LISTENER-SPONSORED PACIFICA RADIO FOR SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
DECEMBER 1976
KPFK's YearEnd Marathon Reading:
THE fiLEXfiNDRIfi QUfiRTET
Lawrence Durrell
Produced by Jay D. Kugelman
Assistant Producer: Philomene Lon<^
It is almost twenty years since Justine first appeared, to be followed in zodiacal
measure by the other members of the Alexandria Quartet. The four novels
completed a four-year cycle, like some micro-cosmic drama - a truly modern
divine comedy - with God as a humorist (to quote Pursewarden's title). The
work strikes one as both comic and serious - for the main themes it explores
are the "heavies" of our literary tradition: illusion and reality, power and
love, choice and compulsion, yet the form in which all this is contained is
open and life-affirming - there are no real deaths or endings, only transfor-
mations and rebirths — new beginnings.
On the surface of things, the Quartet is a story of love and intrigue, bedroom
politics on an international scale with Alexandria not as the background, but
the author-director of the piece. What we become aware of (through a vivid
mosaic of characters and situations which emerge from the city like exotic
flowers growing according to some as yet undiscovered natural law) is that
we are experiencing the creation of a work of art which captures the imagina-
tion in much the same fashion as Justine had captured it.
As we listen to the tale unfold, like a flower opening deeper and deeper into
the mystery at the heart of things, we feel the thrill and awe of initiates en-
tering into the presence of some unknown and powerful force which lies at
the quick of things, driving them on into strange shapes and constellations.
The same process is mirrored in all of the characters as a daimon which drives
them into new areas of action and consciousness, stripping off their old masks
and roles like a bandage which must be ripped from a wound in order for it
to heal.
The Quartet has been characterized as "an investigation of modern love" in
all its many shapes and forms, the love of knowledge, power, beauty, truth.
Each of the characters is in some sense androgynous, embodying or searching
for his or her opposite; everything is true of everybody. This accounts for
the apparent confusion of "fact" which makes the "truth" seem impossible
to grasp. But the truth of the matter is that the truth is in the making -
truth will out when so willed and created.
Because the work is open-ended, in a constant state of becoming, there is no
loss in its being experienced in part, as a collection of "heraldic" episodes or
prismatically refracted images. Like the notes and workpoints which have been
lifted from the ends of the novels and sprinkled throughout the readings, the
poems of Constantine Cavafy have been inserted between the segments to sea-
son them with the tender irony of the "old poet of the city" as one might a
fine meal with rare and delicate spices.
It is poetically appropriate that the Alexandria Quartet be read now - in this
season between the old and the new, at this time of promise. It is also fitting
that it should be offered thus, as a gift, a labor of love - for such surely is
the spirit of its conception and its continual renewal with each rereading.
It is wonderful — truly magical to be able to present the richness of Lawrence
Durrell's vision and language through the life breath of so many beautiful peo-
ple for the Quartet is above all a communal feast - a partaking and celebration
of life's absurdities, heroics, sufferings and joys - the joys of search and dis-
covery - the joys of Art and Creation. We hope that your listening experience
will be as rich and exciting as ours has been in creating it for you.
Jay D. Kugelman
Program Producer
The whole Quartet is scored with this as a predominant theme — each of the
major characters emerges as an artist (or a potential one) attempting to create
a personality and style of imagination in a world ruled by disharmony and
ugliness. Their struggle is that of all artists — to maintain a vision and unique
expression in the face of a blind will which seeks to reduce organic life to an
inorganic state: the Eternal Battle of Eros and Thanatos, Love and Death.
PHOTO CREDITS
Cover photo of Lawrence Durrell at Cal Tech by Robert A. Fitzgerald, Jr.
Photos of Durrell appearing throughout the Folio are from the author's
Blue Thirst (Capra Press, Santa Barbara) which contains the texts of his
talks on diplomacy and life on Corfu.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 1
90.7v
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KPFK FO! 10 PAGE 2
>o5
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A NON PHOFrr MEMBERSHIP ASSOCIATION
DEDICATH3 ONLY TO SERVING THE
IhTTERESTS OF THE CALIFORNIA CONSUMER
Film of the Month Club
ccc siction
PAY LESS 1976 INCOME TAX
ccc CAN HELP
If you apply before December 31, 1976
CCCs Insurance & Financial Services Division can now help eligible
3729 Club members with their financial planning for estate, retirement,
pension, and income tax qualified deductions.
FOR EXAMPLE
If you are not now receiving credits and deposits toward an
Individual retirement plan (annuity) or pension, you are eligible for
enrollment in either of two IRS tax qualified retirement plans (I.R.A. or
H.R. 10)
As an employee, you may open an IRA. which will allow you to
deposit up to $1,500 of the money paid into Federal income taxes
(withholding F.I.C.A.) into a qualified retirement annuity. This special
account builds savings plus interest for you. AND you are eligible to
reduce your taxable income up to 15%. Yes, you now have the choice of
saving up to $1,500 each year instead of paying it to the I.R.S.
If you are self-employed, you may be eligible to reduce your per-
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qualified Keogh (H.R. 10) plan.
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
CCC an assist 3729 Club members in the proper selection of all
types of savings plans, Insurances, planning and professional services
by personal appointment in your office, home or CCC offices.
DECEMBER 22 IRA APPOINTMENT DEADLINE
For an appointment to review and consider eligibility and the
advantages of a CCC recommended I.R.A. or Keogh plan for 1976,
contact CCC Membership Services now for an appointment: (213)624-
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FILM ^'c MONTH CLUB
K^tjfeTippepl
HOLLYWOOD REPORTER REVIEW by Todd McCarthy
In telling the story of a lower-class girl who moves to Amsterdam with her family
in 1881 and gradually works her way up the societal ladder, Verhoeven and writer
Gerard Goetman breathe life into the past without grafting on any obtrusive con-
temporary rhetoric. Though clearly a partisan of the left, Verhoeven is most essen-
tially a romantic Bohemian and admirably refuses to idealize the poor or caricature
the rich, presenting good and evil as coexistent in all ranges of the social spectrum.
Everything from a delicious meal at an exclusive restaurant to a degrading visit with
a lecherous doctor, represents yet another facet of experience, the sum of which
makes up the grand fabric of life.
The exploitation of workers, and especially women, is vividly conveyed as Keetje
moves from short tenures as a washerwoman, a seamstress, a prostitute (at the in-
sistence of her mother), an artist's model, and, finally a lady of means. Though
constantly in a subservient position, Keetje retains her dignity and positive energy
and attains her eventual status not, in cynical fashion, through cheating or conniving,
but by remaining true to herself (the film is based on the autobiographic works of
Neel Doff).
In the title roll, Monique van de Ven pulls off a tour de force. In both her films
with Verhoeven, this beautiful natural actress has thrown herself into her characters
without restraint. The director has found the perfect complement to his earthy,
bawdy, energetic style in this glorious actress. Rutger Hauer and Eddie Brugman lend
strong support as the men in Keetje's life . . .
"Keetje" shows at the WESTLAND TWIN THEATRE, 10754 W. Pico Blvd
1pm Saturday, Dec 18 and 1pm Sunday, Dec. 19
RESERVATIONS will be taken WEDNESDAY, Dec. 15, 11am-5pm ONLY
so as not to conflict with preparations for the Christmas Fair.
(Seating is limited for this bonus feature)
J
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 3
V
Regular Programs & Series
CLASSICAL MUSIC
E1HNIC AND FOLK MUSIC
NEWS AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS
CONSUMER PROGRAMS
Boston Symphony
Chapel, Court &
Countryside
Cleveland Orchestra
Israel Philharmonic
William Malloch Proeran
Tues 8pm
Mon 8pm
Ballads, Banjos, Bluegrass
Folk Dance With Mario!
Folk Music (Davi!
Folkscene
Sat 2pm
Tu, Th 10am
Sun 10:4Sam
Sat 10:30am
Sun 9:30pm
Mon & Fri 10an
Community Journal
Holding Up More Than
Half the Sky
KPFK Evening News
Inside L.A.
Open lournal
Tues 2:00 pn
Daily 6pm
Sat 5pm
The Car Show
The Health Departn
In Fidelity
Organic Gardening
Red Tape
Ruths Kitchen
Sat 12:30pn-
Thur 4pm
Thurs. 10pm
Mon 4pm
Tues 4pm
Wed 4pm
Noon Concert
Sunday Opera
Sunrise Concert
Tenor of the Times
Tesseract
Zymurgv
ROCK AND JAZZ
Bop Kings
Gospel Caravan
Johnny Otis Show
Soft Core Phonography
M-F 12n
Sun 1pm
M-F 6am
4th Sun Ipn
Sat 10pm
Sat 8pm
Tu3pn
Sun7ar
Sun 7pm
Sun 2am
Music Black & White
Preachin the Blues
Richland Woman
CULTURAL AFFAIRS
The Big Broadcast
Culture Journal
In Print
The Janus Company
Kulchur
Little Ladle
Morning Reading
On Film
Onstage
The Play of the Week
Poetry Live
Sour Apple Tree
Talking About Movies
Sun 12 pm
Sat 3:30pm
Mon 10:30pm
Wed 10am
Sat 12m
1+3 Th 10:30pm
Sat6:4Spm
Thurs 11:30pm
M-F 11:30am
Wed 11:4Sam
M-F 11am
Sat 6:30pm
3rd Sat 6:45pm
Wed. 2pm
2•^4Th 10:30pm
Sun 5pm
Tues 6:45pm
Wed 9:15am*
This Morning
Read All About It
COMMENTARY
Dealing
Grey Power
Dorothy Healey
I.M.R.U.
Labor Scene
La Raza Nueva
Lesbian Sisters
Charles Morgan
Newspeak
Strawberry Shortbrt
William Winter
M-F 9am
M-F 9:30am
M-F 5pm
1/3 Thur 3pm
Sun 11:30am
2-f3-f4 Tu 10:30pn
Mon 7pm
Mon 9pm
IstTu 10:30pm
M-fW 6:4Spm
Tu+Th 9:1Sam*
Fri 6:45pm
Mon 9:15am»_
2+4 Thur 3pm
Thurs 6:45pm
Fri. 9: 1 Sam*
l■^3 Tu 7pm
CONSCIOUSNESS RAISERS
Bio-Meditation
(Jack Gariss)
Carlos Hagen Presents
Come to Life
Hour 25: Science Fiction
Science Connection
Trans
Alan Watts
NONE OF THE ABOVE
Calendar of Ev
Vi Way Down the Staii
Report to the Listenei
Weekend Calenda
• indicates rebroadcast
Sun 9am
Sun 8:30pm
Sun 10am
Fri 10pm
Tues 10pm
Sat 8:30am
Sat Sam
M-F 9:55am
5:55pm
Sat 9:30am
Wed 1:55pm
Fri 6:40pm
Sat 1 :'SOpm
monday 13
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerl
9:00 THIS MORNING
10:00 FOLKSCENE
The cowboy in song.
11:00 MORNING READING
"You are born. >ou are a he or a
she. . and you live until you die. . . willy-
niliy," -The River, a novel by Rumcr
Godden. read by Rachel Jonah, produced
by Jane Bennett and David Ossman for
-+CPHK back m 1963, at Christmastime.
11:30 AN AGE OF SONG
The Klizabcthan period in music
and literature. Today's program features
the work of poet John Donne.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Two Views of the Seasons.
VIVALDI: The Seasons; 1 Musici:
Phillips 650017 (between each movement,
environmental sounds of dawn, the sea,
crackling fire, and a storm). David Cloud
hosts. Stereo.
2:00 DICKENS DUETS
Irank Peltingill presents selections
from David Copperfietd and Oliver Twist.
2:30 THEHOBBIT
A two-part dramatic presentation
by Nicol Williamson of J R. R. Tolkien's
magical work. The second half of the
play will be broadcast on Wednesday at
this time.
4:00 ORGANIC GARDENING
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL: LABOR SCENE
Hosted by Sam Kushner.
beginning tRis montfi., Cfuif)tC
Court &■ CcunlrysicLe- uiiCC
fvxvc a new fiosii he 13
cJoscp/i Spencer, a fong - time
frUnd of former fiost K&i/icruu,
Calvin, and. a^ucst with Aer'
on the jfiou) many times. Jasep/x
ii an expert on keuBoard irjsUit--
ments and a dcuote£. qfearfy
music in, generaL. One of his
chief interests m ifie daxUpmcni
of inslrumeniaC enscrnSks into tf>e
orcfiestraC concept. CfiapeC
Court 6- Countryside airs Monday
cvcnijiys at ci^fit.
8-'S Cnapct Court tr Coar)trjs«3e ■:
'AScruimuSifC ^ recreating one of
3iiXfe-hudo's famous JCies ofcori-^
Certs uJ/j!C/i beaan in ]i,ut>eck. in
l6rj. Wor/cs 4y Scfiutji.Bohrr,.
Bruhns and 3iixtxfiu.cLc fjosepf)
Spencer^ Siuts. * '~&^
9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA
10:00 MEMORIAL TO ORLANDO
LETELIER
Lclclier, a former ambassador to
the I'.S under the .Allcnde government
of Chile, and Ronnie Moffie, a co-worker
at the Institute lor Policy Studies in Wash-
ington. D.C died in a bomb explosion in
the capitol in September of this year. A
mass protest followed their murder. Pro-
duced by the Washington Bureau
10:30 PREACHING THE BLUES
Irank Scott hosts this program of
blues, black gospel and boogie from 60
years of recorded music. Sometimes live
guests.
12:00 LONGHAIRED MUSIC
Tonight a two-hour documentary
on the life of that remarkable octogenarian,
conductor-pianist-composer-musicologist
Nicolas Slonimsky Produced by the CBC.
tuesday 14
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News, Commentary by Charles Mor-
gan, Calendar and "Read All About It. "
10:00 FOLKDANCE WITH MARIO!
11:00 MORNING READING
The River: " 'U goes on, goes on.'
said Harriet. I wonder what is going to
happen to us?' " The reading goes on for
11:30 AN AGE OF SONG
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Two Views of the Planets.
HOLST: The Planets: Ambrosian
Singers; London S> mphony Orchestra;
Andre Prcvin conducting; Angel S 36991 ;
HOLST: The Planets Isynthesizer versioni;
i:u Polyphonic Synthesizer: Patrick
Glecson; Mercury SRI 80000 David Cloud
hosts Stereo.
2:00 HOLDING UP MORE THAN HALF
THE SKY
Produced b> a feminist coalition
al KPI K
3:00 THE BOP KINGS
4:00 RED TAPE
I'p against the bureaucracy with
community organizer John Kotick and
environmentalist Diane Moyc.
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 TALKING ABOUT MOVIES
With Sieve Mamber.
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
KPI Ks nightly magazine probes
for reality behind Ihe headlines. Inter-
views, panels, debates, sometimes open
phones. Produced by the Public Affairs
Department.
8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHES-
TRA - LIVE IN CONCERT
BEETHOVEN: Missa Solemnis.
Colin Davis conducts William Pierce
hosts. Recorded with Ihe Dolby "A"
noise reduction system.
KPFK FOI 10 PAGE 4
AT THE MIKE
10 00 THE SCIENCE CONNECTION
Resident astronomer Steve Kilston
looks al the worlds of seiencc and scien-
10:30 GAY RADIO COLLECTI VE/IMRU
■BeOaiise feelings are not permitted
tree expression, the male lives m eonstant
rcaetion against himself. , He has been
I heavily socialized to repress and deny al-
; most the total range of his emotions and
i human needs in order that he can perform
' in the aceeptable 'masculine' way. - ." So
I says Dr Herb Goldberg in his challenging
; book. The Hazards of Being Male: Surviving
the Myth of Masculine Privilege. Dr Gold-
berg talks about the mherenl problems of
macho-ism in toda\ 's societ\- with Jim
Akers.
11;30 IT CHANGED MY LIFE
Betty Hriedan communicates her
enthusiasm, her hopes and fears for the
Women's Movement in this interview with
KPI'K's Barbara Cady.
12:00 PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
Rcbroadcasts until 2:00 am of pro-
grams aired during the day
Wednesday
15
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News. Talking about Movies with
Steve .Mamber. Calendar, and "Read All
About It."
10:00 RICHLAND WOMAN
Roberta Friedman hosts.
11:00 MORNING READING
The River: Whatever happened, a
fish's death, a wreck, storm, sun. the river
assimilated it all." Continuing our two-
week presentation of the novel by Rumer
Godden. produced in 1963
11:30 AN AGE OF SONG
The Elizabethan series features the
works of poets and players.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Vocal Music of Poulenc & Milhaud
POULENC: Christmas Motets. Choir
of Christ Church Cathedral. Oxford. Lon-
don Sinfonietta. directed by Simon Pres-
ton. (Argo ZRG 720). Mass in G Major;
The I estival Singers of Toronto conducted
by Elmer Keler (Seraphim S-60085)
MILHAUD: Cantate de L "Enfant Et De
La Mere. La Muse Menagere. Madeleine
Milhaud. Diseuse. Juilliard Quartet, Leo-
nid Hambro. piano. Conducted by Mil-
haud. (Odyssey: 433790). Leni Isaacs
hosts.
1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
2:00 DICKENS DUETS
Frank Pettingill presents selections
from Martin Chualewit, Great Expecta-
tions and The Pickwick Papers.
2:30 THE HOBBIT
The conclusion of J.R.R. Tolkien's
fantasy Presented by Nicol Williamson
on an Argo recording. (Check Friday
night. 24th, at 10pm for more Tolkien.)
4:00 RUTHS KITCHEN
Succulent morsels, recipes and
restaurant reviews, lor gourmet cooks
and the kitchen cognoscenti.
5:00 DEALING: Barbara Cady
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL
Jimmy Roosevelt tries some ot Ruth ZIony's (Ruth's Kitchen) peanut brittle.
Mike Model with local historians John and La Ree Caughey who have just
published a history of Los Angeles.
Mike Auldridge, the dobro player, sits in with the bluegrass bozos Tom
Sauber and Bill Bryson (I and r)
8:00 ISRAEL PHILHARMONIC-
LIVE IN CONCERT
COPLAND: An Outdoor Overture.
WEBER: Piano Concerto no. 2-Malcolni
l-rager. soloist. LISZT: Dante Symphony.
1 onn Maa/el conducts
10:00 GANIENKEH: FOR THE GENERA
TIONSTOCOME
Ganienkeh means Land ot I lint, and
IS located in New York's Adirondack
Stale Park The land is the ancestral home
of the Mohawk Nation, a member of the
sic-nation Iroquois Confederacy. On May
13, 1974, native men, women and children,
(mostly Mohawk) reclaimed Ganienkeh to
establish a traditional Indian community.
This documentary, produced by KPI'K's
Tim McGovern, investigates the history,
culture and present legal battles of the
Iroquois Nation.
Tom Wolfe, popular author, being interviewed by Barbara "Tangerine Flaked
Streamlined Baby" Cady
12:00 PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
thursday
16
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News. Commentary by Charles Mor-
gan. Calendar and "Read All About It "
10:00 FOLKDANCE WITH MARIO!
11:00 MORNING READING
The River: "She tried to remem-
ber the names of the stars as she lay, and
she thought how much longer stars and
things like trees and rocks svent on than
people '" Our reading of Rumer Cloddens
novel continues.
11:30 AN AGE OF SONG
1 caluring excerpts from Christo-
pher Marlowe"s The Tragical History of Dr.
Faustus.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Lf OS JANACEK: Complete works
for Piano Capriccio for Piano. Theme
and Variations. Concertino for Piano,
Violins. Clarinet, Horn and Bassoon.
On An Overgrown Path. In the Mist.
Rudolf lirkushy. piano. Members of the
Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra
(Deutsche Grammophon 2707 0551
Lcni Isaacs hosts.
2:00 PORTRAIT OF AN UNKNOWN
LADY: ELEANOR WYLIE
Actress Marian Seldcs presents the
extraordinary life of this long.-negIected
poet. Wylic defied the society of her time,
embracing her loves and convictions with
a passion that flew in the face of conven-
tion. This remarkable documentary in-
cludes the works of a lady long out of
literary fashion: one senses that a renewed
interest in her life and work is in the wind
3:00 GREY POWER
Aurelia Morris celebrates Chanukah
and discusses the significance of roots,
traditions and rituals in our lives.
4:00 THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT
I xploration of health care with
host Al Hucbner of Science for the People
5:00 DEALING
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 ANALYSIS: William Winter
7:00 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
8:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA
LIVE IN CONCERT
PROKOFIEV: Romeo and Juliet
(e.xccrpts) Piano Concerto no. 4— Leon
1-leisher. soloist Symphony no. 5. Lorin
Maazcl conducts Robert C onrad hosts
Recorded in Colcmbia SO I our-Channel
Sound
8:50 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
KPFK FOLIO PACE S
9:30 SHOLEM ALEICHEM, DIR
AMERIKA-HAPPY CHANUKAH
A I'dlk opcrclla based on AfofV Pa'se.
the Cantor's Son, by Sholcm Aleichcm. -
and slarrinj; Ihc great Yiddish entertainer
Molly Picon and the Jewish People's
Chorus of New York,
10:15 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
10:50 THE POETRY OF CHANUKAH
11:30 MARTHA SCHLAMME SINGS
YIDDISH SONGS
12:00 PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
Two hours of Pacil'iea programs for
the night shift, the insomniacs and the
friday 17
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News. Analysis by William Winter.
Calendar, and "Read All About It."
10:00 FOLKSCENE
Guests are Mary McCaslin and J mi
Ringer
11:00 MORNING READING
The River: "She painted a picture;
it was of a lotus on blue water, and when
it was done, looking at it critically, she
could see that it was nothing like a lotus,
it was more like a )% in bluish mud."
Rumer Godden's novel rdad by Rachel
Jonah continues.
11:30 AN AGE OF SONG
Selections from poems and a sermon
by John Donne.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
\ smattering of lute music from the
Renaissance to early classical Lute music
of Sweclinck. -Moritz.Ochsenkhun. (Archive
2533 302) Concerto in F for Lute and
Strings by Kohaut. Nicholas Kraemer.
harpsichord John Gray, viola. Julian
Bream. Lute Concerto in BFIat for Two
Lutes by Handel. Robert Spencer, chitar-
rone. Nicholas Kraemer. harpsichord,
Marilyn Sansom, cello. Julian Bream, lute,
(RCA ARLI-1180). Concertos for lute
and mandolin by Vivaldi. Paul Kuentz
Chamber Orchestra. (Deutsche Gram-
mophon 2530211), Leni Isaacs hosts.
2:00 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
2:30 YIDDISH SONGS AND STORIES
first we hear Sholem Aleichcm's
short story Third Class read by Lva Yeru-
shalmy in the Lnglish translation, and
Joseph Witkover in the original Yiddish
Then Morris Ressner sings Yiddish songs
of the New York 2nd Avenue theater
world .
3:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
4:00 IRANS ILLEGAL REGIME
A Columbia University audience
hears fojmer U.S. Attorney General Ramsey
Clark, poet Reza Baraheni and Aijaz
Ahmed discuss the Iranian secret police
(Savak) and intellectual and artistic
freedom in Iran
5:10 CALENDAR: Terry Hodel
5:15 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
I 6:45 NEWSPEAK
Commentary on the media.
7:00 THE SIN OF JESUS
Isaac Babel was a Jewish writer who
died in the Russian purges of the '30's.
This short story was made into a film by
Robert 1-rank who transposed the locale
to New Jersey. Tonight we present a
version adapted and dramatized by the Cul-
tural Affairs Department at KPFA.
7:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
8:00 THE WILLIAM MALLOCH
PROGRAMME
9:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
10:15 HOUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION
12:00 GOODBYE PORKPIE HAT
Jazz with host Paul Vangelisli
2:00 THE BIG SLEEP
Back to the days of Birdland with
John Breckow.
Saturday
18
8:00 ALAN WATTS
Continuing the lecture series by the
eastern/western philosopher. From the
Pacifica archives of 1958.
8:30 TRANS: Amanda Foulger
Two interviews: John Michcll, authoi
of A View Over Atlantic City of Revela-
tion. The Earth Spirit and other works on
ancient knowledge, sacred geometry, na-
tural magic; and Dr. Henriette Mertz.a
lawyer and onetime Commander in the
U.S. Navy whose scientific research has
yielded proof of early Chinese explora-
tion of North America, extensive travel
in the ancient world and an exciting new
theory on the location of Atlantis - both
talked with us during the Ancient Medi-
terranean Research Association Conference
in San Diego, Labor Day weekend.
9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
Uncle Ruthie (Buell) invites chil-
dren of all ages to listen.
10:30 FOLK MUSIC: John Davis
12:30 THE CAR SHOW
John Retsek answers the phones and
gives advice about wingless chariots.
1:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
2:00 BALLADS, BANJOS AND
BLUEGRASS
3:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
4:00 MUSIC BLACK ANDWHITE
5:00 CALENDAR
Terry Hodel with the-weekend
events.
5:10 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
6:00 THE SATURDAY NEWS
6:30 ON FILM: Dean Cohen
6:45 ONSTAGE
7:00 SHOLEM ALEICHEM: "Beryl Isaac"
Joseph Witkover reads the original
Yiddish and Lila Hassid presents the Eng-
lish translation. Happy Chanukah!
7:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
8:00 ZYMURGY
Conlon Nancarrow: Studies for
Player Piano.
Charles Amirkhanian, Music Direc-
tor of our sister station KPFA in Berkeley,
introduces recent compositions by this
American composer, who since 1947, has
developed a unique body of complex pieces
all for player piano. Nancarrow's concerns
with rhythm and sonority are more ad-
vanced than almost any in the world,
yet his music makes an immediate impres-
sion even on those who don't normally
Uke "avant garde" music. Monaural.
(Rebroadcast.Mon.. Dec 20, 12 midnight)
10:00 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
10:30 TESSERACT: Phil Mendelson
A program of contemporary and
electronic music.
12:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
2:00 THE SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
SHOW: Jay Lacey
Sunday
19
7:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN: Prince Dixon
9:00 BIO-MEDITATION: Jack Gariss
An experiential, experimental
exploration of feeling states, body states
and states of consciousness of the multi-
dimensional unity of you.
10:00 COME TO LIFE: Herschel Lymon
A human growth center of the air.
10:45 FOLKDANCE WITH MARIO!
11:30 DOROTHY HEALEY
Marxist commentary, guests and
open phones.
12:30 COMMUNITY JOURNAL
A new outreach program open to
the diverse groupings and organizations
that, combined, represent our tumultuous
and colorful corner of the world. Host
is Susan Anderson.
1:00 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
1:30 SUNDAY OPERA
HUMPERDINCK: Hansel and Gretel.
Soloists -Rise Stevens, Nadine Conner,
Thelma Votipka, John Brownlee, Claramae
Turner; Max Rudolf conducts the Chorus
and Orchestra of the Metropolitan Opera
(Odyssey Y2 32546). HAYDN: Die
Jahresieiten. Soloists-Teresa Stich-Randall.
Helmut Kretschmar, Erich Wenk; Walter
Geohr conducts the North German Radio
Chorus and Orchestra (Nonesuch HC 3009)
Fred Hyatt hosts. Stereo.
5:00 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
6:00 SUNDAY NEWS: Peter Gordo
6:30 GEORGE BERNARD SHAW
PN WAR
In 1937 the international political
situation was grim. The writer voiced
his concern over the BBC.
6:45 UNDERGROUND POETRY:
DANIEL BERRIGAN
(■'ather Berrigan reads some of
his poetry at a reading held while he
was being .sought by the FBI.
7:00 UNDER MILK WOOD
The BBC version of the Dylan
Thomas play with Richard Burton. Hugh
Griffith and others.
8:30 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
9:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
10:00 FOLKSCENE: The Larmans
12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
monday 20
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News. "Newspeak." and "Read All
About It."
10:00 FOLKSCENE
Folk music from New Zealand.
11:00 MORNING READING
The River: "It was not entirely Euro-
pean, it was not entirely Indian; it was a
mixture of both." Rachel Jonah continues
reading the Rumer Godden novel produced
for KPFK a decade ago by Jane Bennett
and David Ossman.
11:30 AN AGE OF SONG
The Elizabethan period in music
and words.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Russian String Quartets
BORODIN: String Quartet No. 1;
Borodin Quartet; Odyssey-Melodiya
V mn.PROKOFIEFF: String Quartet
No. I, Novak Quartet; Phillips 6500103;
SHOSTAKOVICH: String Quartet No. 14;
Fitzwilliam Quartet; Oiseau DSLO-8.
David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 THE SECRET GARDEN
Glenda Jackson presents an adap-
tation of Frances Hodgson Burnett's spell-
binding book. Organic gardeners suspend
your spades for this special holiday plot.
From an Argo recording.
5:00 CALENDAR: Terry Hodel
5:10 THE POST OFFICE
Rabindranath Tagore's tender story
about an invalid child who yearns for a
letter from the King. A Christmas play
for metaphorical minds. Produced by
Ruth Buell.
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY: Charles Morgan
7:00 OPEN JOURNAL: Labor Scene
Sam Kushner presents news about
the steelworkers election.
/.£? CAa/Kl 0>ttr£ £, 0>ttr)tnJside ■:■
A Concert of 1\enaissancc Cfinstmiii
mu^ic, 6j JcAeir), ScAcidt, 'Praeto-
rjius, a-nit otherj ■ loiepfj SptnCV
Host! •••• 'T&' ^ I J ^r
9:00 LA RAZA NUEVA
10:00 SPOOKS, PLANES AND HEROIN
Author Peter Dale Scott, inter-
viewed by Nick Egleson on his book 77ie
War Conspiracy - The Secret Road to the
Second IndoChina War.
10:30 PREACHING THE BLUES
Frank Scott hosts.
12:00 LONGHAIRED MUSIC
Studies for the player piano. Re-
broadcast from Zymurgy, Sat . Dec, 18th.
tuesday 21
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News. Commentary by Charles
Morgan. Calendar and "Read All About
10:00 FOLKDANCE WITH MARIO!
11:00 MORNING READING
The River. "Who was it who had said
yod could not stop days or rivers?" Con-
tinuing our presentation of the novel by
Rumer Godden. read by Rachel Jonah,
produced by Jane Bennett and David Oss-
man for KPFK back in 1963, at Christmas
time.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 6
11:30 AN AGE OF SONG
Broadsheet ballads, street cries and
love soiiss
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Music for Nine Instruments.
MARTINU: Nonet: Boston Sym-
phonv Chamber Plavers: RCA LSC6189;
COPLAND: Nonet for Strings; Coluinbia
Strin;: Lnsenible; .Aaron Copland conduc-
ting: Columbia M ymi.WEBERN: Con
certo for Nine Instruments; Boston Sym-
phony Chamber Players; RCA LSC 6189
Dasid Cloud hosts Stereo
1:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
2:00 HOLDING UP MORE THAN HALF
THE SKY
Produced by a feminist coalition
at KPf K
3:00 THE BOP KINGS
3:45 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
4:30 RED TAPE
5:00 CALENDAR: Terry Hodel
5:05 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 TALKING ABOUT MOVIES
With Steve Mamber.
7:00 A CHILD'S CHRISTMAS IN WALES
Dylan Thomas retelling his boyhood.
7:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
8:00 BOSTON SYMPHONY^
LIVE IN CONCERT
BEETHOVEN: Egmont Overture.
Piano Concerto no. 5-Malcolm Krager,
soloist. Symphony No. 5. Klaus Tennstedt
conducts William Pierce hosts. Recor-
ded with the Dolby "A" noise reduction
system. Stereo.
10:00 LIVEFROMTHE FAIR!
10:30 GAY RADIO COLLECTI VE/IM RU
Traditionally a time of family ga-
therings, this holiday season often weighs
heavily on the single and alone gay per-
son. Yet for many other gays it is the
highlight of the year, a time for parties
and celebrations with friends and/or lovers
The Collective explores the effects of this
special time of the year with a variety of
gay Angelenos. . and offers its own
collection of Christmas caiols "to make
the Yuletide gay." The l.M R U. News
staff provides a year-end review of 1976"s
significant gay news stories.
11:30 THE WRECK OF THE
DEUTSCHLAND
The great poem by Gerald Manley
Hopkins IS based upon an actual ship-
wreck in which many nuns were drowned.
Jack Hirschman presents the work.
12:00 PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
Rebroadcasts until 2:00am of pro-
grams aiied earlier in the day, month, or
Wednesday
22
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News. Talking about Movies with
Steve Mamber, Calendar, and "Read All
About It."
10:00 RICHLAND WOMAN
Roberta Iriedman hosts.
11:00 MORNING READING
Continuing our reading of Tfte
River; Rumer Godden's novel, read by
Rachel Jonah and produced by Jane Ben
nett for KPFK just one decade ago.'
11:30 AN AGE OF SONG
Hurd Hatfield reads from the work
of John Milton
12:00 NOON CONCERT
David Cloud hosts a program of
ne« releases l.om luie and jbroad Stereo
2:00 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
2:30 THE POETRY OF CHANUKAH
3:15 THE GIFT OF THE MAGI
i:isa Knight Thompson presents
the O Henry short story
3:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
4:00 RUTH'S KITCHEN
5:00 CALENDAR: Terry Hodel
5:05 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 COMMENTARY : Charles Morgan
7:00 A PROGRAM FOR CHRISTMAS
Produced in 1962 by KPIA's Litera-
ture Director, John Leonard. (He then went
on to make good in the Big Apple on the
New York Times.
7:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
8:00 ISRAEL PHILHARMONIC
ORCHESTRA-LIVE IN CONCERT
t\/IOZART: Piano Concerto no. 21,
K. 4e7-Christoph hschenbach, soloist.
FRANCK: Symphony. BERG: Three
Orchestral Pieces. Jacques Delacote
c-onducts,
10:00 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
10:30 THE LIFE OF THE VIRGIN MARY
This production of the work of the
German poet Rainer Maria Rilke is an assem-
blage of programs originating at KPFK and
KPl'A and Lyrichord recording LL97. Pro-
duced by Lee Whiting in the '60's.
12:00 PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
Programs that played in earlier
hours hit the air for the late night crowd.
thursday
23
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News. Commentary by Charles
Morgan, Calendar and "Read All About
It."
10:00 FOLKDANCE WITH MARIO!
11:00 MORNING READING
The River: "You can't stop days
or rivers, not stop them, and not hurry
them." Today, the penultimate episode
in our reading of Rumer Godden's novel,
produced by Jane Bennett for KPFK, 1963.
11:30 AN AGE OF SONG
Poetry and sonnets by Sir Thomas
Raleigh.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
LOUIS-CLAUDE DAGUIN: A
Book of Noels; F. Power Biggs, organ;
Columbia MS f>\b7 . HEINRICH SCHUETZ:
Christmas Oratorio; Hans-Joachim Rotzch,
Herla Hebbe. Hans-Olaf Hudemann, solo-
ists; Westphalian Choir and Instrumental
tnsemble; Wilhelm l.hmann conducting.
Bach Guild HM USD David Cloud hosts
Stereo
2:00 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
2:30 STRAWBERRY SHORTBREAD
Pat Benson hosts regular discussions
of education, with an emphasis on the need
for multi-cultural, bi-lingual programs and
parent involvement. Features. guests,
panels and open phones.
3:30 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
4:00 THE HEALTH DEPARTMENT
I xploralion of health care with
host Al Huebner of Science for the People
5:00 CALENDAR: Terry Hodel
5:05 LIVE FROM THE FAIR!
6:00 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
6:45 ANALYSIS: William Wmler
7:00 LIVEFROMTHE FAIR!
7:30 CHANUKAH GELT
The traditional Sholem Alcichem
short story read by Thon Wyann
7:45 THE GIFT OF THE MAGI
Pacifica's indomitable Elsa Knight
Thompson reads IheO. Henry short story
8:00 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA-
LIVE IN CONCERT
STRAUSS: A Hero's Life. BAR-
TOK: Concerto lor Orchestra. Lorin Maa-
ie\ conducts Robert Conrad hosts. Re-
corded in Columbia SO I'our-ChanncI
Sound.
10:00 MURDER IN THE CATHEDRAL
T. S. liliot's play was originally
written for production at Canterbury Ca-
thedral and stars Robert Donat as Arch-
bishop Thomas Becket. The central con-
flict - is Becket seeking his own martyr-
dom out of motives of spiritual pride?
11:40 PORTRAIT OF THE ARTIST
AS A YOUNG MAN
Eleanor Sully of KPI A reads a selection
from the James Joyce book dealing with
Christmas dinner.
12:00 PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
Two hours of Pacifica programs for
the night shift, the insomniacs, and the owls
friday
24
6:00 SUNRISE CONCERT: Paul Vorwerk
9:00 THIS MORNING
News, Analysis by William Winter,
Calendar and "Read All About It."
10:00 FOLKSCENE
"Long" John Baldry accompanied
by Casey Kelly,
11:00 MORNING READING
The River: "That was the wonder:
foals, little horses to horses; rabbits to
rabbits; people to people; all made without
a mistake. And without a pattern," The
conclusion of Rumer Godden's novel read
by Rachel Jonah and produced by Jane
Bennett.
11:30 A CHRISTMAS CAROL
Lionel Barry more reads the tradi-
tional Charles Dickens short story in a
presentation that has become a tradition
itself,
12:00 NOON CONCERT
BERLIOZ: L'Enfance du Christ;
Florence Kopleff. Cesare Valetti. Gerard
Souzay. Robert Oliver, soloists; New
Lngland Conservatory Chorus; Boston
Symphony Orchestra; Charles Munch con-
ducting; Victrola Vies 6006. David
Cloud hosts. Stereo
2:00 THE LITTLE PRINCE
David and Jean Birney present the
Antoine de Saint-Fxupery classic.
3:15 THE SKY WITH ITS MOUTH
WIDE OPEN: VOICES OF
POLITICAL CAPTIVES
To mark the progress of humanity,
an anthology of writings from the world's
political prisons, be they constructed of
walls and cellblocks or entire continents.
This is a joint production of KPlK's Pub-
lic and Cultural Affairs Departments
6:15 THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
7:00 FOR THE TIME BEING: A
CHRISTMAS ORATORIO
W, II Audcn's celebration of the
questions and answers posed by the
meaning of the season, darkened by the
turbulence of the 'iO's in lingland, the
coining war. and the impending sense of
meanirfglcssncss. This prophetic piece
is as timely now as when it was written
SOO THE WILLIAM MALLOCH
PROGRAMME
10:00 HOUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION
I R R TOLKIEN S WORLD
The author himself presents "The
Fellowship of the Ring" and "The Lord
of the Rings."
12:00 GOODBYE PORKPIE HAT
Jazz with Paul Vanpelisti hosting
2:00 THE BIG SLEEP
John Breckow and memories of
Birdland
"'4^,
Saturday
25
8:00 ALAN WATTS
8:30 TRANS: Amanda Foulger
An interview' with Arthur Young,
inventor of the Bell helicopter, founder
of the Foundation for the Study of Con-
sciousness (now superseccd by the Insti-
tute for the Study of Consciousness lo-
cated in Berkeley. Ca.) Young's two new
books. The Reflexive Universe and The
Geometry of Meaning are philosophical
in the purest sense of the word, linking
the inner and outer worlds, science and
consciousness, "the facts and principles
of reality,"
9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
Uncle Rulhic (Buclli talks about
your Barbicdoll in language you don't
have to be a Parisian designer to under-
stand
10:30 FOLK MUSIC: |uhn Davis
Uncle John will play folk records
and complain,
12:30 THE CAR SHOW
John Retsek talks about our cars
and maybe >our car if you can phone
1:50 WEEKENDCALENDAR
Compiled and read bv Ferrv
Hodel,
2:00 BANJOS, BALLADS AND
BLUEGRASS
3:30 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
5:00 THE SEVEN POOR TRAVELERS
The short story, by Charles Dickens,
presented by Frank Coffee, From the
Pacifica Archives.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 7
s
aturday 25
6:00 PROLOGUE: Henry Miller, a long time friend of Lawrence Durrell,
introduces the writer and his creation, (from interviews by Robert Snyder and
Cynthia Sears.
PETER FINCH
JOHN RANDOLPH
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"Justine would say that we had been trapped in the projection of a
will too powerful and too deliberate to be human - the gravitational field which
Alexandria threw down upon those it had chosen as its exemplars." (Justine p. 8)
PETER FINCH reads the opening of the Quartet (Justine 3-15)
JOHN RANDOLPH: On Justine in all her grandeur (Justine 1fi-33)
7:30 ISRAEL PHILHARMONIC-LIVE IN CONCERT
HANDEL: Messiah: Heather Harper, Alfreda Hodgson, Robert Tear,
Benjamin Luxon, soloists. Zubin IVIehta conducts. Stereo.
9:45 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"Balthazar says that the natural traitors - like you and I - are
really Caballi. He says we are dead and live this life as a sort of limbo. Yet
the living can't do without us. We infect them with a desire to experience
more, to grow." (Justine p. 72)
THE
fiLEXfiNDRIfi
QUfiRTET
SALOME JENS
BRUCE SOLOMON
SALOME JENS: On knowing Justine — touching her perfect body with the mind.
(Justine 33-44)
BRUCE SOLOMON: Darley rescues Melissa from the clutches of malnutrition, hys-
teria, alcohol, hashish, tuberculosis, and Spanish fly. (Justine 42-50).
JOSEPH CAMPANELLA: Moeurs - a novel about Justine by her first husband,
the French-AlbanianJew Jacob Arnauti (Justine 50-61).
11:00 CHRISTMAS NIGHT SPECIAL CONCERT
GIAN-CARLO MENOTTI: Amahl and the Night Visitors; Chet Allen,
Rosemary Kuhlmann, Andrew McKinley, David Aiken, Leon Lishner, Frank
Monachino, soloists; Orchestra and chorus conducted by Thomas Schippers
(Original 1951 NBC telecast recording); Victrola VIC 1512. Monaural.
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Lawrence Durrell leaning on the omphalos, great bellybutton of the world.
12:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
2:00 THE SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY SHOW
'.411 page indications refer to the Pocket Book edition of the Alexandria Quartet,
which the publishers, Simon & Schuster. Inc. were kind enough to send us for this
reading.
KPFK Pr JO PAGE 8
s
unday 26
7:00
9:00
GOSPEL CARAVAN
THE ALEXANDRIA aUARTET
"And then, as far as Alexandria is concerned, you can understand why
this is really a city of incest. . . . For this etiolation of the heart and reins in love-
making must make one turn inwards upon one's sister. The lover mirrors himself
like Narcissus in his own family; there is no exit from this predicament." (Baltha-
zar on the Caha\: Justine p. 82].
"We of this Cabal say: indulge but refine. We are enlisting everything
in order to make man's wholeness match the wholeness of the universe - even
pleasure, the destructive granulation of the mind in pleasure." (Balthazar on the
Cabal ; Justine p. 86)
JOE CAMPANELLA
MOLLY DODD
JOSEPH CAMPANELLA: Moeurs (conclusion) (Justine 61-73/
MOLLY DODD: On Balthazar and the Cabal (Justine 77-871
MICHAEL LERNER: Cohen's Death (Justine 87-97)
10:30
ALEXANDRIAN MELODIES
8^ »;
.■ r
c
vm
1
THOMAS MAHARD
BARBARA CLAIRCHILDE
1:00
1:30
TENOR OF THE TIMES
Fred Hyatt offers his annual review of the year's featured tenors.
THE SUNDAY OPERA
STRAUSS: Die Fledermaus. Soloists - Lily Pons, Ljuba Welitsch,
Richard Tucker, Martha Lipton; Eugene Ormandy conducts the Chorus and
Orchestra of the Metropolitan Opera (Odyssey Y2 32666). Fred Hyatt hosts. Stereo.
ANTHONY ZERBE
RAY TATAR
5:00 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"How disgusting I must seem to you, . . with my obscene jumble of
conflicting ideas; all this sickly preoccupation with God and a total inability to
obey the smallest moral injunction from my inner nature like being faithful to a
man one adores." (Justine: on herself. Justine 1321
RAY TATAR: The Plot thickens (Justine 131-141)
MIKE HODEL: In Abu Sir did Nessim a Summer Palace decree (Justine 141-152)
MICHAEL LERNER
11:30 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"The modern novel! The grumus merdae left behind by criminals on
the scene of their misdeeds." Pursewarden ^Jusf/ne p. 121)
BUCK HENRY: Pursewarden - the novelist: on the secret of his trade (Justine 97-104)
TOM MAHARD: Scobie - The cockney pirate and anchorite (Justine 104-111)
BARBARA CLAIRCHILDE: Clea - the painter: honey-gold and warm (Justine 111-116)
ANTHONY ZERBE: The Alexandrian enigma between writers (Justine 116-127)
ALEXANDER THE GREAT
MIKE HODEL THE GOOD
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 9
6:00 SUNDAY NEWS
NATE ESFORMES
ORSON BEAN
6:30 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"This IS what is meant by possession - to be passionately at war for
the qualities in one another: to contend for the treasures of each other's per-
sonalities. But how can such a war be anything but destructive and hopeless?"
(Darley Justine p. 178)
NATE ESFORMES: Nessim's Dream Memories of Alexander (Justine 152-162)
ORSON BEAN: Darley on the sexual mysteries (Justine 162-173)
JULIE CHRISTIE BILL SCHALLERT
JULIE CHRISTIE: Melissa and Nessim as secret sharers (Justine 173-188)
BILL SCHALLERT: The duck shoot on Lake Mareotis (Justine 188-200)
8:30 FOLKSCENE: A post Christmas party with the Larmans.
12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
lyionday
27
6:00
SUNRISE CONCERT
10:00 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"Is there a friendship possible this side of love which could be sought
and found? I speak no more of love - the world and its conventions have become
odious to me. But is there a friendship possible to attain which is deeper even,
limitlessly deep, and yet wordless, idealess?" — Clea in a letter to Darley
(Justine p. 221)
NINA FOCH
NINA FOCH: Ends and Beginnings (Justine 203-222)
FRED HAINES: Selected poems of Lawrence Durrell read and recorded at KPFA
in March, 1961.
ROBERT SNYDER: Balthazar brings the corrected "Interlinear." (Balthazar 3-13)
12:00 NOON CONCERT: French Organ Music
LOUIS COUPERIN: Chacone in re; Chacone en sol; LOUIS CLERAM
BAULT: Plain jeu, duo, et recit; Plein jeu et fugue; NICOLAS DE GRIGNY:
Recit de pange lingua; Pierre Froidebise, organ; Nonesuch H 71020; OLIVIER
MESSIAEN: Messe de la Pentacote; Olivier Messiaen, organ; Ducretet-Thomson DUC-6J
(mono). David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"Of course, if there was ever any trouble, I'd say I was in disguise. I
am a policeman when you come to think of it. After all, even Lawrence of
Arabia wore a nightshirt didn't he?" — Scobie (Balthazar p. 33)
MARVIN MILLER: Mnemjian's Establishment and Scoble's Tendencies
(Balthazar 14-35)
LISA DANIELS: Clea's Portrait of Justine (Balthazar 35-47)
3:30
ALEXANDRIAN MELODIES
MARVIN MILLER
LISA DANIELS
KPFK FCLIOPAGE 10
6:45
7:00
COMMENTARY
Charles Morgan.
LAWRENCE DURRELL WITH HENRY MILLER, 1973.
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"Yes, she is just like me - merciless in the pursuit of pleasure and
yet and - all her milk has turned into power-love. Yet she is also like me in
that she is tender and kindly and a real man's woman. I hate her because she
is like me. do you understand? And I fear her because she can read my mind. "
— Leila on Justine (Balthazar p. 911
RAY SINGER : Nessim's Wedding (Balthazar 89-961
LAWRENCE DURRELL: On Writers and Writing The author of the Alexandria
Quartet reads a chapter from Bitter Lemons and some new (light!) verse, as well as
discussing various aspects of his work and the work of others. Recorded in L.A.
(Jan. 1972) and Sommieres, France. Produced by Cynthia Sears.
CONCERT: Music from Holland
MARGO ANN BERDESHEVSKY
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
". . . the first pure draughts of desert air, and the nakedness of space
pure as a theorem, stretching away into the sky, drenched in all its own silence
and majesty, untenanted except by such figures as the imagination of man has in
vented to people landscapes which are inimical to his passions and whose purity
flays the mind." (Balthazar p. 77)
RAY SINGER
JUNE FORAY
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"First nobody can own an artist so be warned. Second what good is
a faithful body when the mind is by its very nature unfaithful' Third stop whining
like an Arab, you know better. Fourth neurosis is no excuse, health must be won
and earned by a battle. Lastly it is honourable if you can't win to hand yourself "
— Pursewarden in a telegram to Justine (Balthazar p. 1151
JUNE FORAY: Balthazar on Pursewarden (Balthazar 99-120)
WALTER BROOK AND YVONNE TISSOT: Alexandrian Affinities
(Balthazar 120-132)
MARGO ANN BERDESHEVSKY: Nessim makes Justine an offei
(Balthazar 47-55)
STEPHAN FISHER: The Brothers Hosnani (Balthazar 55-64)
JHEAN BURTON: The Dark Swallow (Balthazar 64-74)
DAVID MEALY: The Desert (Balthazar 74-89)
6:00
THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
12:00
LONG HAIRED MUSIC
YVONNE TISSOT
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 11
T
uesday 28
6:00
10:00
SUNRISE CONCERT
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"I regard it (the psyche) as completely insubstantial as a rainbow — it
only coheres into identifiable states and attributes when attention is focused on it.
The truest form of right attention is of course love. Thus 'people' are as much of
an illusion to the mystic as 'matter' to the physicist when he is regarding it as a form
of energy." — Pursewarden (Balthazar p. 132)
ANDREW PRINE
"Then he sought her mouth feverishly, as if he would suck the very
image of Clea from her breath — from that sesame-laden breath. He trembled
with excitement — the perilous feeling of one about to desecrate a sacred place by
some irresistible obscenity whose meaning flickered like lightning in the mind with
a horrible beauty of its own. (Aphrodite permits every conjugation of the mind and
sense in love.}" — Narouz and the Prostitute (Balthazar p. 159)
CHARLES SIEBERT: Justine and Pursewarden - Dangerous Games (Balthazar 132-142)
ANDREW PRINE: Narouz at the Festival of Sitna Mariam (Balthazar 143-152)
STEVE PEARLMAN: Narouz hears the truth from the Magzub and Clea in the
Prostitute (Balthazar 152-162)
SHELBY HIATT: Scobie's End (Balthazar 162-173)
SEVERN DARDEN: The Enigma of Truth (Balthazar 177-182)
SEVERN DARDEN
2:00 THF ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
" 'The lover fears the carnival,' says the proverb. And with the
emergence of these black-robed creatures of the night everywhere, all is
subtly altered. The whole temperature of life in the city alters, grows warm
with the subtle intimations of Spring. Carni vale — the flesh's farewell to the
year, unwinding its mummy wrappings of sex, identity and name, and stepping
forward naked into the futurity of the dream." (Balthazar p. 183)
JACK HIRSCHMAN AND GEORGE APOSTOLIDES reading the poetry of
Constantine Cavafy. Recorded at KPFK in July, 1962.
SEVERN DARDEN: The Carnival and Masked Ball (conclusion) (Balthazar 182-197)
TONY BILL: After the Ball is Over: The Discovery of Toto (Balthazar 197-210)
3:30
STEPHEN PEARLMAN
SHELBY HIATT
12:00 NOON CONCERT: French Piano Concertos
SAINT-SAENS: Piano Concerto No. 1. Op. 17; Jeanne-Marie Darre,
piano; French National Radio Orchestra; Louis Fourestier conducting; Pathe 30395;
DEBUSSY: Fantasie for Piano and Orchestra; Aldo Ciccolini, piano; French National
Radio Orchestra; Jean Martinon conducting; Angel S 37065; ROUSSEL: Piano Con-
certo; M)LHAUD: Piano Concerto No. 2; Grant Johannesen, piano; Radio Luxembourg
Orchestra; Kontarsky, conducting; Turnabout 34496. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
ALEXANDRIAN MELODIES
PETER BONERZ
JOANNA PETTET
4:30 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
" 'At first,' writes Pursewarden, 'we seek to supplement the emptiness
of our individuality through love, and for a brief moment enjoy the illusion of
completeness. But it is only an illusion. For this strange creature, which we
thought would join us to the body-of the world, succeeds at last in separating us
most thoroughly from it. Love joins and then divides. How else would we be
growing?'" -Clea quoting Pursewarden (Balthazar p. 231)
PETER BONERZ: The Post-Mortem Investigation. (Balthazar 210-222)
JOANNA PETTET: Narouz confesses all to Clea (Balthazar 223-231)
JEAN HEPPLE AND JAY KUGELMAN: Letters from Clea and Pursewarden
(Balthazar 231-240)
THANASIS MASKALERIS AND DICK BRATSET: The Poetry of Constantine
Cavafy read and recorded by KPFA at San Francisco State College.
KPFK '= :,LlO PAGE 12
BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA-LIVE IN CONCERT
GERSHWIN: Cuban Overture. Concerto in F - Earl Wild, piano.
Porgy and Bess: A Symphonic Picture. Girl Crazy (selections). Arthur Fiedler
conducts. William Pierce hosts. Recorded with the Dolby "A" noise reduction
system Stereo
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"What am I, Pursewarden, doing here among people who live in a
frerizy of propriety? Let me wander where people haue come to terms with
their own human obscenity, safe in the poet's cloak of invisibility. I want to
learn to respect nothing while despising nothing - crooked is the path of the
initiate," -spoken to Mountolive in London (Mountolive p. 31 j
BEATRICE MANLEY: Mountolive Meets Pursewarden and Liza in London
(Mountolive 37-55)
AL AN NAPIER: Mountolive in Russia (Mountolive 56-69)
MIKE TIGAR: "The Ghost Train " A reading from Durrell's Bspirit de Corps,
recorded at KPFA in May , 1961.
6:00
6:45
JAY KUGELMAN
THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
TALKING ABOUT MOVIES
With Steve Mamber.
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"He had been formally educated in England, educated not to wish to
feel. All the other valuable lessons he had already mastered, despite his youth -
to confront the problems of the drawing room and the street with sang-froid;
but toward personal emotions he could only oppose the nervous silence of a
national sensibility almost anaesthetized into clumsy taciturnity: an education
in selected reticences and shames." (Mountolive p. 8)
DAVID HURST: Mountolive's Egyptian Initiation (Mountolive 1-7)
DIANNA MADDOX: Leila Loves David, her Mountolive (Mountolive 7-17)
BROCK PETERS: Clouds over the Hosnani Household. (Mountolive 17-28)
TE)1ESE BASHA: Narouz on the Copts (Mountolive 28-37)
ALAN NAPIER
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 13
Above: a few of the hundreds of entertainers and craftspeople, beautifully
costumed, with Fair Crafts Coordinator Ray Tatar (with puppets). All
around them are shown: Silver necklace by Arye; Engraved leather book-
binding by Tom & Judi Darnell; Enamel-on-copper by Marianne Merit;
Scrimshaw carving on ivory by Cat Kindsfather; Chip Worsinger's gypsy
wagon filled with stained glass.
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PAGE 25
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 14
Above: Limited edition at »
Batik dress by Candace Jo 1 1
who also do face painting.
Right: Renaissance gothic sculpture by James Rumph;
Below: Ruth Keller's Elhnica necklace; Art Nouveau
style hand bUnvn 2l:is^; lsr:ieli hjlik hanging by Ruth Raviv
5^,
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 15
Right; Renaissance gothic sculpture by James Rumph;
Below: Ruth Keller's Ethnica necklace; Art Nouveau
style hand blown glass; Israeli batik hanging by Ruth Raviv.
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KffK FOLIO PAGE M
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 1S
Right: RenaissanL-e gothic sculpture by James Rumph;
Below: Ruth Keller's Ethnica necklace: Art Nouveau
style hand blown glass: Nr;ieli hutik hanging by Ruth Raviv
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 15
iAiednesday 29
6:00
10:00
SUNRISE CONCERT
ANALOGY OF THE ALCHEMICAL MICROCOSM TO THE MACROCOSM
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
". . . for the rest, the country is still here - everything that is hetero-
clite, devious, polymorph, anfractuous, equivocal, opaque, ambiguous, many-branched
or just plain dotty. I wish you joy of it when I am far away! I know you will make
your first mission a resounding success." -Pursewarden in a letter to Mountolive
IMountotive p. 1 13)
CHARLES MORGAN: Pursewarden's Letter to Mountoli"
tion (Diplomatically Speaking) (Mountolive 86-105)
The General Situa-
IVAN MOFFAT: Pursewarden's Letter (conclusidn) {Mountolive 105-114)
12:00 NOON CONCERT
REGER: Romantic Suite, Op. 125; North German Radio Orchestra;
Hans Schmidtlsserstedt conducting; MENDELSSOHN: Violin Concerto. Op. 64;
Wanda Wilkomirska, violin; South German Radio Orchestra; Hans Dreyrans conduc-
ting; RESPIGHI: Pines of Rome; North German Radio Orchestra; Wilhelm Schuech-
ter conducting; HINDEMITH: Concerto for Trumpet, Bassoon, and String Orchestra;
Hans Potts, trumpet; Wolfgang Boettler, bassoon; Hessian Radio Orchestra; Dean Dixon
conducting; STRA VINSKY: Suite from 'Pulcinella'; Bavarian Radio Orchestra;
Colin Davis conducting. Tapes courtesy of Deutsche Welle. Stereo.
2:00 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"Diplomacy or Undiplomacy." Lawrence Durrell recounts his experiences
as a diplomatic attache' in ftaly, Greece and Turkey during WW II. Recorded at
Claremont Men's College March 1974. Courtesy of Cynthia Sears.
HEDLEY MATTINGLY LIA WAGONER
HEDLEY MATTINGLY: Shakeup in the Embassy (Mountolive 70-79)
LIAWAGGNER Mountolive visits his Mother (Mountolive 79-85)
Wl
DUDLEY KNIGHT
ANTOINETTE BOWER
DUDLEY KNIGHT: Ambassador Mountolive Arrives in Cairo (Mountolive 115-125)
ANTOINETTE BOWER: High Society in Alexandria; Semira and Amaril (Mountolive
125 138)
CHARLES MORGAN
IVAN MOFFAT
3:30
ALEXANDRIAN MELODIES
<?^f^^ '^.PA<^Afi
4:30 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"Achi What a boring wodd we have created around us. The slime of
plot and counterplot I have just recognized that it is not my world at all. (I can
hear your swearing as you read). . " -Pursewarden's last official communication
IMountolive p. 165).
ROSCOE LEE BROWNE: Pursewarden's Least Official Act (Movntolive 138161)
JIM DALE: Diplomatic Reactions to Pursewarden's Indiscretion. IMountolive
161-1731
MAP OF ALEXANDRIA
6:00
6:45
THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
COMMENTARY
Charles Morgan.
7:00 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
■■I want to be frank. I have no interest in real life. . . I am visualizing
a relationship far closer in a way than anything passion could invent — a bond of
common belief. . . I wish to make you a confidence now which, if betrayed, might
mean irreparable harm to myself and my family; and indeed to the cause I am
serving. I wish to put myself utterly in your power. Let us suppose we are both
dead to love. . . I want to ask you to become part of a dangerous. . ." — Nessim's
Proposition to Justine IMountolive p. 178).
ROSCOE LEE BROWNE
FRANK CAMPANELLA
BRENDA VACCARO: Nessim and Justine as co-plotters IMountolive 174-186)
CLORIS LEACHMAN: The Plot Continues IMountolive 186-192)
ED ASNER: Nessim Encounters a New Narouz IMountolive 192 212)
8:30 ISRAEL PHILHARMONIC ORCHESTRA - LIVE IN CONCERT
HAYDN: Creation. Soloists-Stella Richmond, Rolf Costwood, Simon
Estes; Tel Aviv Philharmonic Choir. Rafael Fruhbeck de Burgos conducts.
10:30 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"He was morbidly superstitious and incurably venal - and indeed
was building an immense fortune upon bribery; yet how shall we add to the
sum or this the fact of his inordinate religiosity - a fanatical zeal of obser-
vance which might have been puzzling in anyone whc was not an Egyptian."
— on Memlik IMountolive p. 234)
DAVID BOXALL: Mountolive Plans his Moves IMountolive 213-229)
FRANK CAMPANELLA: Nessim Bribes Memlik IMountolive 229-244)
12:00
PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 17
The magen David used as the basic design for a kabbalistic drawing,
Italy 1 7th century.
T
6:00
10:00
hursday 30
SUNRISE CONCERT
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"Mountolive's romantic heart was beating wildly — was he now to be
vouchsafed some mystical vision of religious truth? He had so often heard stories
of the bazaars and the religious men who lurked there waiting to fulfill secret
missions on behalf of that unseen world, the numinous, carefully guarded world
of the hermetic doctors." (Mountolive p. 264)
FLORIDA FRIEBUS
SADA THOMPSON
FLORIDA FRIEBUS: Mountolive's Secret Meeting with Leila (Mountolive 245-258)
SADA THOMPSON: Mountolive in Search of New Mysteries (Mountolive 258-2721
BARRY SULLIVAN: Narouz's Death (Mountolive 273-281)
(To be announced): Lamentation and Burial (Mountolive 281-292)
BARRY SULLIVAN
AVERY SCHREIBER
12:00 NOON CONCERT
HAYDN: Oboe Concerto (attrib ), Alfred Zuss, oboe; Hessian Radio
Symphony Orchestra; Dean Dixon conducting; BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 2.
Op. 36; Southwest German Radio Orchestra/Baden-Baden; Ernest Bour conduc-
ting; SCHUMANN: Overture to -Hermann und Dorothea", Op. 136; BRAHMS:
Piano Concerto No. 2 Op. 83: Bruno Gelber, piano; South German Radio Orches-
tra/Stuttgart; Hans MullerKrei conducting. Tapes courtesy of Deutsche Welle. Stereo
2:00 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"It had come so softly towards us over the waters, this war; gradually,
as clouds which softly fill in a horizon from end to end. But as yet it had not
broken. Only the rumor of it gripped the heart with conflicting hopes and fears.
At first it had seemed to portend the end of the so-called civilized world, but this
hope soon proved vain. No, it was to be as always simply the end of kindness and
safety and moderate ways; the end of the artist's hopes-of nonchalance, of joy."
(Clea p. 13)
AVERY SCHREIBER: Return to Alexandria (Clea 3-22)
ROBERT FIELDS: Rediscovery of Things Past (Clea 22-38)
ROBERT FIELDS
KPFK FOLIu RAGE 18
3:30
4:30
ALEXANDRIAN MELODIES
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"She was like every woman, everything that the mind of a man
(let us define "man" as a poet perpetually conspiring against himself) - that
the mind of man wished to imagine. She was there forever and she had never
existed! Under all these masks there was only another woman, every woman,
like a lay figure in a dressmaker's shop, waiting for the poet to clothe her
breathe life into her." -Darley: on re-encountering Justine (C/ea p. 47)
LARRY PRESSMAN AND LANNA SAUNDERS: Justine Again (Clea 38-54)
JACK MANNING
LISABETH HUSH
LISA DANIELS AND JACK MANNING: Clea and Darley at El Scob's
Shrine (Clea 66-80)
LISABETH HUSH AND BUD CORT At Semira's Coming Out and Into Bed
KAREN GRASSLE AND FRANK BUXTON: Clea of Life and Love (Clea 93-105)
Readings of the Erotic Poetry of Constantine Cavafy.*
HARRY FRAZIER: Balthazar's Death and Rebirth (Clea 54-66)
6:00
6:45
7:00
THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
COMMENTARY
Analysis of William Winter
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"There is not enough faith charity or tenderness to furnish the
world with a single ray of hope - yet so long as that strange sad cry rings
out over the world, the birth-pangs of an artists — all can t be lost." -Clea
quoting Pursewarden (Clea p 110)
*Cavafy ptiPtry heard throughout the Quartet was read by Panos Christi, Evry
Tsakiridis and John Chiolis.
FRANK BUXTON
8:30 CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA LIVE IN CONCERT
BOULEZ: Rituel SAINTSAENS: Piano Concerto no. 5-Aldo
CiccolinI soloist TCHAIKOVSKY: Symphony no 6 Lorin Maazel conducts
Robert Conrad hosts Recorded in Columbia SO Four Channel Sound.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 19
MARIAN MERCER
10.30 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
' Brother Ass the so called act of living is really an act of the
imagination The world which we always visualize as 'the outside' world —
yields only to self exploration -Pursewarden's Conversations with Brother Ass.
fClea p. 144)
KAREN GRASSLE AND FRANK BUXTON: Clea on Life and Love (Clea 105-115)
TONY RANDALL: Conversations with Brother Ass ICIea 115-1301
MARIAN MERCER: Conversations with Brother Ass (conclusion) (Clea 130-146)
12:00 PLAY IT AGAIN SAM
F
6:00
riday 31
SUNRISE CONCERT
10:00 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"The tremendous sorrow and beauty which this man expressed so
easily - the terrifying abundance of his gifts filled me with helpless dispair
and joy at once The cruelty and the richness! It was as if the words poured
from every pore in his body - execrations groans mixed tears of joy and dispair
all welded to the fierce rapid musical notation of a language perfected by its
purpose. Here at last the lovers confronted one another, stripped to the bone
stripped bare " Darley on Pursewarden s Letters to his Sister {Clea 116)
HARRIS YULIN
JOAN HACKETT
PAUL CROSSWHITE: Darley at the Office (Clea 146-151)
NICK MEYER: Darley and Clea Revisited (Clea 151-156)
HARRIS YULIN JOAN HACKETT AND DAVE BOXALL: Liza and Pursewarden's
Letters (Clea 156-183)
HARLAN ELLISON: DaCapo's Magic Letter (Clea 187-199)
NICHOLAS MEYER
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 20
HARLAN ELLISON
THE PTOLEMAIC TOWER AT ABU SIR
12:00
NOON CONCERT
DVORAK: ■American" Suite Op 98b; BORODIN Symphony No 1
in EFIat: South German Radio Orchestra/Stuttgart; Hubert Reichert and Kurt
Brass conducting;
SIBELIUS: Two Humoreskes for Violin and Orchestra, Op. 87;
Wim Stenz violin; Northwest German Philharmonia; Richard KraUs conducting
PFITZNER: Cello Concerto Op. 42; Klaus Storch cello; Hessian Radio Symphony
Orchestra/Frankfurt; Hermann Mikhail conducting; STRAUSS: Also Sprach
Zarathustra, Op 30; Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra/Munich; Joseph
Keilberth conducting. Tapes courtesy of Deutsche Welle Stereo.
2:00 THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"But the scenario had already been devised somewhere the actors
chosen, the timing rehearsed down to the last detail in the mind of that invisible
author - which perhaps would prove to be only the city itself: the Alexandria
of the human estate. The seeds of future events are carried within ourselves. They
are implicit in us and unfold according to the laws of their own nature" (Clea p. 2151
JOHN AND P \TTI DUKE AUSTIN
JOHN ASTIN, PATTY DUKE ASTIN AND ALAN BERGMANN: Underwater Climax
(Clea 233-252 j
WILLGEER: El Scob's Celebration (Clea 252 264)
The Poetry of Constantine Cavafy
6:00
6:45
THE KPFK EVENING NEWS
^r
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"I have crossed the border and entered into the possession of my
kingdom thanks to the Hand. It is the Hand which has contrived to slip me
through the barriers into the company of the Real Ones as Pursewarden used to
say." -Clea on her New Powers (Clea p. 271)
SAMANTHA EGGAR: Breakthroughs and Nudges (Clea 265 275}
1*^
ALICE FROST
PHILOMENE LONG
ALICE FROST: Fosca s Tragic End (Clea 199 214)
PHILOMENE LONG: Prelude (Clea 214-216)
(To be announced) Discovery of Narouz s Island (Clea 216 233)
3:30
4:30
ALEXANDRIAN MELODIES
THE ALEXANDRIA QUARTET
"I crashed back into the water, now following the long green thread
with all the suspense of Ariadne; and to it added the weight of slowness which
only heartsick apprehension brings I knew in my mind that I was swimming
vigorously - yet it seemed like one of those slow motion films where human
actions delayed by the camera are drawn unctuously out to infinity, spooled out
like toffee " (Clea p 241)
ALAN BERGMANN
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 21
EPILOGUE
Lawrence Durrell looks back on the Greece of the 1930's and
reminisces about his life as a poet of 21 on the Island of Corfu. The program
ends with a brief reading of some of the poems Durrell wrote during this
period Recorded at Cal Tech and produced by Cynthia Sears.
LAWRENCE DURRELL (far right) AS A YOUNG
POET ON THE ISLAND OF CORFU.
ALEXANDER THE GREAT
ROBERT SNYDER (1) WITH HENRY MILLER
CREDITS
To all the readers, Phllomene Long - Assistant Producer, and to everybody
at KPFK who made it all possible.
-Jay D. Kugelman.
THE NOTES AND WORKPOINTS
INSERTED THROUGHOUT THE
"QUARTET" WERE READ BY
PATRICIA STITCH
,I<PFK "QHQPAGE 22
Lawrence Durrell
IWIonday
31
8:00 THE WILLIAM MALLOCH
PROGRAMME
10:00 HOUR 25: SCIENCE FICTION
RIDERS OF THE PURPLE WAGE
KPKK's dramatization of Phillip
Jose Farmer's novella about life in Beverly
Hills Level 14. Featuring Harlan tUison.
Theodore Sturgeon and others, m a pro-
duction by Mike Hodel. Plus selected
short subjects.
2:00 THE BIG SLEEP
John Breckow see:
with rhythm.
1 the New Year
Tuesday
' 1
8:00 THIS WAS A MAN
A documentary presentation of the
life of William Shakespeare. Produced in
1963 by KPFK, it won the Ohio State
Award.
10:15 HAMLET BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
One of the most interesting and
problematic of Lli/abethan dramas, this
production features Paul Scofield, with
Diana Wynyard and Wilfrid Lawson, Direc
ted by Howard Sackler.
1:15 WAGNER: THE RING CYCLE
PARTI: DASRHEINGOLD
Soloisls-Donaiu Mclntyre (Wotan).
Jerker Arvidson (Donner). Heribert
Steinbach (Froh). Heinz Zednik (Logcl,
Matti Salmmen (I asoll), BengI Rundprcn
II afncrl. Zoltan Kelemen (Albcrich).
Wolf Appcl (Mimel. Fva Randova iFrickal.
Rachel Yakar (Ireia). Ortrun Wenkel
(Frdc), Yoko Kawahara (Woglindel, Use
Gramatiki (Wellgunde). Adclheid Krauss
(Flosshildel. Pierre Boulez conducts the
Bayreuth Festival Chorus and Orchestra
(program material courtesy of Deutsche
Welle). Stereo.
4Mi
4:00 STRANGE INTERLUDE BY
EUGENE O'NEILL
This Actors Studio production
under the direction of Jose Quintero.
features Ben Ga/.?.arii, Betty Field, Pat
Hinclc, Geraldinc Page, Jane Fonda, (ie
ffrey Home. William Prince. Franchot
Tone and Richard Thomas,
8:00 WAGNER: THE RING CYCLE
PART II: DIEWALKUERE
Soloisls-Pelcr Hofmann iSigmundl,
Matti Salmincn (Hunding), Donald Mcln-
tyre (Woton). HannelorcBode (Siegiindcl.
Gwyneth Jones ( Brunhilde), Fva Randova
(l-ricka). Rachel Yakar (Gerhildel, Iria
Auroora (Ortlindc). Dons Soffel (Waltrautc),
Adclheid Krauss (Schwcrtleite). Katie
Clarke I Helmwige), Alicia Nafc (Siegrunc).
Use Gramat/ki iGrimcerde), Elisabeth
Glauscr I Rossweissel. Pierre Boulez con-
ducts the Bayreuth Festival Chorus and
Orchestra (program material courtesy of
Deutsche Welle). Stereo.
10:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
2:00 THE SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
SHOW
w
ed 2
7:00 GOSPEL CARAVAN
With the legendary Prince Dixon
9:00 THE REVELATION OF ST. lOHN
The new Fnglish Bible translation
as read by Mitchell Harding with music
by Olivier Messiaen
10:20 AFTER THE FALL
BY ARTHUR MILLER
When it was produced in 1964. the
first play from Miller in nine years. After
the Fall created some furor, mostly for
autobiographical reasons. The play, still
one of Miller's most perplexing is presen-
ted here in its original cast recording.
Features Jason RobardsJr., Barbara Loden,
Crystal Field, Salome Jens, Patricia Roe,
Michael Strong, Paul Mann, Faye Dunaway
and Ralph Meeker Directed by Elia Kazan
> /■ c? yon ^ ■
1:00 WAGNER: THE RING CYCLE
PART III: SIEGFRIED
Soloists Rene Kollo (Siegfried),
Heinz Zednik (Mime), Donald Mclntyre (
(Der Wanderer), Zoltan Kelemen (Albenich)
Bengt Rundgren (Fafner), Hanna Schwarz
(Frdc). Gwyneth Jones (Brunhilde).
Yoko Dawahara IWaldvogel) Pierre Boulez
conducts the Bayreuth Festival Chorus
and Orchestra (program material courtesy
of Deutsche Welle). Stereo.
5:00 MAJOR BARBARA
BY G.B SHAW
Originally produced in 1905, this
play remains one of the wittiest and most
biting of Shaw's satires. This production
features an excellent cast, including Maggie
Smith, Robert Morley, (elia Johnson and
Alex McCowan . Directed by Howard
Sackler.
7:15 WAGNER: THE RING CYCLE
PART IV:
DIE GOTTERDAEMMERUNG
Soloists-Jess Thomas (Siegfried).
Jerker Arvidson (Gunthcr), Karl Riddcr-
busch (Hagcn). Zoltan Kclcmcn (Alberick).
Gwyneth Jones (Brunhilde). Irja Auroora
(Gutrune). Yoko Kawahara (Woglmdc).
Use Gramatzki (Wellgunde). Adclheid
Krauss (Mosshilde), Pierre Boulez conduct'
the Bayreuth festival Chorus and Orches-
tra (program material courtesy of Deutsche
Welle). Stereo.
12:00 MUSIC BLACK AND WHITE
Nawana Davis plays down home
sounds and nitty gritty novelties.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 23
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
r r^Sj/^k,. baseball cards, hand to hand, with a
ll^^^^^j remarkable enthusiasm. As the moguls
Cjn^^^^ °^ '^^ 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
v.as the Los Angeles Free Press.
.\s often happens in life, the Free Press has had its ups
and downs over the years, and lately there has been a good
deal of speculation about the paper's present intentions. To
( k-ar the air and put our cards on the table, this seems as
ijood a lime as any to reaffirm the original goals of this
n(\\s|)aper as stated in the first edition given general cir-
(uhition here in the summer of 1964.
riiouiih the reader may find a certain antique flavor in
I he follow ini<. the ideas and aspirations expressed remain
ihi' same for the jiresent staff. If they still make sense to
\i)ii. voii'll find a handv subscription form at the bottom of
the p,it;c.
ihis |i..|>.r „ idii.d V..I1 will
I>.tIi.m>s .<N'< ».>ii> I" kn.m »h, »r f.-il ihM *
ii.'» piililMniKHi Is nrci'<s^r\ in ih<' l.cis \ni!<'li".
.in. I .iml uh.il »>' hopr In .,i<iim|>li<h Ih.il l<
ilirii-K'ni ih.iii (itlirr i-xistint; |iu)>li«;iltims
II Ml Ihf lnll<miiii< »!' do iioi .inswir Ihrsr
.|,„M„.iis h, voiir s.ilisUlinn. ..r. if ihirr .in-
«lii. h inii w.i.il.l liki- .msK.-n-d. iiIimii- fr<-l fni-
I.. „Mic .1 liiiir 1.1 ihr .-Hilor iir. if Mill iirr sii in-
niili-
\\i ii.ii.ir.ill, ..ml |il
m .,H>.in,<- CO
■i.ivcliiH whin
MiiiliKik.il lliiMssiii. .ind|iiiriiiiildrlv.inh.is<-lii
t.in.m. v.iii will n.iiiri- rhai wi- an- n..i .ikiid r.i
Ml ml i.iiilr.xini.il in.iliTMl ,ind lil ihr wrilrr
li,„r Ins ..„ li IS .1 Ki-ncral nil.- in ihis
will, he or slir will havr ihrir Hav in print I"hal
1. win w.- i.ill ollr^<■lvc■^ ihp Fm- Prrss
Ui-. or ( fiiirsr. diwi'l plan to print matrrial
lli.li will l.iiiH ihr jmlilishrr and his staff in jail
for IiIk'I H.il.-shorl of thai ana and those rrslrii-
ii.m- Mn|io-.d In spair in our tolumns and thr
"■■■■ 1 loiirn.ilisii, lialan,,-, wr plan to print
irri-,<-n-iiI .irtirlr our wrilrrs and readers suf>mtt
lli.it is n-!atrH to the eivir and eullural life of our
riiis List lominent brings us to another point
We .in- fiind.iinentallv a rominunitv newspaper
Ui- pl.in to fo. us on l.os .\nueles and to a lesser
isii-ni. on California affairs We do not plan to
di.il with iLilional and international events. In
our opinion, there are a numher of adequate
iH-u--sp,iper« and mai;a7ine available to our
, ,>.,,,.,.. k 111. pi. 1 I...- \IH!.-1.-
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Ml
111 .1 ll.ii l.isliK.n. this piililiia 1 IS 1101
mill.-.l 1.. III.- p S.111 ,1.1. us.- <.f .111,
p.Jlli<.il .u.:..iii/.il...ii. .I.spn. Ih.- p.ililii.il
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ku..kiim .111, p..lili<.il p.irt, wh.-lh.-r It lie
l)..,i.Ki.,li. I<.p.il,li,.in 01 S.K,..lisl if w,- fill
tli.u ...1 111. I I l.u-l 111., ..n- l.ikinv sl.inils
,1, i,,,,i, uMl 1.. .hi- ,n..-T.-.l. ,.( Ih.- ...mm.miu
th.- riyhl 1.1 ine.ininiifiillv par-
.il.m.l il life \s
-.1,., „r„,,IK i.,u..n..w ih.-li.,ri/.„is..l.i,ili/,i.
Uiili ilu. u. uiiii.l w. h.u. .111.1 will in Ihe
1. 1. I.. Ih. .1. l.-ii.. ..I 111.- .iiiisi 111 intisl it
.1..I .ill .,1 Ih.- .,1... .1111, .....s .,s w.-II as I'n all
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• lu-'l-o' •■:■
VVh.l.
lllllll.il
il.li- lime and the human
iilunt.-er, has been most
I ...ki-s hundreds of dollarj
ihis newspaper —and there
p.-r does not immediately gain
It- .ominunitv in regard to sub-
.h.-rlismi; we will very quicltl,
our ,.-ntiire We don't expect
i,.nf- with evers- anicle in this
I- is 11.11 on.- stalT member who
.-s- with all the pieces in this
lo hope ih.it sou sympathize
yener.il ..l>t.-. tives to give this
.11..- K. pnne iiself I'en thou-
...n s.ippon the Free Press \
siihs. riln-rs .-.u h week until the
.itit.-d . .in k.-.-p lh<- printer paid
..r i».ut 11, s.-nding in your sub-
..II.! .i.kinu s.iur friends to do
^rlhttr Kunhn
SignMeUp
Qcli.ijoi- It) in\ .\l.isHT Chiirge.
\—\ s.-ml 111,- lu isstt.-s r„i- SV2=. ' ( ,,,,1 ,.s|,i,-,..
ris.-tui „H- ^: , -s 1,1, sifi.'^s ^'"""" ■
n^.-...i .11. i"i i--n.s i..t Ms:ii niiii! ""■ I-'"'
FRi:i: PRi:ss
385(1 Hollvwood Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90028
Only in Los Angeles.
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cossette electrooic notebook by Omg SUPPORTER
2. Sony dicta*ion and tranicrlpr.on equip- f) 1. Hew pfogronvnoole calculotor by Tl around
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B) 1. 3« .nBO'otion. copiers (rom $97 - 2 New silent prinlheods on calculaiori. See
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ood '<» less. Bond d.ty (or under S2000 ■
C) 1 New electronic telephone onsw.r.ng eq ..p SO Skifl the MuSBUm )nd SBB tht littSt it
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LOS ANGELES. CtLIF 9002S
^aemmle Tine^rtg Theatres
"Edvard Munch' is the best film I've
seen in its depiction of the artistic
process. A welcome event, the cin-
ema's most intelligent attempt to
probe and dramatize the mind and
methods of a great artist."
.#t^U ^
-Jack Kfoil. Newsweek
it
Magnificent. An overwhelming
accomplishment. One that nobody
interested in any aspect of artistic
creation can afford to miss. *'
JoMn Simon New York Magazine
tiUMll THdlRj '
SWestiand Twin ThealresS
10754 W. Pico Blvd. - W.I. .A. E
474-9589 E
n !ilk. east of Westwnod Blvd.) S
GROIT scales AV'AlLABLt. . .Call Laemmle Theatres
478-1041. Men - Fri. 9:00 AM -5:30 PM
Artists' Equity Assoc, L. A. Chapter,
Preview Benefit, Dec . 21,Tues . , 7 :0n PM
EDVARD MUNCH
a film by Peter Watkins
With Geir Westby and Gro Fraas
r.Tmera work hy Odd Ceir SaeCher
KPFK FOL 10 PACE 25
Classified
CLASSIFIED MARKF.T PLACE
Phone Bae Windsor. 659-7288
or write
CAM
650 Westboucne Orive Suite 107
Los Ancjeles. Ca. 90069
(Bankamericard or Mastercharge accepted)
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UNITARIAN COMMUNITY CHURCH
Brings People Closer
Together in Community
18th & Arizona, Santa Monica, 829-5436
Rev E. D Pipes Ir. Sunday at 11 a.m.
ROOMMATE NEEOED-Male or I
to share house in Manhattan Beacf
Tree section. Your half = S200/m
Call anytime - Gene (545-0748)
MESSAGE THERAPY - 30 year old
licensed masseur and chiropractic student
practices a massage technique, developed
by a Santa Monica Chiropractor, designed
to relieve spastic, tense, tired muscles.
Tiglit muscles in the neck and back can
cause blood and nerve supply to be
hindered, vertebrae to misalign and many
poor postural compensations resulting
in many symptons. e.g. headache and
back pain. In order to establish a clien-
tele, introductory treatments will be
given free of charge.
Leave message for Jim .Athing at
823-6393. References available.
ARTS AND CRAFTS
GUATEMALAN
Fabrics, clothing & wall hangings
Handmade by Indians.
Large Selection and low prices
lonala stoneware
handloomed |,otn mexico.
fabrics, clothing, heath stoneware.
decorative articles everything
(or the home. 20% below retail.
THE MERCHANT OF
GUATEMALA~655-4376
BEAUTIFUL HANDCRAFTED
BATIKS
PILLOWS, WALL HANGINGS, QUILTS,
BAGS, CLOTHING, DOLLS AND MANY
OTHER UNIQUE ITEMS FOR YOU
AND YOUR HOME ALSO A FULL
LINE OF BATIK SUPPLIES:
Permanent cold water dyes, wax Ijantings.
brushes and fabrics.
Monday through Saturday afternoons
Phone 6621 534
APPLE ROOM
512 N. Hoover St , L A , 90004
BOOKS
COUNSELING
Qiaracter Analysis
Oreani and Hand .Analysis
for creative people
664-6943
ONGOING CARING GROUPS
TUESDAY night
Contact Activities, verbal and nonverbal
FRIDAY afternoon: Emotion Release
Expressiveness, Deep Relaxation
WEST L.A. Fight Inflation Rates
HANNA THOST (213) 851-5197
FOR THE GOURMET
A;
for those uH„ „^^
re^"""^/^ /o care
'^ Al kaiser's
^vareInn-^«//ez/
cocktail: dinner daily from 5PM
illNCHLMONTHRUfRI FROM U MAM
"ail credit cards honored ■ )83-»16
13625 VENTURA BLVOSMtRMAN OAKS E OF WOODMAN
INSTRUCTION
SOARING INSTRUCTION
Soaring, the intellectual alternative for
all ages 12-70. Learn to fly the
Schweizer 2-33A sailplane and know
the exhilaration of silent flight. No
FAA physical examination for licensing
as a glider pilot.
Call John Liles (CKl) 663-1869
HOMEWORK
STARTING CLASSES
IN QUILTING, ETC.
MRS. GOODSON 935-6116
MODERN DANCE
TECHNIQUE
Improvisation and
Composition
Children's Creative
MAGAZINES
Back Issue Magazines.
1890-1976 Movies Playboy. Lite.
Look, etc Free lisl
Everybody's Bookshop
317 W Sixth, LA 90014 623-6234
®
MUSIC INSTRUCTION
PIANO INSTRUCTION
Learn Beginning, Pop, Classical
plus Music Theory. Experienced
instructor. MA. Music. 391-4136.
PIANO LESSONS
In Your Home -Beginning
through advanced grades.
Graduate of USC, MM DEGREE
Call Alex F. Ruggieri
413-4215 (evenings)
SAX AND FLUTE LESSONS
Improve your technical facility in a
correct and positive direction. Learn
more about iazz improvisation and mi
theory. Have studied with the finest
teachers. You will benefit!
Call Robert
391-4191
MUSICIANS AND SINGERS
Theory, harmony, arranging, composition,
sight reading, ear training and rhythm
studies.
Beginners welcome
Ron Webb
628-5025 or 661-1398
GLASS & MIRRORS
FOR EVERY NEED
DOORS -WINDOWS
TABLE TOPS
CUT TO FIT
FREE ESTIMATES
733-8514
INSTALLATIONS
NO JOS TOO SMALL
JOE
MASONRY
ARTISTIC ROCK & BRICK WORK
Quality building, repair, adOitton
LANDSCAPE SERVICE
WALLS. WALKS. WATERFALLS
PO^JDS - VENEER
DECORATIVE TILE WORK
3rd Generation Stone Mason
Michael KnaDO 655-9233
111 paint a mural in your home or office to
; your own interest or fantasy. Enlivens &
onalizes a room. Can be realistic, surreal,
ract impressionist... Fee very reasonable.
Call Ginger at (213) 271-8991.
FOR SALE
FLUTES FOR SALE
Wood William Haynes, George
Haynes. silver keys. Rxeellenl
playing condition. Silver Louis
Lot, C Foot, American Plateau
kevs. 931-9408
SERVICES
• Alexandra
780-6714
ARCANA WORKSHOPS
MEDITATION TRAINING
scientific meditation
builds the future
407 N. Maple Dr., Room 214
Beverly Hills, CA 90210
PAPA BACH BOOK SHOP
113 1 2 Santa Monica Blvd
We« Los Angeles
Open Sunday 'til 9:00
Dkl: GflUBERC
Stained Glass Lessons
ISAAC HERNANDEZ INSIRUCTOR
20 YEARS EXPERIENCE
NEW CLASSES STARTING
WEEK OF OCT 25
ISAAC S STAINED GUtSS STUDIO
310 NO VISTA STREET L A
654SZ05
VOCAL INSTRUCTION
SINGERS AND ACTORS
Develop the perleci vocal tecnniaue lor
smgino and acting Pop Musical
Comedy and Opera uain confiOence lor
that great PERFORMANCE'
CUSTOM PRINTS FROM SLIDES
2x3 20 \ 24
24 hr. I ilm Processing
F.KTACHROMU & Kodachrome
lO'^r off for KPI K subscribers
Pacific Color Uib
10620 Burbank Blvd.
No Hollywood. Ca 91601
985-2864
WALL-TO-WALL CARPET CLEANING
and UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
tSth Year serving KPFK Listeners!
for ^iU/U "P/U^et
PIANO TUNING
AND REPAIR
Experienced and Reliable
I Buy Pianos
Nick Fetlis 931-0634
COMPLETE ASTROLOGICAL SERVICES
by trained, cerlincd pro.
Introductory booklet on request
ASTRAL ARTS. 871 N Dillon
LA., 90026 663-1439
Sea-Matlon Society
Direct Cremation $250.
Disposition at Sea 967-2077
SHIMMERING MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
Presents:
the finest selection of
DULCIMERS $85-$600 ARABIC DRUMS
metal $49 ceramic $35 WOODEN SLIT
DRUMS $9-$35 and professional solid
brass FINGER CYMBALS $20
Call (2131 392-7422
THINK XMAS
Think Junk City
Hollywood's Favorite Junk
7771 * 7739 Santa Monica
E of Fairfax 10-7, 7 Da
Brine this ad in for 1 0!4 Dis
Store
Blvd.
POOL TABLE
Pin Ball Machines
Juke Boxes
Rl 9-6487
Adolph D'Este
CUSTOM H/^RDWOOD POOL TABLE
3": X 7 ft. Solid Rosewood Rails,
3 pc, 1 " Slate, new Rust colored felt.
Includes all accessories. $650.
Days: 876-6200 Eve. & Wknd: 876 2445
YOUR NUTRILITE
AMWAY DISTRIBUTOR
MIM Z. BROWN
Product Delivery on Tuesdays
653-4384 days 10 a.m. -5 p,m,
465-5038 eves* weekends
The finest imported clothes
for men, women and children
shown by appointment only.
Full price range.
A marvelous gift to remember.
CALL 659-7288
388-6707
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
Magnificent Silver Mink Jacket.
Almost New. Will Sacrifice. By Appt. Only.
By Appointment Only. No Dealers Please.
653^384 days 10 a.m. -5 p m
465-5038 eves & weekends.
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 26
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 S7.95 softbound $15 hardbound
marrg in venice
temple of rrwn
1439 cabrjilo ove/213-399-97%7
chotteuton's
OS t complete paperback selection
n spcciali/ing in lilcrary, foreign
t periodicals.
A BOOK SHOP
1818 No. Vermont Ave.
Los Ariielej, Calif. 90027
664-3882
musical
I heRitaqe
I society
I has an unusual catalog of music
from the Baroque era to the present aay,
available by mail order only.
Write for a free catalog.
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PUBLIC WORKS
unlimited run
S3.00 Donation ($2.50 with this ad)
Fri.+ Sat.at9pni
The Church in Ocean Park
23.5 Hill Sir
b.inl,. M(
FoLKmnce
Every mbm-
MMAXH
moving?
The Folio will NOT be automatically
forwarded to your new address. It
will be returned to us after a few
weeks with your new address on il--
probably not in time for the next
Folio. So to avoid missing out, fill
' out this coupon and return it to Sub-
scriptions. Be sure your label is on
the back. (We get 500-1000 address
changes a month). Thank-you.
i^WWWTWWMKXMMWKfMKVKVXieiJtXaaiXg^
HOME IMPROVEMENTS, REPAIRS
AND REDECORATION
I am an all-around craftsman with
30 years experience who has
special affection for KPFK
Subscribers.
Rome Ronconi 8214769
For those of you who have heard DR. CARL FABER
on Carlos Hagen's program and asked,
Perseus Press is pleased to announce the publication of
a small, red, beautiful book.
TO ORDER: Send $4.95 + 85 cents postage and handling to:
PERSEUS PRESS
PO BOX 1221
PACIFIC PALISADES, CA 90272
KPFK FOLIO PAGE 27
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^BELLY MNCERS-^JUCCLERS^SrEEL BANDS |j 1 ^V
Ominstrels-^bacpipers t^magicians I P^ ■
GOSPEL SINGERSifMARlACHlS-kPUPPETEERS I y
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10 Craft Wmport Booths
Festive&Forei^ Foods I
^oIorFul Costumes | (, ^ ^ .
ADULTS -$3.60 f A^M^
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KPFK
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U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
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