sheet music) 

950 N. Western Ave., L.A.; 465-1777 10%-15% 

HILLTOP VIOLIN AND VIOLA SHOP 16635 Gazeley St., 

Saugus 91350; 1805) 251-0714 10% 

UNIVERSITY MUSIC CENTER 1 1833 Wilshire Blvd.; 478-4686 10% 

JEWELERS 

DAVENPORT JEWELERS (engraving & watchmaking) 
7135 Lindley Ave., Reseda; 343-5021 



JOHN FABIAN MFG. (jewelry) 11 E. de la Guerra. 
Santa Barbara; (805) 962-6323 

JOSEPH'S RING SHOP (custom made jewelry) 

1423 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach 92651 
(714) 494-5060 (except purchases over $500) 

SHAFFER & SONS. JEWELERS (we design, also) 
107 N. Brand Blvd., Glendale; CH5-4101 

SILBERMAN, HERB (custom jewelry mfgr.l 
607 Hill St., 622-4433 



20% 
20% 

20% 



^^Club 



SOUND EQUIPMENT 

HIGH-FIDELITY HOUSE, Pasadena 

563 S. Fair Oaks; 795-41 18 10%-20% 

MARK PAPEL ELECTRONICS/STEREO EAST 

249 S. Atlantic Blvd., E.L.A.;263-7506 10% 

SOUND EQUIPMENT RENTAL COMPANY 

8535 Appian Way, Los Angeles: 654-1600 15% 

STEREO HAPPY 5202 Vineland Ave., 

North Hollywood; 761-3100 10%-40% 

STEREO WAREHOUSE CLUB, INC. (private discount clubl 

2026 Pico Blvd; 392-5958 (except special orderl 4% 
UNIVERSITY STEREO 35% 

4626K Van Nuys Blvd.. Sherman Oaks; 981-1731 

3378 Overland Blvd.; 839-2216 
VALLEY SOUND MUSIC CENTER (repairing) 10%-40% 

3705 Cahuenga Blvd., N.H.; 980-3910 

THEATERS 

CINE'- CIENEGA THEATER 755 N. La Cienega Blvd.; 

657-2801 Student Discount Rate 
CORBIN THEATER 19620 Ventura Blvd., Tarzana; 345-2222 20% 
THE SYNERGY TRUST 1835 Hyperion Ave., L.A. 

Saturdays only, 9:30 pm; 663-8031 25% 

BOOKSTORES 

ARK BOOKSTORE 3971 State St., Santa Barbara 

(Except textbooks) (805) 964-3656 10% 

BLUE DOOR BOOKSTORE 3823 Fifth Ave., 

San Diego; (714) 298-8610 10% 

EMERALD SHOP (books, picture frames, Zen & Eastern books) 

2321 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica; 828-1519 15% 

ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA 6922 Hollywood Blvd., Rm. 707 

Days - 462-3345; Evenings & weekends - 346-3204 

34% minimum discount, plus S10 to KPFK from every sale. 
EVERYWOMAN BOOKSTORE, 2083 Westwood Blvd. 

L.A. 90025; 474-1278 (periodicals excepted) 10% 

METROPOLIS BOOKSTORE 

6520 Hollywood Blvd., L.A.; 461-2424 10% 

PAPA BACH BOOKSTORE 11317 Santa Monica Blvd. 

478-2374 (magazines excepted) 10% 

MISCELLANEOUS 

ABACUS BUSINESS EQUIPMENT 1 1569 Sta. Monica Blvd., 

Los Angeles; 473-2424 10% 

A-OK ELECTRONICS 3801 S. Broadway, L.A. 

235-41 19 10% to 50% on Std. Newark or Allied prices. 
ANTIQUE POOL TABLE COMPANY (old & new tables) 

Long Beach. Call for Appt.: 597-3876 10% 

ART'S PHOTO SHOP 2151 Sunset Blvd.; 386-3639 10%-25% 

ART'S PHARMACY 12830 E. Rosecrans, Norwalk; 921-2524 10% 
AZTECA FRAME CO. 5219 Lankershim, N.H.; 877-1026 10%-50% 
BARGER CARCASS & GUT CO. (by appointment) 

704 Santa Monica Blvd., Santa Monica; 451-8787 
25%. plus 25% donated to KPFK 
ROBERT FREDERICK BEHRENS 

Piano lessons in your home; 820-1058 20% 

BOB SMITH DRAPERIES 14515 Tyler St.. 

Svlmar; 367-3726 (on fabrics) 25% 

CENTER FOR SENSORY DEVELOPMENT 

1034 S. Citrus Ave.; LA.. 938-8794 
CLINTON ART SUPPLY 126 N. La Brea; 936-8166 15% 

COHN. MATTHEW (speed reading! 

15015 Ventura Bl.. Sherman Oaks. 986-2067 10% 
COLONIAL BUICK. INC. & COLONIAL IMPORTS (new cars only) 
144 S. Glendale Ave., Glendale; (call Sv Hertz) 245-661 1 
COLOR MAGIC (printing services) 617 S. La Brea Ave., L.A. 90036 

931-4392 or 937-9603 10% 

ERIKA WOMEN'S APPAREL 

1801 1 Chatsworth, Sylmar; 363-7505 10% 



FOGEL FURNITURE 3025 Crenshaw Blvd.. L.A. 

Call Mr. Fogel -732-7101 40% 

JOHN GODEL (house painting) 

1815 Griffith Park Blvd.. L.A.; 666-8874 10% 

GRANADA HILLS PAINT & WALLPAPER 

17722 Chatsworth, Granada Hills; 363-1910 10% 

GREATER LOS ANGELES PATROL (guard service) 

15015 Ventura Bl., Sherman Oaks, 784-4125 10% 

GREEN SPRING PAINTING - (213) 986-8272 15% 

GREENWOOD LODGE (except July 4 and. Labor Day) 

P.O. Box 828, Soquel; (408) 475-9995 10% 

GROSSMAN PORTRAIT AND WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY 

Woodland Hills; 888-8405 10% & up 

HALLMARK HOUSE MOTOR HOTEL Ihotel room rentalsl 

7023 Sunset Bl., Hwd.; 464-8344 10* 

CHARLES HAMILTON - Dimension VI Distributor 

5242 Los Bonitos Way, Hollywood; 465-8953 10% 

PAUL HINTON, JR. O.D. 736 South Pacific Ave. San Pedro; 

832-1 185. 50% of total fee donated to KPFK. 
EDWIN HIRSCHHORN, DIRECT METAL SCULPTURE 

1034 S. Citrus. LA.: 938-8794 
HUSCO AUTO PARTS 726 Mission St., S. Pasadena; 

799-4171. 25% plus 25% to KPFK (except lair-trade). 
INTERNATIONAL STORY CONSULTANT 

P.O. Box 5502. Santa Monica. 396-1664 15%-20% 

JRM PRODUCTS (Alpha Wave Biofeedback Instruments) 

704 Santa Monica Blvd.. S.M.; 392-7427 10% 

THE LEVIN CO., INC. (painting and photo frames) 

334 N. La Brea Ave, L.A. ; 938-2888 25% 

LIDO MAIL ORDER Box 894. Huntington Beach 92647 

(714) 536-3364. 50% on rubber stamps, other: 10% 
MEYER. RALPH Icarpet cleaners) 

216 Amalfi Dr.. Santa Monica 90402. 454-2334 10% 
MIGHTY MAN Icarpet cleaners) 

5428 Crenshaw Blvd.. L.A.; 296-0599 10% 

THE OLFACTORY (incense mfgr.) 

2217 Pontius. W.L.A.; 478-8901 35% 

PANTS FACTORY 

5066 Lankershim 8lvd., 980-9512 10% 

PHOTOGRAPHY BY GORDON 

1402 Micheltorena St., 665-8498 10% 

PSYCHOLOGICAL ASTROLOGICAL SCHOOL 

Box 222. Glendale; 241-5044. 10% classes; 20% textbooks. 

SHAKLEE PRODUCTS: Bio degrad able cleaning products, 
food supplements, vitamins 
16322 Akron St.. Pac. Pal.. 454-8977 20% to KPFK 

SHERWOOD. FRANK Shaklee Distributor 10% & up 

Basic H cleaning products, food supplements, toiletries- 
men, women, children. Box 85321, Hwd. 90072; 466-2466 

A. H. SMITH Upholstery and Recovering 

839 N.Spauldmg, LA.; 626-2222 25% 

T.L.C. DOG TRAINING 

1645 Stanford St.. Santa Monica. 828 7257 10% 

TABLOC IN USE HERE (motorcycle sprockets) 

15004 E. Arrow Hwy.. Baldwin Park; 962-3591 25% 

TED'S MOTORS 4884 University Ave.. San Diego; 281-6251 10% 

ELIZABETH THURSTON (Oistr. Vitarox Green Lile Products) 

Write to 2101 S.'Gramercy PI.. L.A. .90018 10% 

THE TOPANGA CENTER FOR HUMAN DEVELOPMENT 

10% on weekend workshops & ongoing encounter groups. 
25% on drop-in encounter groups and psychomats. 
2247 N. Topanga Canyon Blvd.. Topanga. 455-2410 

U.S. TRAVEL BUREAU/CLUB MEDITERRANEE 

11478 Burbank Blvd. (PO Box 69). N. Hoi. 91603 
877-2623. Membership fee refund. 

LESLIE WELLINS PHOTOGRAPHY 

8687 Melrose Ave.. L.A. (Studio-25%) 657-5672 10% 



32 



SOUND IDEAS 



FISHER 

MARAWT7 



High- Fidelity House f* 



583 S. Fair Oifci, Pindim 

(213) SY-M11I OPEN MON ft FRI till 9 P.M. 



T«nns 
Ay.kUW. 



PHONE 

A 
FRIEND 
TODAY 



Make today the day you convince someone you know 
to subscribe to KPFK. The effort you make to 
convince a friend to support your radio station will 
pay dividends in better programming, as well as the 
knowledge you have strengthened the voice of free 
radio in Southern California. 



PEACE 



* 



liooivsmm: 



DRAFT MATERIALS 
BOOKS on: BLACKS 



Posters 

Holiday Cards 
Bumper Stickers 



CHICANOS 

NATIVE AMERICANS 

NONVIOLENCE 
REVOLUTION 



A1SC 

BOOK STORE 

980A NORTH FAIR OAKS 
PASADENA. CALIF 91103 



791-1978 
681-7651 



AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMITTEE 



CHILDREN'S MUSIC CENTER 

More than a record shop.. ..a center 
staffed by consultants trained to help 
parents and teachers select the finest 
records and books for any age, from 
preschool to beyond the university. 
Here you will not find the trite or the 
violent; only what stimulates children 
to move, listen, play an instrument, re- 
lax or create. We are especially proud 
of our tremendous collections of ma- 
terial on history and contributions of 
Black and Spanish-speaking Americans; 
the best of our own heritage, and that 
of people everywhere. 

Children's Music Center 

5373 W. Pico Bl., Los Angeles 90019 

937-1825 

Open Tues. thru Sat. 9 am to 5:30 pm. 

Closed Sundays & Mondays. 



in the Santa Cruz Mountains has everything! 

Miles of hiking trails through the redwoods, 

music, folk dancing, swimming in our heated 

pool, relaxing on our sundeck, and 

lots of sunshine, free from fog or 

smog. To say nothing of delicious meals 

and good company to enjoy them with! 



RESERVE NOW FOR MEMORIAL DAY 

WEEKEND, MAY 26 -29 

AND FOR YOUR SUMMER VACATION 

For brochure and rates, write: P.O. Box 
P.O. Box 828, Soquel, California 95073, 
■or call GReenwood 5-9995 or -9552 (408). 




CDLOR 
/MAGIC 

MINTING 



617 SOUTH LABREA 

LOS ANGELES 90036 

PHONE: 

931-4392 or 

937-9603 

[MEMBER 3729 CLUB] 



For Sale - 15" x 18" approx. image size - REPRODUCTIONS OF PHOTOS Limited Editions - 1.25 ea. Post Paid 

(We can also print yours.) 



CWS6IFIED 



books 



PAPA BACH BOOK SHOP 

11312 Sanla Monica Blvd 

West L.A. 

Open Sunday >il 9 

DIAL "GRUBtHG" 



EVERYWQMAN 



Feminist Bookstore 
Open till 9 M-W-F 



Newspapei 
Subs $5/year 



T FEMINIST BOOK CLUB 

Dues $1/year. Big discounts on wide, wild 
selection of books, posters, prints. 

WE ALL LIVE AT 

2083 Westwood Blvd., L.A. 90025 
Phone: 474-1278 

20% OFF . . . NEW HARD COVER BOOKS 
IMMED. SHIPMENT . . . CURRENT TITLES 
SEND CK. WITH ORDER, PUB. PR. LESS 
20%. ADD 5% CAL. SALES TAX & 50% 
POST/HANDL. 

BOOK DISCOUNT SERVICE OF L.A., 
P.O. BOX 1176, STUDIO CITY, CAL. 
91604. 



services 



Marloma Friends meeting: 647 Locust St., 
Long Beach, California. Meeting for worship 
1 1 00 am Sunday. Pam Borgers, clerk: (213) 
431-4015. Friends (Quakers) welcome ALL 
people. 

CARPET CLEANING 
UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 

Ralph Meyer: 454-2334 

Eleven years serving 

KPFK listeners! 



HERBERT L BADLER 

Builder 

ROOM ADDITIONS 

REMODELING 

7636636 ALTERATIONS 76I 3I36 

PAINTER WHO LIKES HIS WORK 

Licensed-Insured. John Godel 



N0 5-OI79 



BUILDING OR REMODELING 
Complete Service- 
Design Plans, Construction 
ABE OSHEROFF-1821-7184 

MANUSCRIPTS TYPED AND EDITED 

Term papers, fiction, speeches, reports 

Professional writing services 

Steve Solomon, writer: 7480685 

Susan Stewart, typist: 749 1810 



FUNERAL REFORM 

Funeral Reform anybody? The Memorial 
Society Movement prevents exploitation of 
the bereaved. (Non-profit). Los Angeles 
Funeral Society, Inc.. 2224 West I4th Street, 
Los Angeles, California 90006. 
Phone: 383-4620 

LICENSED PAINTING 8. DECORATING 

Commercial 

Residential, Interior, Exterior 

For Free Estimate Call 

SISKIND -933-1091 eves. 

FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 
OF LOS ANGELES 

"The church of contemporary involvement" 

Peter Christiansen, Minister 

Paul Vorwerk, Music Director 

Educational Activities 

Waldemar Hille, Organist 

Sunday Services - 11:00 a.m. 

2936 W. Eighth St. (near Vermontl 

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR 

Expert Technician 

Wes Velkov-6661707 



places 



Discerns" 



not- 



~«s 



Natural Foods to A uourmet s Taste. 
Phone 455-9079 for reservations. 
Rich and Marj Dehr. 

Closed Tuesdays 



THE LOFT 

House of Authentic Indonesian 
Food. Ethnic Entertainment Friday 
and Saturday nights. 

7353 Westwood Bl. L.A. 90024 
PHONE: 477-5392 



for thota who or* 
'I Kalier't f 

arelnn-HdUy 

* CeckUili . . . Oinn.r Dally from 5 P.M 

J Lunch Hon. ttinr r.l from 11:30 A.M 

ALL CREDIT CARDS HONORED 

13525 IMvn 11,11. Ultrman O.li 713 5616 

tail if Woodman 




SPRING TOUR TO THE SOVIET UNION 
and Central Asia, May 10-31. Visit: Moscow, 
Leningrad, Kiev, Samarkand, Tashkent, Buk- 
hara. First Class hotels, all meals, fully 
escorted. L.A. to L.A. S1.075.00. NY. to 
N.Y. $925.00. Details: Ass'n for Cultural 
Relations USA/USSR, 1154 No. Western 
Av. No. 206, L.A., Cal. 90026. Phone 
(213) 469-7525. 



instruction 



3729 Merchant 
T. L. C. DOG TRAINING 

Affection Training 

18 years experience 

SMALL CLASSES 

828 7257 



VARDA ULLMAN IS 
ACCEPTING PIANO STUDENTS 

Write her c/o KPFK 

MUSICIANS AND SINGERS 

Lessons or classes 

in theory, harmony, sight-singing, 

arranging, etc. Your home or mine. 

Ron Webb, 628-5025, day or evening. 

LYNORA SAUNDERS 
FOLK DANCE EDUCATOR 

presents . . . 

INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCE 

WORKSHOPS 

Basic instruction and technique for men 
and women on MONDAYS. 8:30 to 
10:00 p.m., at Bert Prival Studio. 14252 
Ventura Blvd., Sherman Oaks, Ca. Call 
(213) 788-9134 for details. 

LOU MAURY PIANO SCHOOL 

All kinds of Instruction in 

All kinds of Piano Music. 

Class, Individual, Children, Adults 

4354 Tujunga Avenue, No. Hollywood 

769-4523 877-3847 



wanted 



KPFKSTAFFER NEEDS HOUSE or cottage 
for himself . . . woodsy, secluded, preferably 
in N. Hollywood Hills. Call Paul, 984-2711. 



for sale 



FOR SALE: 1952 tt-ton Chevy panel 
truck. Many new parts. Runs very well. 
Has '72 commercial plates. Contact Jor 
Van Kline at 851-4849 or leave message 
with service: HO 4-5161. 

KPFK FOLIO ADVERTISING RATES 

Your advertising is seen by (2,000 folio re- 
cipients AND their friends each month, 
ALL month long. Please call KPFK to dis- 
cuss your special advertising needs. 

DISPLAY Sll/col.inch 

with frequency discount, $9 

CLASSIFIED: Sl/lme 

(Articles not included) 

minimum S5.00 

Right reserved to raise rates without notice 

Prevailing contracts for insertions which run 
beyond the first issue affected by a new rate 
will be acknowledged at the old rate 

All advertising is subject to publisher's 
approval. 



34 



The New Vagabond presents 






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Luis 

Dimucl 




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(This Strange Passion) 



EXTERMINATING! 
ANGEL 

MILKY WAY 
TRISTANA 
NAZARIN 



new vagabond^? ™^£ 3872171 



March 29 

to 

April 4 

April 5 

to 
April 11 

April 12 

to 
April 18 

April 19 

to 
April 25 



Simon of the Desert 
Andalusian Dog 

THE YOUNG 



ONE 



(La Joven) 



MEXICAN BUS 
RIDE 






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