LISTENER-SPONSORED PACIFICA RADIO FOR SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
AUGUST 1976
Highlights
PERSPECTIVES IN BLACK
The "black movement," "black condition," "black struggle," have been
frequently used along with other terms during the past decade to des-
cribe the quest for black advancement. Most Americans by now/ feel
that they have become acquainted with some aspect of black existence.
Certainly, the mass media has played a large part in bringing to public
awareness many of the crucial events and developments in recent years
in the black communities. However, with the current trend toward
malignant rather than benign neglect, conservative reaction, and racist
resurgence, it is once again necessary to explore the dimensions of black
life.
Vital questions still remain to be answered; such as: Have there been
real gains made in closing the income gap? What about upgrading job
positions, housing, and public services? Has increased black political
strength improved ghetto life?
While making no pretense to have complete answers to these and other
demanding questions, KPFK has geared its special programming during
August to at least providing what we call some Perspectives in Black.
Mondays at 3;00 pm and Wednesdays at 10:00 pm the station will air
a series of documentaries examining: the black middle class, the black
working class, the issues of Affirmative Action, and Busing. In addition,
feature material will be presented which also touches on areas of concern
to the black community.
Earl Of ah
Public Alt airs
Sandra Kate Williams [41
"Strawberry Shortbread"
Pat Benson hosted this program on Open Journal and on KVST and
now finds herself regularly ensconced on the 2nd and 4th Thursdays
of the month at 3 pm. Strawberry Shortbread is made up of children
and education: bilingual and multi-cultural. Pat Benson is a black
woman with children in the Los Angeles Public Schools. She is active
in parents' groups and works with the American Friends Service Com-
mittee in their attempts to stop the arbitrary use of suspension and ex-
pulsion. For a multi-faceted look at education and culture, tune in
Strawberry Shortbread.
Jim Berland
Public Affairs Director
PHOTOS AND GRAPHICS
The cover is a lino-cut by Samella Lewis called Field, produced by Con-
temporary Crafts, Inc. Photos inside are from five books and will be
identified by number: ( 1 ] -Harlem on My Mind; Allon Schoener, ed.
Random House, N.Y., 1968. [2J -Modern Negro Art, James A. Porter.
Arno Press & New York Times; 1969. [3] Shots: Photographs From
The Underground Press: David Fenton, ed. Douglas Book Co.; 1971.
(4) Southern Exposure; Vol. 3 No. 1. (51 -
1970; Smithsonian Institution Press; 1971.
Song Magazine; Vol. 24 No. 6; 1976.
- William H. Johnson: 1901-
(61 Sing Out: The Folk
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 1
*R. Gordon Agnew
*Ken Jenkins
*David B. Finkel
♦Jonas Rosenfield Jr
*Thelma Meltzer
Hon. Chairperson
Chairperson
President
1st Vice President
2nd Vice President
*Peter Franck
♦Oscar Hanigsberg
Nina Bauman
♦George Fox
Robert Kuttner
Pearl Skotnes
3rd Vice President
Treasurer
Secretary
Asst. Secretary
Asst. Secretary
Asst. Secretary
♦BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Isabel Alegria, Dupuy Bateman III, Joseph C. Beldcn, Carol A. Breshears,
Charles Brousse, Michael R. Davis, Ralph Engelman, Edwin A. Goodman,
Ken Jenkins, Danny Samuels, Peter Tagger, Tracy A. Westen.
KPFK LOCAL ADVISORY BOARD
Jim Berland, Carol Breshears, Barbara Cady, Geoffrey Cowan, Moctezuma Esparza,
David Finkel, Peter Ftaxman, Brownlee Haydon, Herschel Lymon, Herb Magidson,
Isabelle Navar, Dolores Peters, Joyce Reed Rosenberg, Jonas Rosenfield jr., Marvin
J. Segelman, Pearl Skotnes, Tracy Westen, Irving Zeiger.
THE VOLUNTEERS; They turn the station on and off and make it go in between
times, run errands, produce programs, record, stuff envelopes, answer phones, help
at community events--in other words, we could not exist without them. Those not
listed elsewhere in the Foliti are:
Anthea Ashe, Albert I. Berger. Carolyn Berger. Bill Blackton, John Bliss, Ron Bluff, Stephen
Blum, Dan Bottoms, John Brownlee, Roy Chapman, Louise Chevlin, Barbara Clairchilde. Rico
Clement, Peter Cole. Dorothy Eletz, Mercedes Everett. Jack Ewing. James Feld, Suzanne Gilbert.
Can/ Ginell, Gail Griffin. Greg Cordon, Bob Gowa. Burt Handelsman. Bill Handelsman, Terry
Hardy, John Hochheimer, Steve Hoffman, Alan Kanter, Marjorie H. Kaufman. Dudley Knight.
Barbara Kraft, Sam Kushner. Alma Landsberger. Janice Leber. Elizabeth Luye, Bob Maestri.
Iris Mann, Milt McCauley. Conrad Melilli, Maureen Mcllroy. Sam Mittleman, Aurelia Morris,
Jim Mossberger, Marsha Necheles. Jim Nelson. Robert Orndorff. ^ruce Robinson. Matt Rotundi,
Eunice Schmidt, Larry Schwartz. Pearl Skotnes, Marcia Slaten, Keven Stern, Ron Streicher.
Steve Sulkes, Johnnie Swift. Gary Taylor. Jerry Trowbridge. Tamar Valenta, Howard Vanucci,
Kim Wier, Carol Wikarska and others whose names may have been inadvertently omitted.
THE KPFK STAFF
Gl NIRAL MANAGI-R: Will I. Lewis. PROGRAM DIRIXTOR: Ruth Hirschman. MUSIC:
David Cloud. Director. Kjthcrine Calkin. Paul Vorwcrk. NKWS: David lioxall & Carol
Hreshears. Co-Directors. Joe Ortiz PUBLIC AIIAIRS: Jim Berland. Director. Barbara
Cady. Alison Hcrshcy*. Annette Hunt*. Ijrl Olari. Maria ilena Vandcvicr. CULTURAL
AI-FAIRS: Helcnc Roscnblutli* PRODUCTION : Peter Sutheim. Director. Janet
Dodson.Tini McGovern. Mark Rosenthal. Steve Tyler. Lcni Isaacs. CHIEF liNClNLLR:
Don Wilson. PROMOTIONS: Barbara Spark. Director. PROGRAM PRODUCRRS: Lucia
Chappelle. livcrctt I rost. SUBSCRIPTIONS: Ahna. Director. David Morrison. ACCOUN-
TANT: I ran Zimmerman. I ay McKinney*. COMMUNITY IIVLNTS COORDINATOR:
Mario Casetta. COMMUNITY liVl NTS DIRICTOR: Ray Taler. Melvina Kronson*. Ava
Pardo*, Bob Strnad. CIIIII BURIiAUCRAT: Roy Tuckman SWITCHBOARD ATI AIRS
CO-DIRECTORS: Julia Mendo/a & Susan Andc»rson. EXPANSION I UND DEVELOPMENT
COORDINATOR: Beverly Polokoff. I OLIO: Roy Tuckman. Editor. Mary Ann Indrcland*.
i *CETA Trainees
The KPFK Folio is not sold; it is sent free to each subscriber supporting our non-profit,
non-commercial educational station, and contains the most accurate possible listings of
the programs broadcast. Subscription rates are $25 a year for working adults, $15 for
students, retired or jnemployed etc., and $65 for the 3729 Club. Free subscriptions
are given to prison inmates.
Our transmitter is on Mount Wilson. We broadcast in stereo multiplex with an effec-
tive radiated ppwer of 112,000 watts. Our broadcasts are Dolby "B" encoded with
25 microsecond pre-emphasis. We broadcast Dolby calibration tones Monday
through Friday at noon and Monday through Saturday at 8pm, Our studios and
offices are at 3729 Cahuenga Blvd. West in North Hollywood, Ca. 91604. Phones:
(213) 877-2711 and 984-2711.
KPFK is owned and operated by the Pacifica Foundation, a non-profit institution.
Subscriptions are transferable to the other Pacifica Stations: KPFA, 2207 Shattuck
Ave, Berkeley, Ca. 94704, WBAI, 359 E 62nd St., N.Y. 10021 . KPFT, 419
Lovett, Houston, Texas 77006.
SUBSCRIPTIONS
BILLING
Members of the 3729 Club and those being billed monthly: the computer will bill you
when you are due. PLEASE wait for a bill. Returning the bit! with your payment will
insure crediting your account correctly, and save us the labor and expense of looking up
your account to see what went wrong.
Sending in a payment without a bill or renewal form costs more to process than the
cost of printing and mailing the form to you. If you do not receive a bill when you
think you should, drop us a card about it, and we'll check out the account. You may
be paid ahead or may not be down for periodic billing.
MOVING
The FOLIO will NOT follow you automatically when you move. It will be returned to us
with your new address on it— after a few weeks— and we will change your address, but pro-
bably not in time for the following FOLIO, So if you don't want to miss a month or two,
fill ou t the "moving" coupon on the inside back page. If we receive it before the middle of
the month, you won 't miss one Folio. (We get 500- 1000 adress changes a month, so your
advance notice saves us a lot of postage charges and "no Folio" phone calls.) Thank you.
RENEWAL AND MAILING-UPDATING PROCEDURES
The Folio Is now being mailed between the 15th and 20th of the month. If you have
been on the machine-labeled mailing list, have not moved recently, and are not lapsed,
you should receive the Folio before the First of the month. If you don't (and do not
have an outside ripoffable mailbox} contact your local Postmaster about delivery.
First renewal notices are sent out one month ahead of expiration. You will receive
your last Folio with the second renewal notice about the beginning of the month your
expiration date Is up. This allows you to respond before the 2nd Wednesday of the
month.
2nd Wednesdays are the key dates in subscription processing as anything processed by
then is sent up to the computer, and all up-dated bills, renewals, and the Folio mailing
list for the next month are printed and returned to us the following Monday. Folios
are addressed and mailed by the end of that week.
As you can see, an address change or payment received by the 2nd Wednesday will
take effect the next month. One day later, the same Information will appear one month
later.
ANNOUNCEMENT TO ALL BLIND KPFK SUBSCRIBERS
The Folio is available on cassette tape (returnable) to all blind subscribers to KPFK.
If you would like to receive the Folio in this form, please tear off the address label on
the back of your Folio and send it along with a note stating that you would llkt to be
on the special blind mailing list. Within two months (hopefully) you will be receiving
your complete program guide on cassette.
/}a£u>M jaoi/rit'
*H
jKUixiwaxxjixxioaaaoaivx/vir/viKi^
NEW SUBSCRIPTION ,
(;1FT SUBSCRIPTION!
[ ] Regular 1 year $25
I I Student 1 year $15 [
( 1 3729 Club $65.00.
[ I 3729 Club payments ($70.00)
$30 enclosed. Bill me at
i '$5 min) per (mo. or qtr)
3729 CLUB CONVERSION
6 mos. $13
6 mos. $8
GIVER
^Address
Dear KPFK: Please convert me to the 3729 Club. Give me
a JI5 "trade in" on my current subscription and start me
for a new year.
PASTE PRESENT FOLIO LABEL
HERE
City (attach Folio labeT i f subscriber) Suie ZipT
RECIPIENT
TU
Name
Address
^^3^1
I I Enclosed is $50 full payment
[ ] Enclosed is an initial payment of
City
State Zip
City
State Zip
and bill me
(total $55)
(mi" <5) per
_ (min. $25)
-(month or qtr)
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 2
o
3F729 CLUB
A NUN-lfKinT MEMBBBtV ASSOOAllCah |
DeDKATO) ONLY TO SERVING THE
NmesTS OF mE cjoff orma coNsutei
Film of the Month CHiib
FILM t^h'e month club
XALA
directed by Oiismane Sembene
in French and Wolof wilh Knglish siiblilles-
■123 niinules
Xala received extraordinary reviews followiiig its screenings ul the Moscow imd New
York Film Festivals. Since then wc have waited in vain lor a Los Angeles showing.
and we've craved it for the Film Club. We thank New Yorker Films Tor their
generosily in making it available. We quote the New Yorker catalog for the program
notes.
"Ousmane Sembene is the most important figure in the estahlishmcnl of an indepen-
dent African cinema and, to date, his continent "s only filmmaker of international
stature. A self-educated Senegalese, Sembene was a long shoreman and union organi-
zer, then a novelist of some repute before becoming a filmmaker. His background is
an important influence on his films, which reflect a mixture of sophistication and
anii-intellectualism.
"Xala (pronounced ha-la), Ousmane Sembene's fourth feature film, is also his first lo
achieve the distinction of being censored in his own country (the print distributed
by New Yorker Films, however, is complete and uncut). Although one cannot con-
done this action, one can certainly understand it. Xala seems calculated to give night-
mares lo the ruling class of Senegal - or of nearly any emerging African nation, for
that matter. Forsaking the easier targets of European exploitation and racism that
characterized Black Girl and Emitai. Sembene here zeroes in on a far touchier sub-
ject: the myth of African independence, the wholesale blackfacing of white colonial
policies by African leaders pompously declaring themselves lo be "liberators."
"As is often the case with the most excruciating social criticism, Xala is a satire and
quite a funny and savage one, too. 'Africa is a land of contrasts," as textbooks and
official documentaries are so fond of declaring. But Sembene goes them one better.
The Africa we see in Xala is a surreal crazy -quilt of native superstitions and white
status symbols, an illegitimate freak conceived under a full moon by a French bureau-
crat and the daughter of a witch doctor. The film opens with black dignitaries in
tuxedos and limousines suavely taking over the Chamber of Commerce while a wild
crowd of dancers and barebreasted girls lends support with bloodcurdling screams on
the steps outside. The film's central character proudly carries a briefcase, speaks
French rather than the native Wolof, drinks only bottled water imported from Europe,
and can't sleep without the air conditioner on, but he also has three wives and goes
running to a variety of marabouts, soothsayers, and charm-dispensers as soon as trou-
ble strikes. Even the Star Band of Dakar is composed of a gleaming saxophone,
African drums, an electric guitar, and a native chanter. And so it goes, until an
amazed and zootsuited pickpocket finally emerges as one of the most respected
members of the communitv.
"We first see El Hadji Abdou Kaber Beye, the hero of the tale, at the height of his
career. His thriving import business has earned him a place in the newly-elected, all-
African CTiamber of Commerce. He is about to crown his success with a third wife,
a beautiful young girl no older than his eldest daughter. But on the wedding night ,
disaster strikes; the self-assured El Hadji cannot consummate the marriage. Some-
one has evidently slapped him with the Xala, a curse rendering its victim impotent.
Who could do this thing to El Hadji? One of his jealous senior wives? His radical,
disapproving daughter? Some old, already-forgotten enemy?
"From this point on, it is only a matter of time until El Hadji's affairs crumble into
ruin. It seems as if the whole world knows of his conjugal problems. While he runs
around emptying his wallet on potions and panaceas. El Hadji's business declines and
finally goes under. Foreclosed, deserted by his young bride, clutching handfuls of
charms, his checks ricocheting all over Senegal, he is finally drummed out the Cham-
ber of Commerce as a disgrace to the business community. El Hadji's impotence is
mirrored in a group of wandering beggars and cripples, whose path eventually crosses
his in a surprising and shocking conclusion, dutifully censored in the Senegalese
Republic.
BASIC INFORMATION
The 3729 Cluh (3/29 is our address)
is a group of subscribers who give $65
a year lor $70 in payments) to KPFK.
Besides the subscription to the Folio
and tax deduction, there are two spe-
cial "premiums" for club members.
1) Membership in the Community
Consumers Council a nonprofit
membership association through which
one can save money on nearly all con-
sumer items plus such services as
.group legal, dental, medical and auto
insurance.
2) Membership in the Film of the
Month Club in which a member and
guest can attend at least one film per
month for free; preview films, classic
films and/or esoterica.
"By the end of the film. El Hadji's impotence has grown much greater than just an
inability to please his sulking young bride. It is the impotence of Senegal and all
young African nations, an impotence which comes froin a dependence on while
technology, an impotence which has failed to remove the class imbalances and
bureaucratic paralysis that have ruled Africa fin over a hundred years. The charms
and fetishes which El Hadji totes around arc ultimately more real than the techno-
logical fetishism on which African nations build their Third World sand-castles. As
one of Sembene's countrymen commented, 'It is true. All of Senegal has the Xala."
FOX VENICE THEATER
620 Lincoln Blvil
RESERVATIONS: 985 5735, between 1 lai.i and 5pm ONLY, Thursday and Friday,
August 26 and 27, Please have your card with you when you phone. Please have
your reservation number and your card ready at the door of the theater.
I SPFCIAL HINT!!! Kvcryhody tries lo call between 1 1 and 2pm for reservations
and the phones are jammed and busy. Hardly anybody call s between 2-5pm. so
if you want the fast and easy way, a word to the wise has been rendered. J
J
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 3
V
Regular Programs & Series
CLASSICAL MUSIC
ETHNIC AND FOLK MUSIC
NEWS AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS
CONSUMER PROGRAMS
Boston Symphony
Chapel, Court &
Countryside
Cleveland Orchestra
Tues 8pm
Mon 8pm
Thur 8pm
Fri. Night Concert Hour
William Malloch Programme
Monday Evening Concert
Fri. 8pm
Sat 10pm
Wed 8pm
NighUngels: Classics
Noon Concert
Mon 12m
MF 12n
Sunday Opera
Sunrise Concert
Sun 1pm
M-F 6am
Tenor of the Times
4th Sun 1pm
Tesseract
Sat 2am
Zymurgy
Sat 8pm
ROCK AND JAZZ
Bop Kings
I'u 3pm
Gospel Caravan
Sun 7am
Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
Wed 12m
Johnny Otis Show
Sun 7pm
Nightangels: Rock
Tu 12m
Soft Core Phonography
Sun 2am
Ballads, Banjos, Bluegrass
Sat 2pm
Holding Up More Than
The Car Show
Sat 12:30pm
Bluegrass Special
Thur 12m
Half the Sky
Tues 2:00 pm
Food for Thought
1+3 Tu 4pm
Folk Dance With Mario!
Tu, Th 10am
KPFK Evening News
Daily 6pm
The Health Department
Thur 4pm
Sun 10:4Sam
Inside L.A.
Sat 5pm
In Fidelity
Fri 9pm
Folk Music (Davis)
Sat 10:30am
Monotone News
M-F 11:30pm
Organic Gardening
Mon 4pm
Folkscene
Sun 9:30pm
Open Journal
M-F 7pm
Red Tape
2+4 Tu 4pm
Mon & Fri 10am
Sun 12:30pm
Ruth's Kitchen
Wed 4pm
Latin Quarter
Fri 9:30pm
1+3 Thur 3pm
Survive With Pleasure
Fri 4pm
Music Black & White
Sun 12m
This Morning
M-F 9am
Sat 3:30pm
Read All About It
M-F 9:30am
CONSCIOUSNESS RAISERS
Preachin the Blues
Mon 10pm
Richland Woman
Wed 10am
Bio-Meditation
(lack Gariss)
Carlos Hagen Presents
Sun 9am
Sun 8:30pm
CULTURAL AFFAIRS
COMMENTARY
Come to Life
Hour 25: Science Fiction
Sun 10am
Fri 12m
The Big Broadcast
Sat 12m
Community Lawyer
2+4 Tu 10pm
Science Connection
1+3 Tu 10pm
Culture Journal
1+3 Th 10pm
Connections
2+4 Sat 7pm
Trans
Sat 8:30am
4th Tower of Inverness
Sun 6:30pm
Dealing
Dorothy Heaiey
I.M.R.U.
M-F 5pm
Sun 11:30am
2+3+4 Tu 10:30pm
Alan Watts
Sat Sam
In Print
The Janus Company
Sal 6:45pm
Thurs 1 1pm
NONE OF THE ABOVE
Kulchur
M-F 11:30am
La Raza Nueva
Mon 9pm
Little Ladle
Morning Reading
Wed n:4Sam
M-F 11am
Lesbian Sisters
Charles Morgan
IstTu 10:30pm
M+W 6:45pmt
Calendar of Events
M-F 9:55am
5:55pm
On Film
Sat 6:30pm
Tu+Th 9:15am»
Onstage
3rd Sat 6:45pm
Newspeak
Fri 6:45pm
'A Way Down the Stairs
Sat 9:30am
The Play of the Week
Tues 2pm
Mon 9:15am*
Report to the Listener
Wed 1:5Spm
Poetry Live
2+4 Th 10pm
Strawberry Shortbread
2+4 Thur 3pm
Fri 6:40pm
Sour Apple Tree
Sun 5pm
William Winter
Thurs 6:45pmt
Weekend Calendar
Sat 1:50pm
Talking About Movies
Tues6:45pmt
Wed 9:15am*
Fri 9:1 Sam
* indicates rebroadcast
t rebroadcast on Monotone News
Sunday 1
7:00
GOSPEL CARAVAN
With the legendary Prince Dixon.
9:00 BIO-MEDITATION: Jack Gariss
An experiential, experimental ex-
ploration of states of consciousness, body
states and feeling states of the multi-di-
mensional unity of you.
10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschel Lymon
A human growth center of the air.
10:45 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
Canto Antiguo. Mario does a
little medieval and renaissance foot stom-
ping with real old-timey instruments.
11:30 DOROTHY HEALEY
Maixist viewpoint with guests and
open phones.
12:30 OPEN JOURNAL
1:00 SUNDAY OPERA
MUSSORGSKY: Khovanshchina.
Boris Khaikin conducts the soloists, cho-
rus and orchestra of the Bolshoi Theater,
Moscow (Melodiya/Angel SRDL 4125).
Fred Hyatt hosts. Stereo.
5:00 THE SOUR APPLE TREE
Does art have any redeeming social
value? Clare Spark asks and answers.
6:00 SUNDAY NEWS
With Peter Gordon and Joanne
Altschuler.
6:30
7:00
THE FOURTH TOWER OF
INVERNESS
THE JOHNNY OTIS SHOW!
A freewheeling drive through jazz
and blues. Live guests, requests and sur-
prises with, . . Johnny Otis Johnny Otis!
tfMMN&
Charles White; Fatigue (oil, 1940). Courtesy, W.P.A,,
Refugee in America
There are words hke Freedom
Sweet and wonderful to say.
On my heart-strings freedom sings
Ail day everyday
There are words like Liberty
That almost make me cry.
If you had known what I knew
You would know why.
Langston Hughes
121
8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
Balance In our Lives. Based on a
lecture given at UCLA by psychologist
Dr. Carl Faber, this program centers around
balance in our hves, the dangers of passiv-
ity, the importance of listening to the
inner voices of our being and the voices
and messages of Nature. Carlos comple-
ments the program with a number of
appropriate commentaries, songs and
sounds.
9:30 FOLKSEEN: The Larmans
Don't froth. Rose and Hubert
Lerner will bring lots of folk musicians
to play live and otherwise with their
banjers and gittars.
12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
I Nawana Davis plays nitty gritt)
down home sounds and novelties.
monday 2
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News with Carol Breshears and Ed
Thomas, "Newspeak," Terry Hodel's
Calendar and "Read All About It" with
Will Lewis and Mike Hodel.
10:00 FOLKSCENE- The Larmans
11:00 MORNING READING
Doris Lessing's Memoirs of a
Survivor. A recent and very perplexing
work by one of England's major novelists.
The reader is Helene Rosenbluth.
11:30 KULCHUR
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 4
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Music in i New Found Ljnd-XXV
A program of American ballet
scores: (he subject mailer the dance
ilseir. STRAVINSKY: Agon. Los Angeles
Icstival Orchestra; Igor Stravinsky con-
ducting: Columbia MS 6022; COPLAND:
Dance Panels: Lond€»n Sytnphony Orches-
tra; Aaron Copland c»tndueting; Colum-
bia M ^^^2b'>: BARBER: Souvenirs: Ion-
don SymphtHiy Orchestra; Jitse Serebrier
conducting; Desto 643.1; KAY: Cakewalk.
Hoslon Pops; Arthur I'tedler conducting;
RCA use 2240. David Cloud hosts. ■
Stereo.
2:00 ELDRIDGE CLEAVER: THEN
AND NOW
In Seplembcr. 1975. a few months
before he surrendered to U.S. authorities.
KIdridge Cleaver talked via trans-Atlan-
tie telephone to Curtis laylor of Rolling
Stone and WItAI's Paul Mclsaac. I oriner
Information Minister of the Black Pan-
itier Party, best-selling novelist Cleaver
apparently underwent sweeping changes
during his 6'/j year exile. In this last
public statement before he disappeared
behind bars again, he describes hiiiiscll
as a conservative, calls lor improving
those institutions he labels the "American
Dream." strengthening the armed forces
against what he now perceives as a threat
to democracy from Russia. China and
Cuba. Also on the program are selections
from a 1970 interview done by a Danish
journalist highlighting the changes in
Cleaver's thinking.
Kathleen, Eldridge and Maceo Cleaver.
Algiers. 1969. [31
3:00 THE BLACK MIDDLE CLASS-
STILL MOVING UP?
Economists and social planners main-
tain that the Black middle-class remains
an upwardly mobile force; making steady
gains in its drive to enter the American
socio-economic mainstream. Is this in
fact the case? This produced documentary
will examine this assertion through ana-
lysis of available material on the status
and progress of the Black middle-class as
well as a discussion with a variety of Black
middle-class figures in the business and
professional fields. Produced by Earl Ofari.
(Rebroadcast Wed., Aug. 4,10:00 pm).
4:00 ORGANIC GARDENING
Master gardener Will Kinney and
genial host Barbara Spark kibbitz your
way to health, happiness and a cornu-
cooian crispcr.
S:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
News and views of many hues
and Terry Model's Calendar.
6 DO THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan
7:(M) OPEN JOURNAL
KPIK's nightly magazine searches
lot reality behind the headlines. Panels,
discussions, documentaries and some-
times open phones. Host is Public Affairs
Director, Jim Berland.
8:00 CHAPEL, COURT AND
COUNTRYSIDE
Renaissance and Early Baroque
Music: rhe Consort of Musicke directed
by Anthony Roolcy has recorded a four
disc set lr;icing the major musical trends
of the Sixteenth Century. Musicke ol
Sundrie Kindes. lonight, Ars Perfects
:in(l Les Cris de Paris, a survey of Iranco-
I'temisli music of the Renaissance. (l.'Oi-
seau-lyte DSLO 20.1-206), Kalhcriiic
Calkin hosts. Stereo.
9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA
10:00 PREACHIN' THE BLUES
A mellow potpourri of blues,
boogie and black gospel music I'ealuriiig
selections from 60 years of recorded
music. Live guests will be dropping in
from lime to time. Host is I'rank Scott
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: CLASSICAL
AMSTERDAM C0NCERTGE80UW
ORCHESTRA LIVE IN CONCERT
BRUCKNER: Symphony No. 4 in
E'Flat; tugen Jochum conducts. Tapes
courtesy of Radio Nederland. Stereo.
tuesday 3
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News with Carol Brcshcars and Ed
Thomas, Charles Morgan's Commentary.
Terry Model's Calendar and "Read All
About It" with Dave Boxall and Mike Hodel
10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
How to belly dance with Jodette-
Everybody up!!!!
11:00 MORNING READING
Doris Lessing's Memoirs of a Sur-
vivor. A recent and very perplexing work
by one of England's major novelists. Read
by Helena Rosenbluth.
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
HAYDN: Symphonies 101-104.
Antal Dorati conducts the Philharmonia
Hungarica (London STS 15319/24).
Katherine Calkin hosts. Stereo.
2:00 HOLDING UP MORE THAN
HALF THE SKY
Now a one-hour program produced
by a group of women working at or interes-
ted in KPFK.
3:00 THE BOP KINGS
Frenetic views of a slower time
and place, live from yesterday.
4:00 FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Ginny Roe hosts this bi-weekly
program on nutrition and health. Guests
and open phones.
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
News and views of varying hues
and Terry Model's Calendar.
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 TALKING ABOUT MOVIES
Steve Mambcr discusses flicks.
James Vanderzee/B.P.O.E.
G.G.G. Studio Ml
Monarch Lodge No. 45, 1931/
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL SPECIAL:
COMMUNISM:
CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY
I'he Chinese view the Soviet Union
as the main enemy of the peoples of the
world, and American leftists are divided as
to how they regard Chinese foreign policy.
China's support of the IN LA and UNI TA
in Angola, led some former supporters to
break with Chinese policy. This panel will
explore four positions: support of Chinese
policy; support of Soviet policy; indepen-
dent neutrality; and support of third
world liberation struggles. Jim Berland
moderates.
8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
LIVE IN CONCERT
ROSSINI: Semiramide Overture.
HAYDN: Symphony no. 60. STRAVIN-
SKY: Firebird. Seiji Ozawa conducts.
William Pierce hosts.
10:00 THE SCIENCE CONNECTION
"Arcturus" is his other name—
I'd rather call him "star. "
It's very mean of Science
To go and interfere!
Host is Steve Kilston.
10:30 LESBIAN SISTERS
News and views of the lesbian com-
munity. An interview with Ins lilms peo-
ple who are making a film on lesbian mothers.
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: ROCK
Steven Tyler: Commentary on
new releases, -■■%
ivednesday
4
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News with Carol Hreshears and Ld
Thomas, Steve Mainbcr talks about mo-
vies, Terry Model brings the Calendar, and
Mike Hodel and Will Lewis "Read All
About II."
10:00 RICHLAND PERSON
Roberta Iricdman is on vacation
in Kngland, so a temporary replacement
in the "person" of I'rank Scott (ha ha,
get it?) will be playing the folk music.
11:00 MORNING READING
Memoirs of a Survivor by Doris
Lessing, A recent and very perplexing
work by one of England's major novelists.
Read by Helene Rosenbluth.
11:30 KULCHUR
featuring 77ie Little Ladle.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Katherine Calkin hosts new releases.
. ,;?,-r^ --.,•-
1:55 REPORT TSTHe^U'^ENEII"'
"aJoev TKE.peAY oF-'tt^feHei.
Unemployment Registration. 1931 /UP! (1]
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 5
Greeting Father Divine. 1938
N. Y. Daily News Photo fjj
4:00 RUTHS KITCHEN
In her ntw weekly tinieslol, Ruth
Ziony talks about everything lo do with
eating food-nutrition, hedonism and
restaurant and meal tips.
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
News and views of varying hues
and Terry Model's Calendar.
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
KPFK's nightly magazine looks for
reality behind the headlines. Panels, dis-
cussions, debates, sometimes open phones.
Hosted by KPFK Public Affairs Director,
Jim Berland.
8:00 MONDAY EVENING CONCERTS-
Recorded live-in-concert at the Leo
S. Bing Theater of the Los Angeles Coun-
ty Museum of Art on December 1. 1975.
DONALD BRB: To Warsaw with Love;
JEAN-PHILLIPE RAMEAU: Theseus'
Aria from Hippolyte et Aricie. Act III:
BERNARD RANDS: Defa, LEONID
HRABOVSKY: From Japanese Haiku;
IGOR STRAVINSKY: Renard. Virko
Baley conducts the Las Vegas Chamber
Players. David Cloud hosts.
Amiri Baraka
World Wide Photos [1]
Interviewed Wednesday, 4th, 11pm.
10:00 THE BLACK MIDDLE CLASS-
STILL MOVING UP?
Economists and social planners
maintain ihal the Black middle-class re-
mains an upwardly mobile force, making
steady gains in its drive to enter the
American socio-economic mainstream. Is
this in fact the case*? Thiv produced docu-
mentary will examine this assertion Ihrougli
analysis of available material nn the status
and progress of the Black middle-class
as well as discussion wilh a variety of
Black middle-class Hgures in the business
and professional fields. Produced by T.arl
Ofari. (Rcbroadcasl from Aug. 2>
11:00 INTERVIEW WITH POET AMIRI
BARAKA (NE'LEROI JONES)
IJar:ika drseusses his silencing by
the cullural/induslrial complex, his re-
thinking of Black nationalism, his venture
into independent publishing and reads
from his new book of poems Hard Facts.
Most is KPIK's ( ullnral Affairs Director,
Paul Vangclisti.
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS; JAZZ
GOODBYE PORKPIE HAT
A program of contemporar) music
otherwise known as jazz. Guests, (ribules
to individual artists and reviews. Host
is Paul Vangclisti.
2:00 THE BIG SLEEP: )ohn Breckow
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Piano Sonatas of Schubert -I
Sonata in C Minor, D. 958; Sonata
in A. D. 959; Sonata in B-Flat. D. 960.
Paul Badura-Skoda. piano: RCA Vietrola
Vies 6128." David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 RAGTIME III
Leonard Chabrowe's literary maga-
zine of the air looks at the phenomenon
of artist's colonies private retreats set
up to provide a "peaceful place to work"
for those who have demonstrated creative
(alcnt- lie describes his visit to one
such refuge- Macdowell in the mountains
near Pctcrboro, New Hampshire. Three
poets he met are heard reading from
iheir own works: James Reiss. Barbara
Lve, and the HIack writer Alice Walker.
Produced by WBAl with a grant from
the National Indtiwment for the Arts,
fl urther programs i>i this scries will be
broadcast every 1 hursday at this time
throughout (he monlliK
3:00 OPEN JOURNAL
4:00 THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT
Al Muebner of Science for the
People explores health care as it is prac-
ticed, and as it inighl he.
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 ANALYSIS; William Winter
Black Jews, 1929/Underwood and Underwood [1)
thursday
5
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News with Carol Breshcarsand Ed
Thomas. Charles Morgan's Commentary.
Terry Hoders Calendar, and "Read All
About It" with Dave Boxall and Mike Mo-
del.
10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
Splendid ethnic music from various
far-off places.
11:00 MORNING READING
Memoirs of a Survivor by Doris
Lessing. Read by Melene Rosenbluth.
I 11:30 KULCHUR
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA-
LIVE IN CONCERT
DEBUSSY: Images. LISZT: Dante
Symphony. Lorin Maazel conducts. Ro-
bert Conrad hosts. Recorded in Colum-
bia SQ Four-Channel Sound.
10:00 CULTURE JOURNAL
The Great Venice Dog, Flea and
People Circus: Interviews with dog lovers
and haters as well as transcontinental
hookups with New York and the Vatican.
Produced for KPFK's Cultural .Affairs
Dept. by the Venice Chapter of the .Anim-
al Freedom League. Contemporary
Chicago Poets: a language celebration pro-
duced by the University of Chicago.
11:00 THE JANUS COMPANY
Live repertory Radio Theatre pre-
senting original and classic stories pro-
duced by Mallory and Jan Geller especially
for KPFK. Tonight: Edgar Allan Poc"s
The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar.
1 1 :30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
Marcus Garvey, c. 1922/
N.Y. Daily News Photo, [l]
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: BLUEGRASS
BLUEGRASS SPECIAL
Gentleman Jim Ludwig plays some
modern biuegrass and lots of old country
music shows (like Grand Old Opry) from
years ago. Also old time collectors items
from rare libraries of biuegrass music.
friday 6
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News with Carol Breshears and Ed
Thomas. William Winter's Analysis. Terry
Hodcl with the Calendar and "Read All
About It " with Mike Model and Will Lewis.
10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
Patty Hall and friends.
11:00 MORNING READING
Memoirs of a Survivor by Doris
Lessing. Read by Helene Rosenbluth.
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
PAUL HINDEMITH: Cgllo Sonata,
Op. 7 1, No. 3: Fiano Sonata No. I;
Cello Sonata (1948): Piano Sonata No. 2:
Three Easy Pieces for Cello and Piano;
Piano Sonata No. 3; Variations on "A
Frog He I/Vent a-Courting" for Cello and
Piano: Frances Steiner, cello; David Ber-
field piano; Glenn Gould. Piano; Orion
ORS 73117; Columbia M 32350. David
Qoud hosts. Stereo.
I AH
1 £li/ah Muhammad and Malcolm X at 369th\
Armory |
I 1960/Magnum Photos [II |
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 6
2:00 DONALD BARTHELME^I
Writer Donald U;irthcliiic, reading
from his own works, and interviewed by
Judith Sherrnan and Charles Ktias ol
WBAI. People who love to hear good
wrilini; will be entertained. People who
want to produee good writing will be
fascinated and instructed. He reads and
discusses early elTorts and inlluence.s, cine-
matic techniques in writing, the effort to
reach a realm of meaning which can't
t|iitte be siiid, rendering an emotion by
bypassing it. and much more. (Parts 2-4
will be broadcast at this time every I^riday).
3:30 300 YEARS OF AMERICAN POETRY
l-'rom Anne Hradstreet to .Stephen
Crane. Read by Julie Harris, fddie Al-
bert. I'd Begley, Vincent Price, Helen
Cahagan Douglas. (This series wdl be
broadcast every week in August at this
time).
4:00 SURVIVE WITH PLEASURE
Wina Sturgeon's view of things.
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
6:45
NEWSPEAK
Guest commentary on the media.
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 FRIDAY NIGHT CONCERT HOUR
AMSTERDAM CONCERTGEBOUW
ORCHESTRA-LIVE IN CONCERT
WEBER: Overture to "Oberon";
HANS KOX: Concerto for Two Violins
and Orchestra; Herman Krcbbers and
Theo Olof. soloists: MENDELSSOHN:
Symphony No. 4 l"ltalian"); Bernard
Haitinic conducts. Tapes courtesy of
Radio Nederland. Stereo.
9:00 IN FIDELITY: Peter Sutheim
A program on how to obtain the
best sound for your system. Open phones.
9:30 LATIN QUARTER
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 HOUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION
Join K.itherine C^alkin, John Henry
Ihong, Mike llodel and Terry Hodel (with
the sf calendar) for stories, discussions,
interviews and fun-all about sf.
'2:00 TESSERACT
A program of contcmpor:iry and
electronic music.
Saturday
8:00 ALAN WATTS: PHILOSOPHY
EAST AND WEST
Reconciliation of Opposites.
8:30 TRANS: Amanda Foulger
i-'rancisco l.upica is :i well-known
New Age musician who has appeared on
the Tomorrow show, nunierous New Age
concerts and events. His innovative in-
struments, especially the Cosmic IJeani
Experience, and his warm, open sound
will be heard in interview and performance.
9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
Uncle Rulhic (Buell) brings songs,
games, stories, fun and stuff for kids of
all ages, even new ones.
10:30 FOLK MUSIC: |ohn Davis
Handsome old Uncle John will
spin some platters and score telling ver-
bal coups.
12:30 THE CAR SHOW
Jack Kirkpatrick and John Retsck
talk about cars in language you don't
have to be a mechanicnic to understand.
Open phones.
1:50 WEEKEND CALENDAR
('i>rnpile<l and read by Terry llodel
2:00 BALLADS, BAN)OS AND
BLUEGRASS
Occasionally hosted by Tom Sauber
and Hill Bryson. Sometimes live jams.
3:30 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
5:00 INSIDE LA.
6:00 SATURDAY NEWS: Larry Moss
6:30 ON FILM: Dean Cohen
6:45 IN PRINT: Robert Peters
7:00 ADOLF HITLERS WAR
LETTERS
to his dear Mama as discovered and
transcribed hy Sam liscnstein. PhD. Play-
wright l-!isenstein's perilous Journey into
the mind of Hitler Produced and direc-
ted by Paul Vangclisti.
8:00 ZYMURGY
David Cloud is holding this time
open for a visit frofn ;i well-known con-
ductor and partisan of American music
who is expected to be in I.os Angeles
this weekend, .Stereo.
10:00 THE WILLIAM MALLOCH
PROGRAMME
A musical (mostly classic:d) trea-
sure hunt conducted by the critic, com-
poser and former Music Director of KPI'K.
12:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
Irom the golden days of old radio-
hosted by Jay Lacey and Jerry Hacndigcs.
2:00 SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
Jay Lacey hosts a program of old,
new, borrowed and sometimes blue music
for your after hours mellow entertainment.
Sunday s
7:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN
9:00 BIOMEDITATION: Jack Gariss
10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschcl Lymcm
10:45 FOLKDANCE WITH MARIO!
Shota. the spirit (tl Albania in
Muisic inid song - plus other goodies in
iJic ethnic vein,
11:30 DOROTHY HEALtY
12:30 OPEN JOURNAL
1:00 SUNDAY OPERA
DONIZETTI: Maria Swarda.
Soloists-Joan Sutherland. Luci:ino
Pavaroiti, llugiictle lourangcau. Richard
Itonynge conducts the Orchestra del
Teatro Communale di Bologna (London
OSA I3II7). Ired Hyatt hosts. Stereo.
5:00 THE SOUR APPLE TREE
6:00 SUNDAY NEWS: Sanford Fidell
6:30 THE FOURTH TOWER OF
INVERNESS
7:00 THE JOHNNY OTIS SHOW!
8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
Surfing Rock. In the pre-Heatles
era of the early 1960's. one of the most
interesting styles of popular music was
surfing rock or surUng music. It went
beyond the musical to reach into a major
social phenomenon of youth popular cul-
ture. Carlos offers in this program a gene-
ral iverview of those vibrant sounds,
9:30 FOLKCEENE: The Larpimples
Don't fright! Harvard and Ozzic
bring you manjo, guitolin and viotar music
and live studio guests from folktown.
12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
EXCLUSIVE q.'A SHO'WI<=NG
"j'i'.'*.',-"P'i
'T'OSSq<=B=L<Y T^E 'BEST SHOW IN TO«W=N !
Royal
-EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT
NOW PLAYING!
I llSn tMM Itaiilca (M
477-SMl
I M I . I UUU OOOOOOOC
"Not since John
Barrymore and
Carole Lombard
squared off in
"Twentieth Cen-
tury" have there
been such epic
physical battles of
the sexes as in
SWEPT AWAY."
-Vimcent CtnbyJi*mY»rkTim»t
^■nui
'^ an exceptionally beautiful 11-mlnute short
OfNTHIA GREGORY and IVAN NAGY In a romantic
pas de deux . . . "IN A REHEARSAL ROOM"
Swept Away.
by an unusual destiny
in the blue se-a of august"
Writtern and Directed by LINA WERTMULLER
Starring GIANCARLO GIANNINI
and MARIANGELA MELATO
"It explodes into a fierce battle
of the sexes that is as witty
as it is wise, and as ferocious
as it is funny."
-Judith Crist. Saturday Review
"SWEPT AWAY is
a funny, beautiful,
emotional movie.
— Barbara Garson, MS Magash
\
. -.COLOItl
llENOllSHSUa-TITLtSir
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 7
monday 9
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
11:00 MORNING READING
Memoirs of a Survivor.
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Music in a New Found Land— XXVI
Music for the movies by three of
America's best practitioners. COPLAND:
Music for the Movies; Suite from "The
Red Pony": New Philharrnonia Orches-
tra; Aaron Copland conducting; Columbia
M 33585; THOMSON: The Plow That
Broke the Plains; The River; Symphony
of the Air; Leopold Stokowski conducting;
Vanguard 2095; BERNSTEIN: Symphonic
Suite from "On the Waterfront"; New
York Philharmonic; Leonard Bernstein
conducting. Columbia MS 625 I . David
Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 COMMUNISM:
CHINESE FOREIGN POLICY
The Chinese view the Soviet Union
as the main enemy of the peoples of the
world, and American leftists arc divided
as to how they regard Chinese foreign
policy. China's support of the FNLA
and UNITA in Angola, led some former
supporters to break with Chinese policy.
This panel will explore four positions:
support of Chinese policy; support of
Soviet policy; independent neutraUty
and support of third world liberation
struggles. Jim Berland moderates.
(Rebroadcast from Aug. 3).
3:00 THE DILEMMA OF THE BLACK
WORKING CLASS
The current economic slump has
seriously eroded the gains of previous
years by the American worker. How-
ever, with the Black worker the situa-
tion has reached crisis proportions. Al-
ways suffering the effects of last hired,
first fired, the Black worker finds his con-
dition today deteriorating in the work-
place. The problems faced are brought
into sharp focus in this documentary.
Selected interviews with trade unionists,
unemployed workers, unorganized wor-
kers, and labor activists are presented
Produced by Earl Ofari. (Rebroadcast
Wed., II th, 10pm).
4:00 ORGANIC GARDENING
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 CHAPEL, COURT AND
COUNTRYSIDE
Renaissance and Early Baroque
Music: Musicke of Sundrie Kindes II.
The Irottola and other forms of Italian
popular music (L'Oiseau-lyre DSLO 203-
206). Kathcrinc Calkin hosts. Stereo.
9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA
10:00 PREACHIN' THE BLUES
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: CLASSICAL
AMSTERDAM CONCERTGEBOUW
ORCHESTRA-LIVE IN CONCERT
C.P.E. BACH: Symphony in A;
HAUL OUKAS: La Peri; FRANZ BER-
WALD: Symphony in C ("Singuliere");
David Zinman conducts. Tapes courtesy
of Radio Nedcrland. Stereo.
Misery
Play the blues for me.
Play the blues for me.
No other music
'LI ease my misery.
Sing a soothin' song.
Said a soothin' song.
Cause the man I love's done
Done me wrong.
Can't you understand,
O, understand
A good woman's cryin'
For a no-go.od man?
Black gal like me.
Black gal like me
'S got to hear a blues
For her misery.
-Langslon Hughes
tuesday
lO
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
Si tar and Tabia and how they got
that way. Hand and Arooj explain and
play.
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
HA YON: Symphonies "A " and "S".
Alternative versions of Symphonies 22. 53,
63. and 103. Antal Dorati conducts the
Philharnionia Hungarica (London STS
15316-17. Kathcrinc Calkin hosts. Stereo.
2:00 HOLDING UP MORE THAN
HALF THE SKY
3:00 THE BOP KINGS
4:00 RED TAPE
. Up against the bureaucracy! Steve
Blum hosts this bi-weekly program on how
to live with and deal with bureaucracies-
governmental, non-governmental, welfare,
phone company, birth, death and taxes.
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 TALKING ABOUT MOVIES
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL SPECIAL:
COMMUNISM:
THESPECTRE HAUNTING EUROPE
Part I
The growth of the Italian, French,
Portuguese and Spanish parties, as well
as the meeting of the European Commu- j
nist Parties under the banner of the inde-
pendence of each party, has revived anti-
communist rhetoric in the West. This
panel will explore how Marxism is devel-
oping a critique of Stalinism, and a prac-
ticing alternative. It will also ask whether
the Communist movement has strayed
from Marx-Engels and Lenin. This dis-
cussion will continue next Tuesday.
Jim Berland moderates. (Rebroadcast
Mon., I6th, 2pm)
8:uo BOSTON SYMPHONY
LIVE IN CONCERT
TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony No. 6.
GRIFFES: The Pleasure Dome of Kubia
Khan. BARTOK: Miraculous Mandarin
Suite. Seiji Ozawa conducts. William
Pierce hosts.
10:00 THE COMMUNITY LAWYER
Atty. Art Goldberg, head of the
Echo Park People's Law Center, talks
about the law and lawyers.
10:30 GAY RADIO COLLECTIVE/
I.M.R.U.
"Royal Courts": flamboyant drag
balls and what else? "Emperor" Hoy
Fowler and "Prime Minister" Michael
Carter, representing the Royal Court of
the San Fernando Valley, outline the com-
munity service activities, involvement in
local politics, and other less-publicized
aspects of these social-service organizations
Also: Lucia Chappellc reports from Wash-
ington, DC. on the U.S. General Con-
ference of the Universal Fellowship of
Metropolitan Community Churches
as part of the regular I.M.R.U. News
Report.
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: ROCK
Steven Tyler: Commentary on
new releases.
KPFK FOLIO PAQE 8
Bradley Smieh/BiUie Holiday, 1944
Frank Driggs Collection fij
Wednesday
11
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 RICHLAND PERSON
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
DUKAS: Symphony in C. The Sor-
cerer's Apprentice. Waller Weller conducts
the London Philharmonic (London CS
6995). La PerHe\CQTpli). Polyeucte Over-
ture. Jean Martinon conducts the French
National Radio Orchestra (Musical Heri-
tage Society MHS 1467). Piano Sonata-
Vladimir Pleshakov, soloist (Orion ORS
6906). Katherine Calkm hosts. Stereo.
1:SS REPORT TO THE LISTENER
2:00 THE PLAY OF THE WEEK
4:00 RUTHS KITCHEN
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY Charles Morgan
7:00 OPEN lOURNAL
8:00 MONDAY EVENING CONCERTS-VI
Recorded live in-concert at the Leo
S. Bing Theater of the Los .Angeles County
Museum of Art on December 15. 1975
J.S. BACH: Cantata No. SI "Janch ret
Cott in alien Landen": IGOR STRAVIN-
SKY: Pribaoutki: Ragtime: DANIEL
KESSNER: Chamber Concerto: J.S. BACH:
Cantata No. 53 "Schlage, doch, gewuen-
schte Stunde": HAROLD BUDD: Songs
of Paradise: JEFF JONES: RIVB: Outtakes.
Karl Kohn and Harold Budd conduct the
Monday Evening Chamber Ensemble.
David Cloud hosts.
10:00 THE DILEMMA OF THE BLACK
WORKING CLASS
The current economic slump has
seriously eroded the gains of previous
years by the American worker. However,
with the Black worker, the situation has
reached crisis proportions. Always suf-
fering the effects of last hired. First Fired,
the Black worker Finds his condition today
deteriorating in the workplace. The pro-
blems faced are brought into sharp f(Kus
in this documentary. Selected interviews
with trade unionists, unemployed wor-
kers, unorganized workers, and labor
activists are presented. Produced by Earl
Ofari. (Rebroadcast from Men, 9th).
1 1:00 AN EVENING WITH MAYA I
ANCiELOU P.irl I |
Maya Angelou. in a very special
program reads seleclK>ns from hei autobio-
graphical works, recit'*s s»»me of her poems.
Sings both her own songs and tT,idilioii:il
spirituals :ind discusses her life and work
with Lin Harris of WHAI Ihc jullinr of
/ Know Why the Caged Bird Sings seeks
lo go beyond mere facts to the truth of
each experience. The experiences retleded
in hei work offer ample (esliinuny to why
(his Black woman, ostensibly "horn lo
lose" has managed to Iriumph in virtually
every field of arts, letters & life. (Part II
will be broadcast next week at this time,
iiul parts I & II on Monday, 30th, .1pm). 'pin
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
1200 NIGHTANGELS: )AZZ
GOODBYE PORKPIE HAT
2:00 THE BIG SLEEP; )ohn Breckow
thursday
12
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
Guest host. Michael Alexander
from the famous Aman l-"olk Ensemble,
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Piano Sonatas of Schubert-ll
Sonata in E. D. 157. Sonata in C,
D. 279/346: Sonata in E. D 459; Sonata
in A Minor, D. 537; Sonata in A-Flat,
D. 557; Sonata in £ Minor, D. 566; Sonata
in EFlat. D. 568. Paul Badura-Skoda.
piano; RCA Victrola VICS 6129. David
Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 RAGTIME IV
An additional look at notable resi-
dents of the Macdowcll Colony. Trans-
lator Willard Trask, who won a National
Book Award for his edition of Casanova's
Memoirs, reads his translations of Portuguese
and Rumanian verse. Host Leonard Cha-
browe discusses the work of writer Ivdwaid
Rice, then presents actor Maurice Ed-
wards reading from Rice's biography of
tfic philosopher-mystic Thomas Merton
describing Merlon's last years, his pilgrim-
age to India and meetings with Tibetan
and Hindu religious figures. (Further
programs in this series will be broadcast
every Thursday at this time in August). I
3:00 STRAWBERRY SHORTBREAD
Pal Hcnson hosis rci;ular discus-
sions of vducalioii, with an einplu'^is c»n
Ihc need tor rnulti-iullural. ln-liiii;u.il pro-
grams and parent involvcnu-nt, J'.M is j
pareni and activist with Ihc America))
hriends Service Committee task force on
suspensions and expulsions. Icatures,
guesis, panels and open phones.
4:00 THE HEALfH DEPARTMENT
lA|>lorint; health care as i| is prac-
ticed and as rt might he. With Al llucb-
ncr of Science for the People.
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 ANALYSIS; William Winter
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA-
LIVE IN CONCERT
MAHLER. Symphony no. 8. Solo-
ists-layc R<)bins4>n. Susan Davcnny Wyncr,
Mignon Dunn. Lih ChiMtkasian. John Alcv-
andcr, Richard Ircdcricks. Paul Plishka;
Scottish National Orchestra Chorus; Itlos-
som lestivat Chorus; I'Tich Leinsdorf con-
ducts. Robert Conrad hosts. Recttrdcd in
Columbia SO lour-<hannel Sound
10:00 POETRY LIVE
l.ivc readings from the studios of
KPIK of poets reading their works. Pro-
duced by Paul Vangelisti,
11:00 THE lANUS COMPANY
A live radio play by Jerry liono.
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: BLUEGRASS
BLUEGRASS SPECIAL
Gentleman Jim Ludwig features
some new bluegrass recordings, some old
and impossible lo ever see or hear recor-
dings from rare collections, and some re-
broadcasts from country music shows of
the 40's and 50's.
Charles Stewart/Sarah Vaughn, c. 1949
Down Beat [1]
friday 13
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
Art Rosenbaum traditional music
from one of the leading authorities of
the banjo.
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
David Cloud hosts a program of
new releases.
2:00 DONALD BARTHEI.ME-II
He reads stones from City Life,
Unspeakable Practices, Unnatural Acts,
Sadness, Paraguay, On Angels, The Presi
dent. Indian Uprising .ind Brain Damage.
He discusses the demands placed on his
leaders, Ihe'wrilers' problem of surpas-
sing Ihcir predecessors and themselves,
Ihe modern American literary scene,
found objects in liclion, and "poorly
prepared critics."
3:40 300 YEARS OF AMERICAN POETRY
4:00 SURVIVE WITH PLEASURE
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:40 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
6:45 NEWSPEAK: Guest Commentary
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
800 FRIDAY NIGHT CONCERT HOUR
AMSTERDAM CONCERTGEBOUW
ORCHESTRA LIVE IN CONCERT
LEX VAN DELDEN: Concerto
lor Two String Orchestras: BEETHOVEN:
Piano Concerto No. 3 in C Minor: l-.mil
Clilels, soloist, liugen Jochuin conducts.
Tapes courtesy of Radio Nederland. Stereo.
9:00 IN FIDELITY: Peter Suthcim
9:30 LATIN QUARTER
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 OUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION
This IS definitely not their 25. but
only ours. But we will share it \vith you-
if you're quiet.
2:00 TESSERACT
A program of contemporary and
electronic music. ,
Saturday
14
8:00 ALAN WATTS: PHILOSOPHY
EAST AND WEST
A Problem of Strategy
8:30 TRANS: Amanda Foulger
A program on Bio-Dynamic Farm-
ing and Gardening with experts who will
be visiting Los Angeles this month for
a special conference.
9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
10:30 FOLK MUSIC: |ohn Davis
12:30 THE CAR SHOW
1:50 WEEKEND CALENDAR
Lena Home, 1948/Down Beat (11
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 9
I, Too
1, too, sing America
They send me to eat in the kitchen
Wlieii company comes.
But I laugh.
And cat well.
And grow strong.
Tomorrow,
I'll be al the table
Wlien company comes.
Nobody 'II dare
Say to me,
"Eat in the kitchen,"
Then.
Besides,
They'll sec how beautiful I am
And be ashamed
I, loo, am America
/.allusion Hughes
PAUL ROBESON 161
2:00 BALLADS, BAN)OS AND
BLUEGRASS
3:30 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
5:00 INSIDE L.A.: Earl Ofari
6:00 SATURDAY NEWS: Larry Moss
6:30 ON FILM: Bill Moritz
6:45 IN PRINT: Bob Peters
7:00 CONNECTIONS
Peter Marin tiosls tliis bi-wcckly
series of discussions which treat the
world as seriously as most people take
themselves.
8:00 ZYMURGY
A program devoted to some recent
works by Karlheinz Stockhauscn- Cey/on
and Bird of Passage as well as a replay of
the final section. Gold Dust, froni Aus
den sieben Tagen (by popular request).
David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
10:00 THE WILLIAM MALLOCH
PROGRAMME
12:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
2:00 THE SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
SHOW: lay Laccy
Sunday 15
7:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN: Prince Dixon
9:00 BtO-MEDITATION: Jacls Gariss
10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschei Lymon
10:45 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
Olivera Katarina from her album
in Yugoslavia entitled TV Show'.
11:30 DOROTHY HEALEY
12:30 OPEN JOURNAL
1:00 SUNDAY OPERA
WAGNER: Die IValkuere. Soloists-
Martha Moedl. Ludwig Suthaus, Leonie
Rysanck, l-'erdinand Frantz, Gottlob
Frick, Margarcte Klose; Wilhelm Furwacn-
gler conducts the Vienna Philharmonic
Orchestra (Seraphim II! 6012). iTcd
Hyatt hosts.
5:00 THE SOUR APPLE TREE
lANGSTON HUGHCS, BUSROY, 192
,jNDtRWOCD AND UNDERWOOD
6:00 SUNDAY NEWS
6:30 THE FOUTH JOWER OF
INVERNESS
7:00 THE lOHNNY OTIS SHOW!
8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
The Surfing l^ystique. C';irlos.
himself a long-time enthusiast of \ur-
Hng, examines in this program the
varied aspects of the sport. Included
are documentaries as well as samples
and commentaries on the mystique and
sub-culture associated with surfing.
9:30 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
monday 16
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
9:15 CHARLES MORGAN FROM THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
9:30 CALENDAR: Terry Hodel
9:35 READ ALL ABOUT IT
10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
11:00 MORNING READING
Memoirs of a Survivor b\' Doris
l.essing, read by llclenc Rosenlilulh.
11:30 KUljCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Music in a New Found Land — XXVII
Music from the darker side of (he
■60\ THOMAS BEVERIPCE: Once-
In Memoriam Martin Luther King: Solo-
ists; members of the Nation;il Symphony
Orchestra; Washington Choral Arts
Society; Turnaboiit TVS 34467; srfl/f
REICH: Come Out: Odyssey 32160160;
RICHARD WERNICK: Requiem-Kaddish
(for the victims of Indochina): Contem-
porary Chamber hnscmble; .Arthur Weis-
bcrg conducting; Nonesuch It 71303;
WILLIAM KRAFT: Contextures-Riots
Decade 60's: Los Angeles Philharmonic
Orchestra; Zubin Mehta conducting; Lon-
don CS 6613. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 communism:
the spectre haunting europe
Part I
The growth of the Italian, 1-rench,
Poriuguesc and Spanish parlies, as well
as (he meeting of the European Commun-
ist Parties under (he banner of indepen-
dence of each party, lias revived anti-
communist rhetoric in the West. This
pane! will explore how Marxism is deve-
loping a critique of Stalinism, and a prac-
ticing allernadve- 11 will also ask whe-
(her (he Comnuimsl movement h;is slrayed
from Marx-t:ngels and Lenin. This dis-
cussion will continue next Monday. Jim
Berland moderates. (Rcbroadcast from
/.ug. 10).
LANGSTON HuGHfS. LINCOLN U., 19?/
■.CIIOYBURG COLLtCTION, NYPL
[if
r>CHOf/BUOG I^'iLLIXTIDN. NYP!
.Joe Louis
Ttiey worshipped Joe.
A school teacher
whose hair was gray
said:
Jiic has sense cn/iugh to know
He is a god
So many gods don 'I know
"TItey say "... "They say "
But the gossips had no
"They say"
to latch onto
for Joe.
Langslon Hughes
"They say '
LOUIS KO's SCHMFLING IN 2:04 OF FIRST ROUND.
Jl-NE 23, 2938/WIDE WORLD PHOTOS
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 10
3:00 BUSING NOW
Warning: this is y pro-busing docu-
mentary, limincnt historians, cornnninily
leaders. ;ind elected officials discuss the
demand for equal, quality, integrated edu-
cation in Los Angeles schools. Produced
by Susan .Anderson. (Rcbroadcast Wed..
18th. lOpm).
4:00 THE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 CHARLES MORGAN FROM THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CON
VENTION
7 no OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 CHAPEL, COURT AND
COUNTRYSIDE
Renaissance and Early Baroque
Music: Musicke of Sundrie Kindes III.
Quodlibet and The Merry Durryps— Ger-
man. Spanish and English musical trends
(L'Oiseaulyrc DSLO 203-206). Kalherine
Calkin hosts. Stereo.
9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA
10:00 PREACHIN' THE BLUES
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: CLASSICAL
AMSTERDAM CONCERTGEBOUW
ORCHESTRA LIVE IN CONCERT
LUTOSLAWSKI: Funeral Music tin
memonam Beta Bartokl; SCHUBER T:
Symphony l\lo. 9 in C: Uri Segal conducts.
Tapes courtesy of Radio Nederland. Stereo
Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton, Oakland
Oakland, California 1967 [31
tuesday 17
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News with Carol lireshears and Ed
Thomas.
9:15 CHARLES MORGAN FROM THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
9:30 CALENDAR: Terry Model
9:35 READ ALL ABOUT IT
10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
Urban Bourhon-2nd set teamed
with (can you believe?) Gypsy Esnia.
11:00 MORNING READIflG
H:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
BEETHOVEN: Sonatas for Violin
and Piano /-Arthur Grumiaux, violin:
Clara llaskil. piano (Philips 6733 001).
Katherinc Calkin hosts. Stereo.
2:00 HOLDING UP MORE 1 HAN
HALF THE SKY
Produced hy Ihc Kl'l K Women''
Collective,
3:00 THE BOP KINGS
4:00 SPECIAL LIVE COVERAGE FROM
THE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 CHARLES MORGAN FROM THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
Ins role in civic affairs and his recent ap-
pointment to the Hoard of Directors of
L.A.'s (iay Community Services Center.
Open phones.
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Sieve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: ROCK
Steven lyler with comment;. ry on
new releases.
ivednesday
18
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul ViMwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News with Carol lireshears and Id
Ihomas.
9:15 CHARLES MORGAN AT THE
REPUBLICAN NAIIONAI
CONVENTION
930 CALENDAR: Terry Hodcl
9:35 READ ALL ABOUT IT
With Will Lewis and Mike Model,
10:00 RICHLAND PERSON
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
BOCCHERINI: Guitar Quintets
nos. 1 and 3; Renala farrago, soloist;
Spanish National Cdambcr Music Lnseiii-
ble (Musical Heritage Society MIIS 575).
Stabat Mater: Carmen Vilalta, Rilva An-
vinen, Gjorgio Marelli, soloists; Ivan Poli-
dori conducts the Genoan Chamber Orch-
estra (Musical Heritage Society MHS 1097).
Katherinc Calkin hosts. Stereo.
^55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
2:00 THE PLAY OF THE WEEK
Black Panther Breakfast for
Children Program (31
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
LIVE IN CONCERT
SCHUBERT: Symphony no. 3.
MOZART: Piano Concerto no. /2Peter
I ranki, soloist. SIBELIUS: Symphony
no. 1. Colin Davis conducts. William
Pierce hosts. Recorded with the Dolby
noise reduction system in Columbia SO
Four Channel Sound.
10:00 THE SCIENCE CONNECTION
/ pull a flower from the woods-
A monster with a glass
Computes the stamens in a breath —
And has her in a "class"!
Steve Kilston hosts,
10:30 GAY RADIO COLLECTIVE/
I.M.R.U.
Scott I orbcs, one of Ihc owners
of the Studio One, L.A.'s most popular
disco, discusses the complexities of owner-
ship and management of this increasingly
mixed "gay" night spot, and talks about
4:00
SPECIAL COVERAGE FROM THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CON-
VENTION
Huey P. Newton. Alameda
County Jail, 1968 131
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 11
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
CHARLES MORGAN AT THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 MONDAY EVENING CONCERTS Vil
Recorded hvc-in-conccrl jl the Lcn
S. Bing Theater of (he Los Antjeles Coun-
ty Museum of Art on Junujry 12. 1976.
HENRY PURCELL: Fantasia and Two
Pavans (American premiere. Arranged by
Peter Myxwcll Davies); PETER MAX-
WELL DAVIES: Ave Maris Stella; GEORGE
CRUMB: Music for a Summer Evenmg
(Makrokosmos III). Paul Polivnick eon-
ducts the Monday I'.vening Chamber
Players; Charles Ticrro and Richard Gruy-
son, pianists. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
10:00 BUSING NOW
Warning: This is a pro-busing docu-
mentary. Lmincnl historians, community
leaders and elected officials discuss the
demand for equal, quality , integrated
education in Los Angeles Schools. Pro-
duced by Susan Anderson. (Rcbroadcasl
from August 16).
11:00 AN EVENING WITH MAYA
j ANGELOU Pari II
The author of / Know Why the Caged
I Bird Sings reads selections from her nuto-
I biographical works, recites some of her
' poems, sings both her own songs and tra-
ditional spirituals and discusses her life
and work with Lin Harris of WItAL (Parts
I and II rebroadcast Men.. 30th. 3pm).
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
' 12:00 NIGHTANGELS: )AZZ
thursday
19
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT; Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
Ncwv wilh l-;d Thomas ;ind Carol
Brcshcars.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Piatui Sundtds uf Schtihcrr 111
Sonata in F Sh.irp Minor, D. 570/
604; Sonata in B, D. 575: Sonata in C,
D. 612/613: Sonata in F Minor. D. 505/
625: Sonata in A, D. 664: Sonata in A
Minor, D. 784. Paul Badura-Skoda. piano;
RCA Viclfol:i Vies 6130. David Cloud
hosts. Stcrfo.
2:00 RAGTIME V
An iippraisal oT tlu* popukir "lil-
tlc magazine" American Poetry Review.
a bi-monthly published in Philadelphia.
Wc hear ciJnlribuling pix;ls Clerald Stern
and Thoda Sehwar/. rc;iding their own
work. le;iturcd is u short storv from
Chech-exile Yuri Weil with an enthusias-
tic introduction by Philip Koth. Weil's
Shanghai. comp;ired to the work of l.aae
Itabel. is an existential story of the N;i/.i
lloloeaust. Produced by Leon;ird Ch:i-
browc of KPI'A. Series funded by a
grant from the National l'*ndowment for
the Arts.
3:00 OPEN JOURNAL
4:00 SPECIAL COVERAGE OF THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 CHARLES MORGAN AT THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
700 OPEN lOURNAL^ "
X:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA
LIVE IN CONCERT
MOZART: Ave Verum Corpus.
BRAHMS: Piano Concerto no. 1. BEETHO-
VEN: Choral farifasy-Misha D.chtcr. piamv.
VERDI: Te Deum. Scollish National
Urcheslr;i Chorus; ltloss<»m lestival
Chorus, brieh Leinsdorf conducts. Ro-
bert Conrad hosts. Recorded in Columbia
SO l(iur-Channel Sound.
10:00 CULTURE JOURNAL
The Social and Cultural Implica-
tions of Language. A discussion produced
by the University of Chicago as part of
their Language Celebration 1975. Spea-
kers are Wayne C Booth, James Sledd,
Dwight M:icDonald. Victor Turner.
I 11:00 THE JANUS COMPANY
A live presentation of II. G. Wells'
classic fiinlasy The Magic Shop with Mike
Model. Mallory C.cller and Jan Ridolphi
Celler.
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS; Sieve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: BLUEGRASS
BLUEGRASS SPECIAL
friday 20
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vurwcrk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
With the I'rue and Trembling
String Hand.
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR ''
9:15 CHARLES MORGAN FROM THE
REPUBLICAN NATIONAL
CONVENTION
9:30 CALENDAR: Terry Model
9:35 READ ALL ABOUT IT
Mike Hodel and Dave Boxall read
morning papers from all over.
10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
The dreaded return of Michael
Alexander.
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
WOMAN'S DORM
JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI
MAY. 1970 [31
Angela Davis on release from prison
Island
Wave of sorrow,
Do not drown me now:
I see the island
Still ahead somehow.
I see the island
And its sands are fair:
Wave of sorrow
Take me there.
-Langs ton Hughes
12:00 NOON CONCERT
VLADIMIR VLASOV: Cello Con-
certo No. 1: Moscow Radio Orchestra;
Gennady Rozhdestvcnsky conducting;
HENRI SAUGUET: Melodic Concertante:
Moscow Radio Orchestra; Henri Sauguet
conducting; Melodiya/Angel SR 40180.
HENRI DUTILLEUX: Cello Concerto:
Orchestrc de Paris; Serge Bando conduc-
ting; IVITOLD LUTOSLAWSKI: Cello
Concerto: Orchcstre de Paris; Wilold
Lutoslawski conducting: Angel S 37146;
Mstislav Rostropovich, soloist. David
Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 DONALD BARTHELME-III
In this 3rd of 4 programs, he reads
his children's book. The Slightly Irregu-
lar Fire Engine or The Hithering Thither-
ing Jiin, Pieces froin Guilt Pleasures, in-
cludingSwa//ow/np, The Royal Treatment,
The Photographs, The Teachings of Don
B — A Yankee Way of Knowledge and
a parodv of Presidential (unintelligible)
tape (inaudible) transcripts. He discusses
parody as fiction or non-fiction, a (fe-
male) pen name that Esquire took serious-
ly, English as an endangered langungc.
children's books as works for kids or
grown-ups. and his special methods of
teaching writing. Produced by WBAI.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 12
The New Los Angeles
FREE PRESS
FREE LOVE, FREE BEER, FREE RENT, FREE PRESS.
TO HOSTILE OBSERVERS of the
events of the Sixties, this was about the
size of it. For those in the eye of the
storm, however, ideas of real impor-
tance were being spread around like
baseball cards, hand to hand, with a
remarkable enthusiasm. As the moguls
of the six-o'clock news and the daily
newspapers had difficulty keeping up,
it was no real surprise to see the
appearance of a number of small newspapers acting as
forums for these events. One of the most important of these
was the Los Angeles Free Press.
As often ha|)pens in life, the Free Press has had its ups
.iiid downs over the years, and lately there has been a good
deal of speculation about the paper's present intentions. To
( Icar the air and put our cards on the table, this seems as
i^ood a time as any to reaffirm the original goals of this
ncws|)aper as stated in the first edition given general cir-
culation here in the summer of 1964.
riioui^h I lie reader may find a certain antique flavor in
ihc following, the ideas and aspirations expressed remain
the same for the present staff. If they still make sense to
\(>ii. \<)u'll find a handy subscription form at the bottom of
ihc |)ai<c.
nHTiwai scoHS viCTur
=.~rr=i HI flWH an iMiui =^-^-'A
I H A V K
RKSKRVKl)
Ihl5
5|»'
ifll ihc rradrr
somrthinif
;i hou t this
newspaper
und why ii
appears
Lhc rcadrr,
hoprfully, will
be concerned
e n <) u i; h to
ask. and has a
ri^ht to know,
if we have any
poljlical com-
mitments or
afliUations
which will in-
flui'iM r ihr wav (his paper is edited Vou will
|KTh.ips alwi wanr to know why wr frel that a
iH*w putilit.ttion IS nrtrssan in the l^s .\ni{eles
.in-.i and what wr ho|H- lo a<(omplish that is
(lifTrreni ihan other rxislini; puliliralinns
If in the following we do not answer these
<|iir'«iions Ki voiir satisfai lion. or. if there are
ollii-r (|iii-%tions relalini; to this puhlicalion
wliiih v<Mi wrnild like answered, plrasr feel free
lo write .1 leiirr to the editor or. if you are so in-
( lillt'd. rvrn .in artiilr
Wr n.tliirallv lan'l promise in advante to
print i-vrr\' letter or artu le wr rereivr hut when
\nii l<M>k .11 this issue, and panicularlv at those to
follow, voii will notice that we are not afraid to
print ( oniri>versial material and let the writer
li.ivi- his sav. It IS a i^eneral rule m this
iH-wspaprr that if anyone has anything to say on
an in)|Ktrtani lommunily issue and can say it
well, hr or she will have iheir day in print That
is whv we (all ourselves the Free Press
We. of < ourse. don't plan to pnnl material
that will land the publisher and his staff in jail
for lit»ct But. short of that area and those restric-
tions imjMised by spare in our columns and the
need for pMirnalisiic balance, we plan to print
rvrr\' prnvocalive. controversial and, yes. even
irrrvereni arti< le our writers and readers submit
■ hat IS related to the civic and cultural life of our
cily
'lliis last (omment brinifs u» lo another poini
Wr are fundamentally a community newspaper
Wr plan to focus on l-os Angeles and to a lesser
extent, on (tatifornia aFfairs We do not plan to
cieal with national and international events In
our opinion, there are a number of adequate
newspapers and magazine available to our
M.iilcis |i)i llic l.ith-r piiipiist' wliilr (here arc
io..n\ .in.iv oDoial life v%huh arc in.idff|iiatclv
..,...,,,..1
\* rMTvoiH- kiiokw ihf \>n-s*. in l^is .\niieles
li.is .1 (Ii-MT\cd f(-tiiii,iii<in lor licini; i|iiitf i onscr-
\.iii\r III then cdiiori.il polii< us .uid nporia^c
Ihc lll.c(..lv .iMiont* »li.>iii ^^.' ( l.i^s oursrlv.s
IIMI.lIK do MDl i{Ct .llll'l|U.II'' n<'^^^ i OMT.I^c ,lbi>ill
ihr Npc. iLk iliiims til. It ( iHiMTii ihc-m This is ihf
|.>orn.il<Ml< ^.l.lHlrll lll.it ^^c pl.iri to nil U hdc
«<• .in .III open pl.ilforiii \\v [i.trlic iil.irK pl.in to
!..■ rhc pl.Hc uhcrr hfirr.iU < ;.n express
ihciiis.'b.-s ..iirl <||s..iss lh<-ir.>vMirlifTi-rrn<rs \s
.1 IK-Usp.ipi'i \\r' feci Olll p.lllH lll.n llllK lion IS (o
proMflc iiiliiriii.iiioii III link imfclhcr the x.inous
sei Millie III our f.ir niiiii> lilicr.it t oiiiniuiiiiv in
SdiiilK 111 < .ililnrni.t
\ ipiisiioii llicii cMUTUcs Is the Irci' I'n-ss fn-r
' iiMiiuli hi priol tii.iirrial disai^rci'iiii; vMlh liber.il
oiU.iMi/.iiioiis ' Misoloit'K Wc «rrc ii.nfroiiicd
ttitli |ii<-< isi'lv this siiii.iiiiin 111 pri-p.innt! thc
issiir III I In- Irrc IVi-ss vim .iic imw holdini; ( >iir
ii'piirtir Iti-q.iii her suir^ on ilie K.ink of Viiirrii .i
^.isHs (OKI. mnn-oi-less .oiMinM-d tli.il the
h.illk*N pnsMitxi t\,is |i|sliried V\ e pl.illtied lo
|iriol llie .illnle lliis \\.i\ |e\eti ihoii^h the
|>iililislier li.is .1 loiii^-sLuidini; persnn.il ri'l.itiiins
tMlli lhc I Mil ciulils iniiwMieiK ) .iiid llieii jiivile
< < >I<1. Ill -.mIiiiiiI I..I piiblii .itloll .1 sl.ileillelit nf
il<. ii\Mi side II I ihe siiirv \s ii tinned •nit our
(epiiitei hi I .inie i (HIMIIi ed ol I he \.ilidil\ of the
COKf. posilioiibv Ihe I.Kis ih.ll eniervrd .|s she
(111! Iiei rese.in Ii \s .i piililu iiev\sp.ipiT free of
'ita.iiH/,iiion.il I oiiiiiiiKneni. we ,ire ifiiini! lo
piint iJie shots .IS mil vMilers <al) iheoi
III 14.11 dless of the prrson.il opinions i>f ihe
piililisher) ,ind then imiie i onitnciii ,in<i relml-
i.il
In .1 siinil.ii lashion. lliis piililii .iiion is iioi
I iiiiiiiitited to the p.irtis.in defense of ,in\
piilidi .il iiri;.iiii/;ilion. desptii' ilie poliiii ,il
Im In ^ iir .irrili.innns n) .m^ of its st.ifT tm-mtiers
W t \m|| preseiil tn.iterial if iiei ess.irv .
koiN kiiii;" .iii\ polilii.ll p.irtv. whether it lie
DriiiiHr.itii KepobtK.in or Soi liIiM i[ »e feel
ih.ll »ll ihe liK.ll le^el ihex ,ire l.ikinif stands
<leliiiiieiit.i] lo the interests of ihe lomnuiiiitv
I )iM-s I his imMii that this is .i newspaper
.illeiiipliiit; ,(11 .ibsiiloteK t.ii etess. neutral poinl
nf Mcu ' \u Ihr si.iff nil Oibers presentK pot-
iitiii (his piibli< .iiion into print deriniiel\ main-
l.ilii .1 lifier.ii point of view .ii;.iiiisl sei^rri^.ition
(01 1 oil liberties .ind for the use ol the i.ix doil.ir
III .1 (.isliKiii whii h liencnis the i iii/enr\ and not
lhc piM kets iif iiinstroi lion < mnpanies Wr ,irr
<lcritiitel\ 4 oininilled lo the prin< iples inherent in
,1 (leniiMraiK ordrrinK of s<m iet\ wherein all
cili/ens h.ivr the righl lo mraninitfulK par-
iMp.n. 1
ll.wsp.
t>> iliipo
.1. Mie .
ImMHIiI
Mlliri ..IS
OM,.|,lK
.loidu.iU
While
III. Ill ill.
I- ■•
I.IO.I.HII.'I
I.Al.t. >
"I""' '"
.lU pl.lll
..1 1.1 II. hi
.inniunitv p.ililii .il .oid s.i< i.il life \s
1)1 the Ujie we li.ive been desi ribini{.
iilil III I ,iis \ti(>eles hie .1 iievs dimen-
ileiiiiM i.ilii sot'il\ . .1 iciib free press
■ Is oiii' .ire.i ol 1 oiiiiiiKtiiM 111 «e do h.ivc
e leel iiei essit.ites st.iteiiieiil We U'lieve
limb ih.ll soiietv slmiild .uoid .iltempts
se .irliili.in hinil.itioiis upon the natural
I the <(e.ilne .iitisi lo e\plor<' in areas
(he iioiiii.tl 1 omeiilioiis of iirijani/rd
Ui b.liive ih.ll III siiHe (he .irtisi mav
' 1m .1 del. IIS. ol s.Ki.il si.indards but
> 1. 1. lib 10 l.lv^ Ihehoil/.ills.ifnxih/a-
il iiri.l w. h.o. .iiid wilt in the
>illl< Ik I lie iletelise ill (he art I si in most if
III ih.- iibsieiiilv I .ises .|s well .is in .ill
«<■■> where tiiu.ini/eH MM il\ iirivtiseb ,ind
• ■.es 11%. piilii e powers ,i({aiiisl 111-
11 ^l.lllps
<- li.oe .1 ^i.-.tt iiiii'iesi III ilieiullural
<>iiiiiiiiiiit\ we w.iiii (II make il i Irar.
\ lo h.ipehil ..iiiuibiii.iis ih.ll we an-
,ill\ .1 iiewsp.tpei .iiid O.il .1 llier.ir\
.1 iieitsp.ipei we seek in iMi 11 issui' to
. ..Mill lent >>n < 01. .-vents i,uit{iii< from
ii<; 10 ii« l.iiuei .ispe. (s III iIk' reino\nl
flooi l'.'is|iiiii> S.pi.ili' lo.>.inen Ihe
librr.il Is .in ixpert .m fcireinn policy but not iuf-
liiieiiTb iinnbed in lhc Imal areas in which he
i.iii 111. ike loiinediate nruifress in ihe cir-
• ooisi.iui IS I if his ov^n lite
I iii.ill\ we iiiiisi bring to ihe attention of our
h-.kI.t ill. It ibis Krer Press (f)sts much money to
|ji(iihne l'.\eii though our writers are presently
doii.iiuiu llirir valuable time and the human
t espouse of iiiher v.ilunleers has been moil
vtiind.-rful. \i-i il still takes hundreds of dollan
.■.II h week loprodmc (his newspaper —and there
It iliis tievsspaper does not immediately i;ain
the siippiirt of the wimmunity m regard to sub-
Miipiioiis ,111(1 .idvenising we will very quickK
h.iii' III I lose up our venture We don't expect
\<iu II. like iir .igrcH* with every article in ihn
iiev\sp,iper (there is not one staff member who
hk.-'*" or '.Hirers" with all the pieces in ihis
i^^iiei but we do hope thai you sympathize
.III II mil Willi our general objeclives to i^ive ihis
iiiwsp.ipiT .1 cli.infi- to pnive itself Ten ihou-
s.iii.l siibM nbers i.in suppon the Free Press, A
li.Miiliiil III III. in- siibsi ribers each wee^ unlil the
l.imei y.i.il i» iibi.iiiM'd i an keep the pnnier paid.
W on'i \oii do \oiir part bv sending in your sub-
^idpimn IikI.iv and asking voiir friends lo do
lik.wi«' — Arthur A unkin
I Sign Me Up
r~]( Mi.ntir 111 m\ M.isicr (Ihart^f- I
117^ SimkI rllr :ri issiiis for Si 2i ( .,1 <l r\|in cs |
,— , \C1I1U11I « I
n^i-ri.l ii.r ^2 l^s,ll■^ lor Slll')i I
[_J ( :in-( k rnclosffi
[JsiImI 111. MM 1^^N.■^ l.ll SlH2ll F] ^^>>^ ""' I'l"'!'
i[ ] 1 -iin s iiu iu>. .1 m
[]SiImI 111. MM 1^^N.■^ I.H SlH2ll flUiH ""• I'l"'!' I
I ' I
I X.l.ll.'ss I
Cm Si. II.- /ip I
I FRi:i: pm:ss I
I .iH.SO Hollywood Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90028 |
Only in Los Angeles.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 13
3:30 300 YEARS OF AMERfCAN POETRY
Itoiii Anne [Irydstrcct to Stephen
Crane. Re;id by Julie H;irris. Uddie Al-
bert, I'd lieglcy, Vincent Price, Helen
Guhagun Douglas.
4:00 SURVIVE WITH PLEASURE
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 CHARLES MORGAN CONVEN-
TION WRAPUP
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 FRIDAY NIGHT CONCERT HOUR
AMSTERDAM CONCERTGLBOUHr
ORCHESTRA -LIVE IN CONCERT
LISZT: Symphonic Poem No. W
"Hamlet": MOZART: Serenade No. 9
in D (Posthorn); Hans Vonk conducts
Tapes courtesy of Radio Ncdcrland. .Stereo.
9:00 IN FIDELITY: Peter Sutheim
9:30 LATIN QUARTER
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 HOUR XXV: SCIENCE FICTION
2:00 TESSERACT
Saturday
21
8:00 ALAN WATTS
Parallel Thought East and West—
On the Work of C. Selver.
8:30 TRANS: Amanda Foulger
The transmitter went out for our
live follow-up to the Waldorf liducation
Scries in June, so wc will make up for it
today with Dr. Virginia Seasc and another
educator from Highland Hall, the local
Waldorf School.
9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
Another program in the Uncle
Ruthie Education Series for grades of
all ages.
10:30 FOLK MUSIC: John Davis
Uncle John proves that you don't
need an cjookashun to be smart.
12:30 THE CAR SHOW
1:50 WEEKEND CALENDAR
2:00 BALLADS, BANJOS AND
BLUEGRASS
3:30 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
5:00 INSIDE L.A.: Earl Ofari
E.xamining social, political and cul-
tural happenings in L.A. with guests, in-
terviews, ACLU Commentary and jazz
interludes.
6:00 SATURDAY NEWS: Larry Moss
6:30 ON FILM: Dean Cohen
6:45 ONSTAGE
7:00 THE MAN WHO SAW THROUGH
TIME
A reading from Loren Eisley's
essay on Francis Bacon. Produced by
Paul Vangelisti.
7:25 RADIO ARTS PROJECT
"DRAW THE CIRCLE"
by Charles Upton
A program of poems read by the
author and produced in collaboration
with sound composer and technical pro-
ducer Clay Grillo. This program in the
KPFA Radio Arts Project series was made
possible by a grant from the National
Endowment for the Arts.
8:00 ZYMURGY
A re-broadcast of a Zymurgy pro-
gram of a couple of years ago featuring
the works of Los Angeles composers
Alden Ashforth and Paul Reale. David
Cloud hosts. Stereo.
Nawana Davis, host of
■■Music Black & White"
Johnnie Swift, engineer for
"The Johnny Otis Show"
Susan Anderson, KPFK Program Producer
Earl Ofari, KPFK Public Affairs Dept.
Lucia Chappelle, Traffic Manager and
Program Producer
10:00 THE WILLIAM MALLOCH
PROGRAMME
A musical (mostly classical) trea-
sure hunt conducted by the critic, com-
poser and former music director of
KPI K. William Malloch.
12:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
2:00 THE SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
SHOW
Sunday 22
7:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN
With the legendary Prince Dixon.
9:00 BIO-MEDITATION: Jack Gariss
An experiential, experimental ex-
ploration of feeling states, body stales
and states of consciousncs.s.
10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschel Lymon
A human growth center of the air.
10:45 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
2nd and final record from the al-
bum. The Many Faces of Greektown.
Recorded live in Hollywood's famous
taverna.
11:30 DOROTHY HEALEY
Marxist viewpoint. Guests and
open phones.
12:30 OPEN JOURNAL
1:00 SUNDAY OPERA
BEESON: Captain Jinks of the
Horse Marines. Russell Patterson eon-
ducts members of the Kansas City Phil-
harmonic (RCA ARL 2-1727). Fred
Hyatt hosts.
5:00 THE SOUR APPLE TREE
Docs art have any redeeming .social
value? Host is Clare Spark.
6:00 SUNDAY NEWS: Sanford Fidell
6:30
7:00
THE FOURTH TOWER OF
INVERNESS '
THE JOHNNY OTIS SHOW!
A freewheeling drive through jazz
and rock. Guests, requests and surprises
with Johnny Otis.
8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
The Ocean. A sonic montage, a
brief overview expressing the intense love
for the ocean and how this love has been
portrayed in music, song, poems and
actual sounds of the many elements of
the ocean.
9:30 FOLKSCENE: The Larpeople
12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
Nawana Davis plays down home
and nitty gritty sounds.
monday 23
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
Snapshots by Roy of Hollywood.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 14
MALCOLM X
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: CLASSICAL
AMSTERDAM CONCERTGEBOUW
ORCHESTRA LIVE IN CONCERT
MOZART Symphony No. 39 in
E Fl.it: NIELSEN Symphony No. 6 ("Sin
Ionia Semplice"!: STRAVINSKY Scher/o
Fantastique: Cicnii;)Uy Ro/h(lt'slvcn\ky
coiiiliK'ts. T;iiH*\ icMirlcsy ol Knclio
NcilcrLiml. SUti'o
tuesday 24
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: l-.iiil Vi.rwcrk
9:00 IHIS MOKNIN(,
10(10 FOLK 1)AN( 1 Willi MARIOi
11:00 MORNINC. READING
11:30 KULtHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
BEETHOVEN: Sonatas lor Violin
and Piano~ll. KillurirK' (':ilkiii hoslv
Stereo.
2:00 HOLDING UP MORE THAN
HALF THE SKY
10:30 GAY RADIO COLLECTIVE/
I.M.R.U.
Na/i anyone?. . . "if h«nic>sc\u:iK
ulii be eapiljlisls. ii; we eaii be ciiniimiri'
ivis . Iheii wliv ejii'l we be N:iliiinul
SiK-Kili'^IV.' Mernberslii|> in llie Njliuiul
Soei.ilisi l.e;ijiue is nperi ti» ;iny while
male dree Irdiii Jewish blooil). . ." eveerpl
Iriim :i(l e<i|)y lejeelecl by j liie:il cay
newspapei. Mibiiiilled by Ihe NSl.. a iieii-
Nii/i criMip wliiise piiniary uulreueh h;is
been In n:iy in:iles lhe(;:iy K:iiliii ('(il-
leclive, while eeiLiliily iinl in aiireeinenl
wilh Ihe philiisophies nl Ihe NSl . iievei
Iheless wishes In pioviUe ii luniin tor
this croiiiv ttenieil-:iliuosl everv where
else, :inil presenis :i le:ilure iiilerview wilh
liK.il represenl;ilives on lonichl's pi4ii:iaiii-
Opeii phones so yon c:iii speak iliieelly
Willi these piy Nazis. I'liis lli.- t. I.n
I.M.R.U News Report
11:10 MONOTONE NEWS. Sieve I ykr
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: ROCK
ivednesday
25
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Music in a New Found Land— XXVIII
American scenes- in music. IVES:
Central Park in the Dark: New York Phil-
harmonic; Leonard Bernstein conducting;
Columbia MS 6»*i: SCHUMAN: George
Washington Bridge: Eastman Wind Ensem-
ble; Frederick I enncll conducting. Mer-
cury MG 50079; e/>ffS£/?. Knoxville-
Summer of I91S: Lcontyne Price, so-
prano; New Philharmonia Orchestra;
Thomas Schippers conducting; RC.-V
ESC 3062; CROFE: Grand Canyon Suite:
Morton Gould and his Orchestra; RCA
LSC 2433; COPLAND: Appalachian
Spring (full orchestra version); London
Symphony Orchestra; Aaron Copland con-
ducting; Columbia M 30649. David Cloud
hosts. Stereo.
2:00 COMMUNISM
THE SPECTRE HAUNTING EUROPE
PART II
A continuation of last week's panel
discussion on the growth of the Italian,
French, Portuguese and Spanish parties.
(Rebroadcast Tues., 24th, 7pm)
3:00 AFFIRMATIVE ACTION-WHOSE
BOGEYMAN?
The issue of Affirmative Action
perhaps ranks with busing as one of the
most controversial issues currently domina-
ting the national debate. Opponents of
affirmative hiring call it reverse discrimina-
tion, while proponents view it as a correc-
tive measure to eliminate job bias. This
program will examine both sides of the
subject, with opinions from opponents,
supporters, and government officials
caught in the middle. Produced by Earl
Ofari and Steve Sulkes. I Rebroadcast
Wed.. 25th. 10pm).
4:00 ORGANIC GARDENING
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 CHAPEL. COURT AND
COUNTRYSIDE
Renaissance and Early Baroque
Music: Musicke of Sundrie Kindes IV.
Italy leads the way to the style of the
Early Baroque (L'Oiscau-lyrc OSLO 203-
206). Katherine Calkin hosts. Stereo
9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA
10:00 PREACHIN' THE BLUES
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
Blacks looking for construction jobs.
Pittsburgh. 1969.
3:00 THE BOP KINGS
4:00 RED TAPE: Steve Blum
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 TALKING ABOUT MOVIES
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL SPECIAL:
COMMUNISM:
THE SPECTRE HAUNTING EUROPE
Part II
The Jfrowth of the Italian, French.
Portuguese and Spanish parties, as well
as Ihe meeting of the European Commu-
nist parties under tha banner of the inde-
pendence of each party . has revived anti-
communist rhetoric in the West. This
panel will explore how Marxism is deve-
loping a critique of Stalinism, and a prac-
ticing alternative. (Rebroadcast from'
Aug. 23).
8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
LIVE IN CONCERT
HAYDN: Symphony no. 60.
RAVEL: Alborada del Gracioso.
DVORAK: Cello ConcerfoMstislav Rostro-
povich. soloist. Sciji Ozawa conducts.
William Pierce hosts.
10:00 THE COMMUNITY LAWYER
Art Goldberg hosts this hi-wcekly
progjam on lawyers and the law.
10:00 RICHLAND PERSON
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
LASSUS: Die Klagen des Hiob:
Mirtin Behrmann conducts the Cappeila
Vocale of Hamburg. Motets: Philippe
Caillard Vocal Ensemble (Musical Heri-
tage Society Mils 634. 624). Katherine
Calkin hosts. Stereo.
1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
2:00 THE PLAY OF THE WEEK
4:00 RUTH'S KITCHEN
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NfWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 MONDAY EVENING CONCERTS
VIII
Recorded livc-in-conccrl at the Leo
S. Bing Thealer of the Los Angeles Coun-
ty Museum of Art on February 2. 1976
JOHN BULL: Salve Regina (arranged by
Charles Wuorincn); PAUL CHIHARA:
Elegy: THE A MUSCRAVE Space Play:
MICHIO MAMIYA: String Quartet No. I:
CHARLES WUORINEN: Camona lor
Twelve Instruments, (h.irlcs Wiioriiieil
conducts Ihe MoiuLiy l-.vening Chamber
Pliycis. Sc<|uoi:i Siring Ouarlet D.ivid
Clinid hosts. Technical prodllclion by
Ronald Slreichet. Mark Rosentli.il ami
Daviil (loud. Recorded with the Dolby
"A" noise reduclion systpin. Stereli.
10 0(1 AFriRMATIVE ACTION
WHOSE BOGEYMAN?
riic issue ol AITirnialive Action
perhaps ranks wilh busing as one of Ihe
most controversial issues' currently tloiiiiiia-
tine the national debate Oppfinenis of
aliirnialivc hiring call it reverse discriiiiin:i
lion, while proponents view it as :i coriei
live measure to clmiiiiale |ob bias. This
piogr;iiii will csaiiiiiie both sides j>r the
subject, with opinions from opponents,
siippiirlers. and government olTjcials
c:iiiglit III the middle. PriHliiced In l:;irl
Olari and Steve Sulkes I Rehroadciisl
troiii Aug. 23t
11:00 THE LAS I DAYS OF
LOUISIANA RED
Noted :iuI1h>i Ishmael Reed iniro
diKcs .iiul provides a niiining t.oniiiienLir>
on (his dr:im;ili/:ition of his novel. A
wild :iiul kinky allegory of eoiitcliipiu:iry
socielv :iiul underground politics. char;ic-
Icrs like Minnie the Moodier, (ieorge Ihe
Kinglish and l.ldndge the Hartender come
to life in a bi/arre plot cc'itering around
a secret iccipc for gumbo. Produced for
Ihe Kl'l A l<:idio Arts l'io|cct under a
gr.iiil Itoni Ihe N;ihoii:tt 1 ndowmenl lor
Ihe Alls
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: JAZZ
2:00 THE BIG SLEEP: John Brcckow
thursday
26
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Piano Sonatas of Schubert IV
Sonata in A Minor, D. 845: Sonata
in C. D. 840: Sonata in D. D. 850: Sona-
ta in G. D. 894. Paul Badura-Skoda.
piano; RCA Victrola VICS 6131. David
Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 RAGTIME VI
Presenting work from Ihe Fiction
Collective -excerpts from novels by B.H.
Friedman and Peter Spielberg, a story by
Russell Banks. Narrated and produced by
Leonard Chabrowe. KPIA. with the help
of a grant from the National Endowment
for the Arts.
MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 15
Woman Ironing (circa 1944) by William H. Johnson [5]
3:00 STRAWBERRY SHORTBREAD
A new bi-monthly program with
regular discussions of education. Hosted
by Pat Benson-a parent and activist with
the American Friends Service Committee
task force on suspensions and expulsions.
Features, guests, panels and open phones.
4:00 THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA-
LIVE IN CONCERT
HINDEMITH: Symphonic Metamor-
phoses. MACDOWELL: Piano Concerto
no. 2-Andre Watts, soloist. MOUSSORG-
SKY-RAVEL: Pictures at an Exhibition.
Matthias Bamert conducts. Robert Con-
rad hosts. Recorded in Columbia SQ
Four-Channel Sound.
10:00 POETRY LIVE
11:00 THE [ANUS COMPANY
An original radio production with
Jan Geller, Mallory Geller. Jerry Bono,
Mike Hodel, Franklin Ruelz and Tom
Thompson. Live.
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: BLUEGRASS
BLUEGRASS SPECIAL
Gentleman Jim Ludwig plays some
new bluegrass, some old and impossible
to fmd bluegrass, and some old transcrip-
tions from ancient radio programs like
Grand Old Opry. lor serious devotees
only.
friday 27
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
Pat's People the Irish Band for-
merly from Belfast.
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
IVIOZART: String Quartet in 0, K.
575; String Quartet in F, K. 590: BERG:
String Quartet. Op. 3; SHOSTAKOVICH
String Quartet No. 10. Op. 118: Weller
Quartet; London SIS 152S7 and 15291.
David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 DONALD BARTHELME-IV
He reads portions of Snow White,
and stories from Come Back Dr. Caligari,
A Shower of Gold &. The Big Broadcast
of 1938. He discusses experiments in
narrative form, the use of a writer's
dreams in his work, the relation of act
and history to fiction, John Barth's re-
using myths, the Manson case, and more.
Produced by WBAI.
3:30
300 YEARS OF AMERICAN
POETRY
4:00 SURVIVE WITH PLEASURE
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 NEWSPEAK: Guest Commentary
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 FRIDAY NIGHT CONCERT HOUR
AMSTERDAM CONCERTGEBOUW
ORCHESTRA -LIVE IN CONCERT
HA YON: Symphony No. 89 in F:
MOZART: Violin Concerto No. 4 in D:
Herman Krcbbcrs, soloist; ROUSSEL:
Suite in F: Frnest Bour conducts. Tapes
courtesy of Radio Nederland. Stereo.
9:00 IN FIDELITY
9:30 LATIN QUARTER
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 HOUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION
Kathcrinc Calkin (who should be
planning music programs), Mike llodcl
(who should be practicing "Read All
About It"), Terry Model (who should be
putting the weekend calendar lopcther)
and John Henry Thong (who should be
home taking care of Julian Thong) all
happen by about now t(t do an sf thing.
2:00 TESSERACT
Saturday
28
8:00 ALAN WATTS: PHILOSOPHY
EAST AND WEST
Bus or Tram?
8:30 TRANS: Amanda Foulger
Rent: and Merlyn C)iierido, Colin
Young and Siegfried Itnzer from the
Three-l'oUl Center & Conimimily in
Spring Valley, NY., and Anthroposophi-
cal Work & Study Cenlcr, speak :ibout
their philosophy and ils practical appli-
cations in their lives.
9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
10:30 FOLK MUSIC: John Davis
12:30 THE AUTOMOBILE PROGRAMME
1:50 WEEKEND CALENDAR
Compiled and read by Terry Hodel.
2:00 BALLADS, BAN|OS AND
BLUEGRASS
3:30 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
5:00 INSIDE LA.: Earl Ofari
6:00 SATURDAY NEWS: Larry Moss
6:30 ON FILM: Bill Moritz
6:45 IN PRINT: Bob Peters
7:00 CONNECTIONS
Peler Marin hosts this bi-weekly
discussion that treats the world as serious-
ly as most pet)ple lake themselves.
8:00 ZYMURGY
Pianist Julian White talks with a
KPI A studio audience about Prokoficffs
Piano Sonata No. 8. plays examples and
passages from the work, and then aTlcr
an inlerniission. returns to play the
complete work. (An educational and
very lively program.)
10:00 THE WILLIAM MALLOCH
PROGRAMME
12:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
Jay Laccy and Jerry llaendiges
bring you two hours of ttld radio pro-
grams and/or memories. Return with us
now to those thrilling days of yesteryear...
2:00 THE SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
SHOW
Join J;iy Lacey fi>r an .after-hours
mellow interlude with old, new, borrowed
and sometimes blue music.
Sunday 29
7:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN: Prince Dixon
9:00 BIO-MEDITATION: )?ck Gariss
10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschel Lymon
10:45 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
11:30 DOROTHY HEALEY
12:30 OPEN JOURNAL
The Home Front (circa 1940-1941 ) by Wllliain H. Johnson [5]
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 16
1:00 TENOR OF THE TIMES
hred HyatI dirccls your attention
once again to the vocal accomplishments
of the late Iritz Wundcrlich.
1:30 SUNDAY OPERA
MOZART: Die Entfuerung aus dem
Serail. Soloists-Adele Stolte. IVler
Schreier. Thco Adam, luigcn Jochuni
conducts the (^hcirus and Orchestra of
the Bavarian State Opera. Munich *(DGG
39213/15). Ired Hyatt hosts.
5:00 THE SOUR APPLE TREE
6:00 SUNDAY NEWS
With Peter Gordon and Joanne
Altschulcr.
6:30 THE FOURTH TOWER OF
INVERNESS
7:00 THE (OHNNY OTIS SHOW
8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
The Sounds and Soul of Rural
America. A program where Carlos brings
the favorite sounds and artists of
country, rural and working America and
the often controversial messages they
convey.
9:30 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
monday 30
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
SCHUBERT: Sonata in A Minor.
O. 821: MENDELSSOHN: Sonata in D,
Op. 58: DEBUSSY: Sonata: PROKOFIEFF:
Sonata in C, Op. 1 19: WEBERN: Drei Kleine
Stuecke, Op. 11: Lynn Harrell, cello; J.imes
Irvine, piano; RCA ARL I 1262 and ARI.
1-1568. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 COM.MUNISM:
PARTICIPATING IN POLITICS,
HOW DEEP?
One of the most confusing and dis-
puted pomls ui Marxist practice cs that
of electoral and parliamentary politics.
The success of Western luropean p;irlKi-
pation in Comniunisl Parties in the past
five years, has sharpened the delnilc in
the United .Sl;iles. The overthrow of the
Chilean government has posed the stra-
tegic question in hiood. This panel will
explore the electoral option and the
campaigns t>i Ihe Socialist and Commu-
nist parlies as well as working inside the
Democratic party. Jim Berland moderates.
3:00 AN EVENING WITH MAYm
ANGELOU
Maya Angclou. in a very special
program, reads selections from her auto-
biographical works, recites some of her
poems, sings both her own songs and tra-
ditional spirituals, and discusses her life
and work with Lin Harris of WUAI. The
author of / Know Why the Caged Bird
Sings seeks to go beyond mere facts to
the truth of each experience. The exper-
iences reflected in her work offer ample
testimony to why this Black woman, os-
tensibly "born to lose" has managed to
triumph in virtually every field of arts.
letters and life. (Rcbroadeasl from Aug.
11 and 18th).
4:00 ORGANIC GARDENING
Chain Gang (1939-1940) by William H. Johnson [5]
graptiic by Richard Powell |4|
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
8:00 CHAPEL, COURT AND
COUNTRYSIDE
Renaissance and Early Baroque
Music: Songs by Henry Purccll composed
on a ground bass. Kalherinc Calkin hosts.
Stereo.
9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA
10:00 PREACHIN' THE BLUES
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: CLASSICAL
AMSTERDAM CONCERTGEBOUW
ORCHESTRA-LIVE IN CONCERT
MOZART: Symphony No. 29 in
A: 8L0CH: Schelomo: Tibor de Machula.
soloist; CARTER: Piano Concerto: Ja-
cob Lateiner. soloist; Erich Leinsdorf
conducts. Tapes courtesy of Radio
Ncderland. Stereo.
tuesday
31
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLK DANCE WITH MARIO!
11:00 MORNING READING
11:30 KULCHUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
A survey of new releases, hosted
by Kathcrine Calkin. Stereo.
2:00 HOLDING UP MORE THAN
HALF THE SKY
3:00 THE BOP KINGS
4:00 FOOD FOR THOUGHT; Ginny Roe
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 TALKING ABOUT MOVIES
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL SPECIAL
COMMUNISM:
PARTICIPATING IN POLITICS,
HOW DEEP?
One of Ihe most confusing and dis-
puted points in Marxist practice is that
of electoral and parliamentary politics.
The success of Western turopean partici-
pation in Communist Parties in the past
five years, has sharpened the -lebate in
the United States. The overthrow of the
Chilean government has posed the strate-
gic question in blood. This panel will
explore the electoral option and the cam-
paigns of the Socialist and Communist
parties as well as working inside the Demo-
cratic party. Jim Bcrland will moderate.
(Rebroadcast from Aug. 301.
8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
LIVE IN CONCERT
TCHAIKOVSKY: Piano Concerto
no. /"Gary Graffman. soloist. Symphony
no. 4. Stanislaw Skrowaczewski conducts.
William Pierce hosts. Recorded with the
Dolby "A" noise reduction system in Col-
umbia SQ Four-Channel Sound.
10:00 THE SCIENCE CONNECTION
10:30 GAY RADIO COLLECTIVE/
I. MRU.
Sexual Compulsives Anonymous,
with local chapters in Los Angeles and
Orange counties, is a program for men and
women whose sexuality often expresses
itself in societally-unaeceptable (and ille-
gal) forms, such as clandestine sex in
public restrooms. While sexual compul-
sives are a very small minority of the
larger homosexual community, their ac-
tivities are often used by homophobes to
discredit all gay people. Tonight, the
studio guests are members of Sexual Com-
pulsives Anonymous, who will discuss the
problems, and the solutions which S.C.A.
uses in its recovery programs. Open phones
11:30 MONOTONE NEWS: Steve Tyler
12:00 NIGHTANGELS: ROCK
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 17
Respect your elders
they have some good ideas.
Learn about a whole tradition of active non-violence
in the U.S. in POWER OF THE PEOPLE, a documentary
history including 300 rare photographs. Edited by
Robert Cooney. Collectively published by 35 movement
groups. Available in October from Peace Press.
240 pages $7.95 softbound $15 hardbound
FoLKmnce
^vtry mm-
DAYfrOWSPM
iVt 120 W^
FAIllFAX^ii
musicail
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.
f ffM"H"S"|t |l
i9«- BB<»6WAy, new yosk, n. y. I0023
PtionwTwf , Racordcall, Sanyo
IBM
STD. TYPEWRITERS I uier-scM
t*' from ti2» lOlifetti-Citimi
Craig, Sony TraiMcribara
Phinipa-NoMco I, .
Memocord, Sanyo 1 '
Suindjrd i minta;uro ^i
NEW PRODUCTS:
A) 1. In stock the world's smoflest standord
cassette electronic notebook by Craig
2. Sony dictation ond tronscription equip-
ment 'or levs lspf»ciol purcbos")
B) 1. 3M innovation, copi
iir'i tfOTi
> S97-
7 A new i-evoki'ionory dry topicr (or hf>Her
nnd for less. Bond oJity for under $2000 -
C) I New plecirbmc 'eiepKonf onswprmg eq-np
nient, smol'e'. improved ond for dO^c oi
nirHai rtiey used to eo*t
C ; ' Finally, on m-.provrd tuol'ty Gern.nr MRr-gl^
plement lypewi'cr
2 New correcio nhbons tor ol'no\* ony type
writer. Coll tor information
ASK FOR SPECIAL
KPFKPR'^^ES
SUPPORTER
F) 1. New pfogrommoole colculotor by Tl around
the corner
2 New itlent pnntheods on calculators. See
our price reductions.
So skiD the Museum and see the latest at
ABilCUS
• %10P Br OUR SHOWROOM
BUT tf rOU CAN T C D . MAIL t TELEfHONE
ORDERS ARE (HEIREUllT ACCEPTED
11353 SINTA MONICA U.VD. 213/478-7791
LOS ANGELES. CAUF 9002S
^ m<3rry in venice
tempte' cff rrwn
W)9 cabrlllo ajzjd^-jB-'fM
i-yHKY week:
MON: U;Eve HiMier, Appalacliian I oik Dances
WEDS: Balkan, Ouick Gall
THURS: Israeli. Gary 1 o\
I'RI: Peasant Class
SAT: International + Special Nights
7/^ (^ /^n:^
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCE COFFEE HOUSE
1810 E Anaheim St, Long Beacti,
For more information, call us at (213) 591—3800
lntiirpiir.)lmK Iht- ArhiHilu' Oiusiimjl
LIGHTNING
EXPRESS
Lightning Express - No. 3 - 1976: 60
pages about Blues, Arhoolie, Country,
Ethnic, Films. Cover by R. Crumb. Only
$1.00 postpaid and we send our 1976
Catalog free.
ARHOOLIE RECORDS
10341 San Pablo Avenue
El Cerrito, California 94530
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 18
Classified
CLASSIUKI) MARKhVI PLACK
Phone File Windsor. 659 7288
or wrilc
CAM
650 Weslboiirne Orive Suile 107
U^ Angeles, C.n. 90069
(B.inl-iimTR.ird or M jstiTchjrKi- .uccplcd)
AMNOUNCEMENTS
MUSIC ODYSSKY
TRADES YOUR RECORDS
il910Wilshire
477-2523
INFANT AND CHILD CARE
In'my home. Nulrllious meals.
References given Noilh Hollywood
area.
764-3350. Belly.
SMOKERS
We have recently discovered an
easy, fast, and cheap way to slop.
If our method helps you stop, and
you are convinced you've made it.
send us the price of a carton of
your brand. That's all. And it's
on the honor system. Send $1 .00
to cover postage and handling to:
Synergelic Sciences. Inc.,
6150 Canoga Ave.. Woodland Hills
Ca. 91.^64
KPFK VOLUNTEER (S) NEEDED
for leleptionc work-
Wc tiave the "rap"
Do you tiave some time?
May make lots of S$ for your favoriti
radio station. Call Beverly or Roy at
KPFK. 877-2711. 984-2711 between
10am and 6pm-
SOUNDEFFECTS PERSONM*«*»K
Volunteer needed to create, perform and
build, if necessary, sound effects for
live radio productions by The Janus
Company. Write Mallory and Jan
Geller, c/o KPFK and include your
phone number
ARTS AND CRAFTS
MOCA JAVA (In Celebration of Morning)
August 12-13-14; 19-20-21
Suruise to Noonish and 6ish to darkness
Recent batiks from A Small Carrot Oper-
ation. 373 No, Western Ave No. 209.
LA. 462-8353 (or by appointment)
GUATEMALAN
Fabrics, clothing & wall hangings
Handmade by Indians.
Large Selection and low prices
THE MERCHANT OF
GUATEMALA-6554376
BOOKS
Proressioiial S|K'ecli leaclicr
I'livale Ix'ssons
U„b lliifihcs ?4:>-026')
GURDJIEFF-OUSPENSKY
CENTERS NOW
ACCEPTING STUDENTS
cY^Gttexztxyols
The most complvlf p.ipcrhaik scIccIkmi
in town spcci.iliAin); in literary, lorciKn
and art periodicals.
A BOOK SHOP
1818 No. Vermont Ave.
Los Aniein, Calif. 90027
664 3882
PASADENA
y\:i MG /H.'o
LOS ANGELES
NEWPORT BEACH
NAIIVL FKLNtH ll^ACHLR
I cirn I reiKh lliiiiuch iiiiinis^ilion
kcioinincnileil l>y: I tcucli Depl. USC
Matmierite tienird
4(>S.|745
PAPA BACH BOOK SHOP
11312 Santa Monica Blvd
West Los Angeles
Open Sunday 'til 9:00
Dial: GRUBERG
MOVIE & TV
We are interested m purciiasiny
used Television and Movie scripts
Also, 8x10 still photographs.
Collectors Boolt Store
6763 Hollywood Blvd
Hollywood, Ca 90028
(213)467-6950
MAGAZINES
Back Issue Magazines.
1890-1976 tiloviKS, Pl.qyhoy, till'
Look, etc Free list
Everybody's Bookshop
317W Sixth L A 90014 623-6234
MOVERS
HALF TON EXPRESS
MOVING AND HAULING
EXPERIENCED; REASONABLE
7 DAY SERVICE
Rich Belfalto 654-2699
FOR THE GOURMET
A;
for Ihosf uhr, „^„
rtr.' '■"»'"'* /„ ,.„re.
1/ hnixvr .s
.ware Inn- '«//et/
COCKTAILS DINNER DAILY FROM 5P M
■ IINCHMON THRU FRI FROM 11 30 A M
ALL CReOIT CARDS HONORED ■ 783 b616
1362S VENTURA BLVD SHt«M*N OAKS E OF WOODMAN
HERBS
®
CLASSIFIED ADS HELP PAY FOR
THE FOLIO-lil<e extra pages, photos,
and colors. So check 'em out and
maybe make one yourself.
Westward Products Co, offers
Detoxifying Herbs for Humans & Pets;
Complete Herbal Hygienic Program.
Kleen-Air-Stops odors for 1 full yr,
Kleen-Flo-Motor Conditioner that
steps up power, saves gas.
Postage Paid on all products.
Free literature: write, or call 877-1050
FORREST GRIFFITH, Westward
Products Co., 12021 Ventura PI.,
Studio City, Ca. 91604
MUSIC INSTRUCTION
YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL
RKGISTRATIOIN FOR
SUMMER CLASSES
CALL US NOW!
AGES 4-8
plus
GROUP KEYBOARD
CLASSES FOR ADULTS
6363 Wilshirc Blvd., L.A.
651-2763
INSTRUCTION
SOARING INSTRUCTION
Soaring, the intellectual alternative for
all ages 12-/0. Learn to fly Itte
Scliweizer 2-33A sailplane and know
the exhilaration of silent flight. No
I AA physical examination for licensing
as a glider pilot.
Call John Lilcs (CI I) 659-7289
PIANO INSTRUCTION
Learn Beginning, Pop, Classical
plus Music Theory. Experienced
instructor. MA. Music. 391-4136.
SERVICES
moving'
The Folto will NOT be aujomattcally
forwarded to your new address, ll
will be returned to us after a few
weeks with your new address on it-
probably not in time for the next
Foho. So to avoid missing out, fill
uut this coupon and return it to Sub
scriptions. Be sure your label is on
the back. (We get 500-1000 address
changes a month), ThankyoU
GC
<
SBBB
n
a
- o
S *
A o
b s
■^""P""™*""''""^
>«™""°^
HOME IMPROVEMENTS, REPAIRS
AND REDECORATION
FLUTE LESSONS
Music Theory— All A,spects
B.A., M.A. in
Music Composition
Peter Davidson. 349-82«3
WALL-TO-WALL CARPET CLEANING
and UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
)5f/i year serving KPFK Listeners!
PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR
Experienced and Reliable
i Buy Pianos
Nick leltis 931-0634
I am an all-around craftsman with
30 years experience who has
special affection for KPFK
Subscribers.
Rome Ronconi 821-4769
PAINTER WHO LIKES HIS WORK
Small repairs, licensed, insured.
John Godcl
656-8874 or
665-0179
S«a-Mat(on Society
Direct Cremation $250
Disposition at Sea 967-2077
COMPLETE ASTROLOGICAL SERVICES
by trained, certified pro.
Introductory booklet on request
ASTRAL ARTS. 871 N Dillon
LA., 90026 653-1439
SITUATION WANTEO
MATURE PERSON SEEKS HOUSE
KEEPING POSITION for weekends.
txccllcnt cook, 482^880 c\t 101
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 19
DATE
HOURS
LOCATION
HIGHLIGHTS
PROCEEDS
THE KPFK
AUDIO BAZAAR II
CONTACT
Nov. 12 - Nov. 14
Friday — Sunday
Noon to 10:00 PM
Hollywood Palladium
(near Sunset and Vine)
Exhibits, demonstra-
tions, professional
consultations, auctions,
and sales of state-of-the-
art hi-fidelity sound
equipment. Bargains
in new and recycled
items donated by the
audio industry and
supporters of KPFK.
Gate admissions and all
the funds collected on
the sale items and a
sizeable percentage of
the regularly priced
equipment go to bene-
fit the KPFK Expansion
Fund.
Ray Tatar at KPFK.
877-2711, 984-2711 (213)
YOU CAN HELP ! HERE'S HOIfU !
/ WOULD LIKE TO DONA TE SOME AUDIO EOUIPMENT IN WORKING CONDITION. I HAVE A
[ ] TUNER
[ ] RECEIVER
[ ] TURNTABLE
[ ] AMPLIFIER
[ J SPEAKER (S)
[ ] OTHER
NAME
PHONE
KPFK WILL RUSH OUT AND SMOTHER YOU WITH THANKS AND AN IRS FORM FOR YOUR TAX DEDUCTIO
KPFK
V
NON PROFIT ORG
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
LOS ANGELES. CALIF.
PERMIT NO 30711
padfica
KPFK
3729 Cahuenga Blvd., West
North Hollywood, California
91604
FORM 3547 REQUESTED