Skip to main content

Full text of "KPFK folio"

See other formats


■  \>---yj 


for  trees  only" 


r.r.  MOIINDO  JUiOU-A  I*  FIN 


KPFK    FOLIO 


AUGUST  1973 


Fhrsf 

People  or 
Mifiofil? 


NUMERABLE  SUBJECTS 
TO  SUIT  YOUR  TASTES 


Dear  KPFK  subscriber: 

You  are  welcome  to  a  visual  treat  and  visit  our  gallery 
where  you  will  see  a  very  large  and  colorful  collection 
of  beautiful  serigraph  prints  done  and  created  by  David 
Weidman,  well  known  artist  of  California. 

The  black  and  white  prints  illustrated  on  this  page  can- 
not possibly  convey  to  you  the  many  hundreds  of  multi- 
colored (6  to  11  screened  colors)  varied  subjects  that 
can  be  seen  and  reasonably  bought  at  the  Weidman  Gallery 
located  at  629  North  LaCienega  Boulevard, 

You  can  afford  to  own  a  piece  of  art,  nximbered  and  signed 
by  the  artist.  KPFK  will  benefit  as  the  gallery  will  do- 
nate in  your  name  10%  of  all  art  purchases  thru  the  " 
"EqUo"  Please  bring  the  KPFK  Folio  with  you. 


SERIGRAPHS  FROM 


Weidman  Patpliiakerse 

629  n.  la  Cicneca  Blvd.    los  Bn«etes  California         pfwne  88S-97V7 


COVER:    Concerto  per  Alberi  (For  Trees  Only) 

by  Luciano  Ori,  one  of  Europe's  leading 
"visual  poets. "  He  resides  in  Florence. 
Italy  where  he  is  currently  producing  a 
series  of  pieces  involving  the  use  of  mu- 
sic score  paper. 


KPFK 

PACIFICA  RADIO 

Vol.  15,  No.  2 


90.7  FM 


LOS  ANGtLES 
August,  1973 


THE    VOLUNTEERS 

are  all  those  people  who  donate  their  time  and  energy  to  keep  this  place  going 
They  produce  programs,  review  cultural  events,  edtt  tapes,  gather  news,  type, 
file,  answer  phones-m  short,  without  ihem  we  wouldn't  be  here.  Thanks. 

Joe  Adams,  David  Ainsworth.  David  Arias,  Decia  Baker,  Ellen  Bjerre,  Steve  Blum, 
Dave  Boxall.  Barbara  Branson,  Peter  Breitner,  Carol  Breshears,  Ruth  Buell,  Mario 
Casetta.  Barbara  Clairchilde,  Kathy  Cochran,  Peter  Cole.  Debby  Crawford,  Ridgely 
Cummings.  Pete  Cutler.  John  DeSimio.  Rod  Edwards,    Michael  Elliott,  Paul  Faulkner. 
Sanford  Fidell,  Mike  Fitzpatrick,  Teri  Friedrichs,  Cy  Gius.  Richard  Gollance.  Bob 
Gottlieb,  Bob  Gowa.  Tiju  Gremlin,  Georg  Gugelberger.  Tom  Halle,  Mitchell  Harding, 
Michael  Harriton.  Alison  Hershey,  Jeff  Himmelfarb.  Celia  Hirschman,  Terry  Hodel, 
Peggy  Holter,  Sammy  Israel.  Alan  Kanter.  Mike  King.  Dudley  Knight,  Helen  Koblin, 
Barbara  Kraft.  Linda  Krausen,  Alma  Landsberger,  Ron  Levitt,  Fran  Lipsker,  Josh 
Lipton,  Stephen  Mamber,  Bill  Margolis.  Petrie  Mason,  Jerry  McBride,  Maureen 
Mcllroy,  Tim  McGovern,  Susan  Miller,  Sam  Mittelman,  Charles  Morgan,  Larry  Moss. 
Bob  Mundy.  Marsha  Necheles.  Richard  Nielsen,  Robin  O'Brian,  Fred  Parks.  Ron 
Ridenour,  Gregg  Roebuck,  Brian  Rosenberg.  A.P.Russo,  Susan  Sellers.  Benjie  Shapiro, 
Dave  Simpson.  Pearl  Skotnes.  Mike  Sneathen,  Clare  Spark  Loeb.  Craig  Spurgeon, 
Madeleine  Stem,  Pat  Sultan.  Ivan  Thoen,  Ed  Thomas,  K.C.   Thompson,  Richard 
Triscari,  Phil  Tuttle,  Paul  Vangelistt,  Bill  Vestal,  Paul  Young.  Allen  Zak.  Alex 
Zimmerman,  and  all  those  we  may  have  inadvertantly  omitted. 


THE  STAFF 

General  Manager:  Will  Lewis.  Program  Director:  Ruth  Hirschman.  Music:  David  Cloud, 
Dir  ,  Katherrne  Calkin,  Paul  Vorwerk   News:  Dennis  Levitt,  Dir  ,  Andres  Chavez.  Greg 
Gorehk,  Bob  Lowe  Public  Affairs:  Mike  Model.  Dir  .  Barbara  Cady,  Earl  0\ax\.  Produc- 
tion: Fred  Ampel,  Rachel  Kurn,  Ron  Richo.  Mark  Rosenthal,  Steve  Tyler. 
Engineering:  Don  Wilson,  Dir.  Promotion  Director:  Barbara  Spark.  Subscrip- 
tions: Clay  Delmar.  Accountant:  Eric  Shapiro.  Folio  Editor:  Jane  Gordon. 
None  of  the  Above:  Elyse  Komins,  Roy  Tuckman. 

PACIFICA  BOARD 

National  KPFA  R.  Gordon  Agnew,  Rudy  Hufwich.  KPFK  Hallock  Hoffman. 
Max  Palevsky,  Robert  Powsner.  Jonas  Rosendeld  Jr  ,  Frank  Wyle.  KPFT  Jody 
Blazek,  David  Lopez,  Thelma  Meltzer.  WBAI  George  Fox,  Carolyn  Goodman, 
Hannah  Levin,  Albert  Ruben,  President  of  Pacif'ca    Ed  Goodman 

Local:  Roscoe  Lee  Browne,  Mae  Churchill,  David  Cloud,  Digby  Diehl,  David  Dworski, 
Moctezuma  Esparza,  David  Finkel.  Sam  Francis,  Everett  Frost,  Frank  Gehry,  Leonard 
Goldman,  Richard  S.  Gunther,  Brownlee  Haydon,  Ruth  Hirschman,  Mitchell  Harding, 
Mike  Model,  Hallock  Hoffman.  Celes  King  III,  Robert  Klein,  Roger  K.  Leib,  Allen  Lenard. 
Louis  Licht,  Ronald  M    Loeb,  Brian  G.  Manion,  Jeffrey  Matsui.  Isabelle  Navar,  Frederick 
Nicholas,  Anais  Nin,  Max  Palevsky,  Marshall  Pearlman,  John  Phillips,  Robert  Powsner, 
Robert  Radnttz,  Joyce  Reed  Rosenberg,  Jonas  Rosenfield  Jr.,  Richard  Rosetti.  Paul 
Saltman,  Avery  Schreiber,  Marvin  Segelman,  Muriel  Seligman,  Pearl  Skotnes,  Frederic 
Sutherland,  Joiyon  Wesi,  Haskell  Wexler,  Digby  Wolfe.  Frank  Wyle,  Floyd  Yudelson. 
Ex  Officio:  Will  Lewis.  Barbara  Spark. 

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   Subscription  rales  are  S25  per  year, 
or  S15  per  year  for  students,  retired,  unemployed  etc 

Our  transmitter  is  on  Mount  Wtlson.  We  broadcast  in  stereo  multiplex  with  an 
effective  radiated  power  of  1 12,000  Watts,  Our  studios  and  offices  are  at  3729 
Cahuenga  Blvd.  W   m  North  Hollywood  91604.  Phones:  877-2711.  984-2711, 

KPFK  IS  owned  and  operated  by  the  Pacifica  Foundation,  a  non-profit  institution. 
Subscriptions  are  transferable  to  the  other  Pacifica  Stations    KPFA.    2207  Shatiuck 
Ave.,  Berkley.  Ca.  94704;  WBAI,  359  E   62nd  St  .  N  Y    10021 .  and  KPFT,  618 
Prairie  St:,  Houston,  Tx.  77002. 


Subscribe! 


The  cost  of  freedom  must  be  shared  by 
those  who  would  enjoy  it.  For  August, 
we  need  362  new  subscriptions  and  750 
renewals  to  meet  our  budget  of  $27,500. 
Why  not  take  out  a  gift  subscription  for 
a  friend  this  month? 


address  *" 

oTy  TTp" 

Student/retired/ 

unemployed  (  ]  Sl5/year  |  lS8/6mo. 

Regular  I  )  S25/vear  I  I$13/6fno. 

3729  Club  [  ]  $5/month  or  SeO/year 


Allow  6  weeks  for  processing.  Make  checks 
payable  to  KPFK-Pacifica  and  mail  to: 

KPFK,  North  Hollywood.  91608 


moving? 

Please  send  address  change  information 
to  KPFK  North  Hollywood  91608.  If 
you  have  a  Folio  address  label,  paste  it  on. 
Allow  SIX  weeks  for  processing' 


Address 

cTw 

NEW  (effec  tive  as  of 


Zip 


Name 


City 


Z.p 


FILM 

OF 

THE 

MONTH 

FILM 

CLUB 

OF 

THE 

FILM 

MONTH 

OF 

CLUB 

THE 

MONTH 

FILM 

CLUB 

OF 

THE 

FILM 

MONTH 

OF 

CLUB 

THE 

MONTH 

FILM 

CLUB 

OF 

FILM 

THE 
MONTH 

OF 
THE 

CLUB 

MONTH 
CLUB 

FILM 
OF 

THE 

MONTH 

CLUB 

COMING 

IN  SEPT 

The  suspense  is  killing  us  too,  and  unlike  you-know-who,  we're  not  given  to  secrets.  But  the  fact  is 
that  as  we  went  to  press  this  month  (early,  so  our  Folio  Editor  could  escape),  we  were  torn  between 
quite  a  number  of  fascinating  films,  some  of  which  were  playing  hard-to-get.  Well.  .  .  as  you  may 
have  guessed  by  now,  the  KPFK  film  mavens  aren't  about  to  settle  for  second  best,  especially  when 
there's  a  good  game  of  cat  and  mouse  going  on;  so  we  invite  you  to  join  us  on  August  11  and  12  to 
enjoy  the  catch,  even  if  you  couldn't  savor  the  pleasures  of  the  hunt.  It  won't  be  a  complete  surprise 
of  course.  As  the  screening  draws  near,  we'll  be  making  frequent  air  announcements  telling  about  the 
film  (even  the  title!).  And  we'll  schedule  the  Sunday  show  extra  early  so  you'll  still  have  plenty  of 
time  to  get  to  the  beach. 


SATURDAY    AUGUST  11  -  Midnight 
SUNDAY         AUGUST  12  -  to  be  announced 


At  the  New  Vagabond  Theater 
2509  Wilshire  Blvd.,  Los  Angeles 
9  blocks  east  of  Vermont  Ave. 

For  reservations,  phone  KPFK  at  980-5735  ONL  Y, 
beginning  Monday,  August  6,  between  11  a.m.  and  6  p.m. 


Prior  to  its  commercial  release,  the  newest  film  by  Francois  Truffaut,  LA  NUIT  AMERICAINE.  KPFK  joins  this  year's 
Cannes,  New  York,  and  San  Francisco  Film  Festivals  in  screening  this  important  new  film 


FILM 

OF 

THE 

MONTH 

CLUB 

FILM 

OF 

THE 

MONTH 

CLUB 

FILM 

OF 

THE 

MONTH 

CLUB 

FILM 

OF 

THE 

MONTH 

CLUB 

FILM 

OF 

THE 

MONTH 

CLUB 


HAVE  YOU  TAKEN  ADVANTAGE  OF  YOUR  OPPORTUNITY 
TO  JOIN  L.A.'s  MOST  EXCLUSIVE  NEW  FILM  GROUP' 

At    leasi  once  a  mornh,  KPFK  Film  of  the  Monih  Club  membefs  may  aliend  treu  special  sCfeenmg?  of  impoMarii  mtw  lilms  and  o> 
film  classics    The  pfivaie  showings  lake  place  weekends  at  the  New  Vagabond  Thi'aifr    The  theater,  ^s  well  as  some  ol  the  Itlms. 
are  being  made  available  to  the  Club  by  theater  operator  Franklin  Urbach    Film  of  Ihe  Month  Club  merribership  is  ovdilablr  to  KPFK 
annual  subscribers  when  they  renew  promptly,  and  is  auiomaticany  bestowed  on  3729  Club  members    Here's  how  you  can  |om 


**Wait  until  your  subscription  is  up  for 
renewal  -then  renew  wihin  ten  days 
after  receiving  your  first    notice 

•"Give  a  full  year's  gift  subscription  lo 
someone  you  care  for. 


•'Convert  to  "thP  3729  Club,  whose 
members  are  automatically  Film  of  the 
.IVIonih    Clubbers     (details    on    page  34  ) 

••Renew  your  subscription  early  You 
may     renew    up    to    12    months    early 


/  am  a  regular,  paid-up  subscriber.  Please  enroll  me  in  the  Filmof  the-Month 

Club. 

Please  check  appropriate  box  and  fill  out  temporary  card   Mail  entire  coupon 

with  your  check  to:   KPFK.  North  Hollvwood,  California  91608 


m 

H 

JAN  /  f  EB  /  MARCH  /  APRIL  /  MAY  /  JUNE  /  JULY  /  AUO 

KPFK  FILM  of  the  MONTH  CLUB 

8 

Z 

Name 

< 

Addreu 

O 

o 

C.ty 

mxp. 

Slate                                                                     Zip 

Not  ¥»hd  unleu 

m«m 

stamped  with  ssnal  no 

0 

0 


EARLY  RENEWAL 


I     I 


REGULAR 
1   year  S25 

1   STUDENT  RETIRED 
1   year  $15 

I   3729  CLUB  CONVERSION 
£60  plus  $5  service  fee 
{subtract  what  you've  already 
paid  on  your  present  sub    Mm 
imum  first  payment:  SIOJ 


GIFT  SUr..;CRIPTION 

1     I    REGULAR 

I     1   STUDENT  RETIRED 


Please  send  to 


name 
address 


r  Progranis&^ 


*iei 


Here  is  a  listing  of  all  of  our  regular  programs  (alphabetically,  by  category),  with  their  day  and  time.  Check  to  see  if  any 
of  your  favorites  have  been  rescheduled,  and  look  into  some  of  our  new  series.  For  more  program  detail,  see  individual 
listings.  Please  remember  that  all  times  are  approximate,  rather  than  exact. 


PROGRAM: 

EVERY: 

PROGRAM: 

EVERY: 

CLASSICAL  MUSIC 

PUBLIC  AFFAIRS 

Johann  Sebastian  Bach 

Sun.,  8  am 

Advocates 

Fri.,  1 1  am 

Boston  Symphony  Orchestra 

Tues.,  8:30  pm 

Among  Consenting  Adults 

2nd  &  4th  Tues.,  1 1  pm 

Chapel,  Court  &  Countryside 

Mon.,  9  pm 

Calendar  of  Events 

Mon. -Sat.,  5:50  pm 

Cleveland  Orchestra 

Thurs.,  8:30  pm 

Dealing 

Mon.-Fri.,  5  pm 

William  Malloch  Programme 

Sat.,  10  pm 

Earthlog 

Mon.,  Wed.,  Fri.,  4  pm 

Morning  Concert 

Mon.-Fri.,  6  am 

Foreign  Press  Report 

Tu.,  Fri.,  6:45  pm 

Music  Not  For  Export 

Sun.,  7:30  pm 

From  the  Center 

Thurs.,  1 1  am 

Noon  Concert 

Mon.-Fri.,  noon 

Gay  at  Heart 

3rd  Tues.,  1 1  pm 

Sunday  Opera 

Sun.,  1  pm 

Inside  L.A. 
Labor  Report 

Sat.,  4:30  p.m. 
Wed.,  6:45  pm 

FOLK.  BLUES,  ETHNIC.  ROCK 

La  Raza  Nueva 

Mon.,  8  pm 

Captain  Midnight/Nightangcis 

Sat. -Thurs.,  midnight 

Lesbian  Sisters 

1st  Tues.,  1 1  pm 

Ethnic  Music 

Mon.-Fri.,  10  am 

Man  On  Earth 

Wed.,  11  am 

Folk  Music  (Davis) 

Sat,  10:30  am 

No  Appointment  Necessary 

Mon.,  10  pm 

Folk  Scene  (Larmans) 

Th.,  4  pm;  Sun.,  9:30  pm 

The  Other  Minority 

1st  Mon.,  1 1  am 

Mundo  Chicano 

Fri.,  9  pm 

9?$?? 

Tues.,  1 1  am 

Music  Black  &  White 

Tues.,  4  pm 

Nommo 

Sat.,  3  pm 

NEWS 

Preachin'  the  Blues 

Sat.,  1:30  pm 

Morning: 

Mon.-Fri.,  9  am 

Soft  Cnre  Phonography 

Fri. /Sat.,  2  am 

(includes  calendar) 

Sunday  Gummies 

Sun.,  6  am 

Evening: 
Beyond  the  News 

Daily,  6  pm 

Tues.,  Th.'rs.,  Fri.,  7  pm 

THE  SPOKEN  ARTS 

Apogee 

Thurs.,  11:30  pm 

Big  Broadcast:  old  radio 

Sat.,  12:30  pm 

COMW     (ITATORS 

Consciousness  Industry 

2nd&  4th  Sat.,  6:30  pm 

Jack  Garias:  Bio-Meditation 

Sun,,  9  am 

Critique 

Fri  ,  2  pm 

Dorothy  Healey:  Soapbox 

2nd  &  4th  Mon.,  7  pm 

Grass  Roots  Salon 

Fri.,  3:30  pm 

Ida  Honorof:  Consumer  report 

Mon.,  6:45  pm.Wed.1 1:30 

am 

Carlos  Hagen  Presents 

Sun.,  8:30  pm 

Herschel  Lymon:  Come  to  '  ife 

Sun.,  10  am 

Halfway  Down  the  Stairs 

Sat.,  9:30  am 

Opinion 

Vyed.,  7  pm 

Hour  25:  sf 

Fri.,  1 1  pm 

Lowell  Ponte:  Soapbox 

1st  &  3rd  Mon.,  7  pm 

Morning  Reading 

Mon.-Fri.,  9:30  am 

Tom  Ritt 

Sun.,  10  45  am 

Play  of  the  Week 

Wed  ,  2  pm 

Jean  Shepherd:  Humor 

Sun  ,  12  15  pm 

Poetry— Live 

1st&  3rd  Fri,  8  pm 

People's  Action  Union 

1st  &  3rd  Sat.,  6:30  pm 

Spectrum 

Tues.,  2  pm 

Union  of  Vietnamese  in  US 

Sun.,  6:30  pm 

Trans 

Sat.,  8  am 

William  Winter:  Analysis 

Thurs.,  6:45  pm 

Womanspace 

Sun.,  6:45  pm 

Margaret  Wright 

Sun.,  5  pm 

Zymurgy  (music,  too) 

Sat.,  8  pm 

■■ 

TR4NS 


India  is  the  gurv 
of  the  nations,  the 
physician  of  the 
human  soul  in  its 
profounder  maladies; 
she  is  destined  once 
more  to  new-mould 
the  life  of  the  world 
and  restore  the  peace 
of  the  human  spirit. 

The  labour  of  ascent 
from  our  half  human 
nature  into  the  fresh 
purity  of  the  spiritual 
consciousness.  .  .  .A 
widest  and  highest 
spiritualising  of  life 
on  earth.  .  .  this  in  the 
end  is  the  mission  for 
which  she  was  born 
and  the  meaning  of 
her  existence. 

—  Sri  Aurobindo 


This  month,  Trans  takes  us  on  a  multi-faceted  trip  to  India. 
Listen  each  Saturday  morning,  8:00  a.m.,  for  the  sights,  the 
sounds,  the  impressions  of  those  who  have  visited  or  lived  in 
India.  Pictured  above,  Ravi  Shankar  whery  he  was  a  boy.  Be- 
low, a  page  from  the  Vivekacbudamani  of  Shri  Shankaracharya. 


^  vm^^-^^wH^^sjg  ii^v?.  II 

349-350.  Like  iron'  manifcstinc;  as  sparks  through 
contnc;  wilh  fire,  the  Bucldlii  manifests  it?rlf  as  kncwer 
and  knowii  throurjh  the  inherence  of  Brahman.  As 
these  two  (knower  and  known),  the  cfTects  of  the 
I'licldlii,  are  obsci-vcd  to  be  unreal  in  the  ca.<:c  of 
dchision,  dream  and  fancy,  simil;  ily,  the  modifications  of 
the  Prnkriti,  from  C2;oi?m  down  to  the  hndv  and  all  sense- 
objects  are  also  unreal.'  Their  unreality  is  verily  due  to 
their  hcin'j;  subject  to  change  every  moment.  But  the 
Atman  never  changes. 

[  '  F.if:c  iron  etc. — Iron  it^rif  is  nevrr  incandc*':ccnt,  it  is  fire 
that  makes  it  appear  so.  Similarly,  the  intelligence  of  Brahman  is 
inip.Trlcd  to  llic  intellect. 


FORH^RD,  /MUSIC! 


From  Pacifica's  very  inception,  it  has  always  been  a  prime 
concern  to  bring  to  the  listeners'  attention  new  trends,  de- 
velopments, and  ideas  ttiat  seem  worthy-be  they  social  is- 
sues, political  opinions,  or  new  (or  even  newly-discovered) 
works  of  art. 

In  past  years  KPFK  presented  the  works  of  Guvtav  Mahler, 
Carl  Nielsen,  and  Charles  Ives  at  a  time  when  they  were  scarce- 
ly known  to  the  larger  musical  public  at  all.  More  recently,  the 
music  of  Iannis  Xenakis,  Per  Nrfrgaard,  and  Arne  Nordheim 
has  been  the  subject  of  in-depth  presentation  over  the  air  at 
90.7  mHz.  This  month  we  offer  another  tour  of  the  newly  de- 
veloping sonic  landscape.  Names  that  you  may  have  heard 
(like- Terry  Riley  and  Steve  Reich),  others  that  will  probably 
be  totally  unfamiliar  (Hubert  Howe,  Daniel  Kessner,  and  Zsolt 
Durko)  will  figure  in  a  month-long  series  of  concerts,  some  re- 
corded live,  others  made  up  from  new  or  hard-to-find  records. 

You  may  not  hear  as  much  music  on  KPFK  as  some  other 

stations  in  town,  but  you'll  hear  it  first. 

-  David  Cloud, 
Music  Director 


NAM  JUNE  PAIK 

SYMPHONIE  NR.  5 


thr  (irmiry-tult  ii  thr  lonRni  6i*ette  of  minhint) 

<J«i  fwijtkciitkalt  m  dit  iltnic  kiankhni  6tt  nxntAhfil 

WANN  gnpitU  wicd  111  fbrflw  wKhiig  w>< 
WAS  t"P'*l*  ""fJ 

DAS  ER5TE  |AHR 

AM  ERSTEN  lANUAR; 
um  I  uhr  na<hii 


PP 


3^ 


J05T*ynTO 


1  Uh(  flM^IS 


?T 


3  ;neuj  ux>rid.i  ^' 

AT  Beat  Loni 

W  tells  you 
Production  booster^ 

Trartilcrte  Thought  to  Action         TT    » 


CD 


CD  E!L 


Turns  Off  Tension 

like  it's  going  out  of  style 


Beat  Loneliness 

how 


FREE  FOIL 
WRAPPINGI 


C«Mact  ywir  twarcst  DmIot  u,*w»«*»  • 

tw  dMMb  Md  a  tfwMnxtratiM:    W&y  Kid  KHOM/S  WnerO  g 


CD  cr 

CD    j3  2 

cD-g  g-. 

^  03  a 

CD 


Zymurgy 

Saturday  4,  11,  18,  25 

8:00  p.m. 
1972  Nordic  Music  Days 

Wednesday  1,  8 

8:30  p.m. 
ISCM  Concerts 

Wednesday  15,  22,  29 

8:30  p.m. 
Dada  Pianissimo 

Wednesday  29 

11:30  p.m. 
Noon  Concert 

Monday  6,  13,  20,  27, 

Friday  3,  10,  17 

noon 


Pictured  here  are  two  selections  from  International  Sources,  Issue  11. 
Source:  Music  of  the  Avant  Garde,  edited  by  Ken  Friedman  and  Stan 
Lunetta.  Available  from  Composer/Performer  Edition,  2101  22nd  St. 
Sacramento,  Ca.  958 18.  The  artists  are  Nam  June  Paik  tabovei  and 
Stu  Horn  (left). 


Pacifica 
Goes  To 
Washington 


Those  of  you  who  have  been  receiving  the  Folio  for  at  least  six 
months  know  that  the  Pgcifica  Foundation  has  applied  for  an  edu- 
cational radio  frequency  in  Washington,  D.C.  We  filed  that  applica- 
tion over  five  years  ago  when  Lorenzo  Milam,  the  founder  of  the 
Crab  Nebula,  discovered  the  last  unclaimed  noncommercial  frequen- 
cy in  Washington  and  passed  the  news  on  to  Pacifica.  Since  then,  a 
number  of  things  have  happened  which  may  or  may  not  mean  that 
Pacifica  is  closer  to  being  awarded  that  frequency.  We  believe  there 
is  about  to  be  another  flurry  of  activity,  which,  again,  might  move 
us  closer  to  a  definite  answer  from  the  Federal  Communications 
Commission. 

Shortly  after  we  applied  for  89.3  fm  in  Washington,  D.C,  the  Na- 
tional Education  Foundation,  a  religious  group  in  the  D.C.  area,  al- 
so applied.  On  August  14,  1969,  the  Commission  designated  a  hear- 
ing to  determine  which  of  the  two  applicants  was  better  qualified 
to  operate  the  channel.  While  this  was  transpiring  in  Washington, 
Pacifica  was  putting  KPFT  on  the  air  in  Houston,  authorized  by  a 
construction  permit  from  the  FCC.  In  October.  1969,  the  Commis- 
sion ruled  that  KPFT's  license  would  be  granted  on  the  basis  of  the 
outcome  of  the  hearing  in  Washington. 

Moving  at  the  usual  snail's  pace  of  a  bureaucracy,  it  was  March, 
1970  before  all  parties  took  care  of  preliminary  business  and  the 
Presiding  Judge  in  Washington  actually  set  a  date  for  the  "compara- 
tive hearing"  between  the  National  Education  Foundation  and  Pa- 
cifica. The  date  would  be  June  15,  1970,  and  both  sides  were  to 
exchange  supporting  exhibits  on  June  9. 

To  make  things  perfectly  clear,  we  have  to  back  up  for  a  minute 
and  explain  that  by  thts  time  Howard  University  had  also  inquired 
about  the  channel,  but  they  had  applied  too  late  and  were  not  ac- 
cepted as  a  contestant.  So  with  the  Book  of  Proberbs,  FCC  law 
and  precedent  as  his  guides,  the  Judge  directed  Pacifica  and    the  Na- 
tional Education  Foundation  to  explore  ways  of  working  out  a 
joint  venture  with  Howard  University. 

Pacifica  asked  for  a  postponement  of  the  proceedings  so  we  could 
meet  and  confer  with  Howard  University,  and  the  Judge  granted  a 
continuance.  Shortly  after,  the  University  got  a  windfall:  the  Wash- 
ington Post  gave  them  a  radio  station.  WTOP,  and  they  dropped 
out  of  the  discussions. 

Following  a  string  of  procedural  delays,  Pacifica's  only  competitor, 
the  National  Education  Foundation,  dropped  its  application  for  the 
station  and  under  FCC  regulations,  Pacifica  agreed  to  pay  NEF's  le- 
gal expenses  l$5500).  The  story  ended  happily  for  NEF:  they  have 
purchased  a  station  in  nearby  suburban  Virginia. 

At  that  juncture,  a  long  series  of  meetings  took  place  to  discuss  the 
scope  of  the  issues  to  be  debated  because  the  situation  had  changed: 
Pacifica  no  longer  had  a  competitor.  On  January  16,  1973,  Pacifica 
representatives  rrwt  informally  with  the  Broadcast  Bureau  of  the  FCC 
and  the  Presiding  Judge;  April  2,  1973  was  set  for  the  hearing.  The 
Broadcast  Bureau,  an  independent  division  of  the  FCC  charged  with 
fostering  "the  public  interest,"  essentially  became  Pacifica's  adver- 
sary in  the  hearing. 

Pacifica  feared  that  the  boundaries  of  the  hearing  were  so  unclear 
that  it  might  open  the  door  to  an  exhaustive,  irrelevant  and  bound- 
less inquiry  into  the  history  and  operations  of  the  Pacifica  stations. 
Nevertheless,  on  March  19,  Pacifica  and  the  Broadcast  Bureau  ex- 
changed exhibits  and  the  hearing  began  on  April  2,  with  our  hope 
that  the  Presiding  Judge  would  restrict  the  scope  of  the  inquiry  to 
those  matters  we  believed  to  be  germane  to  the  proceedings. 


After  two  days,  Pacifica's  worst  fears  were  confirmed.    Upon  the 
pretext  of  exploring  the  administration  of  Pacifica's  Program  Poli- 
cy, the  Broadcast  Bureau  introduced  into  the  record  controversial 
program  material,  much  of  which  had  been  passed  on  favorably  by 
the  Commission  in  the  course  of  previous  license  renewals.  The  Bu- 
reau also  brought  forward  program  material  which  predated  the  Pro- 
gram Policy  presumably  being  tested,  as  well  as  material  which  by 
definition  does  not,  and  never  did,  fall  under  the  Proigram  Policy. 

We  then  filed  a  "Petition  for  Extraordinary  Relief"  directly  with  the 
Commission  itself,  because  we  believe  the  criteria  for  the  hearing  (le- 
gal, financial,  technical,  educational  and  other)  were  never  clearly  e- 
nough  defined  to  prevent  an  endless,  enervating,  harassing  proceed- 
ing. The  Presiding  Judge  granted  a  continuance  (postponement  of 
proceedings)  over  the  strenuous  objections  of  the  Broadcast  Bureau. 

In  our  latest  petition,  we  seek  a  direct  grant  of  the  license  on  the 
grounds  that  Pacifica  Foundation's  basic  qualifications  are  manifest 
in  the  application  itself  and  in  exhibits  submitted  to  date  and  that 
none  of  the  issues  raised  by  the  Broadcast  Bureau  involve  disquali- 
fying issues  based  on  the  history  of  FCC  decisions  to  date.  Failing 
a  direct  grant  of  the  license,  Pacifica  is  requesting  a  clarification  of 
the  usues  (which  we  have  previously  sought  at  other  levels  and  failed 
to  receive).  Pacifica  argues  that  the  current  framework  of  the  hear- 
ing IS  in  violation  of  FCC  regulations,  the  Administrative  Procedure 
Act  and  the  U.S.  Constitution,  all  of  which  require  specific  delinea- 
tion of  the  issues. 

The  Commission  is  to  hear  our  argument  sometime  this  summer. 
Several  things  may  happen.  After  weighing  our  arguments  against 
those  of  the  Broadcast  Bureau,  the  Commission  may  decide  to 
grant  the  license  forthwith.  Or,  the  Commission  may  decide  the 
matter  needs  further  discussion  and  agree  with  our  request  to  limit 
the  scope  of  the  hearing. 

From  our  perspective,  the  worst  thing  that  could  happen  is  that  the 
Commission  will  either  refuse  to  clarify  the  issues  or  will  clarify  them 
incompletely. 

If  the  ruling  is  unfavorable,  Pacifica  will  have  to  decide  if  there  are 
sufficient  grounds  to  take  our  case  outside  the  Commission  to  the 
Appeals  Court  in  Washington,  or  whether  we  must  undergo  a  hear- 
ing on  terms  unacceptable  to  us. 

Stand  by  foi  the  sixth  year  of  a  drama  called  "In  Search  of  a  Station." 
-  Reprinted  from  KPFA's  Folio,  July  1973, 


The  licenses  of  all  the  Pacifica  Stations-including 
KPFK's  license— are  being  held  in  abeyance,  pend- 
ing the  outcome  of  the  Washington  hearings.  To 
date,  the  license  fight  has  cost  Pacifica  over  $30,000. 

Please,  do  not  write  to  the  FCC.  If  you  want  to  help, 
continue  your  subscription.  Or  give  a  special  donation. 

—  Will  Lewis, 
General  Manager 


8 


H^TERGITE 

**. .  .  Naked  to  Mine  Enemies" 


Senator  Sam  Ervin,  quoting  Shakespeare's  Cardinal  Wolsey, 
has  put  his  finger  on  a  key  aspect  of  the  Watergate  revelations. 
The  shock  to  the  American  political  system,  the  surfacing  of 
the  contempt  by  those  responsible  for  the  break-in  and  the 
cover-up  now  leaves  them  naked  to  the  public. 

KPFK's  Public  Affairs  Department  will  present  a  two-part 
documentary  study  of  the  Watergate  affair  on  Wednesday, 
August  22  and  August  29  (10:00  p.m.). 

The  first  part,  covering  the  break-in  and  the  prior  planning, 
will  feature  the  voices  of  Bernard  Barker,  James  McCord,  Jeb 
Stuart  Magruder  and  others.  It  will  attempt  to  place  in  per- 
spective the  motives  for  the  break-in  and  the  reasons  for  such 
actions. 


A  week  later,  the  cover-up  will  be  the  subject  of  the  docu- 
mentary. From  the  White  House  to  CREEP,  from  Washington 
to  Miami  to  Southern  California,  the  personnel  involved  and 
their  motives  will  be  examined.  The  doci.imentary,  produced 
by  Mike  Hodel  and  Steve  Tyler,  will  be  as  comprehensive  as 
possible. 

And,  of  course,  daily  developments  in  Watergate  and  the 
California  Connection  will  be  a  prominent  feature  of  KPFK's 
Evening  News,  each  night  at  6:00  p.m.  Dennis  Levitt  and  Greg 
Gorelik  will  keep  you  up  to  date. 

Out  thanks  to  those  of  you  who  have  responded  during  the 
live  coverage  of  the  Watergate  hearings  and  the  related  mater- 
ial broadcast  this  spring  and  summer.  We  appreciate  your  sup- 
port and  encouragement. 

-  Mike  Hodel, 

Public  Affairs  Director 


ivednesday     1 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  luxurians.   luxuriating  music,  wrih  Paul  Vorwerk. 
The  news  and  calendar  are  featured  at  9  00  a.m. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

The  Man  in  the  Rohrschach  Shirt.  The  story  by  Ray 
Bradbury,  from  his  collection,  /  Sing  the  Body  Electric.  The  read- 
er IS  Mike  Hodel- 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Ragas  and  other  morning  music  from  the  timeless 
traditions  of  India. 

11:00         MAN  ON  EARTH 

Ecologist  S.P.R,  Charter  continues  his  new  series  of  talks. 
Today,  "Property,  Free  Enterprise  and  Environment." 

11:30         REPORT  TO  THE  CONSUMER 

Ida  Honorof  reviews  The  Cholesterol  Controversy,  by  Dr. 
Edward  R.  Pinckney  and  Cathey  Pinckney,  ",  ,  ,  There  is  absolute- 
ly no  scientific  evidence  to  prove  that  even  if  you  could  consistent- 
ly lower  the  amount  of  cholesterol  in  your  blood,  as  measured  by 
laboratory  tests,  you  would  decrease  your  chances  of  having  a  heart 
attack." 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

A  concert  by  members  of  the  Festival  Players  of  Califor- 
nia recorded  live  on  March  7,  1973  in  KPFK's  Auditorium.  A  pro- 
gram of  Baroque  music  including  Sonata  in  D  Minor  by  Pepusch, 
Sonata  in  C  Minor  by  Loeillet,  Les  Barricades  Mysterieuses  by  Fran- 
cois Coupenn,  and  the  Introduction  and  Fandango  by  Bocchenni. 
Ellen  Perrin,  recorders;  Larry  Munsen,  guitar;  Suzanne  Shapiro, 
harpsichord,  Informal  commentary  by  Dorye  Roettger.  Stereo.  Re- 
scheduled from  June. 


1:55 


REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


2:00  PLAY  OF  THE  WEEK:  The  Cocktail  Party 

The  T.S.  Eliot  play  directed  by  E,  Martin  Browne,  and 
featuring  Sir  Alec  Guiness.  Cathleen  Nesbttt,  Robert  Fleming  and 
others  from  the  original  New  York  production  (a  Decca  recording). 

4:00  EARTHLOG 

Ecologism,  alternativism,  and  some  non-isms,  produced 
by  Mike  Model,  with  in-studio  guests  and  open  phones, 

5:00  DEALING 

News,  views  and  calendar  set  to  mustc,  produced  by 
Barbara  Cady. 


6:00 


7:00 


THE  EVENING  NEWS 

From  the  tonsils  of  Dennis  and  Greg. 

LABOR  REPORT 

With  Paul  Schrade. 


OPINION 

The  presentation  of  differing  political  viewpoints.  Tonight, 
Ron  Ridenour  and  commentary  from  the  conservative  press. 

7:30  OPEN  HOUR 

We   leave  this  time  slot  open  for  late-breaking  develop- 
ments in  news,  public  affairs  or  the  arts, 

8:30  THE  1972  NORDIC  MUSIC  DAYS  -  I 

The  first  of  two  orchestral  concerts  from  the  1972  Nordic 
Music  Days  held  in  Oslo,  Norway  in  September  of  1972.  Johnny 
Grandert:  Skorogoworka  for  wind  orchestra;  Thorkell  Sigurdbjorns- 
son:  Laeti:  Fortem  Valen:  Two  Chinese  Songs;  Darest  Thou  Now. 
O  5ou/— Dorothy  Dorow,  soprano;  Aulis  Sallmen:  Symphony  in  one 
movement;  Mogens  Wmkel  Holm:  Galgarien.  The  Oslo  Philharmonic 
Orchestra  is  conducted  by  Miltiades  Caridis.  David  Cloud  provides 
commentary.  Tapes  courtesy  of  Norwegian  Radio    Stereo, 


10:00         NOTES  FROM  UNDERGROUND  -  I 

Fyodor  Dostoevsky's  1864  novel,  presented  in  its  entirety, 
m  two  parts.  Of  this  novel,  the  noted  authority  on  Russian  litera- 
ture, D.S.  Mirsky,  said:  "It  cannot  be  recommended  to  those  who 
are  not  either  sufficiently  strong  to  overcome  it,  or  sufficiently  in- 
nocent to  remain  unpoisoned.  It  is  a  strong  poison,  which  is  most 
safely  left  untouched."  Perhaps  one  of  the  greatest  documents  ever 
written  about  humanity,  it  is  read  magnificently  and  decisively.  Part 
I  read  by  Morris  Carnovsky  on  an  out-of-print  Lively  Arts  recording 
{translated  by  Constance  Garnettl.  Part  II,  next  week  at  this  time, 
will  be  read  by  Stacey  Keach.  Produced  by  Kathy  Dobkin,  with  as- 
sistance from  Milton  Hoffman,  of  WBAI,  (Part  I  rebroadcast  Thurs- 
day the  2nd.  2:00  p.m  ) 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock  blues-jazz  &c. 


2  thursday 


6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Paul  Vorwerk  hosts  a  program  of  musica  luxurians,  which 
he  assures  us  means  luxuriating  music,  with  news  and  calendar  at  9. 

9;25  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

GBme  of  Rat  and  Dragon.  The  science  fiction  story  by 
Cordwainer  Smith,  read  by  Mike  Hodel. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC  /  Mario  Casetta 


10 


11:00         FROM  THE  CENTER 

The  Movement  Lawyer.  Michael  Tigar,  a  lawyer  devoted 
to  defending  clients  who  participate  in  the  movement  tor  social 
change,  explains  his  viewpoint  and  activities  to  Donald  McDonald, 
Executive  Editor  of  The  Center  Magazine.  Tigar,  an  articulate  spokes- 
man for  the  need  for  change,  gives  persuasive  criticism  of  the  present 
status  quo  as  well  as  an  explanation  of  why  he  and  other  movement 
lawyers  handle  their  court  cases  as  they  do.  A  program  from  the 
Center  for  the  Study  of  Democratic  Institutions,  Rescheduled  from 
June. 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Baroque  Works  for  Trumpet,  Organ  and  Orchestra. 
Green  and  Boyce:  A  Suite  of  Trumpet  Voluntaries;  Prentzl:  Sonata 
for  Trumpet,  Bassoon  and  Continuo;  Krebs:  Two  Settings  of  "Wa- 
chet  auf'-Edward  Tarr,  trumpet;  George  Kent,  organ;  Helmut  Boe- 
cker,  bassoon  (Nonesuch  H  71279)    Vejvanovsky:  Sonata  Vesperina 
in  C;  Sonata  in  G;  Sonata  in  D;  Offertur  ad  duos  choros  in  A- 
Members  of  the  Prague  Wind  Ensemble  and  the  Prague  Symphony 
Orchestra.  Libor  Pesek  conductor  (Crossroads  2216  0034),  Pezel; 
Sonata  for  Trumpet.  Bassoon  and  Continuo:  Purcell;   Voluntary  for 
Organ:  Stanley:  A  Suite  of  Trumpet  Voluntaries  (Nonesuch  H 
71279).  Vejvanovsky:  Serenada  in  C:  Sonata  Natalis:  Sonata  Vena- 
toria  in  D  (Crossroads  2216  0034).  David  Cloud  hosts.  Stereo.  Re- 
scheduled from  June, 

2:00  NOTES  FROM  UNDERGROUND  -   I 

Rebroadcast  from  Wednesday  the  1st.  10:00  p.m. 

4:00  FOLK  SCENE 

Hosted  by  Roz  and  Howard  Larman 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

If  your  day  was  heavy,  wait  til  you  hear  what  happened 
to  the  world 

6:45  WILLIAM  WINTER:  News  Analysis 

7:00  BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  on  recent  significant  news 
items,  produced  by  the  KPFK  News  Department. 

7:30  OPEN  HOUR 

8:30  CLEVELAND  ORCHESTRA  -  Live  in  Concert 

Shostakovich    Festival  Overture:  William  Schuman:  Sym- 
phony No.  8;  Rachmaninoff:  Piano  Concerto  No.  2  in  C  Minor, 
Op    18— Eunice  Podis.  piano.  Lorin  Maazel  conducts.  Robert  Con- 
rad hosts  (Blossom  Festival  Concert).  Stereo. 


3  friday 


10:30  I  AM  ELIJAH  THRUSH 

A  dramatic  rendering  of  part  of  the  novel  by  James  Pur- 
dy,  recently  published  by  Doubleday.  The  cast  i/ictudes  author 
James  Purdy  as  Elijah  Thrush,  Stephen  Varble,  Bob  Christian,  and 
the  special  participation  of  Hermione  Gingold.  The  production  was 
directed  by  Stephen  Varble  and  produced  by  Geoffry  Hendricks. 
Recording  and  technical  production  by  David  Rapkin.  Executive 
producer,  Mimi  Anderson,  from  WBAI,  (to  be  rebroadcast  Monday 
the  6th,  2;00  p.m.) 


6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  luxurians  defined  luxuriantly  by  Paul  Vorwerk, 
with  a  break  for  news  and  calendar  at  9  00  a.m. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Western  Science  is  So  Wonderful!  A  reading  by  Mike 
Hodel  of  the  story  by  Cordwainer  Smith, 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Indigenous  music  from  the  Middle  East— a  half  hour  from 
the  Arabic  heritage  and  a  half  hour  from  the  Israeli  culture. 

11:00         THE  ADVOCATES 

The  audio  portion  of  KCET's  forum. 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Fifth  Biennial  Survey  of  Contemporary  Music  —  I. 
Pierre  Bartholomee:  Romance:  Karel  Goeyvaerts:  Compte  Tenu 
("Bearing  in  Mind");  Phillipe  Boesmans:  Fanfare  No.  2:  Paul-Baudoin 
Michel:  Puzzlefonie:  Henn  Pousseur:  Icarus  the  Apprentice:  Isang 
Tun;  Sonorous  Pipes:  Zbigniew  Tursky:  The  Shadow.  Performers 
include  the  Belgian  Radio  Chamber  Orchestra  and  organist  Bernard 
Foccroulle,  Tapes  courtesy  of  the  Belgian  Radio.  Stereo. 

2:00  CRITIQUE 

A  look  at  current  books,  film,  theater,  music. 

2:30  ADRIENNE  RICH  READS  HER  POETRY 

Rebroadcast  from  Friday.  July  27th,  8:00  p.m. 

3:00  THREE  POEMS  IN  WORDS  AND  SONG 

Rebroadcast  from  Friday,  July  27th,  8  30  p.m. 

3:30  GRASS  ROOTS  SALON 

A  weekly  series  of  programs  in  which  Decia  Baker  and 
Elliott  Mittler  explore  the  arts  locally,  and  share  what  they  find. 

4:00  EARTHLOG 

Wma  Sturgeon  hosts  each  Friday,  with  an  eye  toward 
survival  in  the  world  of  technological  overkill.  With  open  phones. 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

What  the  Herald  didn't  Examine  and  the  Los  Angeles 
didn't  have  Time  for 

6:45  FOREIGN  PRESS  REPORT:  Israel 

With  Oded  E'Dan,  Israeli  State  Radio  correspondent, 

6:55  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 

7:00  BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  recent  important  news 
items.  Produced  by  KPFK's  News  Department. 

8:00  POETRY  -  LIVE! 

Alvaro  Cardon-Hine,  poet  and  translator,  will  read  from 
his  own  works  and  his  translations  of  Spanish  and  Latin  American 
poets,  (to  be  rebroadcast  Fnday  the  10th,  2;30  p,m  ) 

9:00  MUNDO  CHICANO 

Musica  para  La  Raza  y  los  demas  tambien  News  and 
guests  of  interest  to  the  Chicano  community,  with  all  kinds  of 
music  to  help  it  alt  along.  Hosted  by  Antonio  Salazar. 

11:00         HOUR  25:  sf 

John  Henry  Thong,  Kathy  Calkin  and  Hike  Hodel  bring 
you  news  from  outer  space,   ["There  was  a  young  man  from  Orion.  . 


12:00 


NIGHTANGELS 

Mostly  Bluegrass  with  Phil    Tuttle,  or  the  transmitter  trip. 


2:00  SOFT  CORE  PHONOGRAPHY 

Mellow  music,  old  radio  goodies,  and  Jay  Lacey. 


;; 


Saturday    4 


8:00  TRANS 

Travellers  to  the  East:  A  special  production  highlighted 
by  sounds  and  music— and,  if  you  have  a  powerful  imagination,  the 
smells,  sights  and  feel— of  contemporary  India.  Amanda  Foulger  and 
James  Farrell  talk  with  three  recent  western  visitors  to  India:  a  de- 
votee of  Ananda  Ma,  a  member  of  the  Vedania  Society,  and  a  hu- 
manistic astrologer. 

9:30  HALF  WAY  DOWN  THE  STAIRS 

With  Uncle  Ruthie  (Buell),  Everything  You  Always  Wanted 
to  Know  About  Childhood,  But  Were  Not  Allowed  to  Ask.  Fun,  Games 
and  Stones  for  Young  People,  and  responsible  adults. 


10:30 


12:30 


1:30 


FOLK  MUSIC 

With  John  Davis. 

THE  BIG  BROADCAST 

Nature  Study  and  Big  Mr.  Little  (Arch  Obler). 


PREACHIN'  THE  BLUES 

Frank  Scott  and  occasional  live  guest  performers  explore 
the  entire  range  of  this  unique  and  vital  American  music  form. 


3:00 


NOMMO 

Contemporary  soulsounds,  with  Kaimu. 


4:30  INSIDE  L.A. 

A  new  weekly  series  which  examines  the  relevant  social, 
cultural  and  political  developments  happening  all  around  L.A.  The 
program,  produced  by  Earl  Ofari,  will  include  the  presence  of  live 
guest  participation  and  open  phones  from  time  to  time,  and  will 
be  punctuated  by  jazz. 

5:50  WEEKEND  CALENDAR 

Compiled  and  read  by  Terry  Model. 

6:00  THE  SATURDAY  NEWS 

With  Larry  Moss. 

6:30  PEOPLES  ACTION  UNION  FOR  PEACE  &  JUSTICE 

Interviews  and  commentary  on  current  movement  issues. 


7:00  AIR  WAR  IN  LAOS 

A  dramatization  of  selections  from  Fred  Branfman's 
powerful  work  about  our  obliteration  of  a  third-world  society. 
We  present  this  appropriately  during  the  month  in  which  we  once 
dropped  the  bomb  on  Hiroshima  and  Nagasaki.  Produced  by  Ruth 
Hirschman  and  many  staff  members  of  KPFK.  (to  be  rebroadcast 
Wednesday  the  8th,  9;30  a.m.  and  Monday  the  13th,  2:00  p.m.) 

7:30  JOAN  BAEZ:  Where  Are  You  Now,  My  Son? 

On  the  anniversary  of  the  week  of  the  atomic  bombing 
of  Japan  we  present  the  second  side  of  this  shattering  recording, 
done  on  location  in  Hanoi  in  December  1972,  during  the  U.S. 
bombing  raids,  (to  be  rebroadcast  Monday  the  13th,  2:30  p.m.) 

8:00  ZYMURGY 

David  Cloud  hosts  a  program  devoted  to  the  new  and  the 
avant-garde  in  music  and  the  allied  arts. 


10:00         THE  WILLIAM  MALLOCH  PROGRAMME 

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

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-folk-blues-jazz-other  stuff 


5    Sunday 


6:00 


THE  SUNDAY  GUMMIES 

A  faith  healer  takes  on  a  case  of  hemorrhoids.  Gramps 
and  Pepino  od.  on  "enitol"  and  Jackie  tells  Chango  she  really  wants 
the  baby. 

8:00  MUSIC  OF  JOHANN  SEBASTIAN  BACH 

Seventh  Sunday  after  Trinity.  The  featured  work  on  this 
program  will  be  the  Cantata  No.    187.  Es  wartet  alles  auf  dich.  Solo- 
ists, Goettinger  Municipal  Chorus,  and  Frankfurt  Cantata  Orchestra 
are  conducted  by  Ludwig  Doormann  (Cantate  640210). 

9:00  BIO-MEDtTATION  WITH  JACK  GARISS 

Experiential,  experimental  exploration  of 
states  of  consciousness. 


J2 


10:00         COME  TO  LIFE 

A  human  growth  center  of  the  air,  with  Herschel  Lymon. 
".  .  .We  have  made  a  separation  between  what  we  call  ourselves  and 
cor  bodily  processes  and  feelings.  ,  .  .In  my  language,  we  are  not 
grounded."  A  conversation  with  Stanley  Keleman,  Director  of  the 
Institute  for  Energetic  Studies,  theoretician  and  practitioner  of  the 
approaches  to  bodily  and  emotional  health  based  on  the  work  of 
Reich  and  Lowen,  and  author  of  Sexuality.  Self  and  Survival. 


10:45 


GATHER  'ROUND  THE  STAKE 

With  Tom  Ritt  and  open  phones. 


12:30         THE  SUNDAY  OPERA 

Wagner:  Parsifal.  Soloists:  Rene  Kollo,  Christa  Ludwig, 
Dietrich  Fischer  Dieskau,  Gottlob  Frick,  Hans  Hotter.  The  Vienna 
Philharmonic  Orchestra  is  conducted  by  Sir  Georg  Solti  (London 
OSA  15101.  Fred  Hyatt  hosts.    Stereo. 

5:00     MARGARET  WRIGHT  ON  SCHOOLS 

Telling  it  like  it  is,  with  open  phones. 

6:00  THE  SUNDAY  NEWS 

With  Sanford  Fidell. 


6:30 


VOICE  OF  THE  UNION  OF  VIETNAMESE  IN  THE  U.S. 


6:45 


WOMANSPACE 

Nancy  Reeves,  author  of  Womankind,  examines  "The 
Feminine  Subculture  and  the  Female  Mind."  Ms.  Reeves,  an  at- 
torney and  life-long  feminist,  uses  a  socio-philosophical  approach 
to  isolate  the  determinants  of  the  feminine  role,     {to  be  rebroad- 
cast  Tuesday  the  7th,  1 1 :00  a.m.) 

7:30  MUSIC  NOT  FOR  EXPORT;  Memories  of  Dtaghilev 

Poulenc:  Les  Biches  —  Complete  Ballet.  Milhaud:  Le 
Train  Bleu  -  Complete  Ballet.  Chorus  and  Orchestra  of  the  Monte 
Carlo  Opera,  Igor  Markevitch  conductor.  Presented  by  Joe  Cooper. 

8:30  CARLOS  HAGEN  PRESENTS 

Leaving  for  the  Big  City.  The  exodus  of  rural  people,  es- 
pecially young  mates  toward  large  cities  and  California.  An  explora- 
tion through  songs  and  commentary  of  the  many  expectations,  con- 
flicts and  dramas  often  experienced  by  thousands  of  common  peo- 
ple lured  by  the  attractions  of  the  vastly  impersonal  urban  centers 
of  America. 

9:30  FOLK  SCENE 

Don't  fret.  .  .  .  Howard  and  Roz  Larman,  along  with  all 
their  guitars,  banjos,  old  and  new  recordings,  and  a  guest  or  two, 
re-emerge  through  your  speakers  for  your  amusement  and  amazement. 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-jazz-more 


monday     6 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Paul  Vorwerk's  musica  luxurians.  News  and  Terry  Model's 
calendar  at  9:00. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

On  the  anniversary  of  the  bombing  of  Hiroshima,  we 
present  a  memorial  program  produced  by  Sue  Blumenberg  from 
our  archives. 


12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

New  Music  by  Steve  Reich  (1936  -      ):  Four  Organs-Sieve 
Reich.  Phillip  Glass,  Steve  Chamber,  Art  Murphy,  organs;  Jon  Gibson, 
maracas  {Shandar  SR  10005).  Drumming-Steve  Reich,  drums  (private 
recording).  David  Cloud  hosts.  Stereo. 


2:00 


I  AM  ELIJAH  THRUSH 

Rebroadcast  from  Thursday  the  2nd,  10:30  p.m. 


3:30  CHILDREN  OF  THE  A-BOMB 

Selections  from  the  letters  of  survivors  of  Hiroshima, 
read  by  Bill  Butler,  on  the  anniversary  of  the  bombing.  From  the 
Pacifica  archives. 

4:00  EARTHLOG 

A  journal  of  alternatives,  with  in-studio  guests,  open 
phones.  Mother  Earth  News,  and  more.  Mike  Model  produces. 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  featuring  reviewers  and  com- 
mentators Stephen  Mamber,  Helen  Koblin,  Richard  Toscan,  and  Ri- 
chard Gollance  on  the  various  days.  Also  includes  Terry  Model's 
daily  calendar.  Produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

6:45  REPORT  TO  THE  CONSUMER:  Ida  Honorof 

7:00  SOAP  BOX 

Lowell  Ponte:  a  right-wing  anarchist  viewpoint.  You  are 
invited  to  participate  by  phone. 

8:00  LA  RAZA  NUEVA 

Of,  by  and  for  the  Chicano  community.  A  discussion  of 
what's  happening,  and  why.  Hosted  by  Moctezuma  Esparza. 

9:00  CHAPEL,  COURT  AND  COUNTRYSIDE 

Renaissance  and  Early  Baroque  Music 

First  of  two  programs  featuring  music  for  brass  and  voices  by 
Andrea  and  Giovanni  Gabrieli  including  recercari,  canzoni,  chori, 
and  motets.  Katherine  Calkin  hosts.  Stereo. 

10:00         NO  APPOINTMENT  NECESSARY 

The  "professional"  program,  each  week  a  different 
discipline  on  a  revolving  regular  monthly  basis.  Tonight,  attorney 
David  Finkel  on  various  aspects  of  law. 


10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Music  of  the  peoples  of  China,  Japan,  Southeast  Asia  and 
Indonesia,  followed  by  Sounds  of  Africa  hosted  by  Philemon  Hou. 

11:00        THE  OTHER  MINORITY 

Mitch  Pomerantz  hosts  this  live  program  on  the  problems 
of  the  physically  handicapped,  and  some  proposed  solutions.  The 
program  features  in-studio  guests  and  open  phones. 


11:00         HIROSHIMA 

From  the  Baghavad  Gita  to  the  Stabat  Mater,  only  the 
language  of  apocalypse  can  encompass  the  tight  brighter  than  a 
thousand  suns.  This  compendium  tells  how  Major  Robert  A.  Lewis 
dropped  the  bomb,  and  includes  the  music  of  Penderecki,  the  poem 
of  a  survivor,  and  other  things  as  assembled  by  Mitchell  Harding. 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-jazz-blues&c 


13 


tuesday    7 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Luxuriating  music  with  Paul  Vorwerk.  The  news  and 
Terry  Model's  calendar  comes  on  at  9:00. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Setsuko  Yoshimura  was  approximately  1,000  yards  from 
ground  zero  when  the  atomic  bomb  was  dropped  on  Hiroshima, 
This  morning  we  listen  to  her  talk  about  how  her  life  was  changed 
ar>d  her  attitude  toward  the  United  States, 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

With  Mario  Casetta. 

11:00         WOMANSPACE 

Rebroadcast  from  Sunday  the  5th,  6:45  p.m. 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

New  Releases.  David  Cloud  hosts  a  program  of  the  latest 
offerings  on  disc  from  this  country  as  well  as  abroad.  Stereo. 


2:00 


3:00 


4:00 


SPECTRUM 

With  Carlos  Hagen. 

HIROSHIMA 

Rebroadcast  from  Monday  the  6th,  11:00  p.m. 


MUSIC  BLACK  AND  WHITE 

The  music  of  both  poor  black  and  poor  white  comes 
together  under  the  able  hand  of  Nawana  Davis. 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

A  newscast  designed  for  information,  not  entertainment. 

6:45  FOREIGN  PRESS  REPORT:  Latin  America 

With  Professor  Donald  Bray,  CSULA. 

7:00  BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  current  significant 
news  items,  produced  by  KPFK's  News  Department. 

7:30  OPEN  HOUR 

8:30  BOSTON  SYMPHONY  ORCHESTRA-Live  in  Concert 

Beethoven:  Symphony  No.  3  in  £  Flat  Major,  Op.  55. 
Berlioz:  Te  Deum,  Op.  22— Richard  Lewis,  tenor;  Tanglewood  Fes- 
tival Chorus  and  Choir;  Albany  All  Saints  Cathedral  Choir  of  Men 
and  Boys;  Berj  Zamkochian,  organ.  Colin  Davis  conducts.  William 
Pierce  hosts.  Stereo. 


10:30         THE  FURTHER  ADVENTURES  OF 

The  program  might  be  funny.  We  almost  called  it  "Hal- 
deman  and  Ehrlichman  are  two  of  the  finest  public  servants  I  Know," 
but  we  didn't.  Satire  and  humor  on  the  week's  news.  .  .  and  Agnows, 
Probably  about  Watergate.  {Best  o1  Further,  reruns,  on  Thursday  the 
23rd  and  30th,  3:30  p.m  ) 


11:00         LESBIAN  SISTERS 

Of,  by  and  for  the  Lesbian  community.  Discussions, 
news,  views,  and  music.  Produced  and  hosted  by  Barbara  McClean. 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-blues-ia22-&c. 


8    Wednesday 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musics  luxurians,  luxuriating  music,  presented  by  Paul 
Vorwerk.  with  a  break  for  news  and  calendar  at  9:00. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Air  l^Var  in  Laos.  A  dramatization  of  selections  from  Fred 
Branfman's  powerful  work  about  our  obliteration  of  a  third-world 
society.  We  present  this  appropriately  on  the  anniversary  of  the 
bombing  of  Nagasaki.  Produced  by  Ruth  Hirschman  and  many  staff 
members  of  KPFK. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Ragas  and  other  morning  music  from  the  timeless 
traditions  of  India. 


11:00 


MAN  ON  EARTH 

Continuing  the  series  of  talks  by  ecologist  S.P.R.  Charter. 


11:30         REPORT  TO  THE  CONSUMER 

Health  Surprises  in  China.  Ida  Honorof  presents  informa- 
tion on  this  topic  from  an  article  by  Robert  Rodate,  publisher  and 
editor  of  Prevention  Magazine,  which  appeared  therein  in  June  '73. 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Purcell:  Sight  Trio  Sonatas  from  Book  Two.  Giorgio 
Ciompi,  violin;  Werner  Torkanowsky,  violin;  George  Koutzen,  cello; 
Hermann  Chessid,  harpsichord  (Dover  NCR  5224).  Bight  Harpsi- 
chord Suites— IsabeWe  Nef,  harpsichord  {L'Oiseau-lyre  OLS  149). 
Katherine  Calkin  hosts. 


1:55 


2:00 


REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


PLAY  OF  THE  WEEK:  "Xa-A  Vietnam  Primer" 

The  Provisional  Theater  presents  a  radio  version  of  its 
highly  successful  "information  theater"  piece,  unfolding  the  2000 
year  struggle  of  the  Vietnamese  to  be  free  on  their  own  land.  Xa 
is  a  compelling  artistic  achievement  and  a  genuinely  successful  ex- 
ample of  political  theater.  Written  by  Michael  Monroe,  directed  by 
Steven  Kent,  and  produced  by  KPFK's  theater  critic,  Richard  Tos- 
can. 

3:30  DONNY  DELAPLAINE 

A  powerful  and  moving  document  from  a  young  man 
killed  in  Vietnam,  whose  letters  home  via  cassette  provide  an  in- 
sight into  the  war  experience.  Produced  by  WBAI.  (to  be  rebroad- 
cast Wednesday  the  15th.  11:30  p.m.) 

4:00  EARTHLOG 

Ecology,  alternatives.  Mother  Earth  News  reports,  in- 
studio  guests,  open  phones,  and  Mike  Hodel.  "* 


5:00 


6:00 


6:45 


7:00 


DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

THE  EVENING  NEWS 

No  trivia  is  too  big  or  too  small  to  be  omitted. 

LABOR  REPORT 

Produced  by  the  Student  Worker  Action  Committee. 


OPINION 

The  presentation  of  differing  political  viewpoints.  Tonight, 
Tom  Hayden  of  the  Indochina  Peace  Coalition,  contrasted  with  com- 
mentary from  the  conservative  press. 


7:30 


OPEN  HOUR 


14 


UVI 

i*/»/tf 

y**' 

'.'jr'rii 

.  ".■/! 

.■VK 

i: 

■     ■•■^ 

e:.- 

'.■;-^ 

■    *,v 

,  •, 

r^\. 

'N 

•>"  ■ 

'>■ 

A',' 

\.v 

'/ 

><k 

ll. 

,.\ 

1, 

rt\ 

In 

.■V 

I:: 

li\ 

j:> 

1 

I 

'•1 

v-- 

1 

\  ' 

/.J 

HU 

d^'' 

\i 

W 

'..i,..^' 


8:30  THE  1972  NORDIC  MUSIC  DAYS  -  M 

The  second  of  two  orchestral  concerts  from  the  1972 
Nordic  Music  Days  held  in  Oslo,  Norway  in  September  of  that  year. 
Ketil  Saeverud:  Mi-Fi-Li  (symphonic  poem);  Carl-Olof  Anderberg: 
Orkesterspel  11:  Usko  Merilainen:  Piano  Concerto  No.  2— Kanko 
Kuosma,  piano:  lb  Ntfrholm:  Isola  Bella:  Paavo  Heininen:  Sympho- 
ny No.  4.  Miltiades  Caridis  conducts  the  Oslo  Philharmonic  Orches- 
tra. David  Cloud  provides  commentary.  Tapes  courtesy  of  Norwe- 
gian Radio.  Stereo. 

10:00         NOTES  FROM  UNDERGROUND  -  II 

Part  II  of  the  reading  of  Dostoevsky's  1864  novel,  pre- 
sented in  its  entirety.  The  second  half  is  read  by  Stacey  Keach, 
and  was  recorded  at  WBAI  especially  for  this  program.  The  trans- 
lation is  by  David  Magarshack.  (to  be  rebroadcast  Thursday  the 
9th,  2:00  p.m. I 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-blues-jazz-SiC. 

thursday    9 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  luxurians,  luxuriating  music,  with  Paul  Vorwerk. 
A  look  at  news  and  the  daily  calendar  at  9:00  a.m. 


9:25 


9:30 


REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


THE  MORNING  READING 

When  It  Changed.  A  reading  of  the  story  by  Johanna 
Russ  from  the  Again  Dangerous  Visions  anthology,  edited  by  Har- 
lan Ellison,  copyright  1973.  The  reader  is  Terry  Hode!.  The  read- 
ing also  includes  the  Afterword  by  Russ  from  the  ADV  anthotogy. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC  /  Mario  Casetta 

11:00         FROM  THE  CENTER 

The  Fundamental  Issue:  The  Sharing  of  Power.  Rexford 
G.  Tugwett  talks  about  the  times  and  issues  that  led  the  Founding 
Fathers  to  draft  a  Constitution  based  on  checks  and  balances,  the 
compromises  they  had  to  make,  and  the  institutions  they  brought 
into  being  almost  as  an  afterthought.  Makes  the  Constitution  seem 
a  little  less  sacred  and  a  little  more  man-made,  ergo  changeable. 

Electoral  Reform:  The  Road  Back  From  Madison  Ave.  to 
James  Madison.  Pulitzer  Prize-winning  journalist  Harry  S.  Ashmore 
shares  his  concerns  about  the  impact  on  the  electorate  of  Madison 
Ave.  media-made  images.  He  argues  convincingly  for  electoral  re- 
form, with  particular  emphasis  on  the  financing  of  election  cam- 
apigns.  Two  programs  from  the  Center  for  the  Study  of  Democra- 
tic Institutions.  Rescheduled  from  June. 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Rarely  Heard  Oratorios,  t:  Giovanni  Francesco  Anerio: 
Vivean  felici  and  La  Conversione  di  S.  Pao/o— Elisabeth  Speiser  and 
Maria  Fnesenhauser,  sopranos;  Theo  Altmeyer  and  Wilfred  Jochims, 
tenors;  Erich  Wenk,  bass;  Choir  and  Instruments  of  the  Church  Mu- 
sic School  of  Muenster,  Rudolf  Ewerhart  conductor  (Turnabout  TV 
34172S).  Carissimi:  8altassar—{\0T  soloists,  see  above);  Judicum  Sa- 
/omon/j— Elisabeth  Speiser  and  Barbara  Lange,  sopranos;  Kurt  Huber, 
tenor;  Guenther  Wilhelms,  bass;  Spandauer  Kantoret,  Helmuth  Ril- 
ling conductor;  Jepte—E.  Speiser  and  B.  Lange,  sopranos;  Derek  Mc- 
Culloch,  alto;  K.  Huber,  tenor;  Helmuth  Geiger,  bass;  Spandauer 
Kantorei,  H.  Rilling  conductor  (Turnabout  TV34089S).  Stereo. 
Katherine  Calkin  hosts.  Rescheduled  from  June. 


2:00 

4:00 
5:00 

6:00 

6:45 
7:00 


NOTES  FROM  UNDERGROLiND  -  II 

Rebroadcast  from  Wednesday  the  8th,  10:00  p.m. 

FOLK  SCENE  /  Howard  and  Roz  Larman 

DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

THE  EVENING  NEWS 

News  reports  subject  to  changing  world  conditions. 

WILLIAM  WINTER:  News  Analysis 


BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

A  closer  look  at  some  of  the  stories  that  made  the  news 
recently,  with  details  and  analysis  provided  by  the  News  Department. 


7:30 


OPEN  HOUR 


8:30  CLEVELAND  ORCHESTRA-Live  in  Concert 

Verdi:  Overture  to  "La  Forza  del  Destino:"  Dvorak:  Vi- 
olin Concerto  in  A  Minor,  Op.  53— Sergio  Luca,  violin;  Beethoven: 
Symphony  No.  4  in  B-Flat,  Op.  60.  Lorin  Maazel  conducts.  Robert 
Conrad  hosts  (Blossom  Festival  Concert).  Stereo. 

10:30         SYNDICATED  CONSERVATISM:  James  J.  Kilpatrick 

An  interview  of  the  syndicated  conservative  counterpoint 
to  Nicholas  von  Hoffman  of  CBS'  60  Minutes  program.  From  his 
youth,  through  college  and  the  McCarthy  era,  and  up  to  Watergate, 
Kilpatrick  reveals  all.  Produced  by  Jim  Strong  of  KPFT.  (to  be  re- 
broadcast Monday  the  13th,  3:00  p.m.) 

11:30         APOGEE 

—is  the  name  of  an  Ideal.  Mitchell  Harding  plays  with 
its  pretty  shadows. 

12:00         NIGHTANGELS 

Mostly  Btuegrass  with  Phil  Tuttle,  sometimes  with  guests, 
and  sometimes  only  whitenoise. 


lO    friday 


6:00 


MORNING  CONCERT 
Paul  Vorwerk  plays  musica  luxurians.  which  simply  means 
luxuriating  music.  News  and  calendar  at  9:00  a.m. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Wheels.  The  science  fiction  story  by  Robert  Thurston, 
from  the  Clarion  anthology.  The  reader  is  Mike  Hodel. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Music  from  the  Middle  East,  embracing  both  the  Arab 
and  the  Israeli  traditions. 


11:00 


THE  ADVOCATES 

The  audio  portion  of  KCET's  forum. 


12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Fifth  Biennial  Survey  of  Contemporary  Music  —  II. 
Frederick  Rzewski:  Les  Moutons  de  Panurge:  Julius  Eastman:  Cre- 
ation: Rudolf  Komorous:  Olimpia:  Petr  Kotik:  There  is  Singularly 
Nothing:  Wojceich  Kilar:  Diphthongs:  Silvano  Bussotti:  Rara-Eco 
Sierologico.  Performers  include  the  Society  of  Electronic  Music  of 
Buffalo  and  the  Chorus  of  the  Varsovia  Philharmonic  (Poland). 
Tapes  courtesy  of  the  Belgian  Radio.  Stereo. 

2:00  CRITIQUE 

A  look  at  current  books,  film,  theater,  music, 

2:30  POETRY  -  LIVE! 

Rebroadcast  from  Friday  the  3rd,  8:00  p.m. 

3:30  GRASS  ROOTS  SALON 

Decia  Baker  talks  with  two  young  playwrights,  Elvie 
Moore  Whitney,  author  of  Angela  Is  Happening,  and  Michael  Mon- 
roe, author  of  Caliban. 


15 


4:00  EARTHLOG 

A  program  of  alternatives,  hosted  on  Fridays  by  Wina 
Sturgeon,  With  open  phones. 


5:00 


6:55 


7:00 


DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

THE  EVENING  NEWS 

All  the  gnus  we  could  catch. 

FOREIGN  PRESS  REPORT:    Japan 

With  Hans  BaenA/ald,  UCLA. 

REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


BEYOND  THE  NEWS 
In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  recent  significant  items 
in  the  news,  produced  by  our  news  department. 

8:00  THE  POEMS  OF  RATTRAY  AND  VAN  BUSKIRK 

Poet  David  Rattray  reads  from  his  own  work,  and  that 
of  Alden  van  Buskirk,  a  young  poet  who  died  in  his  early  20s  sev- 
eral years  ago.  Mr.  Rattray  has  translated  many  European  poets, 
among  them  Antonin  Artaud,  and  lives  in  New  York,  (to  be  re- 
broadcast  Friday  the  17th,  2:30  p.m.) 

9:00  MUNDO  CHICANO 

Musica  para  La  Raza,  y  los  demas  tambien.  Antonio 
Salazar  hosts  a  program  of  music  and  guests  of  interest  to  the 
Chicano  community  and  to  all. 

11:00         HOUR  25:  sf 

Kathy  Calkin,  Mike  Model  and  John  Henry  Thong  with 
science  and  sci-fi  (pronounced  skiffle)  [".  .  .  Who  was  continually 
crion.  .  .  ." 


2:00 


SOFT  CORE  PHONOGRAPHY 

Jay  Lacey  plays  mellow  music  and  vintage  radio  'til  dawn. 


Saturday  11 


aaxya  i>ai  tsaon 
8:00  TRANS 

Shantih  Devi:  Hilda  Charlton,  a  dancer  by  profession, 
spent  18  years  in  India  and  sat  at  the  feet  of  many  spiritual  teach- 
ers. She  is  presently  a  disciple  of  Satya  Sai  Baba,  lives  in  New  York, 
has  an  ashram  and  conducts  a  number  of  meditation  groups  there. 
Ram  Dass,  the  former  Richard  Alpert,  calls  her  the  "American  mo- 
ther of  Bhakti  (spiritual  love  and  devotion)."  Karl  Heussenstamm 
conducts  the  interview. Music  by  Baba  and  other  great  devotees. 

9:30  HALF  WAY  DOWN  THE  STAIRS 

With  Uncle  Ruthie  (Ruth  Buell).  Everything  You  Always 
Wanted  to  Know  About  Childhood  But  Were  Not  Allowed  to  Ask. 
Stories,  Fun  and  Games  for  Kids,  and  responsible  adults. 


10:30         FOLK  MUSIC 

With  John  Davis. 

17:30         THE  BIG  BROADCAST 

The  Henry  Morgan  Show  (comedy). 

1:30  PREACHIN'  THE  BLUES 

Frank  Scott  brings  you  tastes,  licks,  and  other  delicious 
morsels  of  this  unique  and  vital  music,  with  live  guests  sometimes. 


3:00 


4:30 


NOMMO 

Contemporary  soutsounds,  with  Kaimu. 


INSIDE  L.A. 

A  weekly  series  exploring  relevant  social,  political  and 
cultural  happenings  around  L.A.,  with  a  jazz  background.  Earl  Ofari 
produces,  and  promises  live  guests  and  open  phones  from  time  to  time. 

5:50  WEEKEND  CALENDAR 

Compiled  and  read  by  Terry  Hodel. 

6:00  THE  SATURDAY  NEWS 

With  Larry  Moss. 

6:30  THE  CONSCIOUSNESS  INDUSTRY 

Reviews,  mostly  of  books,  by  Bob  Gottlieb. 

7:00  THE  CITY  ON  THE  SAND 

A  highly  evocative  mood  piece  suggestive  of  the  impo- 
tence and  futility  of  modern  culture.  George  Alec  Effinger  wrote 
this  story  which  appeared  in  the  April  1973  issue  of  The  Magazine 
of  Fantasy  and  Science  Fiction.  It  is  read  with  sensitivity  by  Mitch- 
ell Harding,  (to  be  rebroadcast  Monday  the  20th,  2:00  p.m.) 

8:00  ZYMURGY:  More  Over  Some  More,  Pierre  Boulez 

Author  and  musicologist  Judith  Rosen  and  various  wo- 
men composers  join  KPFK's  David  Cloud  and  Katherine  Calkin 
for  a  discussion  about  and  a  listen  to  the  work  of  avant-garde  fe- 
male composers  as  part  of  our  month-long  survey  of  what's  new 
in  music. 

10:00         THE  WILLIAM  MALLOCH  PROGRAMME 

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

12:00        CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock -folk -blues-jazz-othar  stuff 


12  Sunday 


6:00  THE  SUNDAY  GUMMIES 

Melanie  can't  even  remember  leaving  the  house  when  Aunt 
Acid  tells  her  she's  passing  through  puberty.  Also,  Change  says  he 
won't  give  up  the  gas  station  for  anybody. 

8:00  MUSIC  OF  JOHANN  SEBASTIAN  BACH 

Eighth  Sunday  after  Trinity.  The  Cantata  No.  45,  Es  ist 
dir  gesagt,  Mensch  will  be  the  featured  work  on  this  program.  Solo- 
ists, Munich  Bach  Chorus  and  Orchestra  are  conducted  by  Karl 
Richter  (Deutsche  Grammophon/Archive  ARC  198028). 

9:00  BIO-MEDITATION  WITH  JACK  GARISS 

Experiential,  experimental  exploration  of 
states  of  consciousness. 

10:00        COME  TO  LIFE 

A  human  growth  center  of  the  air,  with  Herschel  Lymon. 
"Life— it's  like  everything  else  in  the  world.  You  begin  at  the  bot- 
tom, and  work  your  way  out."  A  charming  and  wise  commencement 
address  at  Reed  College  by  Heywood  Hale  Broun,  CBS  sports  feature 
announcer. 


re 


10:45         GATHER  'ROUND  THE  STAKE 

With  Tom  Ritt  and  open  phones. 

12:15         JEAN  SHEPHERD:  Humor  from  NYC. 


1:00  THE  SUNDAY  OPERA 

Smetana:  Dalibor.  Soloists:  Jindrich  Jindrak,  Vilem  Pribyl, 
Nadezda  Kmplova;  Orchestra  and  Chorus  of  the  Prague  National 
Theater  conducted  by  Jaroslav  Krombholc  (Genesis  GS  1040/42). 
Fred  Hyatt  hosts.  Stereo. 


2:30  JOAN  BAEZ:  Where  Are  You  Now,  My  Son? 

Rebroadcast  from  Saturday  the  4th,  7:30  p.m. 


5:00 


MARGARET  WRIGHT  ON  SCHOOLS 

Telling  it  like  it  is,  with  open  phones. 


6:00  THE  SUNDAY  NEWS 

With  Sanford  Fidell. 


6:30 


VOICE  OF  THE  UNION  OF  VIETNAMESE  IN  THE  US 


6:45  WOMANSPACE 

Art  historian  Meg  Harlam  discusses  "Natalie  Goncharova 
and  the  Russian  Avant-Garde"  and  the  work  of  Kathe  Kollwitz. 
Both  artists  are  examined  from  a  feminist  perspective,  (to  be  re- 
broadcast  Tuesday  the  14th,  11:00  a.m.) 

7:30  MUSIC  NOT  FOR  EXPORT:  More  Than  Fiddle  Fluff 

Eugene  Ysaye:  Sonata  No.  2  for  Solo  Violin  (Obsession)- 
Krzystof  Jakowicz,  violin;  Paganini  Variations-^ %a\G  String  Ensem- 
ble, Lola  Bobesco  conductor;  Sonata  for  Two  Solo  Violins— Leonid 
Kogan  and  Elizaveta  Gilels.  violins;  Harmonies  du  So/r— Les  Solistes 
de  Liege,  Gary  Lemaire  conductor.  Presented  by  Joe  Cooper. 

8:30  CARLOS  HAGEN  PRESENTS 

The  discovery  of  the  classical  composers,  especially  Bach, 
by  rock,  jazz  and  experimental  ensembles.  Also,  as  an  interesting 
contrast,  the  treatment  of  the  classics  by  some  of  the  popular  bands 
of  the  1930's  and  40's. 

9:30  FOLK  SCENE 

Don't  fret.      .  Roz  and  Howard  Larman  bring  forth  gui- 
tars, banjos,  recordings  and  a  guest  or  two  for  added  fun. 

12:00        CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-jazz-and  such 


monday    13 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Paul  Vorwerk  hosts  .  News  and  Calendar  at  9:00 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Stories  by  James  Purdy.  An  anthology  of  short  stories 
by  the  American  writer  from  a  Spoken  Arts  recording.  The  works 
are  read  by  the  author. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Music  of  the  poeples  of  China,  Japan,  Southeast  Asia  and 
Indonesia,  followed  by  Sounds  of  Africa  hosted  by  Philemon  Hou. 

11:00         OPEN  HOUR 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

New  Music  by  Penderecki  (1933  ■       ):  Fonogrammi  for 
flutes  and  chamber  orchestra;  Cello  Concerfo— Siegfried  Palm,  cello; 
De  Natura  Sondris  No.  2;  Kanon  for  orchestra  and  tape;  Capriccio 
No.   1  for  oboe  and  strings— Heinz  HoMiger,  oboe;  Capriccio  No.  2 
for  violin  and  orchestra— Wanda  Wilkominska,  violin;  Emanationen 
for  two  string  orchestras;  Partita  for  harpsichord  and  orchestra— Fe- 
licja  Blumental,  harpsichord.  Polish  Radio  Symphony  Orchestra, 
Krzysztof  Penderecki  conducting  (Angel  S36949-50).  David  Cloud 
hosts.  Stereo. 


3:00 


4:00 


SYNDICATED  CONSERVATISM:   Kilpatrtck 

Rebroadcast  from  Thursday  the  9th,  10:30  p.m. 


EARTHLOG 

A  journal  of  alternatives,  featuring  in-studio  guests,  and 
audience  participation  by  phone.  Produced  and  hosted  by  Mike  Model. 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  featuring  reviewers  and  com- 
mentators Stephen  Mamber,  Helen  Koblin,  Richard  Toscan  and  Ri- 
chard Gollance  on  various  days.  Also  includes  Terry  Hodel's  daily 
calendar  of  events.  Produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 


6:00 

6:45 
7:00 

8:00 


THE  EVENING  NEWS 

Censored  news:  bias  and  editorializing  discreetly  omitted. 

REPORT  TO  THE  CONSUMER:  Ida  Honorof 

SOAP  BOX 

Dorothy  Heatey:  a  communist  viewpoint,  with  open  phones. 


LA  RAZA  NUEVA 

Of,  by  and  for  the  Chicano  community.  A  discussion  of 
what's  happening,  and  why.  Hosted  by  Moctezuma  Esparza. 


9:00  CHAPEL,  COURT  AND  COUNTRYSIDE 

Renaissance  and  Early  Baroque  Music 

Music  of  the  Gabrielis,  II.  Katherine  Calkin  hosts.  Stereo. 


10:00 


NO  APPOINTMENT  NECESSARY:  The  "Professionals" 
Tonight,  Dr.  Dick  Huemer  invites  you  to  "Ask  the  Doctor.' 


2:00 


AIR  WAR  IN  LAOS 

Rebroadca.t  from  Saturday  the  4th,  7:00  p.m. 


11:00         HALLUCINOGENIC  PLANTS 

Richard  E.  Shultus,  Professor  of  Biology  and  director  of 
the  Botanical  Museum  ar  Harvard  specializes  in  New  World  hallucino- 
gens, with  extensive  field  work  in  central  Mexico  and  the  Amazon 
basin.  He  presents  a  compendium  of  all  the  most  exotic  drugs,  with 
stange  primitive  rituals.  The  program  from  WBAI  was  recorded  at 
a  meeting  of  the  New  York  Horticultural  Society,  (to  be  rebroad- 
cast Tuesday  the  14th,  3:00  p.m.) 

12:00        CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock  jazz-all  of  the  above- 

14  tuesday 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  luxurians,  luxuriating  music,  with  Paul  Vorwerk. 
The  news  and  calendar  are  featured  at  9:00  a.m. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Stories  by  James  Purdy.  An  anthology  of  short  stories  by 
the  American  writer  from  a  Spoken  Arts  recording.  The  works  are 
read  by  the  author. 


/7 


Si&&sv^_^_ 


Conqrcss  shal  make  ™efre|domof; 

(lA  l^iii      ^Uti'tAAittA  BE  TAKEN  AWAY, 

0ymu.,.aDrmmii9  and  silent  we  ii 
the  freedom  like^heep  to  k 

ofsoeeeh^or 
ofmepress. 


-»:l~"  :  IT 


First  Amendment  to  the 
Constitution 

AlKsolnlc  jrcc 
(l(Hn  oi  {\w  iMvss 
to  (lisciiss  iiiibtk' 

qiH'NilOIIMSllM' 

inundation  s((m(' 
oi\nMii('anli\in<t. 


Herbert  Hoover 


The  mv.iicr  (Jj^^ 
thciiiiportiinccor  , 

siirc.uiiiii'Hinu-  lilt'  F^'^^* 

coiMiiiiiiiiiy  ivoiii  nwr\ 

iiicilcmt'iilslotlir  ot  (II 

^-'-!r  overthrow  of  our  //,w,, 

inslitiiliotisby  lorcc  nwd  '^^i 

violt'iicc.tlictiioiviiniH'ra- ., 


IN  ORDER 

lOENJOY  ,     „      ,,     . 

tDCiUrn  tivcis  llic  iKM'd  to|nvs('ivo 

i  IVlmVSi  iii\ioliil('lli<'<<>iisliliili()ii;i! 

/VllMllBlE  n.ulilsorrnM'sixrcli.frcc 

nryrr  to  pivss  and  live  asscnihly.. 

lIBERIYOr 


REPRESS  ENSURES. 
IS  NEC 


...THESE  PRINCIPL! 

FREEDOM  OF  THE  PRII 

KQiDV  in  ^m BRIGHT CONSTEUilTII 

MmHi  lU  I^^GOME  BEFORE  US.  AN 

THEINEKI  STEPS  THROUGH  AN  AGE  OF  RB 

S  TRAI  IT  REFORMATION.  THE  WISDOM  I 

ANDTHEBL00D0F0URHER0E9 

VOTED  TOTHEIRATTAINMENT.TI 


Alexis  De  Tocque"jlle 


i^oi,{7Jt^^hfi!rafi^  ™f  CRED  OF  OUR  POUTICAIFAI 

""«f'^7i«<>^ft*#f »ir/«f««i»f>f  WETRYTHESERVICES  OFTHOSi 
ir  gtu-fiumvutH.       ■  •  .■     SHOUlDWEWANDtRFROMTHEJ 

A  free  press  can  of  course   OF  ERROR  OR  AIARM.IEI  USHAS 

J:^nfv'!ri*i;t  fc^m  OUR  STEPS  AND  TO  REGAIN  THI 
it  win  n^^bil^ll^hi;:,  b^ad.  ALONE  LEADS  TO  PEACE.  LIBERl 


Albert  Camus 


18 


Washmqton 


>eech  mayi 
lnd  dumb 

AY  BE  LEDI 
IE  SLAUGHTER. 

/Vx/  .[mcndmcnt)  prexup- 
hat  right  condmions  are 
ikdfi  to  be  gathered  out 
ultitude  of  tongues,  than 
h  ami  kind  of  aiithorita- 

!f  ('(■('  Helection.To  many 
thix  inMnd  always  will 
he.  i'nlly;  but  we  have 
,.  slaked  upon  il  our  all. 

;  (INCLUDING 
5)  FORM  THE 
I  WHICH  HAS 
IGUIDEDOUR 
DLUTIONAND 
f  OUR  SAGES 
lAVE  BEEN  DE- 
NY SHOULD  BE 
H.THETEXTDF 
iEBY  WHICH 
ETRUST;AND 
IN  MOMENTS 
MTO  RETRACE 
HOAD  WHICH 
AND  SAFETY. 


LOS   AHGELES 


Walter  Lippmann 


IH[MORyOFAfR[E 
PRESS  IS  MIH[IRUIH 
WILL  [MERGE  FROM  FRE 
RFPORIING  AND  FREE  DIS- 
CUSSiON.NOIIHAlHWia 
BEPRESENlEOPERFECILy 
ANOlNSIANlLYINANyONE 
ACCOUNI. 

AFREEPRESSISNOIA 
PRIVILEGE  BUI  AN  ORGAN- 
IC NECESSIiyiNAGREAI 


FREE 


A  free  press  is 
as  a  free  press  does . 
The  L.A.  Free  Press  does  it. 


LOS  ANGELES  FREE  PRESS 

6013  Hollywood  Boulevard 
Los  Angein,  California  90028 
Ipublithad  weekly) 


FREE 
PRESS 


I         I  1  have  enclosed  $9.  for  a  one  year  subscription  (52  Issues) 
I  I  1  have  enclosed  $15. for  a  2-year  subscription  {104  Issues). 

I         1       This  IS  a  renewal. 

(P.S.  -  Add  S3,  additional  postage  for  Canada  8.  Mexico 

S5.  for  the  rest  of  the  World    APO  FPO's  are  sent  in  wrappers 

Send  Check  or  Money  Order  only  1 

tt^ai 

l^«M«  prirtl  ciMrlvl 

STREET  I.  WO. 


REQUIRED  ZIP 


10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC  /  Mario  Casetta 

11:00         WOMANSPACE 

Rebroadcast  from  Sunday  the  12th.  6:45  p  m, 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Tartini     Twelve  Sonatas  for  Violin  and  Ce//o- Giovanni 
Guglielnio,  violm,  Amonio  Pocaterra,  violmcello  (Telefunken   SAWT 
9592/93)    Stereo.  Kathenne  Calkin  hosts. 


2:00 


SPECTRUM  /  Carlos  Hagen 


3:00  HALLUCINOGENIC  PLANTS 

Rebroadcast  from  Monday  the  '3th,  11  00  p  m, 

4  00  MUSIC  BLACK  AND  WHITE 

The  music  of  poor  black  and  that  of  poor  white  come 
together  with  a  little  help  from  Nawana  Davis, 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady 

600  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

The  day's  news  read  m  the  Enghsh  language  (translated 
from  the  original  slangese) 

6:45  FOREIGN  PRESS  REPORT:  Africa 

With  Professor  Michael  Lofchte,  UCLA. 

7:00  BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In  depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  recent  significant  items 
in  ihe  news    Produced  by  KPFK's  News  Department. 


7:30 


OPEN  HOUR 


8:30  BOSTON  SYMPHONY  ORCHESTRA-Live  in  Concert 

Ligeli:  Melodien.  Chopm    Piano  Concerto  No.   1  in  E  Mi- 
nor, Op    1 1   -Alexis  Weissenberg,  piano    Bartok:  Suite  from  The 
Miraculous  Mandarin.  Seiji  Ozavva  conducts.  William  Pierce  hosts. 
Stereo 

10:30         THE  FURTHER  ADVENTURES  OF 

The  waterballoon  has  burst  and  we  were  caught  m  the 
rush.  Satire  and  humor,  with  all  due  irreverence,  about  our  hal- 
lowed leaders-assuming  they  haven't  all  resigned  by  the  time  this 
IS  printed    [Best  of  Further,  reruns,  on  Thursday  the  23rd  and  30th. 
3:30  p  m  J 

11:00         AMONG  CONSENTING  ADULTS 

An  attempt  to  break  down  the  walls  of  fear  and  ignorance 
about  sex  which  still  exist  m  today's  "liberated  society,"  Hosts 
Jeremy  Shapiro  and  Barbara  Spark  invue  you  to  )Oin  m  by  phone 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-jazz-blues&c. 


Wednesday   15 


11:30         REPORT  TO  THE  CONSUMER 

Ida  Honorof  presents  two  articles  from  the  June  '73  issue 
of  Prevention  Magazine  Needle  Anesthesia  and  How  Chinese  Herbs 
and  Acupuncture  Cured  My  Laryngitis 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Rarely  Heard  Qraiorios,  II:  Leonhard  Lechner:  History  of 
the  Passion  and  Suffermngs  of  Christ.  Chnstoph  Demanttus:  Prophecy 
of  the  Sufferings  and  Death  of  C/jf/sf— Spandauer  Kantorei,  Martin 
Behrmann  conductor  (Turnabout  TV  34175),  Alessandro  Scarlatti 
San  Filippo  Neri~Pe\re  Munteanu,  tenor;  Bruna  Rizzoli,  soprano; 
Biancameria  Casom,  mezzo-soprano;  Annamana  Rota,  alto;  Angeli- 
cum  Orchestra  of  Milan,  Franco  Caracciolo  conductor  (Music  Guild 
M-12)    Katherine  Calkin  hosts,  Rescheduled  from  June. 


1:55 


2:00 


REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


PLAY  OF  THE  WEEK: 

"In  the  Matter  of  J.  Robert  Oppenheimer"  In  the  days 
of  Watergate,  and  m  the  month  of  Hiroshima,  it  seemed  fitting  to 
present  the  dramatization  of  the  heannngs  of  the  scientist  whose 
views  on  the  hydrogen  bomb  challenged  the  military  establishment 
The  play  is  by  Heinar  Kipperhardt  and  directed  by  Gordon  David- 
son, The  Center  Theater  Group  of  Los  Angeles  features  Joseph 
Wiseman  as  Oppenheimer 

^,:30  RAMSEY  CLARK:  Crime  in  America 

Details  listed  under  Monday  the  27th,  11  00  p.m. 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  including  Terry  Model's 
dalily  calendar  of  events    Produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

With  crack  reporters  Levitt  on  Hollywood,  Gorelik's 
sports  desk,  and  Boxall  up  m  the  lelehelicopter. 


6:45 


700 


LABOR  REPORT 

Wiih  Paul  Schrade. 

OPINION 
Th 


The  presentation  of  differing  political  viewpoints    Tonight, 
Ron  Ridenour,  contrasted  with  commentary  from  the  conservative 


press 

7:30  OPEN  HOUR 


6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Paul  Vorwerk  plays  musica  luxunans.   the  translation  of 
which,  h     ..   ,urx's  us,  is  luxuriating  music.  News  and  calendar  at  900 

9:30  •     L  r.ORNING  READING 

More  from  rhe  anthology  of  short  stories  written  and 
read  by  American  author  Jomes  Purdy.  A  Spoken  Arts  recording. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Ragas  8fc    from  the  timeless  traditions  of  India. 

11:00         MAN  ON  EARTH 

Ecologist  S  P  P    ry^-^-^r.,  presents  his  thoughts  on  the  very 

'-  f        ,  ^  .  ^■^-^^■•\  ,    i:   o,if  (ri'frit    oloqv 


55 


8:30  FIRST  INTERNATIONAL  FESTIVAL  OF 

CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  AT  LOS  ANGELES  -   I 

The  first  of  three  chamber  music  concerts  sponsored  jointly  by  the 
Los  Angeles  Chapter  of  the  International  Society  for  Contemporary 
Music  (ISCM)  and  Theater  Vanguard.  Peter  Maxwell  Davies:  Hymnos; 
Felice  Quaranta    Strofe  X  ~,  (American  premiere):  Brian  Fennelly 
Evanescences:  Edward  Applebaum:  Shantih;  Daniel  Lentz:  Les  Sirenes 
(world  premiere):  Maurice  Ghana:  Sibylle  (American  premiere).  This 
program  under  the  direction  of  Leonard  Rosenman,  was  recorded  on 
June  8,  1973  at  the  Theater  Vanguard  m  Los  Angeles.  David  Cloud 
provides  commentary.  Technical  production  by  Mark  Rosenthal  and 
Pf..,i  An-,.-ol    '^'.T.'n 


10:00         XA:  A  Vietnam  Primer 

The  Provisional  Theater  presents  a  radio  version  of  its 
highly  successful  "information  theater"  piece,  adapted  and  produced 
especially  for  broadcast  on  KPFK    The  play  unfolds  the  2,000  year 
struggle  of  the  Vietnamese  to  be  free  on  their  own  land    Xa  ts  a 
compelling  artistic  achievement  and  a  genuinely  successful  example 
of  political  theater.  Written  by  Michael  Monroe,  directed  by  Steven 
Kent,  and  produced  by  KPFK's  theater  critic,  Richard  Toscan. 

11:30         DONNY  DELAPLAINE 

A  powerful  and  moving  document  from  a  young  man 
killed  in  Vietnam  whose  letters  home  via  cassette  provide  insight 
into  the  war  experience.  Produced  by  WBAI. 


6:45 
7:00 


WILLIAM  WifMTER:  News  Analysis 


BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  recent  sigtuficant  nows 
terns,  produced  by  the  News  Department. 


7:30 


OPEN  HOUR 


8:30  CLEVELAND  ORCHESTRA  -  Live  in  Concert 

Vivaldi;  Concerto  for  Strings;  Mendelssohn    Violin  Con- 
certo in  D  Minor,  Op    64-Kyung-WhaChung,  violin,  Prokofiev 
Alexander  Nevsky-L\\\  Chookasian.  contralto,  with  the  Blossom 
Festival  Chorus    Riccardo  Muti  conducts.  Robert  Conrad  hosts.  Stereo, 


12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock  blues-jazz  &c. 


thursday    16 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  luxurians.  luxuriating  music,  is  what  you  hear 
when  Paul  Vorwerk  is  around.  News  and  calendar  at  900. 

9:25  REPORT  TO  THE   LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Stories  by  James  Purdy    The  American  author  reads  from 
an  anthology  of  his  short  stories,  a  Spoken  Arts  recording. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC  /  Mario  Casetta 

11:00         FROM  THE  CENTER:  Broadcasting  &  First  Amendment 

The  l^/hitahead  Emancipation  Proclamation:  Interpretations 
of  Clay  T,  Whitehead's  proposals  vary  almost  as  much  as  the  responses 
they   have  provoked    Do  they  represent  more  or  fewer  restrictions  on 
the  broadcast  media?  Why  the  changes  at  all?  What  effect  will  they 
really  have?  To  what  extent  are  they  "sort  of  an  emancipation  procla- 
mation for  the  broadcast  industry?" 

The  National  News  Council-A  Solution?  Roger  Traynor. 
head  cf  the  new  National  News  Council,  describes  how  his  organiza- 
tion could  be  one  way  to  assure  "responsible  and  accurate  television 
news;"  Lord  Ritchie-Calder  reports  on  the  way  a  similar  organization 
has  improved  the  quality  of  the  English  press;  and  Eduard  Goldstue- 
cker  comments  on  his  experiences  with  both  press  and  television  in 
Czechoslovakia    Two  programs  from  the  Center  for  the  Study  of 
Democratic  Institutions.   Rescheduled  from  July. 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Rarely  Heard  Oratorios,  IV:  Cesar  Franck:  Les  Beatitudes- 
Denise  Monteil  and  Chnstiane  Chantel,  sopranos;  Simone  Couder'c 
and  Mona  Kgrys,  mezzo-sopranos;  Denise  Joly,  alto;  Marcel  Huyl- 
brock  and  Jean  Brazzt,  tenors;  Andre  Jonquieres  and  Louis  Maunn, 
baritones,  Pierre  Marret  and  Xavier  Depraz,  basses;  Elisabeth  Brasseur 
Choir  and  Boys  Choir  of  ChaiHot;  Orchestra  of  the  Symphonic  Aca- 
demy of  Pans,  Jean  Alam  conductor  (Musica  Sacra  AMS  31/32), 
Katherine  Calkin  hosts    Rescheduled  from  June. 


10:30         CHINA  TODAY  -  1 

A  two-part  series  exploring  the  Varied  facets  of  the  Chi- 
nese revolution  and  its  impact  on  Chinese  society.  The  program 
features  many  interviews  with  leading  political  and  cultural  persons 
in  China    The  program  is  produced  by  Earl  Ofari  and  Jacquie  Tun- 
berg,  both  of  whom  paid  recent  visits  to  the  country.  Part  II  will 
be  aired  next  week  at  this  time.  (Part  I  rebroadcast  Monday  the 
20th,  3:00  p.m.) 

11:30         APOGEE 

—winds  into  the  fog.  Mitchell  Harding  waits  for  Godot 
with  more  noise  than  usual. 

12:00        CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-blues-iazz&c. 


17    friday 


2:00  INFLATIONARY  SPIRAL:  Japan 

Details  listed  under  Monday  the  27ih,  1 1  30  pm, 

2:30  LIAM  CLANCY:  Words  and  Songs  and  Things 

Details  listed  under  Saturday  the  25th.  7  00  p  m. 

3:15  ASLEEP  AT  THE  WHEEL 

Details  listed  under  Wednesday  the  22nd,  11  30  p  m, 

4:00  FOLK  SCENE  /  Roz  and  Howard  Larman 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady, 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

Everything  you  always  wanted  to  know  about  the  news, 
but  the  others  were  afraid  to  tell  you 


6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  luxurians,   luxuriating  music,  with  Paul  Vorwerk, 
who  breaks  for  news  and  calendar  at  9. 00  am 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Stories  by  James  Purdy.  Continuing  in  the  series  of  short 
stones  read  by  the  author,  from  a  Spoken  Arts  recording. 

10:00  ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Indigenous  music  from  the  Middle  East,  including  both 
Arabic  and  Israeli  cultures. 

11:00         THE  ADVOCATES 

The  audio  portion  of  KCET's  forum. 


21 


12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

A  Tribute  to  Leo  Ornstein.  To  many.  Ornstein  was  an 
evil  genius,  a  great  anarch,  an  iconoclast.  His  gospel  was  black  here- 
sy. But  he  figures  heavily  m  every  book  of  20th  century  music.  He 
was  an  excellent  concert  pianist,  and  the  most  extreme  avant  garde 
composer  of  his  time    Most  audiences  were  appalled  by  his  seeming- 
ly incoherent  pieces.  This  program  is  a  tribute  to  Ornstein  on  his 
80th  birthday,  His  greatest  works  were  written  tn  the  period  1915  - 
1928.  You  will  hear  Michael  Sellers  perform  his  Poems  of  1917  and 
three  tjxcerpts  from  the  collection  Arabesques.  There  are  also  two 
piano  rolls  recorded  by  Ornstem  for  Ampico:  the  composer's  own 
Berceuse  and  Reflets  dans  I'Eau  from  Images.  Book  I,  by  Claude 
Debussy.  Also,  interviews  with  Leo  and  Pauline  Ornstein  recorded 
by  telephone  from  their  home  in    TJorth  Conway,  New  Hampshire. 
Produced  and  narrated  by  Charles  Amirkhanian,  Music  Director  of 
ouf  sister  station,  KPFA  m  Berkeley.  Stereo. 


2:00 


2:30 


3:30 


CRITIQUE 

A  look  at  current  film,  books,  theater,  music. 


POEMS  OF  RATTRAY  AND  VAN  BUSKIRK 

Rebroadcost  from  Friday  the  10th,  8  00  p.m. 


GRASS  ROOTS  SALON 

Elliot  Mitller  discusses  the  animated  cartoon  with  Ron 
Ward,  Vice  President  of  J,  Ward  Productions,  makers  of  Bullwinkle. 
Dudly  DoRight.  and  Super  Chtcker). 

4:00  EARTHLOG 

A  program  of  ecology,  alternatives  and  survival,  hosted 
on  Fridays  by  Wina  Sturgeon,  and  featuring  open  phones. 


5:00 


DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  with  Barbara  Cady, 


6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

While  others  snooze  through  camouflaged  views,  we  choose 
the  news  interesting  to  yous,  .  .  . 


6:45 


6:55 


FOREIGN  PRESS  REPORT:    Arab 

With  Hassan  El  Nouty. 

REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


7:00  BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In-depth  coverage  and  analysts  of  recent  significant  items 
in  the  news,  compiled  by  our  news  departm-jnt. 

8:00  POETRY  -  LIVE!    Oeutsch  and  Cook 

Joel  Dtruisch  is  former  editor  of  the  underground  poetry 
magazine  Meatball.  Geoffrey  Cook  is  a  poet  and  translator  from 
Cleveland,  now  living  m  San  Francisco.  He  translates  from  hardly- 
known  vulgur-laiin  poets,  which  he  will  read  as  well  as  his  own 
work    (to  be  rebroadcast  Friday  the  24th,  2:30  p.m J 

9:00  MUNDO  CHICANO 

Musica  para  La  Raza,  y  Ids  demas  tambien.  News  and 
guests  of  interest  to  the  Chicane  corrmunitv,  with  music  to  do 
right  by.  Host  is  Antonio  Salazar. 


11:00 


2:00 


HOUR  25:  sf 

Mike  Hodel  and  the  Young  Radishes  pn-sent:  who'trr 


SOFT  CORE  PHONOGRAPHY 

Jay  Lacey  plays  mt'llow  music  and  old  radio  delights 

18    Saturday 


■O   c 


8:00  TRANS 

Sn  Aurobindo:  We  celebrate  the  anniversary  of  the  birth 
of  India's  great  20th  century  Sage  with  readings,  chants,  conversa- 
tions and  interviews  with  outstanding  individuals  whose  lives  and 
work  have  been  inspired  by  Aurobindo's  vision, 

9:30  HALF  WAY  DOWN  THE  STAIRS 

With  Uncle  Ruthie  (Ruth  Buelll  Everything  You  Always 
Wanted  to  Know  About  Childhood  Bui  Weic  Not  Allowed  to  Ask. 
Stories,  Fun  and  Games  for  Kids,  and  losponsible  adults, 

10:30  FOLK  MUSIC  /  John  Davis 

12:30         THE  BIG  BROADCAST 

Laura  (drama) 

1:30  PREACHIN'  THE   BLUES 

Frank  Scott  and  sometimes  live  guest  performers  bring 
you  music  uniquely  American,  always  moving. 


3:00 


4:30 


NOMMO 

Coniemporory  soulsounds,  with  Kaimu, 


INSIDE  L.A. 

A  weekly  exploration  of  relevant  social,  cultural  and 
political  developments  happening  around  LA    The  program  is  pro- 
duced by  Earl  Ofan,  and  will  feature  guests  and  open  phones  from 
time  to  time;  with  jazz  to  tie  up  the  package. 


5:50 


6:00 


6:30 


7:00 


WEEKEND  CALENDAR  /  Terry  Hodel 
THE  SATURDAY  NEWS  /  Larry  Moss 

PEOPLE'S  ACTION  UNION   FOR  PEACE  &  JUSTICE 

Interviews  and  analysis  on  current  movement  issues 


YOU  CAN  BEAT  CITY  HALL:  The  Venice  Canals 

Human  rights  vs.  property  nghts  are  at  the  heart  of  the 
five  year  struggle  between  LA.  real  estate  interests  with  the  attenu- 
ating political  apparatus,  and  the  people  of  the  Venice  community. 
This  documentary  will  feature  background  on  the  conflict,  inter- 
views with  residents,  selections  from  the  official  Environmental 
Report  and  tapes  from  the  confrontation  over  a  resident-built  play- 
ground. Produced  by  Linda  Krausen  and  Ruth  Hirschman.  Rebroad- 
cast from  June 


22 


8:00  ZYMURGY:  The  Expanded  Ear 

A  two-hour  survey  of  the  remarkable  sonic  proceedings 
that  transptred  last  April  at  de  Benneville  Pines  in  the  San  Bernar- 
dtno  National  Forest-Nicolas  Slonimsky  and  Dane  Rudhyar  remi- 
niscing, Charles  Amirkhaman's  Heavy  Aspirations,  David  Cloud's 
Fuer  Ludwig.  an  impromptu  realization  of  Steven  BirchaN's  alea- 
tonc  choral  work  Suchness,  and  Six  Acre  Jam,  with  dozens  of  per- 
formers playing  traditional  and  electronic  instruments  out-of-doors. 
The  Expanded  Ear  was  jointly  sponsored  by  KPFK,  KPFA  and 
Source  magazine.  Special  thanks  to  Ken  Friedman,  Charles  Amir- 
khanian,  Donald  Buchia,  and  the  staff  at  de  Benneville  Pines.  Tech 
meal  production  by  Mark  Rosenthal.  Stereo. 

10:00         THE  WILLIAM  MALLOCH  PROGRAMME 

A  musical  (mostly  classical)  treasure  hunt  conducted  by 
the  composer,  critic  and  former  music  director  of  KPFK, 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-folk-blues-iazz-etc-etc. 

Sunday  19 

6:00  THE  SUNDAY  GUMMIES 

West  Coast  Assassins  School  opens  without  a  hitch,  or  a 
pupil    Oscar  sings    "I'm  in  Love  with  a  Hydrocephalic." 

8:00  MUSIC  OF  JOHANN  SEBASTIAN  BACH 

Ninth  Sunday  after  Trinity.  Featured  on  this  program 
will  be  the  Cantata  No.   105,  Herr,  gehe  nicht  ins  Gericht.  Soloists 
and  the  Suisse  Romande  Orchestra  are  conducted  by  Ernest  Anser- 
met  (London  25996) 

9:00  BIO  MEDITATION  W'TH  JACK  GARISS 

Experiential  experimental  exploration  of 
states  of  consciousness. 

10:00         COME  TO  LIFE 

A  human  growth  center  of  the  air  with  Herschel  Lymon 
"We  truly  possess  that  which  we  let  go.  .  .    "  Dr.  Benjamin  Weinin 
ger,  psychoanalyst,  speaks  on  Hazards  of  Being  a  Professional  and 
Brief  and  Sfiort-Term  Psychotf}erapy  at  a  Southern  California  Coun- 
selling Center  workshop 


10:45 


GATHER    ROUND  THE  STAKE 

With  Tom  Riit  and  open  phones 


12:15         JEAN  SHEPHERD:   Humor  from  N.Y.C. 

1:00  THE  SUNDAY  OPERA 

Mozart:  Cosi  fan  fi/ffe-Soloists:   Irmgard  Secfned,  Nan 
Merriman,  Hermann  Prey,  Ernst  Haefliger,  Erika  Koelh,  Dtetnch 
Fischer  Oieskau    RIAS  Chamber  Choir  and  Berlin  Philharmonic  Or 
chesira  ronducied  by  Eugen  Jochum  (DGG   18861/63)    Fred  Hyall 
hosts. 


5:00  MARGARET  WRIGHT  ON  SCHOOLS 

Teiling  it  like  ii  is,  with  open  phones 

6:00  THE  SUNDAY  NEWS  /  Sanford  FidaM 

6:30  VOICE  OF  THE  UNION  OF  VIETNAMESE  IN  THE  U.S. 

6:45  WOMANSPACE 

Ramona  Ripston,  Executive  Director  of  the  Los  Angeles 
branch  of  the  American  Civil  Liberties  Union  explains  in  lay  terms 
the  meaning  and  effect  of  recent  couit  decisions  concerning  women. 
Ms.  Ripston,  a  founding  member  of  the  National  Women's  Political 
Caucus,  explains  what  women's  rights  are  under  the  Constitution 
and  statutory  law.  (to  be  rebroadcast  Tuesday  the  21st,  11  00  a.m.) 

7:30  MUSIC  NOT  FOR  EXPORT:  Neo  Medieval 

D.E.  Inghelbrecht.  Requiem:  l/i?^e/av-Christianc  Eda- 
Pierre,  soprano;  Remy  Corazza.  tenor;  Bernard  Kruysen  and  Ber- 
nard Demigny,  baritones;  Jeanne  Baudry-Godard,  organ;  French 
National  Radio  Orchestra  and  Chorus.  Jean  Fournet  conductor. 
Presented  by  Joe  Cooper, 

8:30  CARLOS  HAGEN  PRESE^JTS 

Reactions  of  listeners  to  last  Sunday's  program  touchmg 
on  rock  groups'  treatment  of  the  classics,  included  such  comments 
as  "there  ought  to  be  a  law"  to  stop  such  practices    This  week  Car- 
los Hagen  discusses  music  and  the  copyright  laws,  illustrated  by  many 
examples,  dealing  with  such  questions  as:  What  compositions  can  be 
arranged  and  tampered  with  without  permission?  What  legal  prolec 
tion  do  composers  have  against  what  they  consider  "abuses"  of  their 
works^  How  much  can  a  performance  vary  from  the  original  compo- 
sition? 

9:30  FOLK  SCENE 

Howard  and  Roz  Larnian  troop  in  again  with  guitars, 
banjos,  new  and  old  recordings,  and  a  gufst  or  two  for  added 
fun.  .  .  so  you  shouldn't  fret. 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-folk-jazz-blues-etc 


20    monday 


6:00 


MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  /uxurians,  luxuriating  music,  hosted  by  Paul 
Vorwerk.  Mews  and  calendar  at  9  00. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Continuing  the  reading  by  James  Purdy  of  an  anthology 
of  his  short  stones,  A  Spoken  Arts  recording, 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Music  of  the  peoples  of  China.  Japan,  Southeast  Asia,  and 
Indonesia,  followed  by  Sounds  of  Africa,  with  Philemon  Hou. 


11:00 
12:00 


OPEIM  HOUR 


NOON  CONCERT 

New  Music  by  Terry  Riley  (1935  ■       ):  Persian  Surgery 
Dervishes  {two  different  realizations! -Terry  Riley,  electric  organ 
and  electronics  IShanti  83501/21.  Dauid  Cloud  hosts.  Stereo, 


2:00 


3:00 


4:00 


THE  CITY  ON  THE  SAND 

Rebroadcast  from  Saturday  the  1  1th.  7  00  p  m 

CHINA  TODAY  -  I 

Rebroadcast  from  Thursd.ry  the  16th,  10.30  pin. 


EARTHLOG 

A  journal  of  alternatives,  hosted  .tnd  pioduced  l»v  Mike 
Hodel.  Features  Mothei  Eaith  News,  vaiious  guests,  .tiul  open  phkMii-<. 

5:00  DEALING 

News  ^M^ti  views  set  to  music,  fe.imting  levievveis  .ind 
cominenlatois  Stephen  Mainhei ,  Helen  KLiblm,  Rich.iid  Toscan  .ind 
Richaid  Gollance,  plus  Teiiy  Model's  c.tleiukii    Pioduced  by  Baib.it.t 
Cady 


6:00 


THE  EVENING  NEWS 

News  in  detail  minus  trivia. 


7:00  SOAP  BOX 

Lowell  Ponte:  a  right-wing  anarchist  viewpoint,  with  open 
phones. 

8:00  LA  RAZA  NUEVA 

Of,  by  and  for  the  Chicane  comnDunity.  A  discussion  of 
what's  happening,  and  why.  Hosted  by  Moctezuma  Esparza. 

9:00  CHAPEL,  COURT  AND  COUNTRYSIDE 

Renaissance  and  Early  Baroque  Music 

More  brass  music  by  various  Renaissance  composers.  Katharine 
Calkin  hosts. 

10:00         NO  APPOINTMENT  NECESSARY:  The  "Professionals" 

Tonight,  astronomer  Steve  Kilston  explores  the  world  of 
the  scientist. 

11:00         THE  UN-ANSWERABLE  QUESTION 

A  possible  philosophical  underpinning  for  the  Ecology 
Movement  dealing  with  multiple  perceptual  universes  and  the  inter- 
penetration  of  mind  and  body.  Excerpts  from  Bach's  B  Minor  Mass 
are  included.  The  test  is  written  and  narrated  by  Mitchell  Harding. 
Originally  heard  as  part  of  KPFK  programming  on  the  Prophetic 
Visionary,  (to  be  rebroadcast  Monday  the  27th,  2:00  p.m.) 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-jazz-blues-and  such 


tuesday    21 


6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  luxurians,  luxuriating  music,  with  Paul  Vorwerk. 
The  news  and  calendar  come  on  at  9:00  a.m. 


12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Purcell:  The  Fairy  Queers  (concert  version).  Soloists:  Jen- 
nifer Vyvyan,  Peter  Pears.  John  Shirley-Quirk,  Ian  Partridge,  Owen 
Brannigan.  Ambrosian  Chorus  and  English  Chamber  Orchestra  con- 
ducted by  Benjamin  Britten.  Stereo.  Katherine  Calkin  hosts. 


2:00 


3:00 


SPECTRUM  /  Carlos  Hagen 


HUNGARY  SINCE  1956:  A  Communist  View 

Colin  Edwards  interviews  George  Makai,  correspondent 
for  the  Hungarian  Illustrated  Weekly.  Makai  discusses  how  the  West 
views  Hungary— especially  the  1956  uprising,  and  with  particular 
emphasis  on  the  political/economic  structure  of  Hungary.  He  goes 
on  to  comment  on  Western  influences,  such  as  rock  and  roll,  and 
the  like,  as  well  as  the  lack  of  political  orientation  of  some  of  Hurv 
gary's  youth,  and  proposes  some  specific  solutions. 

4:00  MUSIC  BLACK  AND  WHITE 

The  music  of  both  poor  black  and  poor  white  mixed 
masterfully  together  by  Nawana  Davis. 


5:00 


6:00 


6:45 


7:00 


DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

THE  EVENING  NEWS 

All  the  news  that's  print  to  fit. 

FOREIGN  PRESS  REPORT:  France 

With  Georges  Cleyet. 


BEYOND  THE  NEWS 
In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  current  significant 
news  stones,  produced  by  KPFK's  News  Department. 


7:30 


OPEN  HOUR 


8:30  BOSTON  SYMPHONY  ORCHESTRA-Live  in  Concert 

Mozart:  Symphony  No.  31  in  D  Major,  K  297.  Messiaen; 
Et  expecto  resurrectionem  mortuorum.  Brahms:  Piano  Concerto 
No.  2  in  B-Flat  Major,  Op.  83-Misha  Dichter,  piano.  Michael  Til- 
son  Thomas  conducts.  William  Pierce  hosts.  Stereo. 


9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Stories  by  James  Purdy.  The  author  reads  from  an  anti 
logy  of  his  works,  from  a  Spoken  Arts  recording. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC  /  Mario  Casetta 


10:30         THE  FURTHER  ADVENTURES  OF 

Secret  agents  Halderhoffen  and  Ehrlichson  track  down 
the  electricians  and  plumbers,  on  orders  from  Dicky  Duck,  with- 
out whom  none  of  this  would  have  been  impossible.    (Best  of  Fur- 
ther, reruns,  Thursday  the23rd  and  30lh,  3:30  p.m.) 


11:00         WOMANSPACE 

Rebroadcast  from  Sunday  the  19th,  6:45  p.m. 


-,  a- 


3  3 


11:00         GAY  AT  HEART 

Richard  Gollance  discusses  matters  important  to  the  Gay 
community,  with  participation  of  the  listening  audience  by  phone. 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-blues-jazz-&c. 

22    ^vednesday 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Paul  Vorwerk  and  musica  luxurians.  with  a  break  for 
news  and  calendar  at  9  00  a.m. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

Last  m  the  series  of  James  Purdy  reading  from  an  antho- 
logy of  his  short  stories;  from  a  Spoken  Arts  recording. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Ragas  and  other  morning  music  from  the  timeless 
traditions  of  India. 

11:00         MAN  ON  EARTH 

A  series  of  talks  by  noted  ecologist  S.P.R.  Charter. 

11:30         REPORT  TO  THE  CONSUMER 

Consumer  advocate  Ida  Honorof  presents  an  article  from 
Prevention  Magazine,  Acupuncture  Without  Needles,  written  by  the 
publications's  executive  editor,  Harold  J.  Taub. 


24 


12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

The  Complete  Piano  Music  of  Saint-Saens,  I:  Piano  Con- 
certo No.   1  in  D,  Op-  17;  Piano  Concerto  No.  2  in  G  Minor,  Op, 
22;  Piano  Concerto  No.  3  m  E-Flat,  Op,  29-Aldo  Ciccolini,  piano; 
Orchestre  de  Pans  conducted  by  Serge  Baudo.  Etude  en  forme  de 
ra/je— Aldo  Ciccolini,  piono  (Seraphim  SIC  6081).  Wedding  Cake— 
Theodore  Letlvm,  piano  (Columbia  M  30677),  Stereo.  Katherine 
Calkin  hosts. 


1:55 


REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


2:00  PLAY  OF  THE  WEEK:  Ulysses 

The  dramatized  version  of  the  James  Joyce  novel  features 
Milo  O'Shea,  Barbara  Jefford,  and  Maurice  Roeves.  Based  on  Joseph 
Strick's  film  and  directed  by  him. 

4:00  EARTHLOG 

Mike  Model  hosts  this  program  of  alternative,  which  often 
features  m-studio  guests  and  open  phones. 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

Ne-ws  spelled  backwards  in  swen.  And  we  report  the 
news  swen  it  happens. 

6:45  LABOR  REPORT 

With  the  Student  Worker  Action  Coalition. 

7:00  OPINION 

The  presentation  of  differing  political  viewpoints.  Tonight, 
Tom  Hayden  of  the  Indochina  Peace  Coalition,  contrasted  with 
comnentary  fromthe  conservative  press, 

7:30  OPEN  HOUR 


Christo:  A  selection  from  Source  Magazine 
Music  of  the  Avant  Garde. 

8:30  FIRST  INTERNATIONAL  FESTIVAL  OF 

CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  AT  LOS  ANGELES  -  II 

The  second  of  three  chamber  music  concerts  sponsored  jointly  by 
the  Los  Angeles  Chapter  of  the  International  Society  for  Contem- 
porary Music  (ISCM)  and  Theater  Vanguard.  Edward  Boguslawski: 
Metamorphoses:  Nguyen  Thien  Dao:  Tay  Nguyen:  George  Heussen- 
stamm:  Tre  Celli  (world  premiere);  Morton  Feldman    The  Viola  in 
My  Life  (parts  I  and  111);  Daniel  Kessner:  Interactions  (American 
premiere);  Donal  Michalsky:  Three  Times  Four.  This  program  is 
under  the  direction  of  Leonard  Stein.  David  Cloud  provides  com- 
mentary. Technical  production  by  Mark  Rosenthal  and  Fred  Ampel. 
Recorded  at  the  Theater  Vanguard  m  Los  Angeles.  Stereo. 


10:00         WATERGATE:  "Naked  To  Mine  Enemies" 

Part  I:  The  Break-in.  Cardinal  Wolsey's  line  from  Shake- 
speare's histories,  as  quoted  by  Senator  Sam  Ervin,  Chairman  of 
the  Senate  Select  Committee  on  Presidential  Campaign  Activities, 
serves  as  the  theme  for  this  documentary.  Today:  Events  leading 
up  to  and  mcluding  the  break-in  at  Democratic  National  Committee 
Headquarters  on  June  17,  1972.  The  participants  include  Bernard 
Barker,  Anthony  Ulasewicz,  James  McCord,  Jeb  Stuart  Magruder, 
and  others.  Produced  by  Mike  Model  and  Steven  Tyler.  This  pro- 
gram is  dedicated  to  President  Richard  M.  Nixon,  without  whom 
it  would  not  have  been  possible— or  perhaps  even  necessary.  Part  II 
will  air  next  Wednesday  at  this  same  time.  (Part  I  rebroadcast  on 
Thursday  the  23rd,  2:00  p.m.) 

11:30         ASLEEP  AT  THE  WHEEL:  An  Interview 

A  very  good  picture  of  the  music  business  from  a  country 
band  (actually  two  members  of  same)  that  reveals  startling  details 
about  the  Jefferson  Airplane  ("cocaine  addicts"),  Jerry  Wexler  ("the 
man's  sick,  he's  senile")  and  others.  Produced  by  Jim  Strong  of 
KPFT,  our  sister  station  in  Houston. 

12:15         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-blues-jazz  &c. 


23    thursday 


6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  luxurians,  luxuriating  music,  is  played  by  Paul 
Vorwerk,  with  a  break  for  news  and  calendar  at  9:00. 

9:25  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

The  Radio.  A  series  of  stereo  radio  dramas  produced  by 
our  sister  station  in  New  York,  WBAI,' 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC  /  Mario  Casetta 

11:00  FROM  THE  CENTER 

Judging  the  Supreme  Court.  Robert  M,  Hutchins,  former 
Dean  of  the  Yale  Law  School  and  now  Chairman  of  the  Center  for 
the  Study  of  Democratic  Institutions,  examines  the  political  role 
played  by  the  Supreme  Court  and  considers  the  long-term  influence 
that  will  be  exerted  by  Nijon  appointees. 

Stumbling  Blocks  to  Social  Planning.   Kenneth  E,F,  Watt 
of  the  Institute  of  Ecology  at  U.C.  Davis  discusses  defects  in  insti- 
tutional planning  m  the  U.S,  He  questions  further  development  and 
the  lack  of  objective  analyses  of  all  the  consequences  of  develop- 
ment options.  He  suggests  a  response  to  these  defects. 

25 


12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Instrumental  Music  of  Hoist  and  Ireland.  Hoist:  Lyric 
Movement  for  Viola  and  Small  Orchestra— Cecil  Aronowitz,  viola. 
Brook  Green  Suite  for  strings.  Nocturne  for  strings.  Fuga/  Concerto 
for  flute,  oboe,  and  stnngs-William  Bennet,  flute;  Peter  Graeme, 
oboe;  English  Chamber  Orchestra  conducted  by  Imogen  Hoist. 
Ireland:  A  London  Overture;  Epic  March;  The  Holy  Boy;  Concer- 
tino Pastorate;  A  Oownfand  Suite;  Prelude— The  Forgotten  Rite- 
London  Philharmonic  Orchestra  conducted  by  Sir  Adrian  Boult. 
Katherine  Calkin  hosts.  Stereo. 


12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

(Vtuspc  from  Germany.  Heinrich  Konietzny:   Variations  for 
Mandolin  and  String  Orchestra;  Anton  Eberl:   Variations  and  Rondo 
for  Harp;  Carl  Mana  von  Weber;  Symphony  No.  2  in  C  Major; 
Richard  Strauss:  Three  Songs;  Wolfgang  Former:  Cycle  for  Celln, 
Winds,  Harp,  and  Percussion.  David  Berger  hosts.  Tapes  courtesy  of 
the  Association  of  German  Broadcasters.  Stereo. 

2:00  CRITIQUE 

A  look  at  current  books,  film,  music.  Theater, 


2:00  WATERGATE:  "Naked  To  Mine  Enemies" 

Part  I.  Rebroadcast  from  Wednesday  the  22nd,  10:00  p.m. 

3:30  BEST  OF  FURTHER 

Selections  from  The  Further  Adventures  of. 

4:00  FOLK  SCENE  /  Howard  and  Roz  Larman 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

A  reality  break,  for  those  who  can  take  it. 

6:45  WILLIAM  WINTER:  News  Analysis 

7:00  BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  recent  important  news 
stories.  Produced  by  KPFK's  News  Department. 

7:30  OPEN  HOUR 


2:30  POETRY  -  LIVE!  Deutsch  and  Cook 

Rebroadcast  from  Friday  the  17th,  800  p.m. 

3:30  GRASS  ROOTS  SALON 

Decia  Baker  speaks  with  famed  industrialist  and  art  con- 
noisseur, Armand  Hammer,  about  his  life  as  an  art  patron. 

4:00  EARTHLOG 

Ecology  is  the  theme  of  this  program,  hosted  on  Fridays 
by  Wina  Sturgeon,  who  invites  your  participation  by  phone. 

5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

For  mature  audiences  only. 

6:45  FOREIGN  PRESS  REPORT:    Germany 

With  Julius  Kirn, 

6:55  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


8:30  CLEVELAND  ORCHESTRA  -  Live  In  Concert 

Rossini:  Overture  to  "Semiramide;"  Schumann:  Piano 
Concerto  in  A  /W/nor-Malcolm  Frager,  piano;  Franck;  Symphony 
in  D  Minor.  Riccardo  Muti  conducts.  Robert  Conrad  hosts.  Stereo. 
(Blossom  Festival  Concert) 

10:30        CHINA  TODAY  -  II 

The  second  of  a  two-part  series  exploring  the  varied  facets 
of  the  Chinese  revolution  and  its  impact  on  Chinese  society,  with 
many  interviews  and  recordings  of  talks  with  leading  political  and 
cultural  persons  in  China.  The  producers.  Earl  Ofari  and  Jacquie 
Tunberg,  have  both  recently  returned  from  trips  to  China,  (to  be 
rebroadcast  Monday  the  27ih,  3:00  p.m.) 

11:30         APOGEE 

—will  play  with  your  head.  Mitchell  Harding  isn't  sure 
it's  legal  but  he's  witling. 


12:00 


NIGHTANGELS 

Mostly  Bluegrass  with  Phil  Tuttle,  or  the  transmitter  trip. 


7:00  BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  recent  significant  news 
stories,  produced  by  KPFK's  News  Department. 

8:00  DAVID  MELTZER  READING  HIS  POETRY 

The  San  Francisco  poet  and  author  of  Luna  and  Dark 
Continent  read  his  poetry  at  Chaiterton's  Bookshop  in  Los  Angeles 
In  February  1973,  He  is  introduced  by  Jack  Hirschman.  (to  be  re- 
broadcast Friday  the  31st.  2:30  p,m. 

9:00  MUNDO  CHICANO 

Musica  para  La  Raza  y  los  demas  tambien.  News  and 
guests  of  interest  to  the  Chtcano  and  Latino  communities,  with  the 
music  to  match.  Hosted  by  Antonio  Salazar. 

11:00         HOUR  25:  sf 

Science  and  science  fiction,  for  those  who  want  it. 
[",  .  .    If  anyone  cared.  .  ." 

2:00  SOFT  CORE  PHONOGRAPHY 

Mellow  music  and  old  radio  goodies  with  Jay  Lacey. 


friday  24 


6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  fuxurians.  luxuriating  music,  with  Paul  Vorwerk. 
The  news  and  calendar  come  on  at  9:00. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

The  Radio.  A  series  of  stereo  radio  dramas  produced  by 
our  sister  station  in  New  York,  WBAI. 

10:00  ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Indigenous  music  from  the  Middle  East,  embracing  the 
heritages  of  both  Arab  and  Israeli  traditions. 

11:00         THE  ADVOCATES 

The  audio  portion  of  KCET's  forum. 


25    Saturday 


8:00  TRANS 

Sadguru  Keshavadas:  Since  childhood,  Sant-ji  has  had 
profound  spiritual  experience  and  sung  the  Lord's  name.  A  former 
lawyer,  now  a  teacher  of  Yoga,  and  a  family  man,  this  master  of 
kirtan  tours  the  world  with  his  family— a  harbinger  of  the  new  world 
religion  of  Peace  and  Love.  Kirtan  is  a  spiritual  art  form-unique  to 
India— which  consists  of  story  telling,  quoting  from  and  interpreting 
Scriptures,  leading  spiritual  gatherings  in  chanting,  prayer,  meditation 
and  performing  devotional  songs  and  stories. 

9:30  HALF  WAY  DOWN  THE  STAIRS 

With  Uncle  Ruthie  (Ruth  Buell).  Everything  You  Always 
Wanted  to  Know  About  Childhood  But  Were  Not  Allowed  to  Ask. 
Stories,  Fun  and  Games  for  Kids,  and  responsible  adults. 

10:30         FOLK  MUSIC  /  John  Davis 


26 


12:30         THE  BIG  BROADCAST 

Four  of  a  Kind;  Return  to  Dust  (Suspense). 

1:30  PREACHIN'  THE  BLUES 

Frank  Scott,  sometimes  with  guests,  brings  you  tastes  of 
this  unique  and  vital  American  music. 


3:00 


4:30 


NOMMO 

Contemporary  soulsounds,  with  Kaimu. 


INSIDE  L.A. 

Examining  the  relevant  social,  cultural  and  political  de- 
velopments happening  in  LA.  The  program,  produced  by  Earl 
Ofari,  will  sometimes  feature    live  guests,  sometimes  open  phones, 
and  always  jazz  interludes. 

5:50  WEEKEND  CALENDAR  /  Terry  Hodel 


6:00 


7:00 


THE  SATURDAY  NEWS  /  Larry  Moss 

THE  CONSCIOUSNESS  INDUSTRY 

Reviews,  mostly  of  books,  with  Bob  Gottlieb. 


LIAM  CLANCY:  Words  and  Songs  and  Things 

The  Irish  folksinger  talks  about  life  in  Ireland  and  presents 
songs  that  express  the  spirit  of  the  people;  he  touches  on  the  fisher- 
men and  their  lives,  the  problems  of  Ireland,  the  history  of  the  IRA, 
the  various  factions  and  the  present  situation,  about  old  men  who  sit 
in  the  park  and  watch  pretty  girls  on  their  lunch  hour;  about  child- 
ren growing  up,  their  innocence,  and  their  eventual  loss  of  innocence. 
Liam  is  witty  and  charming,  and  his  songs  are  just  great. 


Alden  Ashforth  (left/  and  Paul  Reale 
8:00  2YMURGY 

Music  past  and  music  future  are  both  present  in  music  now. 

A  free-wheeling  discussion  between  KPFK's  Music  Director  David 
Cloud  and  two  UCLA  composers,  Alden  Ashforth  and  Paul  Reale. 
Subjects  will  include:  a  disputation  of  the  notion  that  classical  mu- 
sic IS  currently  in  a  continuously  experimental  period;  the  concept 
of  a  "fluctuating  stasis"  in  which  all  styles  and  techniques  are  simul- 
taneously available  to  the  cognizant  contemporary  composer;  the  es- 
sential versus  artificial  distinctions  between  "popular"  and  "classical" 
music;  tributaries  from  music  of  the  past  to  the  current  state  of  a 
"terza  prattica"  encompassing  all  styles;  new  inputs  from  technology 
including  such  experimental  techniques  as  the  application  of  bio- 
feedback brainwave  control  to  electronic  synthesizers;  and  prognoses 
of  potential  future  developments.  The  program's  aural  demonstra- 
tions will  include  live  performances  of  excerpts  from  prescient  20th 
century  works,  examples  of  current  electronic  works,  and  the  world 
premiere  of  a  new  work  by  Paul  Reale  written  for  cellist  Terry  King. 

10:00         THE  WILLIAM  MALLOCH  PROGRAMME 

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

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-fotk-bluesjazz  &  stuff 


26    Sunday 


6:00  THE  SUNDAY  GUMMIES 

A  retired  whale  milker  whittles  false  teeth  for  Pirana, 


I 


8:00  MUSIC  OF  JOHANN  SEBASTIAN  BACH 

Tenth  Sunday  after  Trinity.  The  Cantata  No.   101.  Nimm 
von  uns,  Herr,  du  treuer  Gott,  wilt  be  featured  on  this  program. 
Soloists  and  the  Suisse  Romande  Orchestra  are  conducted  by  Ern- 
est Ansermet  (London  26098). 

9:00  BIO-MEDITATION  WITH  JACK  GARISS 

Experiential  experimental  exploration  of 
states  of  consciousness. 

10:00         COME  TO  LIFE 

A  human  growth  center  of  the  air.  with  Herschel  Lymon. 
"Depression  is  a  belief  in  one's  own  helplessness."  An  inquiry  into 
some  of  the  latest  theories  about  psychological  depression  and  what 
can  be  done  about  it. 

10:45         GATHER  ROUND  THE  STAKE 

With  Torn  Ritt  and  open  phones. 

12:15         JEAN  SHEPHERD:  Humor  from  N.Y.C. 

1:00  TENOR  OF  THE  TIMES 

Fred  Hyatt  previously  said  he  would  do  it,  and  do  it  he 
will-  He  has  gathered  together  all  the  known  (to  him}  recordings 
by  the  great  Lauritz  Melchior  of  excerpts  from  Verdi's  Otello  and 
will  play  them  for  you  in  this  special  edition  of  Tenor  of  tfie  Times. 

1:30  THE  SUNDAY  OPERA 

Bizet:  Carmen-Sotoists:  Marilyn  Home,  James  McCracken, 
Tom  Krause,  Adrians  Maliponte.  The  Metropolitan  Opera  Orchestra 
and  Children's  Chorus  with  the  Manhattan  Opera  Chorus  conducted 
by  Leonard  Bernstein  (DGG  2709043).  Stereo.  Fred  Hyatt  hosts. 

5:00     MARGARET  WRIGHT  ON  SCHOOLS 

Telling  it  like  it  is,  with  open  phones. 


6:30 


6:45 


THE  SUNDAY  NEWS  /  Sanford  Fidell 


VOICE  OF  THE  UNION  OF  VIETNAMESE  IN  THE  U.S. 


WOMANSPACE 

Two  poets,  Joni  Gordon  and  Deena  Metzger,  read  some 
recent  works  at  Womanspace   This  is  the  last  of  the  special  summer 
series  on  Womanspace.  Next  month  Clare  Spark  Loeb's  Sour  Apple 
Tree  returns,  (to  be  rebroadcast  Tuesday  the  28th,  11:00  a  m.) 

7:30  MUSIC  NOT  FOR  EXPORT:  Poetry  from  Languedoc 

Deodat  de  Severac:  En  Languedoc- M6o  Ciccolmi,  piano; 
Cerrfana— Jean-Joel  Barbier,  piano.  Presented  by  Joe  Coopei. 


2/ 


8:30  CARLOS  HAGEN  PRESENTS 

The  Sounds  and  Soul  of  Rural  America.  On  the  last  Sun- 
day of  each  month,  Carlos  Hagen  presents  the  favorite  sounds  and 
artists  of  country,  rural  and  working  America. 


^M 

Hi 

IH! 

^^^g^ 

■1  ^"^Jk 

^^^^Hr       ^i«.' 

'  ^X^ 

^^'^■B 

^  i|t  1 

^~\^j^M 

WK                ^^^^^^H 

^^r^W 

^    I 

^^v  ^  ^  I'^k  ^^^^^^^^H 

wUm 

B#^9i 

9:30  FOLK  SCENE 

Guitars,  banjos,  new  and  old  recordings,  and  a  guest  or 
two  for  added  fun  come  along  with  the  Larmans.  So  don't  fret,  .  .  . 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rockblues-jazz-etc. 

monday  27 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Music  musica  luKurians  luxuriating,  hosted  by  Paul 
Vorwerk.  News  and  calendar  at  9:00  a.m. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

The  Radio.  A  series  of  stereo  radio  dramas  produced  by 
our  sister  station  in  New  York,  WBAI. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC  * 

Music  of  the  peoples  of  China,  Japan,  Southeast  Asia  and 
Indonesia,  followed  by  Sounds  of  Africa  with  Philemon  Hou. 

11:00         OPEN  HOUR 


5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  featuring  reviewers  and  com- 
mentators Stephen  Mamber,  Helen  Koblin,  Richard  Toscan  and 
Richard  Gollance  on  various  days,  and  Terry  Model's  calendar.  Pro- 
duced by  Barbara  Cady. 


6:00 

6:45 
7:00 

8:00 


THE  EVENING  NEWS 

Tonight,  a  brand  new  show— with  all  new  stories. 

REPORT  TO  THE  CONSUMER:  Ida  Honorof 

SOAP  BOX 

Dorothy  Healey:  A  communist  viewpoint  with  open  phones. 


LA  RAZA  NUEVA 

Of,  by  and  for  the  Chicano  community.  A  discussion  of 
what's  happening,  and  why.  Hosted  by  Moctezuma  Esparza. 

9:00  CHAPEL,  COURT  AND  COUNTRYSIDE 

Renaissance  and  Early  Baroque  Music 

Giovanni  Francesco  Anerio:  Missa  pro  defunctis.  A  setting  of  the 
Requiem  by  a  pupil  of  Palestnna.  The  choir  of  the  Carmelite  Pri- 
ory is  conducted  by  George  Malcolm  (L'Oiseau-lyre  SOL  60042). 
Katherine  Calkin  hosts.  Stereo, 

10:00         NO  APPOINTMENT  NECESSARY:  The  "Professionals" 

Tonight,  social  psychiatrist  Isidore  Ziferstein  explores  his 
profession  and  related  topics. 

11:00         RAMSEY  CLARK:  Crime  in  America 

This  speech,  before  a  forum  of  the  Center  for  the  Study 
of  Democratic  Institutions  held  in  Houston,  was  recorded  by  our 
sister  Pacifica  Station  there  KPFT.  The  program  was  produced  by 
Jim  Strong. 

11:30         INFLATIONARY  SPIRAL:  Japan 

Steve  Hart  of  the  Bay  Area  Institute  talks  with  John 
Spragens,  a  teacher  who  has  spent  the  last  three  years  in  Japan. 
They  discuss  Japan's  entry  into  the  inflationary  spiral,  and  give 
specific  examples  of  price  increases  and  governmental  and  people's 
reactions.  They  point  out  the  role  of  Japan's  corporate  giants  in 
creating  high  prices  and  decreased  supply  of  essential  food  pro- 
ducts. Produced  for  KPFA  by  the  Bay  Area  Institute. 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-jazzblues&c. 


28    tuesday 


12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

New  Music  from  Holland.  Ton  de  Leeuw:  Music  for  Strings— 
Netherlands  Broadcasting  Foundation  Orchestra,  Jean  Fournet  conduc- 
tor   Peter  Schai:   Theme  for  Solo  Oboe  and  Wnrfs  -Han  de  Vries,  oboe; 
Netherland  Wind  Ensemble,  Peter  Schat  conductor.  Jan  Vriend:  Huan- 
tan  for  Organ  and  Winds-Jan  Vriend,  organ;  Netherland  Broadcasting 
Foundation  Wind  Ensemble,  Hans  Vonk  conductor,  David  Porcelijn: 
/?eQu/em-Percussion  Group  Amsterdam.  Rob  du  Bois:  Le  Concerto 
pour  Hrisanide- Aiexandre  Hrisanide,  soloist;  Hilversum  Radio  Cham- 
ber Orchestra,  Roelof  Krol  conductor.  Ton  de  Leeuw:  Night  Music- 
Abbie  de  Quant,  piccolo  and  flutes.  Tristan  Keuris:  Concerto  for  Alto 
Saxophone  and  Orchestra~^6  Boogaard,  alto  saxophone;  Hilversum 
Radio  Philharmonic  Orchestra,  Diego  Masson  conductor.  David  Cloud 
hosts.  Program  material  courtesy  of  Radio  Nederland.  Stereo. 


2:00 


4:00 


THE  UN  ANSWERABLE  QUESTION 

Rebroadcast  from  Monday  the  20th,  11  00  p.m. 

CHINA  TODAY  -  II 

Rebroadcast  from  Thursday  the  23rd,  10:30  p.m. 


EARTHLOG 

A  journal  of  alternatives,  featuring  Mother  Earth  News, 
instudio    guests  and  open  phones.  Mike  Model  produces. 


6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Paul  Vorwerk's  choice  of  musica  fuxurians,  luxuriating 
music,  with  news  and  calendar  at  900  a.m. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

The  Radio.  Continuing  the  series  of  stereo  radio  dramas 
produced  by  our  sister  station  in  New  York,  WBAI. 


10:00 
11:00 

12:00 

2:00 
3:00 

4:00 


ETHNIC  MUSIC  /  Mario  Casetta 

WOMANSPACE 

Rebroadcast  from  Sunday  the  26th,  6:45  p.m. 

NOON  CONCERT 

A  program  of  new  releases,  Katherine  Calkin  hosts.  Stereo. 

SPECTRUM  /  Carlos  Hagen 

THE  CALIFORNIA-APARTHEID  TRIANGLE 

Details  listed  under  Thursday  the  30th,  1030  p.m. 


MUSIC  BLACK  AND  WHITE 

The  music  of  poor  black  and  that  of  poor  white,  mixed 
masterfully  together  by  Nawana  Davis. 


5:00 


6:00 


6:45 


7:00 


DEALING 

News  and  veiws  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

THE  EVENING  NEWS 

With  film  clips  when  available. 

FOREIGN  PRESS  REPORT:  Sweden 

From  Radio  Sweden. 


BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  recent  significant  news 
items,  produced  by  KPFK's  News  Department. 


7:30 
8:30 


OPEN  HOUR 


BOSTON  SYIVIPHONY  ORCHESTRA-Live  in  Concert 

Beethoven:  Violin  Concerto  in  D  Major,  Op,  61-Zino 
Francescatti.  viotin.  Mahler:  Symphony  No.  5  in  C-Sharp  Minor. 
Michael  Tilson  Thomas  conducts.  William  Pierce  hosts.  Stereo. 

10:30         THE  FURTHER  ADVENTURES  OF 

All  previous  programs  are  inoperative.  We  would  like  to 
dedicate  this  program  to  the  Commander  in  Chief,  without  whom 
we  wouldn't  have  this  program,  or  have  been  subjected  to  all  this 
fun.     (rebroadcast  of  Best  of  Further,  Thursday  the  30th,  3  30  p  m.l 

11:00         AIVIONG  CONSENTING  ADULTS 

An  attempt  to  break  down  the  walls  of  fear  and  ignorance 
about  sex  which  still  exists  in  today's  "liberated  society."  Hosts 
Jeremy  Shapiro  and  Barbara  Spark  invite  you  to  participate  by  phone, 

12:00         CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-bluesjazz-gic. 


2:00  PLAY  OF  THE  WEEK:  The  Little  Prince 

For  this  special,  we  depart  from  the  usual  play  format  of 
Wednesday  matinees  to  hear  Peter  Ustinov  present  the  marvelous 
work  by  Antoine  de  Saint-Exupery  in  a  new  Argo  recording.  The 
reading  will  be  followed  by  music  very  French,  and  dedicated  to 
the  little  protagonist,  avec  de  grosses  bises,  from  Jane  Gordon. 

4:00  EARTHLOG 

Mike  Hodel  hosts  this  program  dedicated  to  alternatives, 
featuring  Mother  Earth  News,  guests,  open  phones,  and  more. 


5:00  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 


Wednesday    29 


6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Musica  /uxurians,  luxuriating  music  which  does  the  same 
to  you,  is  brought  on  by  Paul  Vorwerk.  with  news  and  calendar  at  9. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

The  Radio:  A  series  of  radio  dramas  produced  by  our 
sister  station  m  New  York,  WBAI.    In  stereo. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Ragas  and  other  morning  music  from  the  timeless 
traditions  of  India. 


11:00 


MAN  ON  EARTH 

A  series  of  talks  by  noted  ecologist  S.P.R.  Charter. 


11:30         REPORT  TO  THE  CONSUMER 

Loviering  The  Boom  on  Blue  Cross:  'The  public,  not  the 
doctors,  must  control  health  insurance.  .  .  ."  From  an  article  by 
Michael  Clark,  Associate  Editor  of  Prevention  Magazine,  read  by 
Ida  Honorof. 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

The  Complete  Piano  Music  of  Saint-Saens,  II:  Piano  Con- 
certo No.  4  in  C  Minor,  Op.  44;  Piano  Concerto  No.  5  in  f.  Op. 
103  ("Egyptian")-Aldo  Ciccolini,  piano.  Septet  in  S-Ffat,  Op.  65- 
Groupe  Instrumental  de  Pans;  John  Laforge,  piano.  Carnival  of  the 
Animals— M6o  Ciccolini  and  Alexis  Weissenberg,  pianos.  Stereo. 
Katharine  Calkin  hosts. 


1:55 


REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

War  news,  more  news,  without  the  bore  and  gore  news. 
And  sometimes  the  Agnews. 


6:45 


LABOR  REPORT 


7:00  OPINION 

Presentation  of  differing  political  viewpoints,  tonight 
featuring  Ron  Rrdenour  and  conservative  press  selections. 

7:30  OPEN  HOUR 


8:30  FIRST  INTERNATIONAL  FESTIVAL  OF 

CONTEMPORARY  MUSIC  AT  LOS  ANGELES  -  III 

The  third  of  three  chamber  music  concerts  sponsored  jointly  by 
the  Los  Angeles  chapter  of  the  International  Society  for  Contem- 
porary Music  (ISCM)  and  Theater  Vanguard.  Hubert  Howe    Freeze; 
Aurelio  de  la  Vega:  Labanum:  Eleanor  Cory:  Tempi:  Zsolt  Durko: 
Iconography  No.  2  (American  premiere);  George  Crumb:  Black  An- 
gels; Iannis  Xenakis:  Anaktoria.  This  program  under  the  direction  of 
William  Kraft.  David  Cloud  provides  commentary.  Technical  produc- 
tion by  Mark  Rosenthal  and  Fred  Ampel.  Recorded  June  10,  1973 
at  the  Theater  Vanguard  in  Los  Angeles.  Stereo. 

29 


10:00        WATERGATE:  "Naked  To  Mine  Enemies" 

Part  II:  The  Cover-up.  When  the  Watergate  break-in  was 
foiled,  it  uncovered  a  scandal  that  may  not  be  fully  explored  for 
years.  In  this  program,  a  look  at  the  efforts  to  hide  the  involve- 
ment by  the  White  House  in  the  affair  and  the  subsequent  events. 
Produced  by  Mike  Hodel  and  Steven  Tyler.  Ito  be  rebroadcast  on 
Thursday  the  30th,  2:00  p.m.) 

11:30         OAOA  PIANISSIMO 

A  mini-concert  of  avant-garde  piano  music.  Peter  Garland: 
Two  Persian  Miniatures;  Harold  Budd:  Lovely  Thing;  John  Cage: 
4'  33";  David  Cloud:  Sonata  Electronics  No.   J  (for  electronically 
altered  piano  sounds);  John  Cage:  Variations  iV.  David  Cloud  is  the 
pianist  and  commentator.  Stereo. 

12:00        CAPTAIN  MIDNIGHT:  rock-blues-jazz&c. 


thursday    30 


6;00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Paul  Vorwerk  plays  luxuriating  music,  with  a  break  at 
9:00  for  news  and  Terry  Model's  calendar  of  events. 

9:25  REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

The  Radio.  Continuing  in  the  series  of  stereo  radio  dramas 
produced  by  our  sister  station  tn  New  York.  WBAI. 

10:00        ETHNIC  MUSIC  /  Mario  Casena 

30 


11:00         FROM  THE  CENTER 

Socialism  for  the  Rich.  The  military-industrial  complex, 
says  Walter  Adams,  Professor  of  Economics  at  Michigan  Slate  Uni- 
versity, is  only  an  illustrative  footnote  to  the  enormous  concentra- 
tion of  economic  power  in  which  government  and  big  business  have 
become  partners,  with  government  taking  the  risks  and  big  business 
taking  the  profits.  Neil  Jacoby,  economic  advisor  to  two  Presidents, 
forcefully  disagrees.    A  program  from  the  Center  for  the  Study  of 
Democratic  Institutions. 

12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Franz  Joseph  Haydn:  Symphony  No.  36  in  C  Major 
("Echo");  Symphony  No.  42  in  D  Major:  Symphony  No.  48  in 
C  Major  ("Maria  Theresia"!— Philharmoma  Hungarica,  Antal  Dorati 
conductor  (London  STS  15249,'54l.  David  Cloud  hosts.  Stereo. 


2:00 


3:30 


WATERGATE:  "Naked  To  Mine  Enemies" 

Part  II.  Rebroadcast  from  Wednesday  the  29th,  10  00  p.m. 


BEST  OF  FURTHER 

Summer  reruns  of  The  Further  AcJventures  of,    culling 
out  the  most  outrageous  moments  from  the  cutting  room  floor. 


4:00 
5:00 

6:00 

6:45 
7:00 


FOLK  SCENE  /  Howard  and  Roz  Larman 

DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

THE  EVENING  NEWS 
Same  day  service. 

WILLIAM  WINTER:  News  Analysis 


BEYOND  THE  NEWS 
In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  recent  significant  news 
tems,  produced  by  KPFK's  News  Department. 


7:30 
8:30 


OPEN  HOUR 


CLEVELAND  ORCHESTRA  -  Live  in  concert 

Weber:  Overture  to  "Der  Freischuerz:"  Szmanowski: 
Sinfonia  Concertante- Eugene  Istomin,  piano;  Brahms:  Symphony 
No.  2  in  D  Major,  Op.  73.  Stanistaw  Skrowaczewski  conducts.  Ro- 
bert Conrad  hosts.  (Blossom  Festival  Concert).  Stereo. 


'^'^im 


10:30         THE  CALIFORNIA  ■  APARTHEID  TRIANGLE 

An  in-depth  look  at  the  role  played  by  California  invest- 
ors in  supporting  the  South  African  government.  Produced  by  Earl 
Ofari. 

11:30         APOGEE 

-rounds  the  far  turn  with  Mitchell  Harding  coming  up 
fast.  Try  it.  You'll.  .  .  . 

12:00         NIGHTANGELS 

Mostly  Bluegrass,  with  Phil  Tuttle,  guests,  or  whitenoise. 


friday    31 

6:00  MORNING  CONCERT 

Paul  Vorwerk  plays  luxuriating  music,  which  is  English 
for  musica  luxurians.  News  and  calendar  at  9:00  a.m. 

9:30  THE  MORNING  READING 

The  Radio.  Concluding  the  series  of  stereo  radio  dramas 
produced  by  our  sister  station  in  New  York.  WBAI. 

10:00         ETHNIC  MUSIC 

Indigenous  music  from  the  Miijdle  East,  embracing  the 
cultures  of  both  Arab  and  Israeli. 


11:00 


THE  ADVOCATES 

The  audio  portion  of  KCET's  forum. 


12:00         NOON  CONCERT 

Two  Englishmen.  Sir  Arthur  Bliss:  Serenade  for  Baritone 
and  Orchestra-John  Shirley-Quirk,  baritone;  Rout  for  Soprano  and 
Orchestra-Rae  WorxJIand.  soprano;  Hymn  to  Apollo;  The  World  Is 
Charged  with  the  Grandeur  of  Gorf-Ambrosian  Singers;  A  Prayer 
to  the  Infant  7esus-Ambrosian  Singers:  London  Symphony  Orches- 
tra. Sir  Arthur  Bliss  and  Philip  Ledger  conducting  ILyrita  SRCS  55). 
Havergal  Brian;  Symphony  No.   10:  Symphony  No.  2/-Leicester- 
shire  Schools  Symphony  Orchestra,  James  Loughran  and  Eric  Pink- 
ett  conducting  (Unicorn  RHS  313).  David  Cloud  hosts.  Stereo. 


2:00 


2:30 


CRITIQUE 

A  look  at  current  books,  film,  theater,  music. 

DAVID  MELTZER  READING  HIS  POETRY 

Rebroadcast  from  Friday  the  24th,  8:00  p.m. 


3:30  GRASS  ROOTS  SALON 

Elliott  Mittler  discusses  screenwriters  and  their  impact  on 
what  we  see  and  believe  when  we  go  to  the  movies   or  watch  TV. 
His  guest  is  Edmund  North,  whose  credits  include  Patton,  The  Day 
The  Earth  Stood  Still,  Destry,  Sink  the  Bismark,  Damned  the  De- 
fiant, etc 


f^ri 


the/TRFF 

The  Newsweekly  with 
Prescience 


4:00  EARTHLOG 

Wina  Sturgeon  shares  her  ideas  about  survival,  ecology 
and  alternatives  with  you  every  Friday.  Open  phones. 

StOO  DEALING 

News  and  views  set  to  music,  produced  by  Barbara  Cady. 

6:00  THE  EVENING  NEWS 

Th-th-th-th-that's  all,  folksl 

6:45  THE  WORLD  THROUGH  LE  MONDE 

A  European  perspective  on  life  in  the  seventies,  as  seen 
through  the  influential  Parisian  daily.  Le  Monde. 


6:55 
7:00 


REPORT  TO  THE  LISTENER  /  Will  Lewis 


BEYOND  THE  NEWS 

In-depth  coverage  and  analysis  of  recent  significant  news 
items,  produced  by  KPFK's  news  department. 

8:00  SELECTED  POEMS  BY  KENNETH  PATCHEN 

A  collection  of  work  read  by  the  poet  himself  from  a 
Folkways  recording,  (to  be  rebroadcast  Friday,  September  7th  at 
2:30  p.m.) 

9:00  MUNDO  CHICANO 

Musica  para  La  Raza.  y  los  demas  tambien.  Music  and 
guests  of  interest  to  the  Chicano  community,  with  Antonio  Salazar. 

11:00         HOUR  25:  sf 

If  you're  into  UFO's,  close  the  door  before  take-off. 
1".  .  .  .If  they  don't,  it's  not  because  I  ain't  trion."] 


2:00 


SOFT  CORE  PHONOGRAPHY 

Jay  Lacey  plays  mellow  music  and  old  radio  shows  til  dawn. 


CO-OP 


CONSUMER 

OWNED 

MARKET 

IS  ONE  OF  THE  FEW  PLACES  IN  SO.  CALIFORNIA 

SELLING  FRESH  NATURAL  GROWN 

STEER  BEEF  CUTS 

WE  CARRY  A  WIDE  SELECTION  OF 

..™oL,.o  HEALTH  FOODS 

ALTADENA 

NATURAL  VITAMINS    -  ORGANIC  PRODUCE  -■  HAIN 


CO-OP 


■^j  7^or<  l^uut  a.  Star 


WE  OFFER  A  FRIENDLY  EFFICIENT 

CREDIT- UNION 

AND    L.A.'S  BUSIEST  RECYCLING  DEPOT 

Westside  Environmental  Center 

EVERYONE  CAN  5HOP 

202 1    S.    BARRINGTON    AVENUE.    IDS    ANGtlES    2S, 
^I^W^Xp  PHONE   GRANITE    B-022l|         ^ 


3J 


Classified 

BOOKS 

SISTERHOOD  BOOKSTORE 

FEMINIST  BOOKS,  POSTERS,  ETC 
NON  SEXIST  CHILDREN'S  BOOKS 
1351  Westwood  Blvd.,  Weslwood. 
477-7300 

ALL  THAT'S  LEFT 

A  Radical  fiooksiore  at  the  Ash  Grove 
8162  Melrose  Ave,,  West  Hollyvaood 
Open  Friday  &  Saturday  nites,  8-2 
Feminism,  Third  World,  Socialism,  etc. 

PAPA  BACH  BOOK  SHOP 

11312  Santa  Monica  Blvd 
West  Los  Angetes 
Open  Sunday  til  9 
Dial     -GRUBERG" 

THE  LONG  MARCH  BOOKSTORE 
NEWSREEL  DOCUMENTARY  FILMS 

7*15  South  Parkview  Street 
Los  Angeles.  Ca. 
Phone:  (2131  384-3856 

TWO  NEW  BOOKS  ABOUT  CHINA: 

New  Women  in  New  China,  78  pp. 
Acupunture  Anaesthesia,  37  pp. 
(Peking,  1972)  in  English,  $1  each,  p.p. 
PO  Box  77632,  Los  Angeles  90007 

INSTRUCTION 

GATEWAY  DAY  SCHOOL 
Learning  in  a  non-hostile,  loving, 
SummerhiM-Reichian  environment. 
Since  1967— ages  4  -  16— non-profit. 
Valley  location.  Call  788-6606 

MUSICIANS  AND  SINGERS 

Lessons  or  classes  in  theory,  harmony, 
Sight-singing,  arranging,  etc. 
Your  home  or  mine.  Day  or  evening. 
Ron  Webb.  628-5025 

lOU  MAURY  PIANO  SCHOOL 

Individual  instruction 

for  children  and  adults. 

4354  Tuiunga  Ave,,  No.  Hollywood 

769-4523,  877  3847 


KPFK  FOLIO  ADVERTISING  RATES 

Your  advertising  is  seen  by  12,000  folio  re- 
cipients AND  their  friends  each  month,  ALL 
month   long.  Please  call   KPFK   to  ditcuu 
your  special  advertising  needs. 
CLASSIFIED    $1/line,  $5  minimum 
DISPLAY    call  about  new  rates 
DEADLINE    fim  day  of  month 
preceding  publication  date. 

ALL    CLASSIfieO  ADS 
MUST  BE  PAID  FOR  IN  ADVANCE 
$1/,  with  a  S5  minimum.     You  can  es- 
timate @  40  letters  per   line.   For   more 
information,  call  Jane  Gordon  877-2711 

Right  reserved  to  raise  rates  without  notice. 
Prevailing  contracts  for  insenions  which  run 
beyond  the  first  luue  affected  by  a  new  rate 
will  be  acknowledged  at  the  old  rate.  All  ad- 
vertising IS  subiect  to  publisher's  approval. 


SERVICES 

HOME  CLEANING 

A  complete  service. 

Licensed -Insured -Bonded 

Michael  Parmely  "Little  Guy"  396-0488 

Passport  Photos 
WHILE  YOU  WAIT 

Close  to  Burbank  Passport  Office 
Magnolia  Photography  846-4550 
4209  W    Magnolia.  Burbank  91505 

PIANO  TUNING  -  $20 
Pianos  need  attention  too! 
Have  yours  tuned  and  serviced. 
M,  Riley 
221-7195 

DANCE  STUDIO 

Cheap.  In  Hottywood. 
At  Sunset  and  Gardner 
20'  X  40'  Mirrors  and  Barres 
Call  Gena  Reno,  769-4144 

HONEST  T.V,  SERVICE 

Reasonable,  reliable 

State-licensed  —  23  years  experience 

Henry  Kasimow  T.V.    939-1383 

FIRST  UNITARIAN  CHURCH 
OF  LOS  ANGELES 

'The  church  of  contemporary  involvement" 

Peter  Christiansen,  Minister 

Educational  activities 

Waldemar  Hille,  Organist 

Sunday  Services  —  11:00  a.m. 

2936  W    Eighth  Street  (near  Vermont) 

CARPET  CLEANING 
UPHOLSTERY  CLEANING 

Ralph  Meyer  -  454-2334 

Eleven  years  serving  KPFK  listeners' 

LICENSED  PAINTING  &  DECORATING 

Residential,  Interior,  Exterior 
For  free  estimate,  call 
SISKIND  -  9331091.  evenings 

PAINTER  WHO  LIKES  HIS  WORK 

Small  Repairs  —  Licensed.  Insured 
John  Godel 
NO  5-0179 

PIANOS  FOR  RENT 

Victorian  Uprights 

in  sound  playing  condition 

$10  -  S12  per  month.  662  2949 


MARLOMA  FRIENDS  MEETING 
647  Locust  St.,  Long  Beach 
Meeting  for  worship  10  a.m.  Sunday 
Pam  Borgers,  clerk:  (213)  431-4015 
Friends  (Quakers)  welcome  ALL  people. 


PliCURKA 

VILLA(;i:   FOLK  HAXn 

PARTIES-WEDOINGS-FESTIVALS 
The  Fun  Band  That  Really  Gets  It  Together 
Call  Michael  Kosberg  (937-5855)  for  Info. 


MISCELLANEOUS 


M.  HARDING,  K.  CALKIN,  two  full-grown 
Weimaraners,  books  &  records,  need  large 
private  residence  with  dog-proof  area.  We're 
trying  to  pay  195/mo'  Help  subsidize  KPFK! 
Find  us  a  multi-room  pJace,  old  is  firie,  for 
something  feasible  like  $1 25/mo.  or  so,  CAII 
KPFK  anytime.  Leave  Message.  Still  HELPI 


FILM  JAZZ  POETRY 

Every  Friday  and  Saturday  Midnight, 
The  best  of  student  &  underground  films 
Sunday  nites— jazz  jams  &  poetry  readings 
Century  City  Educational  Arts  Project 
10508  W.  Pico  Blvd.    839-3322 

Young  Woman  (26)  in  Wheel  Chair 

looking  for  woman  or  couple  to  live  in 
and  help  with  housekeeping,  driving,  etc. 
10—15  hours  per  week.  Room  &  board 
provided,  plus  small  salary.  Call  Geri  at 
823-9459.  If  no  answer,  821-1259. 


WESTSIDE  GAY  COMMUNITY  CENTER 

Business  meeting  7  pm  every  Tuesday 
1829  Stanford  Ave.,  Santa  Monica 
828-2444.  478-1351 

FUNERAL   REFORM 

Funerat  Reform  anybody'  The  Memorial 
Society  Movement  prevents  exploitation  of 
the  bereaved  (non-profit).  The  Lo.".  Angeles 
Funeral  Society.  Inc.  PC  Box  9456.  North 
Hollywood.  91609.  Phone   877-1474 


PLACES 


PLAN  TO  SPEND  SUMMER  VACATION 
at  Greenwood  Lodge  in  the  Santa  Cruz  Mts. 
For  information,  write.  P  O.   Box  828, 
Soquel,  Calif,  or  call  GReenwood  5-9995  or 
GReenwood  5-9552  (area  code  408), 


HSCOyHGT 

Natural  Foods  to  «  GourmM't  Taitt, 

PhoiM  4S5-9078  for  RMMvatkma. 

Rich  and  Mar]  0*hr 

Cloud  Tuttdtys 


X101 


C 


ustomer 
dubs 


JL.: 


SfKittnt  in  iht  riftii  lai  limiiif  «/  htyiMri  inshumtids. 


LAEMMLE  FINE  ARTS  THEATERS 


LOS  FELI2 
Los  Angeles 
NO  4-2169 

ESQUIRE 
Pasadena 
MU  4  1774 

PLAZA 

Westwood 
TR  9-9077 
GR  7  0097 


REGENT 
Westwood 
BR  2-0501 
477-0059 


MONICA  I 
MONICA  II 
Santa  Monica 
451-8686 


THE  ROYAL 
11523  S.M.  Blvd. 
West  LA. 
473-1636 
270-4110 


2nd  ISRAELI  FILM  FESTIVAL 

Oct.  24  -  Nou.  6: 
THE  POLICEMAN 

Nov.  7  -  20: 

KA  YZ  and  KA  RASSO 

Nov.  21    -  Dec.  4: 
TOPELE 


Duplicate  tapes  of  most  of  the  programs  broadcast  on 
KPFK  are  available  to  the  public.  These  dubs  are  made  on 
new,  hrgh  quality  tape  at  3%  i.p.s  on  7-inch  reels  (5-inch 
reels  available  on  request)  and  cost: 

S7.50  for  the  first  half-hour;  $5.00  for  each  additional 
half-hour;  plus  5%  state  sales  tax. 

For  information,  write  to  KPFK,  North  Hollywood  91608 
Attn:  Customer  Dubs. 


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. 


CONSIDER 

A  DISPLAY  AD  IN  THE  FOLIO: 

The  Folio  is  sent  free  to  every  sub- 
scriber to  KPFK.  That  means  your 
ad  will  be  seen  all  month  long  by 
more  than  13,000  KPFK  people, 
not  to  mention  their  friends,  fami- 
ly, etc.  Our  rates  for  camera-ready 
ads  are: 

Full  page  (TA  XOVi); 

$250,  or  $225  w/  3-mo.  contract 

Half  page  (ZVi  X  9'/2  or  Th  X  4'/2): 

$150,  or  $125  w/  3-mo.  contract 
Quarter  page  (3%  X  a'/a;  TA  X  2'A): 

$75,  or  $60  w/  3-mo.  contract 
Eighth-page eVj  X  2V>): 

$40,  or  $35  w/  3mo.  contract 
COVERS:  (inside  front  and  back, 
and  outside  back):  $275,  or  $250 
with  3-month  contract.  Call  Jane 
for  deadlines  and  other  details  at 
877-2711  or  984-2711. 


musical 

heRitaqe 
society 

has  an  unusual  catalog  of  music 

from  the  Baroque  era  to  the  present  day, 

available  by  mail  order  only. 

Write  for  a  free  catalog. 


1991  BOOiOwAy.  new  yook.  n.  y.  10023 


n, 


Haste  &  Hirsty  Volvo  Pacific    ^-—^ 

1 1647  Ventura  Blvd.,  Studio  City        / /^^N  V 
(3  blocks  East  of  Laurel  Canyon)     ("VQIj'VO) 


Ptwna:  766  3847  or  877  0864 
FACTORY  AUTHORIZED  DEALER 
FACTORY  TRAINED  MECHANICS 
LEASE  PLAN  AVAILABLE 
OVERSEAS  DELIVERY 
SPECIALISTS 


FIAT 


&4I 


Lanny  May  Be  Gone,  But  His  Tongue  Lives  On'. 

Those  Blue  Chip  Stamps  cluttering  up 

Your  kitchen  drawer  and  glove  compartment 

can  mean  needed  supplies  for  KPFK. 

SEND  THOSE  STAMPS! 

to:  Lanny  the  Tongue 
KPFK 

North  Hollywood 
91608 


33 


Last  Year 

You  May  Have 

Thrown  Away 

$1000. 

This  Year, 

Let  the  3729  Club 

Help  You  Get  It  Back 


MEMBERSHIP  ADVANTAGES:  GROUP  POWER 

PERSON  TO-PERSON    SERVICE 
PURCHASING  AGENT  SERVICE 


\9 

ColrfomiQ  Consumers  CounciU 


Buying  Services 
administered  by 


TELEPHONE  BUYING  LINE 


INSURANCE  CONSULTANTS 


TRAVEL  &  ENTERTAINMENT 


Why  Join 
the  3729  Club/CCC? 

Basically  for  the  same  reasons  indi- 
viduals join  unions,  professional  associa- 
tions and  credit  unions.  Often  the  group 
working  together  can  obtain  advantages 
and  opportunities  which  the  individual 
cannot.  CCC  acts  as  the  group  represent- 
ative in  making  purchases  from  manu- 
facturers and  distributors'  obtaining  the 
best  possible  price  for  members. 

Don't  Fedco,  White  Front  and  other 
discount  stor^  offer  low  prices? 

KPFK    North    Hollywood   91608 
PLEASE  PRINT!  Please  send  me  my  personalized 

membership  card. 
Name 

Address 

City 


On  most  items,  no.  The  so-called 
discount  stores  have  many  of  the  same 
overhead  costs  which  push  prices  up  in 
retail  stores-large  buildings,  large  staffs, 
millions  of  dollars  tied  up  in  inventory, 
huge  advertising  budgets.  CCC  cuts 
through  these  expenses  by  ordering  only 
the  merchandise  requested  by  the 
member.  CCC  can  obtain  almost  any 
item  by  nationally  known  manufac- 
turers at  prices  which  are  usually  sub- 
stantially below  those  charged  by  so- 
called  "discounters." 


BEATS  DISCOUNT  PRICES 

FINANCING 

INCOME  TAX  SERVICE 

LEGAL  SERVICE 

INFORMATION 

CONVENIENCE 

And.  CCC  members  receive  extra 
service  which  "discounters"  can't  begin 
to  offer.  Each  member  is  important  to 
CCC,  so  each  member  receives  the 
personalized  attention  which  his  mem- 
bership deserves.  CCC  members  don't 
have  to  contend  with  the  mobs  of  shop- 
pers, long  check  stand  lines  and  discour- 
teous employees  so  common  in  depart- 
ment stores.  In  fact,  members  may 
transact  their  purchase  entirely  over  the 
telephone  through  CCC's  exclusive 
"buying  line." 


Zip 


I     ]    Current  subscriber.  Please  "convert"  me  to  3729 

member.  $10.00  enclosed  ($5  service  plus  $5  first 

month  corrtnbution). 
I     ]    New  subscriber.  Please  enroll  me  in  the  3729  Club. 

One  year's  subscription  payment  {$25  or  $15)  is 

enclosed.  Bill  the  remainder: 

I    ]   annually    [    ]  quarterly    [    1  monthly 
As  a  3729  Club  member.  I  understand  that  I  will  donate  a  mini- 
mum  ol  $60.00  to  KPFK  annually  at  the  rate  of  $5  per  month. 
Signed 


BMr*r  H  «otttt«d  to  b«r**fw»  and  privii«gM  »*     . 

3729  Clut^*- 


ExpIrM 
P.0.?0»  69667  1- A.  CA  90069;        (213)  27&4)910 


si^mmmjsjmmjmimMimjmimmmjms 


34 


Happiness  is  a  bicycle 


For  Peace,  Free 


§fter  Watergate 


Cs  @F  ffiailG 


617    South    La    Brea    Avenue      •      Uos  Angeles,    California    90036 


kWERGITE 

"NAKED  TO  MINE  ENEMIES" 

KPFK's  Public  Affairs  Department 
will  present  a  two-part  documentary 
study  of  the  Watergate  Affair,  on 
Wednesday,  August  22  and  August 
29,  at  10:00  p.m.  Part  I  will  feature 
the  break-in;  Part  II  will  delve  into 
to  subsequent  cover-up   attempts. 
In  both  parts,  particular  attention 
will  be  paid  to  "the  motive"  accord- 
ing to  testimony  of  the  individuals. 

KPFK's  News  Department  continues 
presenting  its  in-depth  Watergate  File 
on  the  Evening  News  at  6:00  p.m.,  to 
keep  you  up  to  date  on  the  latest  leaks, 
connections,  confessions,  confections, 
and  co-relative  information. 


And,  of  course,  complete,  live,  gavel- 
to-gavel  coverage  of  the  Senate  Hear- 
ings will  continue,  as  well  as  the  con- 
densed version  at  7:00  p.m.  each  day 
of  the  sessions. 

KPFK:  WATERGATE  RADIO  FOR 
SOUTHERN  CALIFORNIA 


Vinct  Compagnone/DOOR/LNS 


DATED  PROGRAM 

Time  Value:  Must  Arrive  By 

August  1,  1973 


KPFK 

3729  Cahuenga  Blvd.,  West 

North  Hollywoud,  California  91604 


NON-PROFIT  ORG. 

US   POSTAGE 

PAID 

LOS  ANGELES.  CALIF 

PERMIT  NO    30711