Folio
KPFK 90.7fmPaci£ica RadioLos Angeles
June 1983
LAEMMLE THEATRES
//
A VERY FUNNY
ROMANTIC COMEDY...
GO SEE IT!
— ludilh CrisI
I n
'LIGHTER
THAN
LIGHT'
— lanet Maslin,
N.Y. Times
"BOULEVARD
COMEDY PAR
EXCELLENCE'
— Village Voice
■ i*
TANnn 7 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
milUU 1 BEST ANIMATED SHORT
•lAEMMLES-
CONTINENTAL
Starring
LUOMILA GURCHENKO and SERGEI SHAKUROV
Directed by PYOTR TODOROVSKY
5308 Melrose 461-4112
English Sub-Tilles
Not since "Zhivago" has a
motion picture captured all the
splendor of a classic love story!
LEO TOLSTOY'S
^
'0/f/
One of the world s great love stories becomes one ot the
most breath taking films of our time.
Starring Maya Plisetskaya.
VAjitcJttd bij AtcxandoA loAilii
OPENING IN JUNE
Follows "Waiting for Gavrilov"
LAEMMLE'S
CONTINENTAL
5308 MELROSE
461-4112
In Riiiiian lO-Uh EngLiih ^ubtctlu
Folio
KPFK 90.7-£m
KPFK STAFF
General Man.iger Inn Rf(l,i[ul OHice Miinagpr/Volunteef
Coordinator Aki(iv'*t*' Uino),i Development Director Miy-i
iwalnki Operations Director: SliHirv Nnvick Music: Kwdku
Lv"". Co Difi-ctor, Amlifjii 'Enthiil, CoDm^cloi News and
Public Affairs: Marc Cnoinr. DirHctor Tony Ciivin. Cvntbi.i
Hjniilton. Rohcrlo N.Kluris, Firrnitruto Vfilii^ciuf/ Exec.
Prod. Traffic: Roy luckniini Production Lf^/lie Lep, Dir .
Sytvt^slcr Rivt^rs, Mqr . M.irq.iret Fowler. R.iffapllo M.i/7ii
Chetf Eng.. Boh Rfittt Friends Coord.: Su/i Weissman
Folio: Susan B'^Oh-II Hiitir.L'n Sheri Wt'inlii'rq Circulation:
Ahna Armouf. Dir Community Events: Mdrio Cjsetta, Dir
Bookkeeper. Jpimy Huhh.ird
KPFK STATION BOARD
Ruth Abraham. George Anton, Barbara Barron, Bill Bidner.
Jim Burford, Dwiqht Chuman, George CoIp, Carol Corngan,
Maggie Creel. Frank Drucker. Rabbi Paul Dubin, Elizabeth
Fraqoa Lloyd, Ruth Galanter, Gerry HaMinan. Inola Henry,
K Lyle Kunsaki, Juanita Henderson Kurisaki. Dr. Sf;rgio
Fuenzalida, Beverly Polokoft, Met Reich, Gary A Richwald.
Luis Rodriguez. Ronald M Sohiqian, Larry Steinberg, Petei
E Suthetm, Denise Thornlx-rq. Delhno Varela, Bob Vogel,
Althea Waites. Maury Weint^r, Frank Wilkinson
Station Board Meetings:
Next Full Bodtd Meeting: See Report to the Listener page
PACIFICA FOUNDATION: 5316 Venice Blvd., Los Angeles
90019. 213/931 1625.
KPFK Switchboard: 213/8772711 or 984-2711. Business
hours: 9 am to 6 pm. Monday thru Friday.
Pacifica Foundation National Board of Directors:
Hon. Chair: R Gordon Agnew. Chair: Jack O'Dell; 1st VP:
Marie Nahikian. VP's. Jeanne Palmquist, Rosemane Reed,
Sharon Maeda, Jim Betland, David Salniker; Treas,: Dan
Scharlin, Sec, Delfmo Varela, Board Members: KPFA Peter
Franck. Ying Lee Kelley. KPFK Julius Mel Reich, Delfmo
Varela. WBAI Dick Asche, Marilyn ClemenT, David Lampel,
Mttton Zisman, KPFT-Jorge Betgrave. Joan Glantz, Margaret
Glaser, Steve Glaser, WPFW-Ron Clark. Gabrielle Edgcomb,
Marie Nahikian. At Large. Jack O'Dell, Dan Scharlin, Alex
Vavouhs.
PACIFICA NETWORK SISTER STATIONS:
KPFA: 2207 Shattuck Ave. Berkeley, CA 94704.
415/848 6767
KPFT: 419 Lovett blvd. Houston. TX. 77006
713/526 4000
WBAI: 505 Eighth Ave. New York, NY 10018.
212/2790707
WPFW: 700 H St , NW, Washington D.C 20001.
202/783 3100
JUNE 1983 NUMBER 6 VOLUME 25
The FOLIO (ISSN 0274 4856) is the monthly publication of
KPFK, 90 7 FM, with offices and studios al 3729 Cahuenga
Blvd, West. North Holfywood CA 91604 Second Class Post
age paid at Studio City CA and additional mailing offices
POSTMASTER: "send address changes to P.O.Box 8639.
Universal City, CA 91608, The Folio is not sold, it is sent
free to each subscriber supporting non profit, non-commer
cial KPFK, and contains the most accurate possible listings
of the programs broadcast Subscriptions to KPFK are S30
per year, and are transfeirahle to the other Pacifica stations
Our Transmitter is on Mt Wilson, We broadcast in stereo
multiplex with 25 microsecond pre emphasis. Dolby calibra
lion tones air daily before the principal evening music pro
gram, KPFK is owned and operated by Pacifica Foundation,
a non-profit institution. KPFK is a member of the Associa
tion of California Public Radio Stations and the National
Federation of Community Broadcasters,
Covvi: in kiffpiiitf with oar June ihvmv of Ln-
vironment & Survival, nnroratc monsters dc-
votirinq the l.aith's resources. (Liberation News
Strv/ee)
At the Mike
Dorothy Ray Healey has been broadcasting at KPFK since 1959, our
first year of existence. After 24 years of broadcasting from KPFK in Los
Angeles, Dorothy is moving to Washington D.C: but her program will
continue, even if from a distance! The Socialist Community School of the
Los Angeles local of the Democratic Socialists of America (of which
Dorothy Healey is the National Vice-Chair) is organizing a send-off and
tribute at the Biltmore Hotel on June 5 from 12:30 to 4 p.m. And on
June 12, at 1 1 a.m., KPFK will air its own tribute to Dorothy Ray Healey.
We here at KPFK will miss Dorothy's personal presence even though we
will still hear her on our airwaves.
Dorothy's life is an exemplary one of struggle and dedication. In 1928,
at the age of 14, Dorothy Rosenbloom joined the Young Communist
League. She was talking socialism then on a soapbox in down-and-out
Oakland to the unemployed. When she was arrested a year later for in-
citing idle workers to riot, her reluctance to embarrass her family led her
to tell police that her name was Dorothy Ray, and it was Dorothy Ray
who quit school at the Party's request the following year and took a job
at a cannery in San Jose. She was a cannery hand, a waitress, an office
worker, an agitator, an organizer. She led farm workers' strikes in the
Imperial Valley in the early 30's, and by 1940 she had become the most
prominent Communist in the CIO. She was the kind of Communist who
never went underground, who proclaimed it everywhere, and her devotion
to the Party ran deep enough to endure six arrests, countless investiga-
tions, a year in jail, two long and debilitating trials and three broken
marriages. It also survived the Hitler-Stalin pact, the McCarthy years, the
invasions of Hungary and Czechoslovakia, the Khrushchev revelations at
the 20th Party Congress-all the tribulations, great and small, that houn-
ded the conscience and shook the convictions of her generation. When
Dorothy finally resigned from the Party her farewell was delivered with
dignified understatement in the course of one of her regular broadcasts
at KPFK.
It was in the aftermath of the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia and
the debates that ensued not just over Czechoslovakia but also over bureau
cratic centralism and the clamping of critical debate that Dorothy left the
Party. When she left she said "My hatred of a capitalism which degrades
and debases all humans is as intense now as it was when I joined the YCL
in 1928 ... I remain a communist, as I have been all my life, albeit with-
out a party." In an Interview with Barry Farrell published in Ramparts
Magazine in 1974 Dorothy talked about some of the things that led her to
break her association with the Party.
"Part of the institutionalization of Marxism is the development of cer-
Continued on page 3 1
June FOLIO PAGE 3
Report
to the
Listener
Jim Berland,
General Manager.
As we listen to KPFK and enjoy
the fact that we can be heard more
widely than any other station in
Southern California, we look back
at the saga and struggle to get our
new signal on the air. Here is the
story, with some of the detnils left
out, but all of the relevant twists
and turns indicated.
In 1975 KPFK applied for
federal funding to construct a new
transmitter and antenna on a new
site. This was done in order to
achieve a number of objectives
1) Reliability in operation: a new
transmitter would replace old and
worn equipment with a set of
parallel transmitters, each of which
could operate independently or to-
gether
2) Improved pattern of signal dis-
semination: with a new antenna
would come a design that could
send the strongest lobes of signal
to the places where it was needed
most.
3) Circular Polarization: this inven-
tion, which postdates KPFK's old
transmitter and antenna, allows the
signal to be received by antennae
which are either vertical or hori
zontal. This primarily improves the
signal reception in automobiles
A/ith whip antennas.
4) Reduced antenna bays: our old
antenna had eight bays, and this
configuration made the signal sus-
ceptible to interference from build
ings and other variations in terrain.
5) A new location: we had planned
to move the tower, transmitter and
antenna to a different part of Mt.
Wilson to help get the signal over
the east ridge top of Mt. Wilson and
improve the reception in the areas
east of downtown Los Angeles.
The original application stated
the cost of the improvements, in
eluding improvements in the studio-
to transmitter link and the remote
control circuits, which would im-
prove the signal to noise ratio of
the FM broadcast, would be
June FOLIO PAGE 4
5162,000. Normally the federal
agency which provides funding for
these matters would pay 75% of
the costs. In this case they negotia-
ted to pay for only 46% of the
costs. This left the station with the
responsibility to raise 587,000 to
complete the project. The KPFK
Expansion Project was set up in
1976, and two large events raised
some 540,000. At the same time
KPFK was offered the opportunity
to buy the building we occupied for
only 318,000 down, and a balance
of 562,000, plus a lot of past due
rent was forgiven. It was too good a
deal to pass up and almost half of
the funds rair,ed were used for this
purchase.
When I became manager in
1978, thp project was stalled finan-
cially and practically. 567,000 was
still needed and a new location for
the transmitter had to be obtained
The next part of the struggle
was to determine whether the site
specified in the application was the
right one or if there was a better
one. Our engineering staff selected
another site, owned by Metromedia
and operated by KCET, Channel
28. During the next three and one
half years we conducted extensive
negotiations, punctuated by three
changes in KCET Operations Direc
tors, in an attempt to put our
transmitter in their building on a
new tower.
Finally, in the summer of 1981,
we recived a definite "no" from
then-President of KCET, Jim
Loper, and instituted Plan B. We
determined that we would keep our
old site, and give up the hope of
escaping the problems caused by
the shadow of the east ridge of Mt.
Wilson While the above was taking
place the cost of the project was
being affected by inflation, and by
the planned changes. Instead of
5162,000, the final costs actually
approach 5210,000. Some money
was raised between 1978 and 1982,
but the gap was at least 570,000
given the increased costs. Once we
had decided to construct on our
current site, we applied to the FCC
to change the construction permit
from specifying the new site to
retaining our current one. This ap-
plication was made in September of
1981.
It was granted in May of 1982 -
an unusually long deal for a simple
amendment. But while we waited
for the FCC we could not order
much of the remaining equipment.
The transmitter itself and much of
the equipment had already been
purchased and was in storage. It
was our hope that we could order,
receive and install all of the equip-
ment before the beginning of
October 1982. As we began in
earnest, we also determined that
it was important to complete the
project now, and to borrow the
money to do it, instead of delaying
any further. Even at high interest
rates the cost of the money would
be quickly offset by the income
from new listeners.
But in the meantime the ele-
ments of the nroject had become
even more complicated and inter-
connected. The elements that crea-
ted difficulty:
1) Certain equipment could not be
ordered until other parts were In-
stalled, and exact measurements
could be taken.
2) Some things could not be in-
stalled with current equipment in
place.
3) The installation would have to
proceed in stages, and the station
had to choose the possibility of
being at lower power for sure, or
risking staying with the old equip-
ment.
4) The engineer who designed the
project was no longer on full-time
at the station and had other de-
mands on his time. The new staff
was also pressed with other respon
sibilities.
We ordered the antenna; we
hoped it would be delivered in late
August, Problems with its design
delayed construction and, even
when it was nearly done, a rain-
storm in Sacramento damaged the
test model. By the time it was
ready we were already into our Fall
Fund Drive, and did not wish to
disrupt that in order to begin the
installation.
At the same time we were hit
with the interference from the new
building across the street, and were
forced to spend time and $10,000
to find a way around it. Only this
week have we signed a lease with a
building site for our extra hop
around the offending building. Suf-
fice It to say that there were only
three places we could go, each of
of the previous two trys hung us
out for a long time, and the one we
just signed took five months from
"agreement" to the execution of a
contract.
By winter our old signal was
barely alive from the rain and ice,
which also kept us waiting and
waiting to begin installing the
new equipment. We had to grade
a new road into the site, get the ap-
propriate permits, and prepare for
the construction. All of this was
done before December.
We planned to bring the trans-
mitter up the hill during the week
after Christmas. That morning It
was raining. We loaded up a few
tons of equipment and tried, but
the dirt road would not allow us
up, and we had to try again. Final-
ly, after the new year, we got
everything on the mountain. The
building had been cleared, some old
equipment rewired and some re-
moved. The antenna hangers, men
who climb tall towers, completed
their work at the same time and we
connected the new antenna to the
old transmitter. Although at lower
power, our signal improved in many
areas.
As the pieces got wired together,
we finally were at the point where
the final measurements could be
made for the last order of con-
necting pipes. We hoped that the
six weeks for their delivery would
allow us to finish the installation
before the Spring Fund Drive be-
gan.
The final connection of four
cabinets (the size of giant refrigera-
tors) and two dummy loads (the
size of a washing machine) with
three giant switching mechanisms,
would allow us to test both halves
of the transmitter, or test either
half and broadcast with the other.
At the same time we had new elec
trical power installed in the build-
ing, which required the Edison
Company to string new cables.
All arrived in mid-March and the
race began, against rain and time,
to put it together before April 6.
After three night of off-air work
from midnight to 6 a.m. both
halves of the transmitters were
turned on-one hour before the
Fund Drive began.
As soon as the Drive was over,
one of the new transmitters blew a
recitifier and we went to 50% o1
power. Hardly anyone noticed
Within a couple more weeks the
new STL should be installed. The
hiss behind our powerful signal
should be quieted, and the path
cleared for the installation of our
new remote control equipment.
All of this will continue the im-
provement of our sound, and im-
prove our monitoring of the trans-
mitter's health. Many thanks to
the engineers who worked on the
project-Don Wilson, Bob Reite,
and Lezlie Lee, and to the volun-
teers who helped along the way.
As this job comes to completion
we will turn our engineering efforts
to an upgrading of the control
rooms. With the improved signal
the problems in the control room
are more obvious than ever. We
will, of course, need more monu,
for that effort, even as we continue
to struggle to pay off the cost of
the transmitter. But we know you,
the listeners, are there-we hear
from you every day-and we know
we can count on you to keep
KPFK growing and improving.
Here comes the second half of
our Spring Fund Drive. The first
two weeks brought a total of
$117,000 in pledges. In this part of
the drive we will strive to exceed
that total.
Because of the size of this
Folio and the need to print the
Car Show Garage List, we will
postpone until July a complete
financial report. We should say
that expenses are up during the
first six months of the fiscal year
(October 1, 1982 to March 31,
1983). Our revenue was not. It
was almost exactly the same as
the previous year for the same
period ($234,000). Community
events are running ahead of sche-
dule, after the Balkan/Christmas
Fair and the Gospel Festival we
have made over $30,000 which
was our annual goal, and have
spent less than the $15,000 we
planned for expenses (only
$8,000). Our phone bill has grown
enormously and we are fighting to
keep it under control, and install
new controlling equipment. Our
debt, which went up last year by
$22,000 has climbed by $27,000.
Most of this difficulty seems to
be turning around since the new
transmitter went on the air. The in-
come for April put us $5,000 ahead
of last year, and we have instituted
cost savings with a hiring freeze
and some reassignment of staff. I
believe that we can continue to
turn things around with the com-
pleted transmitter, increased staff
and volunteer coordination and
unity, and special fundraising
efforts.
June FOLIO PAGE 5
HIGHLIGHTS
CASETTA READS
THE STARR-WEINER REPORT
The Starr-Weiner Report on Sex
and Sexuality in the Mature Years,
by Bernard D. Starr, Ph.D. and Mar-
cella Bakur Weiner, Ed. D., Mc-
Graw-Hill Paperbacks, S5.95, 1982.
Subtitled "The most explosivf.'
and significant study of human
sexuality to be published in recent
years," the Starr-Weiner Report
certainly lives up to its clain.
Starting with the myths and reality
of growinn old, as the process re-
lates to sex and sexual activities,
the report continues with chap
ters, among others, related to the
love experience, sexual experimen
tation, masturbation, intimate com-
munications, likes and dislikes and
the revolutions of the old.
This survey was conducted
among over 800 respondents, aged
60 to 91, who reported that they
find sex as good now as it was when
they were younger-and for some it
is even better!
When asked about their Ideal
Lover, a divorced male, age 69,
reported: "Age is irrelevant. My
ideal lover would have a certain
glint in her eye, be quick to laugh
and play, eager to experiment
with any kind of sex and would
find no part of my body unplea-
sant to touch or kiss." A 73year-
old woman was more blunt in re-
plying: "Any age as long as he has
an erection which lasts long enough
to give me an orgasm."
The Starr Weiner Report is en-
June FOLIO PAGE 6
couraging (especially to those who
are leaving 59 for 60). It is a book
that reassures middle-aged people
and it is beautiful. Your reader is
Mario Casetta, who brought the
book to the attention of KPFK,
and Mario says it's also a lot of
fun-and he should know, he's
over 601
Be sure to tune in weekdays
during the month of June (11:30
a.m. -12:00 noon) for this en-
lightening Morning Reading.
i^.>n\
DOES MILITARY SPENDING
CREATE JOBS?
On Saturday, June 18th, from
9 to 11 a.m. local time. Public
Radio stations are being offered a
live radio call in special "Does
Military Spending Create Jobs?"
Moderated by journalist Neil
Conan, the program will focus on
the consequences of the defense
budget on other sectors of the
economy, the growth of military
industries during peace time and
the conversion of military technolo-
gies to civilian uses.
Joining Conan will be three dis-
tinguished economists:
Klaus Mehrens is head of policy
planning and an economist for I G
Metall, West Germany's largest
trade union. He is an expert for the
union president of I G Metall
(metal-workers union) on conver-
sion projects, arms reduction and
other issues in the arms industry.
Herbert Stein is a member of
President Reagan's Economic Poli-
cy Board; he served on the Council
of Economic Advisers under Presi
dents Nixon and Ford; and he is
the holder of a chair at the Univer-
sity of Virginia. He is also a senior
fellow at the American Enterprise
Institute.
Lester Thurow is a Professor of
Economics at the Massachusetts In-
stitute of Technology. He is the
author of Zero Sum Society and
has written of the harmful effects
of military spending on the econo-
my. He is also an economics colum-
nist for the Los Angeles Times.
Representatives from the U.S.
defense industry will also be in-
cluded in the discussion.
Listeners from around the coun
try will be encouraged to call in
collect to (212) 279-3400 to ques-
tion the panelists and contribute
their points of view.
This program is a production
of the Institute of Labor Educa-
tion, Workers Policy Project-a
N.Y. based non-profit organization
that designs economic education
programs for trade unions and com
munity groups-in cooperation with
WBAI/FM and W;JYC/AM.
LESBIAN/GAY DAY
A three-hour live concert broad-
cast, offerings from lesbian/gay
radio programs in Denver, Minnea-
polis, Atlanta, and Vancouver
(B.C.), a review of the year's im
poitant Lesbian/Gay news events,
discussions with open phones on a
variety of topics, programming
about the multi-ethnicity of the
Lesbian/Gay community, historical
reviews, and an important hour
about the Acquired Immune Defi
ciency Syndrome (AIDS) crisis
will all be part of the Sixth Annual
Lesbian/Gay Day on KPFK, from
9:00 a.m. until midnight on Sun-
day, June 19th.
Eliminate Pacifica Debts
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June FOLIO PAGE 7
Join James Burford at 6:45 p.m. for Senior Citizen 's Report (Wednesdays).
1. Wednesday
6.00 Sunrise Concert. Music from
the Hearts of Space: Meditative
music, often electronic, produced
at KPFA Berkeley.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 7:15, CPUSA; 7:30,
News Check-In: interviews, fea-
tures, etc.; 8:30, Newscast: an ex
tended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Independent Music. Mario
Casetta plays folk, jazz and dance-
able music, often from Eastern
Europe and the Balkans.
1 1 :30 Morning Reading. The Starr-
Weiner Report on Sex and Sexuali-
ty in the Mature Years, by Bernard
D Starr, Ph.D. and Marcella Bakur
Weiner, Ed. D. (McGraw-Hill Paper-
backs, S5.95), 1982. Read by Mario
Casetta
12:00 Noon Concert. Journey
Through the Realms of Music:
David Weiss, principal oboist for
the LA. Philharmonic and saw
player (?). Bill Davila hosts.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. We Are
M.A.A.D. Media Artists Against
Discrimination (MAAD) is an, or-
ganization made up of active per-
forming artists and media people
of all nationalities committed to
exposing and fighting against the
injustices and stereotypic images
that still exist in American TV and
film. MAAD members Pat Li,
Mady Maguire, Alicia Sandoval,
and Vernon Washington talk about
their own experiences, and what
MAAD is involved in. Miya Iwataki
hosts; 3:00, Pacifica Radio News
Afternoon Report: From our
National .Niews Service in Washing-
ton and from our correspondents
around the country and the world,
a comprehensive report on the
events of the day; 3:30, Feminist
Magazine with Helene Rosenbluth;
5:00, Movement L.A. with Mark
and Avis Ridley-Thomas; 5:55,
Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Senior Citizen's Report.
James Burford of Americans for
Democratic Action hosts.
7:00 Family Tree. Left open for
late breaking events in the African
community. Sylvester Rivers hosts.
8:00 Spirit Flight. African World
Music, interviews, news and occa-
sional open phones. Discussion this
evening is with Lola Coleman,
nurse midwife, on "The Full Impli
cations of Homebirth." Open
phones. Kwaku Lynn hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
"The Graveyard Shift" with Dudley
Knight. Spoken arts to 6 am.
2 Thursday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music acous-
tic and eclectic Marv Aldin hosts.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 9:00, Read All About
It; 9:25, Calendar
9:30 The Nixon Tapes. Tom Nixon
hosts.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/)e Sfar/--
Weiner Report on Sex and Sexuali-
ty in the Mature Years, read by
Mario Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Chapel,
Court & Countryside: Early classi-
cal music, with host Joseph Spen-
cer.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Theatre
Close-Up with Stefan Tatar; 2:30,
Media Rare with Paul Lion; 3:00,
Pacifica Radio News Afternoon
Report; 3:30, Inside /../A. -Explores
the public policy landscape of
Southern California's natural and
built environments, with host Bob
Pugsley; 4:15, Portraits of the
U.S.S.R. with Suzi Weissman; 5:00,
The Wizard Show-"Camet,"
Steven Oppenheimer, Cal. State
University, Northridge-Shel Plot-
kin and Bob Nelson host; 5:55, Cal-
endar.
6:00 The Evening News.
PROGRAMACION EN ESPANOL
6:45 Noticiero Pacifica. Informa-
cion semanal preparada por el De-
partamento de Noticias de su esta-
cion KPFK
7:15 Flor y Canto. Programa de
musica latinoamericana: tradicional
y nuevo canto, donde cada semana
se toca un tema o una combinacion
de temas sobre la musica folcloorica
en sus diferentes ritmos y estilos o
de los diferentes interpretes de la
nueva cancion
8:15 Nuestra Comunidad Latina.
Programa en vivo donde se presen
tan temas de interes para la comu
nidad y sobre la comunidad con in
vitados y linea abierta para que el
auditorio exprese su opinion.
June FOLIO PAGE 8
9:15 Voz Y Raiz de Latinoameri-
cana. Programa que ofrece un anali-
sis de la realidad historica contem-
poranea que enfrentan los latino-
americanos, en sus paises, asi como
en los Estados Unidos. El formato
varia desde programas en vivo hasta
documentales completos.
10:15 America Latina en Marcha.
Programa en vivo donde usted se
podra enterar de lo que pasa con
los diferentes movimientos sociales
en los paises de nuestra america y
con linea abierta para que el audi-
torio exprese su opinion.
11:00 Janus Co. Radio Theatre.
Jan and Mallory Geller present
radio repertory drama, usually
live, written and produced especial-
ly for KPFK.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
3 Friday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. We Call It
Music: Jim Seely presents music of
the folk-country tradition.
7:00 Morning Magazine.
9:30 Amelia
9:30 Amelia Airwaves. A mix of
folk, jazz and popular music selec-
ted by Susan Kernes.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/?e Sfa/T-
Weiner Report on Sex and Sexuali-
ty in the Mature Years, read by
Mario Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Soundboard:
Classical art music of the guitar,
lute, and other instruments with
soundboards, produced by John
Schneider.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Late-
breaking cultural affairs informa-
tion, book reviews, and interviews;
2:30, Intergay—A weekly syndica-
ted report with host David Wyn-
yard; 3:00, Pacifica Radio News Af-
ternoon Report; 3:30, Newswatch;
4:30, Just a Minute with Blase Bon-
pane and Nancy Hollander alter-
nating weekly; 5:30, The Iron Tri-
angle with Gordon Adams; 5:55,
Calendar,
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Open Journal.
7:00 The Health Department. Al
Huebner hosts.
8:00 Le Jazz Hot & Cool. John
Breckow hosts.
10:00 Hour 25. Science Fiction
with Mike Model.
11:30 FutureWatch. Monitoring
the cutting odge of science and reli-
gion with host Linda Strawn.
12:00 Straight, No Chaser. Jazz
with Jay Green.
2:00 Music, Inc. Jazz selected by
Pearl Shelby.
4 Saturday
6:00 Genesis of a Music. Music of
the 12th through 20th centuries,
both national and iiiternational,
exploring roots and influence,
causes and effect. David Porter
hosts.
8:30 Folk Music. John Davis hosts.
10:30 Halfway Down the Stairs.
Be Brave-Be Assertive with your
children! Disconnect the TV and
its Saturday cartoons and tune in
this non-sexist, multi-cultural, fun-
filled show for kids and their famil-
ies. Uncle Ruthie Buell hosts.
11:30 Ballads, Bluegrass and Ban-
joes. Tom Sauber hosts.
12:25 Calendar.
12:35 The Car Show. John Retsek
and Len Frank share their expertise
with you. Open phones.
2:00 African Roots. Sheiron Allen
plays traditional and contemporary
continental African music.
4:00 Sounds of Jamaica. The best
in Reggae, brought to you by Miss
Wire Waist.
6:00 The Saturday Night News.
6:30 The Poetry Connexion. The
guest is street poet Max Schwartz.
Wanda Coleman and Austin Straus
host.
7:30 Up From the Ashgrove. Ed
Pearl produces this music sampler
that has in the past presented pro-
grams of Yiddish, mod rock, poli-
tical punk, jazz and folk music.
9:00 Land of a Thousand Dances.
Jimmy Hori presents soul, Motown,
funk reggae, and dance music.
12:00 12 O'clock Rock. At press
time the prospect of finishing the
month of April seemed formidable
and any thoughts of June beyond
comprehension. With finals, gradu-
ations and vacations, June is a
schizo month for underground rock
and its listeners. So we're leaving
our options open. We may continue
with Live From Anti-Zzzz at mid-
night—or we may not (though we
will still present live music, the
question is where and with what
kind of audience, not if). Andrea
'Enthal continues to play new and
formerly new underground rock
records and tapes on For the
Record (midnight until 3), while
Jeff Harris and/or Liz Garo play
even more punk, postpunk, reggae,
scratch and maybe even an occa-
sional funk cut from 3 'til dawn on
Saturday Night Special. See June
18 for more about this program.
5 Sunday
6:00 Gospel Caravan. Black gospel
with brother Prince Dixon.
9:00 National Security. Ian Mas-
ters hosts.
11:00 Dorothy Ray Healey.
Socialist Commentary.
12:00 Many Worlds of Music. Mar
io Casetta plays folk, jazz and
danceable music, often from
Eastern Europe and the Balkans.
1:00 The Sunday Opera. Verdi:
Falstaff with Renato Bruson, Katia
Ricciarelli, Lucia Valentini-Terrani,
and the Los Angeles Philharmonic
Orchestra, conducted by Carlo
Maria Giulini (DG 2741-020). Fred
Hyatt hosts.
5:00 East Wind. Current communi-
ty issues and cultural developments
in the Asian Pacific community.
6:00 The Sunday Evening News.
6:30 The Science Connection.
Steve and Vera Kilston with the
latest science news and views.
7:00 Preachin' the Blues. Sixty
years of recorded black gospel,
blues and boogie woogie, hosted
by Mary Aldin.
8:30 Lesbian Sisters. A potpourri
of music, discussion and open
phones about issues concerning the
lesbian community. Helene Rosen-
bluth hosts.
9:30 Folkscene. A program of tra-
ditional and contemporary folk
music, featuring live music, inter-
views with the performers, and the
finest in recorded folk music. Tune
in for a special live guest.
12:00 Smoke Rings. Six hours of
jazz and commentary with John
Breckow.
June FOLIO PAGE 9
6 Monday
KPFK's Spring Fund Drive, Part 2
begins today, which means that all
of our programming will include
fundraising appeals/breaks. We need
your support!
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Beginning
today and continuing for the next
five weeks, Lorin Sklamberg will
present highlights of Healing Earth
Productions' Music of the Heart
and Mind Concert Series. This
morning; a live concert with Boston
singer/songwriter Fred Small, re
corded March 19, 1983.
7.00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 7:15, Inquiries; 7:30,
News Check-In: interviews, features
and more; 8:30, Newscast: an ex
tended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Folkdance with Mario!!
11:30 Morning Reading. The Starr-
Weiner Report on Sex and Sexuali-
ty in the Mature Years, read by
Mario Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Music of the
Americas. Jeannie Pool hosts.
2:00 Alan Watts. Fundraising. The
next Watts afternoon talk will be
broadcast on the 27th.
3:00 The Afternoon Air. Pacifica
Radio News Afternoon Report;
3:30, Organic Gardening with Will
Kinney and Barbara Spark; 4:30,
Consider the Alternatives: Pro-
duced by the SANE Education
Fund; 5:00, Body Politics with
Gary Richwald; 5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Commentary.
7:00 Labor Scene. Sam Kushner
hosts
7:30 Chapel, Court & Countryside.
Early classical music with host
Joseph Spencer.
9:00 Blue Monday Edition:
Johnny Otis Show.
rhe
11:00 Lady Day.
Billie Holiday, born Eleanor Pagan
in Baltimore, Maryland on April 7,
1915, died July 17, 1959. After her
death the mystique of the lady with
the gardenia was probed by Dizzy
Gillespie and Lena Home, Studs
Terkel, and Frank Schiffman. Un
expurgated passages from her auto-
biography Lady Sings the Blues are
voiced here by Lillian McKinney
from a KPFA production of Fabs
and Gene De'olessi. (Pacifica
archive number BC 0674). The
second half of the program will air
next week at this time.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Alan Watts will be on Wednesday
night. Fundraising 'til 1:30. Krish
namurti speaks.
7 Tuesday
Part 2 of our Spring Fund Drive
continues. All programming in-
cludes fundraising. Call in your
pledge!
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music in
Black: John Patton and Barbara
Sherrill play classic black music,
from classical to Cole Porter.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna
tional events; 7:15, Commentary;
7:30, News Check-In: interviews,
features, etc.; 8:30, Newscast: an
extended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Folkscene. Music from Cana
da is featured today (Roz Larman
hosts), followed by Howard Lar
man and his guests from Canada,
Na Cabafeidh.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/7e Sfar/--
Weiner Report on Sex and Sexuali-
ty in the Mature Years, read by
Mario Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Leonid Ham-
bro at the Keyboard
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Audio
Networks: Zone 23 with Jackie
Apple; 3:00, Pacifica Radio News
Afternoon Report; 3:30, American
Indian Airwaves with Liz Lloyd;
4:00, Open time; 5:00, Voice of
the Barrio— news, documentaries
and music from Southern Califor-
nia's barrios, coordinated by Frank
Hernandez of KPFK's Latin Ameri-
can Collective.
6:00 The Evening News.
7:00 When the Wind Blows.
A dramatic radio play about a
nuclear holocaust and what hap-
pens afterwards. It stars Ruth Buell
and Mike Hodel in an adaptation of
the book by Raymond O. Briggs.
Technical production by Steve
Barker.
8:30 Imaginary Landscape. Carl
Stone hosts.
10:30 In Fidelity. Peter Sutheim
hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Centerstand. Fundraising
and features on motorcycles.
1:30 Something's Happening!
Fundraising 3-4 am.
8 Wednesday
The Fund Drive continues. All pro-
gramming includes fundraising.
Support KPFK!
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music from
the Hearts of Space: Meditative
music, often electronic, produced
at KPFA in Berkeley.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 7:15, Jeff Horton;
7:30. News Check In: interviews,
features, etc.; 8:30, Newscast: an
extended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25. Calendar.
9:30 Independent Music. Mario
Casetta plays folk, jazz and dance-
June FOLIO PAGE 10
able music, often from Eastern
Europe and 'or the Bnlkans.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/>e Sfarr-
Welner Report on Sex and Sexuali-
ty In the Mature Years, read by
Mario Casetta.
12:00 (Moon Concert. Journey
Through the Realms of Music:
Dave Smith, percussionist, leader
of the fusion group Squash. Bill
Davila hosts.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Special
programming to celebrate life, in
eluding excerpts from the historic
disarmament demonstrations held
a year ago, June 12, in New York
City and San Francisco; 3:00,
Pacifica Radio News Afternoon
Report; 3:30, Feminist Magazine
with Helene Rosenbluth; 5:00,
Movement L.A. with Mark and Avis
RidleyThomas; 5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Senior Citizen's Report.
James Burford of Americans for
Democratic Action hosts.
7:00 Family Tree. Sylvester Rivers
hosts.
8:00 Spirit Flight. African World
Music, interviews, news and occa-
sional open phones. Discussion this
evening is with Professor Kwabena
Nketia, music dept. of UCLA, Open
phones. Kwaku Lynn hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Alan Watts on "Inevitable Ecstasy"
part 3 of 4. Fundraising 1-2 am.
Non-linear radio to 6.
9 Thursday
KPFK's Spring Fund Drive, Part 2,
continues, with all programming to
include fundraising breaks. Give
generously!
600 Sunrise Concert. Music acous-
tic and eclectic, brought to you by
Mary Aldin
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 9:00, Read All About
It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 The Nixon Tapes. Tom Nixon
hosts.
11:30 Morning Reading. The Starr-
Weiner Report on Sex and Sexuali-
ty in the Mature Years, read by
Mario Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Chapel,
Court & Countryside: Early classi-
cal music with host Joseph Spencer.
2; 00 The Afternoon Air. Theatre
Close-Up with Stefan Tatar; 2:30,
Speaking of Seniors with Grace
Jacobs; 3:00, Pacifica Radio News
Afternoon Report; 3:30, Middle
East in Focus with Michel Bogopol
sky and Sarah Mardell; 4:15, Por-
traits of the U.S.S.R. with Suzi
Weissman; 5:00, The Wizard
Show "Maximizing Land Produc-
tion," Elio Rodriguez, U.C. Irvine—
Shel Plotkin and Bob Nelson host;
5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
PROGRAMACION EN ESPANOL
6:45 Noticiero Pacifica.
7:15 Flor y Canto.
8:15 Nuestra Comunidad Latina.
9:15 Voz y Raiz de Latinoameri-
cana.
10:15 America Latina en Marcha.
(See June 2 for program details)
11:00 Janus Co. Radio Theatre.
Repertory radio drama produced
especially for KPFK. Jan and Mal-
lory Geller host.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Experimental pitch and play.
10 Friday
Day 5 of our Spring Fund Drive
(Part Two). Please support KPFK-
6:00 Sunrise Concert. We Call It
Music: folk-country from Jim
Seely.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Amelia Airwaves. A mix of
folk, jazz and popular music selec-
ted by Susan Kernes.
11:30 Morning Reading. TVve Sfa/T-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality,
read by Mario Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Soundboard:
Classical art music of the guitar,
lute and other instruments with
soundboards, produced by John
Schneider.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Special
programming; 2:30, Intergay—a
weekly syndicated report with host
David Wynyard; 3:00, Pacifica
Radio News Afternoon Report;
3:30, Newswatch; 4:30, Just a
Minute with Nancy Hollander and
Blase Bonpane alternating weekly;
5:30, The Iron Triangle with Gor
don Adams; 5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Open Journal.
7:00 The Health Department. Al
Huebner hosts.
8:00 Le Jazz Hot & Cool. John
Breckow hosts
10:00 Hour 25. Science Fiction
with Mike Hodel.
12:00 Straight, No Chaser. Jazz
with Jay Green.
2:00 Music, Inc. Pearl Shelby
hosts.
11 Saturday
6 a.m. to 6 p.m. MAVERICKS.
In every one of us there is a
maverick, a stubbornly defiant,
nonconformist streak resisting
authority, control and belonging.
Rejected by society and even by
their own kind, mavericks are the
kind who dare to do something,
change some things, or fail trying.
Today is a Music Department
sampler in which you'll hear regu-
lar program producers and others
from the community play jazz,
classical, folk, rock, avant garde,
experimental, and historic music,
all connected to the idea of mav-
erickdom.
Also today the Car Show will
talk about Mavericks (Pintos, Dod-
ges, and Toyotas) from 12:30 to
1:30 p.m.
The Evening News will air from
6-6:30 p.m. as usual.
For specific times and specials
on today's air listen to the non-
commercials between programs or
consult the Radio Airwaves section
of the LA. Weekly.
-Andrea 'Enthal (Music Co-dir.)
6:30 On Film. Dean Cohen hosts.
7:00 On Stage. Lawrence Christon
hosts.
7:30 Up From the Ashgrove. Ed
Pearl hosts.
9:00 Land of a Thousand Dances.
Jimmy Mori hosts.
12:00 12 O'clock Rock.
^®
June FOLIO PAGE 11
Dorothy Healey
12 Sunday
6:00 Gospel Caravan. Black gospel
with brother Prince Dixon,
9:00 National Security. Ian Mas
ters hosts.
11:00 Dorothy Ray Healey: In
Search of Truth. After 20 years on
KPFK and many more as an active
revolutionary leader, Dorothy
Healey is moving to Washington
D.C. In this tribute, KPFK presents
Dorothy speaking for herself,
paying tribute to her mother, and
intervievi/ing some of the most arti-
culate radicals of our time. Among
the presentations that will be
heard: Dorothy speaking at the
Solidarity rally in Los Angeles in
1982, her address to a teach-in on
the history of the Cold War, Doro-
thy on Iran, and on the Communist
Party, Marxism and free speech. Al-
ways controversial and outspoken,
this tribute will reflect those values.
Produced by Jim Berland
3:00 The Sunday Opera. Verdi: II
Trovatore with Zinka Milanov, Jus-
si Bjoerling, Leonard Warren and
the RCA Orchestra and Chorus,
Renato Cellini, conductor (RCA
Victor). Followed by fundraising,
5:30-6 pm. Fred Hyatt hosts.
6:00 The Sunday Evening News.
6:30 The Science Connection.
Steve and Vera Kilston with the
latest science news and views
7:00 Preachin' the Blues. Sixty
years of recorded black gospel.
blues and boogie woogie, with
host Mary Aldin.
8:30 IMRU. The IMRU Gay/Les
bian news report, features, and
calendar.
9:30 Folkscene. A program of tra
ditional and contemporary folk
music, featuring live music, inter-
views with the performers, and the
finest in recorded folk music. This
evening's program consists of some
fundraising, plus the tentatively
scheduled guest, hammer dulcimer
player Jay Round. Roz and Howard
Larman host.
12:00 Smoke Rings. Six hours of
jazz and commentary with John
Breckow.
13 Monday
The Spring Fund Drive continues-
all programming includes fund-
raising breaks/appeals. Please help!
6:00 Sunrise Concert. A live con-
cert by L.A. singer-songwriter
Ruthie Gorton, recorded 3/19/83.
This is the second part of the
"Music of the Heart & Mind Con-
cert Series. " Your host is Lorin
Sklamberg.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 7:15, Inquiries; 7:30,
News Check-In: interviews, fea-
tures, etc.; 8:30, Newscast: an ex-
tended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Folkdance with Mario!!
11:30 Morning Reading. r/)e Sfarr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Music of the
Americas. Jeannie Pool hosts.
2:00 Alan Watts. Fundraising.
3:00 The Afternoon Air. Pacifica
Radio News Afternoon Report:
From our National News Service in
Washington and from our corres-
pondents around the country and
the world, a comprehensive re-
port on the events of the day; 3:30,
Nutrition, Health and the En-
vironment with Irv Lyon; 4:30,
Consider the Alternatives; 5:00,
Consumer Awareness with Ida
Honorof; 5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
7:00 Juneteen.
"Juneteen, June 19, marks the
anniversary of the emancipation
of the slaves in Texas. It has be-
come a day of national importance
and we celebrate it early in this 2-
hour special program produced by
Barbara Sherrill and John Pat
ton.
9:00 Blue Monday Edition: The
Johnny Otis Show.
11:00 Lady Day. Part Two of a
two-part series. See June 6 listing
for description.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Alan Watts speaks on "Inevitable
Ecstasy" part 4, conclusion. Fund
raising to 2. Open programming to
6.
14 Tuesday
Spring Fund Drive continues . . .
call in your pledge today. All pro-
gramming includes fundraising.
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music in
Black: John Patton and Barbara
Sherrill play classic black music,
from classical to Cole Porter.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 When the Wind Blows.
A dramatic radio play about a
nuclear holocaust and what hap-
pens afterward. It stars Ruth Buell
and Mike Hodel in an adaptation
of the book by Raymond 0. Briggs.
Technical production by Steve
Barker.
10:30 Folkscene. The first of
MacColl-Seeger radio ballads pro-
duced for BCC. "The Ballad of
John Axon." The true life story
of a British railroad engineer as
told by his friends and co-workers
and set into song by Ewan MacColl.
Roz and Howard Larman host.
11:30 Morning Reading. Ti'je Sfarr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Leonid Ham-
bro at the Keyboard.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. "Mac
Death" by Susan M, Bingham and
Molly Ann Mullin-This satirical
rendition of Will Shakespeare's
quaint colonial play is vaguely
reminiscent of the Goons of old.
June FOLIO PAGE 12
Directed by Patrick Bannon. Cast:
William Forward, Alison Evans,
Marlene McCormick, Jayme Spier
er, Delores Unger, Miguel Marcott,
Rob Zapple, Marc Silver, Larry
Dilg, Joseph Talarowski and John
Tartaglia. Also: "The Elicited Leg
end" by David L. Krebs-An emis-
sary of the Crown tries to persuade
a clever bandit to secretly join
forces with him to guarantee his
release from prison. But the outlaw
is dubious of the conditions of the
proposed bargain. Directed by
David L. Krebs. Cast: Barry
Coo jer, John-Frederick Jones, Julie
Briggs, Thomas Boyle and Patrick
Bannon; 3:00, Pacifica Radio News
Afternoon Report; 3:30, Open
time; 4:00, Cambridge Forum:
Produced by the Unitarian Uni-
versal ist Society, this program
features addresses and debates on
current political and philosophical
issues. Hosted by Reverend Phillip
Zwerling; 5:00, Catch 222: Grow-
ing Up in L.A. Schools with Jeff
Horton; 5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Open Journal. Roy Ulrich
hosts.
7:30 Prescription for Survival.
Dr. Bob Rufs,/old of Physicians
for Social Responsibility hosts.
8:30 Imaginary Landscape. Carl
Stone hosts.
10:30 In Fidelity. Peter Sutheim
hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Centerstand. Motorcycle
fundraising and features.
1:30 Something's Happening!
Fundraising 4-5 am.
15 Wednesday
More of Spring Fund Drive, Part 2.
Fundraising interspersed through-
out programming. Support KPFKf
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music From
the Hearts of Space: Meditative
music, often electronic, produced
at KPFA in Berkeley.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna
tional events; 9:00, Read All About
It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Independent Music, r.'ario
Casetta plays music from Eastern
Europe and the Balkans.
11:30 Morning Reading. 7"/)eSfa/-/-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Journey
Through Realms of Music: Bill
Davila hosts.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Special
programming to celebrate life, in-
cluding excerpts from the historic
disarmament demonstrations held
a year ago (June 12) in New York
City and San Francisco; 3:00,
Pacifica Radio News Afternoon Re-
port; 3:30. Feminist Magazine w/
Helene Rosenbluth; 5:00, Move-
ment L.A. with Mark and Avis
Ridley-Thomas; 5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Senior Citizen's Report.
James Burford of Americans for
Democratic Action hosts.
7:00 Family Tree. Sylvester
Rivers hosts.
8:00 Spirit Flight. African World
Music, interviews, news and occa-
sional open phones. Featured to-
night is an exclusive interview &
concert with Don Carlos, original
lead singer of Black Uhuru, in his
first performance in Los Angeles.
Kwaku Lynn hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Fundraising to 12:45. "The Grave-
yard Shift" with Dudley Knight.
Open to 6.
16 Thursday
Spring Fund Drive continues. All
programming includes fundraising.
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music acous
tic and eclectic, Mary Aldin hosts.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 9:00, Read All About
It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 The Nixon Tapes. Tom Nixon
hosts.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/7e Sfarr
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Chapel,
Court & Countryside with host
Joseph Spencer
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Theatre
Close Up with Stefan Tatar; 2:30,
Media Rare with Paul Lion; 3:00,
Pacifica Radio News Afternoon Re
port; 3:30, Inside L.A.- Explores
the public policy landscape of So.
California's natural and built en
vironments, with host Bob Pugsley;
4:15, Portraits of the U.S.S.R. w/
Su^i Weissman; 5:00, The Wizard
S/joi/v— "Radio Astronomy," Gene
Epstein, Aerospace Corporation-
Bob Nelson and Shel Plotkin
host; 5:55, Calendar
6:00 The Evening News.
PROGRAMACION EN ESPANOL
6:45 Noticiero Pacifica.
7:15 Flor y Canto.
8:15 Nuestra Comunidad Latina.
9:15 Voz y Raiz de Latinoameri-
cana.
10:15 America Latina en Marcha.
(See June 2 for descriptions)
11:00 Janus Co. Radio Theatre.
Jan and Mallory Geller host.
11 :30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Experimental pitch and play.
17 Friday
The Spring Fund Drive continues . .
Support KPFK now!
6:00 Sunrise Concert. We Call It
Music: folk-country from Jim
Seely.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Amelia Airwaves. A mix of
folk, jazz and popular music selec-
ted by Susan Kernes.
11:30 Morning Reading. The Starr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality,
read by Mario Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Soundboard:
Classical art music of the guitar,
lute and other instruments with
soundboards, produced by John
Schneider.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Special
programming; 2:30, Intergay-a
weekly syndicated report with host
David Wynyard; 3:00, Pacifica
Radio News Afternoon Report;
3:30, Newswatch; 4:30, Just a
Minute with Nancy Hollander and
Blase Bonpane alternating weekly;
5:30, The Iron Triangle with Gor-
don Adams; 5:55, Calendar
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Open Journal.
7:00 The Health Department.
June FOLIO PAGE 13
8:00 Special.
Fernando Velazquez and Voces
Latinas present an all-night special
on Latin music. The programming
includes blocks of music from the
Caribbean, Central and South
America, as well as music from
the South West of the U.S.
18 Saturday
Spring Fund Drive continues . . .
all programming includes time for
fundraising efforts. Subscribe now!
6:00 Genesis of a Music. Music of
the 12th through 20th centuries,
both national and international, ex-
ploring roots and influences, causes
and effect. David Porter hosts.
9:00 Does Military Spending Cre-
ate Jobs? Special: Moderated by
journalist Neil Conan, the program
will focus on the consequences of
the defense budget on other sectors
of the economy, the growth of mili-
tary industries during peace time
and the conversion of military tech-
nologies to civilian uses. Joining
Conan will be three distinguished
economists; Klaus Mehrens, Her-
bert Stein, and Lester Thurow.
Representatives from the U.S. de-
fense industry will also be inclu-
ded in the discussion. For more
details please see the highlights
section of this issue
11:00 Halfway Down the Stairs.
A children's show for grown-ups,
with host Uncle Ruthie Buell.
11:30 Ballads, Banjoes and Blue-
grass. Tom Sauber hosts.
12:25 Calendar.
12:35 The Car Show; An Exten-
ded Version. As a special treat to
Car Show enthusiasts, this program
runs an entire G'/i hours -long
enough to get lots of extra informa-
tion and still give you time to call
in those pledges.
4:00 Sounds of Jamaica. Miss Wire
Waist plays the best of reggae
6:00 The Saturday Night News.
6.30 The Poetry Connexion. Japa-
nese poet Mitsue Yamada ("Camp
Notes") is the guest. Wanda Cole-
man and Austin Straus host
7:30 Up From the Ashgrove. Ed
Pearl hosts this music sampler
9:00 Land of a Thousand Dances.
Jimmy Hori hosts a program of
soul, funk, old Motown, reggae
and dance music.
12:00 12 O'clock Rock. (Contin
ued from June 4 listing). Speaking
of graduations and Liz Garo, she'll
be going to school in England,
therefore leaving this program in
August Auditioning for her slot
will be Richard Crowley (from
England). Let producer Andrea
'Enthal know what you think of
him as a DJ (and oh yes, he won't
just be playing British imports,
but a mixture of American, Los
Angelean, German, Australian, and
other miscellaneous releases).
an /gay d
19 Sunday
Spring Fund Drive continues— all
programming includes fundraising.
6:00 Gospel Caravan. Black gospel
with brother Prince Dixon.
9:00 Time Line. From the Stone-
wall Riots to the March on Wash-
ington, from Anita Bryant to the
"Moral Majority," a review of some
of the important news events in,
or affecting the Lesbian/Gay com-
munity in recent years. With music
by Holly Near, Tom Robinson, Meg
Christian, Blackberri, and many
others, "Time Line " is a primer in
recent Lesbian/Gay her/history,
produced from "imru " and Pacifica
Program Service archives by Greg
Gordon.
10:30 The Gay Games. An historic
"first" took place in San Francisco
August 28th through September
5th last year. You will be transpor-
ted to this fabulous celebration of
Lesbian and Gay talent and spirit,
as imru's Debi Fidler and Joan
Sprague talk with some of the
athletes, organizers and observers,
and offer highlights of the ceremo-
nies. Re-live the feelings, experience
the excitement, and reflect upon
the political ramifications of this
memorable event!
11:00 Marxist Commentary. A spe-
cial Lesbian/Gay Day half-hour
edition of this popular program,
considering attitudes towards Les
bians and Gay Men in progressive
movements, with KPFK's commen-
tator Dorothy Healey, imru's Joan
Sprague, and you, via open phone
lines.
11:30 Common Ground. Members
of our community have long held
important leadership positions in
the world-wide Disarmament move-
ment, but they are rarely identified
as Lesbian or Gay. imru's Elissa
Millman profiles some of these peo
pie, and discusses why these issues
should be of concern to our com-
munity.
12:00 Gayzette. Two hours of
music, comment, and comedy, in
eluding Nurse Pimento's "Best of
Stranger than Straight": Kim Wil
son's conversation with Holly Near
about homophobia on the road,
community criticism, and more,
along with music from her most re-
cent album "Speed of Light"; a
musical tribute to the late Patrick
Crowley, produced by Bob Steele
of the "Pink Triangle Radio" pro-
gram in Denver; from "Fresh
Fruit" at KFAI in Minneapolis,
Marj Schneider's conversation with
Maxine Feldman about her life, art,
politics, women's music, and the
coffeehouse she's started in Bos-
lune FOLIO PAGE 14
ton with two songs by this unique
performer, and, from WRFG in At
lanta. a collage of programming
from their "Southern Gay Dreams"
radio program, including greetings
from Atlanta's community to ours.
2:00 The Politics of Pornography.
What distinguishes "erotica" from
"pornography"? Many in our com-
munity accuse "the porn industry"
of exploiting women, children, mi-
norities, and yes, even men. Can
Gay men and Lesbians define their
own erotica, minus the exploita-
tion? These and related issues will
be discussed during this hour,
with CO producers David Hunt and
Josy Catoggio, and open phones.
3:00 Shades of Gay. A program
about some of the important cul-
tural and political contributions
made to our community by Les-
bians and Gay men of color, with
imru's Anthony Price also spot-
lighting some local organizations
which serve the special interests of
these "minorities within a minor-
ity."
4:00 No Womb for Daddy. Artifi
cial insemination is becoming more
accessible to the Lesbian communi-
ty. How does this affect the lives of
Lesbians and their children? How
do tTieir relatives respond? Should
you know the donor? This pro-
gram, produced by Helene Rosen-
bluth, explores some of the issues
involved in making this choice.
4:30 Father's Gay. On this Fathers
Day 1983, Greg Gordon talks with
imru's George Atkinson and his son
Bjorn; Age of Consent's John Cal-
lahan (whose daughter lives in Bos-
ton); and David and Kevin Frater,
about their much-publicized Gay
father-heterosexual adoption case
in Riverside.
5:00 To Be Young, Lesbian &
Black in the 50s. Poet and Lesbian
feminist writer Audre Lord talks
about coming out in Harlem during
the 1950's, and reads from her
latest book, "Zami; a new spelling
of my name." Produced by Helene
Rosenbluth.
5:30 The Art of Female Imper-
sonation. From CFRO FM's "Com-
ing Out" radio program in Van-
couver, British Columbia, Bill
Houghton's 1980 feature, we asked
them to select a good program to
share with Southern California, and
from their over five years on the
air, this is itf
6:00 The Lesbian/Gay Day News
Report and Community Calendar.
A review of current news events in,
or affecting the Lesbian/Gay com
munity, plus a Calendar of events
sponsored by local organizations
during the upcoming Lesbian/Gay
Pride Week in Los Angeles.
6:30 I Will Survive. A look at the
medical, political and sociological
impact of the Acquired Immune
Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) cri-
sis, with imru's David Hunt, Ken
Miller, and David Fradkin. How can
we, as a community, turn panic in-
to positive energy for survival?
7:30 Personal Profiles. Listen to
Arne Prince's "Ramblings", one
person's reflections on the gay ex-
perience in Los Angeles; take
Joan Sprague's and Josy Catoggio's
"Are You a Real Lesbian?" quiz;
and hear David Fradkin's often-
hilarious conversation with Clark
("The Butch Manual ") Henley.
8:00 The Sixth Annual Lesbian/
Gay Day Concert: Live From Stu-
dio Z. Reflections of the past, pre-
sent and future highlight this an-
nual musical celebration of Les-
bian/Gay pride. From the past, four
acts who have appeared at previous
Lesbian/Gay Day Concerts: after
literally stopping the show at last
year's concert, and everywhere else
they've performed, those dynamic
political rappers Age of Consent
will be back to delight, mystify and
surprise; the mellow duo of Donna
Wade & Joseph Suber will be
making a rare live appearance; also
returning from previous concerts
are Leroy Dysart. performing mu-
sic from his recent album, "We Are
Everywhere", as well as new and
original material; and the wonderful
harmonies and high-spirited music
of No Strings Attached. Represent-
ing the present are three acts who
will be making their KPFK debuts
at this concert: the fabulous Cathy
Dion & Special Effect, the multi-
talented Ron Hale; and the in-
comparable Sally Piano, who, be-
sides performing solo as Sirani
Avedis, with her album "Tattoo",
is half of the duo of Sal Et Al. As
a reflection of the future, this con-
cert will feature a group so new
that, as of press time, they hadn't
chosen a name yet— however, each
of these musician's names is famil
iar to Woman's music fans, since
they have individually written, per-
formed and/or recorded with the
likes of Holly Near, Meg Christian,
Margie Adam, Maiden Voyage, and
the I. .A. Women's Community
Chorus. This as yet unnamed group
is comprised of Carrie Barton, Mari-
lyn Donat, Sue Fink, and Diane
Lindsay. Concert producer Art Ara
tin co-emcees with Josy Catoggio.
Be a part of the studio audience for
this live concert broadcast (phone
reservations will be taken through-
out the Sixth Annual Lesbian/Gay
Day), or crank up your radio for
three non-stop hours of Lesbian/
Gay musical celebration!
11:00 Why? Because We LIKE
You! The final 60, with the con-
cluding installment of David Hunt's
review of important Lesbian/Gay
news events of the past twelve
months (other news review seg-
ments will be heard throughout
the day); any last-minute pro-
gramming which became available
after press time; and open phones
to wind up (or down) another 15-
hour Lesbian/Gay radio marathoni
12:00 Smoke Rings. Six hours of
jazz and commentary with John
Breckow.
20 Monday
Last Day of Spring Fund Drive-
It's still not too late to support
KPFK!
6:00 Sunrise Concert. "The Music
of the Heart & Mind Concert
Series" part 3: a live concert by
L.A. gay troubadour Leroy Dy-
sart, recorded April 9, 1983. Lorin
Sk lam berg hosts.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 7:15, Inquiries; 7:30,
News Check-In: interviews, fea-
tures, etc.; 8:30, Newscast; an ex-
tended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Folkdance with Mario!!
11:30 Morning Reading. r/ieSfarr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
June FOLIO PAGE 15
12;00 Noon Concert. Music of the
Americas. Jeannie Pool hosts.
2:00 Alan Watts. Fundraising.
The next Watts afternoon talk will
be broadcast on the 27th.
3:00 The Afternoon Air. Pacifica
Radio News Afternoon Report;
3:30, Organic Gardening with Will
Kinney and Barbara Spark; 4:30,
Consider the Alternatives; 5:00,
Body Politics with Gary Richwald;
5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Commentary.
7:00 Blue Monday Edition: The
Johnny Otis Show, A marathon to
close out the fund drive. Solid R &
B until listeners stop calling
985KPFK.
21 Tuesday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music in
Black-The Classic Image. Black
classical musicians of all genres,
from the 1700's to the present
day. Barbara Sherrill and John
Patton host.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 7:15, Commentary;
7:30, News-Check-In: interviews,
features, etc.; 8:30, Newscast: an
extended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Folkscene. Roz Larman
hosts an hour of American folk
music. Then Howard Larman and
his special guest guitarist/singer/
songwriter Mitch Greenhill.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/jeSfarr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta
12:00 Noon Concert. Leonid Ham
t)ro at the Keyboard.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Audio
Networks: Zone 23 with host
Jackie Apple; 3:00, Pacifica Radio
News Afternoon Report; 3:30,
American Indian Airwaves with
Liz Lloyd; 4:00, Open time; 5:00,
Voice of the Barrio - Produced by
Frank Hernandez of KPFK's Latin
American Collective; 5:55, Calen-
dar,
6:00 The Evening rOews.
6:45 Open Journal. Roy Ulrich
hosts
7:30 Psychology for the People.
Steve Portugues hosts.
8:30 Imaginary Landscape. Carl
Stone hosts.
10:30 In Fidelity. Peter Sutheim
hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Centerstand. Motorcycle
talk with Dick, Roy, Margaret and
Diane at the throttle.
1:30 Something's Happening!
Spoken arts.
2 2 Wednesday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music From
the Hearts of Space: Meditative
music, often electronic, produced
at KPFA, Berkeley.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 7:15, Jeff Horton;
9:00, Read All About It; 9:25,
Calendar.
9:30 Independent Music. Mario
Casetta, that great partisan of Irish
music, is still in the Emerald Isle
replenishing his supply of Irish
music. Before leaving he prepared
a tape of some wonderful records.
These include The Clancy Brothers
on Vanguard Records, Tommy
Maken and Liam Clancy on Black-
bird Records (Dublin), The Chief-
tans-10 on Shanachie Records and
Celtic singing from Robin William-
son of Flying Fish Records, A Glint
at the Kindling. Also watch for
Mulligan and Banshee Records!
11:30 Morning Reading. The Starr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Journey
Through the Realms of Music: The
guest is Frank Campo, contempo-
rary composer. Bill Davila hosts.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Artist-
photographer Monticello, who re-
cently opened his own gajlery, talks
about the established art communi-
ty in the downtown area, and a new
trend towards individual galleries in
Hollywood; 3:00, Pacifica Radio
News Afternoon Report; 3:30,
Feminist Magazine with Helene
Rosenbluth; 5:00, Movement L.A.
with Avis and Mark Ridley Thomas;
5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Senior Citizen's Report.
James Burford of Americans for
6:45 Senior Citizen's Report.
James Burford of Americans for
Democratic Action hosts.
7:00 Family Tree. Sylvester Ri
vers hosts
8:00 Spirit Flight. African World
Music, interviews, news and occa-
sional open phones. Featured to-
night is a speech by Angela Davis
made in March 1983 at San Fernan-
do Valley College. Want to know
where she's coming from now?-
Listen in. Kwaku Lynn hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Alan Watts on "Beyond Theology"
part 1 of 3. Krishnamurti speaks.
Open to 6.
23 Thursday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music acous-
tic and eclectic. Mary Aldin hosts.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 9:00, Read All About
It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 The Nixon Tapes. Tom Nixon
hosts.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/>e Sfarr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Chapel,
Court & Countryside: Early classi-
cal music with host Joseph Spencer.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Theatre
Close-Up with Stefan Tatar; 2:30,
Speaking of Seniors with Grace Ja-
cobs; 3:00, Pacifica Radio News
Afternoon Report; 3:30, Middle
East in Focus with Michel Bogopol-
sky and Sarah Mardell; 4:15. Por-
traits of the U.S.S.R. with Suzi
Weissman; 5:00, The Wizard
Show "Missions to the Asteroids,"
Neal Hulkower, JPL-Shel Plotkin
and Bob Nelson host; 5:55, Calen-
dar.
6:00 The Evening News.
PROGRAMACION EN ESPANOL
6:45 Noticiero Pacifica.
7:15 Flor y Canto.
8:15 Nuestra Comunidad Latina.
9:15 Voz V Raiz de Latinoameri-
cana.
10:15 America Latina en Marcha.
(See June 2 for descriptions)
11:00 Janus Co. Radio Theatre.
Jan and Mallory Geller present
June FOLIO PAGE 16
repertory radio drama, usually
live, produced especially for KPFK.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Rebroadcast of Elliott Mintz' visit
from last year.
24 Friday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. We Call It
Music: folk-country from Jim
Seely.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Amelia Airwaves. A mix of
folk, jazz and popular music selec-
ted by Susan Kernes.
11:30 Morning Reading. The Starr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality,
read by Mario Casetta
12:00 Noon Concert. Soundboard:
Classical art music of the guitar,
lute and other instruments with
soundboards, produced by John
Schneider.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Special
programming; 2:30, Intergay—a
weekly syndicated report with host
David Wynyard; 3:00, Pacifica
Radio News Afternoon Report;
3:30, Newswatch; 4:30, Just a
Minute with Nancy Hollander and
Blase Bonpane alternating weekly;
5:30, The Iron Triangle with Gor-
don Adams; 5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Open Journal.
7:00 The Health Department. Al
Huebner hosts
8:00 Le Jazz Hot & Cool. John
Breckow hosts.
10:00 Hour 25. Science Fiction
with Mike Model.
12:00 Straight, No Chaser. Jazz
with Jay Green
2:00 Music, Inc. Pearl Shelby
hosts
25 Saturday
6:00 Genesis of a Music. Music of
the 12lh through 20th centuries,
both national and international, ex-
ploring roots and influence, causes
and effect. David Porter hosts.
8:30 Folk Music. John Davis hosts
10:30 Halfway Down the Stairs.
Uncle Ruthie hosts this program
that is NOT for children only.
11:30 Ballads, Banjoes and Blue-
grass. Tom Sauber hosts.
12:25 Calendar.
12:35 The Car Show. John Retsek
and Len Frank host. Open phones
2:00 African Roots. Traditional
and contemporary continental Afri
can music. Sheiron Allen hosts.
4:00 Sounds of Jamaica. Miss Wire
Waist plays reggae with requests
and dedications
6:00 The Saturday Night News.
6:30 On Film. Dean Cohen hosts.
7:00 On Stage. Lawrence Christon
hosts.
7:30 Up From the Ashgrove. Ed
Pearl produces this music sampler
that has in the past played pro
grams on Yiddish, mod rock, poli-
tical punk, jazz and folk music.
9:00 Land of a Thousand Dances.
Jimmy Hori hosts, with funk, soul,
reggae, old Motown and dance
music.
12:00 12 O'clock Rock. Where do
they sell underground records any-
way' The following stores are
recommended by Andrea 'Enthal:
Poo Bah, Pasadena; Vinyl Fetish,
Hollywood; Arons, Hollywood
(cheaper prices than Fetish but
they get the records later); Middle
Earth, Downey; Zed, Long Beach.
Half-recommended; Moby Disc,
Sherman Oaks or the West Valley
(high prices, snotty salesmen, and
limited selection make this store
recommended only if you can't
get out of the valley).
26 Sunday
6:00 Gospel Caravan. Black gospel
with brother Prince Dixon.
9:00 National Security. Ian Mas
ters hosts
11:00 Dorothy Ray Healey. Social
ist Commentary.
12:00 Many Worlds of Music.
Mario Casetta presents Greek re-
gional music recorded in Sweden
(!) on Caprice label, supported by
the Swedish government. Also: we
hear from the Aman Folk Ensemble
with recorded music from the
Balkans. (Mario is due back in L.A.
from Ireland today, and will be
with you live tomorrow at 9:30
a.m., doubtless with some Irish
goodies!).
1:00 The Sunday Opera. Tenor of
the Times (1-1:30): Host Fred
Hyatt repeats his July 1976 Bicen
tennial Tribute to American tenors
of note. At 1 : 30- Verc//.- La Travia-
ta with Sutherland, Pavarotti and
the National Philharmonic Orches-
tra and Chorus, conducted by
Richard Bonynge. Fred Hyatt has
pencilled in his first go at the new
compact disc technology for this
afternoon.
5:00 East Windd. Chinese Ameri-
can Mothers and Daughters: Bound
and Unbound Feet- looks at
mother-daughter relationships from
Western, traditional Chinese, and
Chinese American perspectives. Dr.
Feelie Lee is interviewed by Susie
Ling. Miya Iwataki produced.
6:00 The Sunday Evening News.
6:30 The Science Connection.
Steve and Vera Kilston with the
latest science news and views.
7:00 Preachin' the Blues. Sixty
years of recorded black gospel,
blues, and boogie woogie. Mary
Aldin hosts.
8:30 IMRU. The IMRU Gay/
Lesbian news report, features, and
calendar.
9:30 Folkscene. A program of tra-
ditional and contemporary folk mu-
sic, featuring live music, inter-
views with the performers, and the
finest in recorded folk music. This
evening's special guests are Tom
Ball and Kenny Sultan.
12:00 Smoke Rings. Six hours of
jazz and commentary with John
Breckow.
27 Monday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Voices of
the Dawn: A live concert with
Elliot Pilshaw and Lorin Sklam-
berg, in celebration of Lesbian/
Gay Pride Week in Los Angeles.
This is part four of the "Music
of the Heart & Mind Concert
Series."
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 7:15, Inquiries; 7:30,
News Check-In: interviews, fea-
tures, etc.; 8:30, Newscast: an ex-
tended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Foikdance with Mario!!
11:30 Morning Reading. r/)eSfa/T-
June FOLIO PAGE 17
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Music of the
Americas Jeannie Pool hosts,
2:00 Alan Watts. "Whose is the
Kingdom, Power & Glory" part 4,
concluding. Tapes from MEA, Box
303, Sausalito, CA. 94965.
3:00 The Afternoon Air. Pacifica
Radio News Afternoon Report:
From our National News Service in
A/ash ington and from our corres-
pondents around the country and
the world, a comprehensive report
on the events of the day; 3:30,
Organic Gardening with Will Kin-
ney and Barbara Spark; 4:30,
Consider the Alternatives; 5:00,
Consumer Awareness with Ida
Honorof; 5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Commentary.
7:00 Labor Scene. Sam Kushner
hosts.
7:30 Chapel, Court & Countryside.
Early classical music with host Jo-
seph Spencer.
9:00 Blue Monday Edition: The
Johnny Otis Show.
11:00 On Radio. Ray Richmond
hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Alan Watts "Beyond Theology"
part 2. Krishnamurti speaks. Open
to 6.
28 Tuesday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music in
Black-The Classic Image: Black
classical musicians of all genres,
from the 1700's to the present
day. John Patton and Barbara
Sherrill host.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 9:00, Read All About
It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Folkscene. Music from the
British Isles and Ireland is fea-
tured today, with host Roz Lar
man. For the second hour, Howard
Larman and his special guests
from Scotland-Ossian.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/)e Sfa/T
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by
Mario Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Leonid Ham-
bro at the Keyboard
2:00 The Afternoon Air. "Cattle
Drive' by Richard Dresser. Bunk
Ward is rebounding from one of the
worst streaks of bad luck this side
of Pecos. He lost his horse and his
wife in a poker game, and now he
can't seem to get his son Emeritus
into puberty. But Bunk has sold
his herd and now has enough of a
stake to get a new start and pur
chase a dose of manhood for his
son at the local bawdy house. Di-
rected byDavid L. Krebs. Cast: Bill
Jackson, Thomas D. Walker, Rob
Monroe, Jan Hennigan, Jack Bar-
ren, Gregg A. Roebuck, Dale Al
an Cooke and Chrlstofer Sands as
Bennett C. Bennett. Piano player:
Michael Abrams. Harmonica solo
ist: Kanan Fischman. Sound effects
artists: Louise Coffey, William Ber-
kuta, Eugene Shaw and David L.
Krebs; 3:00, Pacifica Radio News
Afternoon Report; 3:30, Open
time; 4:00,
Afternoon Report; 3:30, Open
time; 4:00, Cambridge Forum:
Produced by the Unitarian Uni
versalist Society, this program
features addresses and debates on
current political and philosophical
issues, with host Reverend Phillip
Zwerling; 5:00, Catch 222: Grow-
ing Up in L.A. Schools with Jeff
Horton; 5:55, Calendar
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Open Journal. Roy Ulrich
hosts.
7:30 Prescription for Survival.
Dr. Bob Rufsvold of Physicians for
Social Responsibility hosts.
8:30 Imaginary Landscape. Carl
Stone hosts.
10:50 In Fidelity. Peter Sutheim
hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Centerstand.
1:30 SofTiething's Happening!
29 Wednesday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music From
the Hearts of Space: Meditative niu
sic, often electronic, produced at
KPFA, Berkeley
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna
tional events; 7:15, CPUSA; 7:30,
News Check-In: interviews, fea-
tures, etc.; 8:30, Newscast: an ex-
tended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 Independent Music. Mario
Casetta hosts.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/7e Sfarr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Journey
Through the Realms of Music:
The guest is David Bradfield, elec-
tronic composer. Bill Davila hosts.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. The
AmerAsia Bookstore and Gallery
was established in the early 1970's
as a collective for-profit endeavor
which would both provide books,
arts & crafts not available at other
stores and provide a means of sur
vival for those who worked for the
store. AmerAsia founders and cur
rent owners talk about why there
was and still is a need for a specifi-
cally Asian bookstore and gallery,
and about programs they are plan-
ning in the future. Miya Iwataki
hosts; 3:00, Pacifica Radio News
Afternoon Report; 3:30, Feminist
Magazine with Helene Rosenbluth;
5:00, Movement L.A. with Avis
and Mark Ridley-Thomas; 5:55,
Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
6:45 Senior Citizen's Report.
James Burford of Americans for
Democratic Action hosts.
7:00 Family Tree. Sylvester Riv-
ers hosts.
8:00 Spirit Flight. African World
Music, interviews, news, discus-
sions. Featured tonight is a contro-
versial speech by Kwame Toure
(Stokely Carmichael) at the UCLA
Law School in May. There will
be open phones. Kwaku Lynn
hosts.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
"The Graveyard Shift" with Dudley
Knight. Open to 6.
30 Thursday
6:00 Sunrise Concert. Music a'cous
tic and eclectic. Mary Aldin hosts.
7:00 Morning Magazine. News: the
latest local, national and interna-
tional events; 7:15, Commentary;
June FOLIO PAGE 18
Dave Lower/, a KPFK volunteer, has submitted some original cartoons for publication in the Folio. As space permits we will pub-
lish these enlightening cartoons. Thanks Dave!
7:30, News Check-In: interviews,
features, etc.; 8:30, Newscast: an
extended report; 9:00, Read All
About It; 9:25, Calendar.
9:30 The Nixon Tapes. Tom Nixon
hosts.
11:30 Morning Reading. r/)e Sfarr-
Weiner Report on Sex & Sexuality
in the Mature Years, read by Mario
Casetta.
12:00 Noon Concert. Chapel,
Court & Countryside: Early classi-
cal music with host Joseph Spencer.
2:00 The Afternoon Air. Theatre
Close-Up with Stefan Tatar; 2:30,
Media Rare with Paul Lion; 3:00,
Pacifica Radio News Afternoon Re-
port; 3:30, Inside Z../4.- Explores
the public policy landscape of So.
California's natural and built en-
vironments-Bob Pugsley hosts;
4:15, Portraits of the U.S.S.R.
with Suzi Weissman; 5:00, The
Wizard Show— "Urban Coyote, "
Steven Slap and Lori Paul, Hu-
man Civic Assn. and Sierra Club-
Bob Nelson and Shel Plotkin
host; 5:55, Calendar.
6:00 The Evening News.
PROGRAMACION EN ESPANOL
6:45 Noticiero Pacifica.
7:15 Flor y Canto.
8:15 Nuestra Comunidad Latina.
9:15 Voz y Raiz de Latinoameri-
cana.
10:15 America Latina en Marcha.
(See June 2 for description)
11:00 Janus Co. Radio Theatre.
Repertory radio drama, usually
live, written and produced especial
ly for KPFK. Jan and Mallory Cel-
lar host.
11:30 The Late Night News.
12:00 Something's Happening!
Open phones.
^.s
June FOLIO PAGE 19
The Car Show
Garage List
Ever since the first Garage List
appeared in the June 1978 Folio,
we've had a steady stream of re-
quests (usually desperate) for cop-
ies of it. At first, we sent out our
extra Folios. We ran out of those,
and began sending out photocopies
of the paste-up, which certainly de-
feated the purpose of getting a
sample Folio into the hands of non-
subscribing listeners! Now, five
years later we again offer a newly
revised version from producers
John and Len and staff. KPFK
would like to take this opportu-
nity to thank John Retsek, Len
Frank and Jim Kraus for all the
energy, enthusiasm and time which
they contribute to us via their pro-
gram, and to you via us. We think
it's the epitome of community
radio!
John and Len's Standard Dis-
claimer: these shops are recommen-
ded by the Car Show listeners as
well as by us. No endorsement by
KPFK is intended or implied, no re-
muneration has been solicited or re-
ceived. The list will have additions
and deletions at the discretion of
The Car Show. Now, the non-stan-
dard disclaimer: not only has no re-
muneration been received, but most
of the shops listed are unaware of
KPFK, the list. The Car Show, the
day of the week, etc. You might
mention it to them. It may get you
better service, a puzzled stare, per
haps worse.
Please notice that the list has
been codified. The subject titles are
mine (Len's) and, as usual, arbitrary
but with some forethought. For in-
stance, American car mechanics are
more familiar with domestic cars
per se. than, say, an Audi mechanic
would be with a Mazda rotary. The
list IS woefully incomplete and no
doubt will remain so. No slight has
been intended. Please equate omis-
sions with simple ignorance. We will
make additions and corrections as
they are received.
This list is only one resource.
Car clubs are mentioned. Check
with other owners. Ask advice of
teachers of public school auto
shops. Don't forget that sometimes
they will work on cars in school
too. Learn as much about your car
as you can. It may seem bewilder-
ing at first, but it's really just a col-
lection of simple mechanical princi-
ples. Remember, grease is fun.
DOMESTIC SERVICE
Batway's Automotive
10202 Topanga Cyn. Blvd.
Chatsworth 341-2715
Corvair, general domestic.
Raabe's Garage
81 1 S. Fairview Ave.
So. Pasadena 799-3225
Best & Fast Automotive
1502 So. Robertson
LA 276-1172
Two Brothers Automotive
10406 Burbank Blvd.
No. Hywd. 980 4408
Bill & Ken's Auto Repair
2418 Lincoln Blvd.
Venice 399-0861
Culver Motor Clinic
10707 Jefferson Blvd.
Culver City 838-7395
All cars.
Joe's Automotive Service
140 B Prospect Ave
Burbank 842-4542
Domestic only.
Wayne's Automotive
337 W. Manchester Blvd.
Inglewood 677 8886
AK Miller's Garage
9225 E. Slauson
Pico Rivera 949-8333
949-2548 (engineering)
ISE Automotive
1776 Hillhurst
Hollywood 663-8013
Excellent, fair prices
Prince Chrysler-Plymouth
1030 W. Manchester
Inglewooa 641-351 1
Dealer
Howard Iten's Tune-up
4559 Artesia Blvd.
Lawndale 370-2545
Excellent, busy, call first Some
imports.
Looney Tuners
8735 Delgany Ave.
Playa Del Rey 823-2722
Mobile repair service & do-it-
yourself instruction.
Lou Pastel Automotive
4744 Woodman Ave.
Sherman Oaks 986 9771
All domestic, some import.
Good quality, good service.
Carburetor Shop
2945 Randolf
Costa Mesa (714) 642-8286 '
Any carb problem expertly solved.
Fremont & Purdon
836 Orange Grove Blvd.
Pasadena 792 5218
All cars.
Chapman Park Auto Service
249 S. Oxford Ave.
LA 389 1774
Huntington Auto Service
610 Mam Street
Huntington Beach
(714)536-2507
Good ol' garage/body shop
general service, repair.
June FOLIO PAGE 20
Martin & P.liller
1108 Hollywoofl Way
Burbank 762 3851 , 849 1988
Listener recommendation. Free
pick-up and delivery, diesel spe-
cialist.
The 'Vomen's Garage
7249 Dcerinq Ave.
Canoga Park 884 5983
Mases Arco
4506 Lankershim
No. Hollywood 766 8050
GENERAL IMPORT SERVICE
JMO of America
133 S. Euclid St.
Fullerton (714) 7380621
Japanese cars only.
Lou Pastel Automotive
4744 Woodman Ave.
Sherman Oaks 986 9771
AH domestic, some import.
Good quality, good sen/ice.
Batway's Automotive
10202 Topanga Cyn. Blvd.
Chatsworth 341-2715
Best & Fast Automotive
1502 So. Robertson Blvd.
LA 276-1172
Two Brothers Automotive
10406 Burbank Blvd.
No. Hywd. 980-4404
Bill & Ken's Auto Repair
2418 Lincoln Blvd.
Venice 3990861
John's Imported Car Service
1 So. Milpas
Santa Barbara (805) 962-8511
Saab & general imports.
Howard Iten's Tune-up
4559 Artesia Blvd.
Lawndale 370-2545
Excellent, busy, call first
Some imports.
Bates Import Auto Repair
781 W. Lacadena Dr.
Riverside (714") 684-0605
John's Imported Car Service
3627 Foothill Blvd.
LaCrescenta 248 1621
ISE Automotive
1776Hillhurst
Hollywood 663 8013
Competent, fair, friendly.
Sheehan's Foreign Car
1945 Placentia
Costa Mesa (714) 642 5133
Looney Tuners
8735 Delgany Ave.
Plays Del Rey 823-2722
Mobile repair service & do-it-
yourself instruction.
South Bay Foreign Car Repair
22857 Arlington Ave
Torrance 325-2466
Kishi Brothers
11608 Venice Blvd.
LA 397 0059
Martin & Miller
1108 Hollywood Way
Burbank 762 3851 , 849 1988
Listener recommendation.
Free pick-up and delivery.
The Women's Garage
7249 Deering Ave.
Canoga Park 884-5983
Japanese Cars
121 1 Trenton Ave.
Orange (714) 633-5475
CHRYSLER/PLYMOUTH/DODGE
Claude Short Dodge
1 127 Santa Monica Blvd.
Santa Monica 395-3211
Barish Chrysler/Plymouth
444 S La Brea Ave.
LA 933 5501
Pasadena Chrysler/Plymouth
2965 E. Colorado Blvd.
Pasadena 449-0121
CORVAIR
The garages below like to work on
CorvairsI
Frank Faller
4357 Woodman Ave.
Sherman Oaks 783-1330
Also VW and Porsche.
Howard Iten's Tune-up
4559 Artesia Blvd.
Lawndale 370 2545
Excel len t, busy, call first.
Some imports.
Smith's for Chevs
11508 0xnard
No. Hywd. 761 2124
Batway's Automotive
10202 Topanga Cyn. Blvd.
Chatsworth 341 2715
CORVETTE
Dick Guldstrand Engineering
11924 Jefferson
Culver City 398-9118
Corvette wizard. Highly recom-
mended.
ALFA
Diro Alfa
1414 Pacific Coast Hwy.
Harbor City 539-5582
Best dealer service.
JAFCO
1710 Pomona St., unit A3
Costa Mesa (714) 548-1236
Excellent Appointment only.
Ward & Deane Racing
Manchester & Bellanca
LA 649-5369
Part time. Special preparation and
general repair. Call first.
Alfa Milano, Inc.
1660 S. La Cienega Blvd.
LA 652 2404
Excellent. Some Ferrari w/ork.
Veloce Motors West
1647 Sepulveda No. 4
Torrance 539-0700
Special preparation & general repair
Alfa West
3033 Long Beach Blvd.
Long Beach 595 7281
Former Alfa National Service Direc-
tor.
BVA
1522 Broadway
Santa Monica 393-9889
June FOLIO PAGE 21
AUDI
Broadway Service Garage
1404 East Broadway
Long Beach 436 6495
Most German cars.
International Motors
1079 E. Wardlow Rd.
Long Beach 595 1869
Rosecrans Auto Haus
2605 Artesia Blvd.
Redondo Beach 371 3321
No 90 or 100 LS.
Audi House
1502 W. Anaheim
Harbor City 325 3605
Audi/BMW/Porsche
BMC-BRITISH-NOT JAGUAR
The Import Auto Cobbler
2739Gundry Ave.
Signal Hill 426-5656
Jensen-Healey , BL, & performance
work.
So. Bay Imported Car Service
640 Torrance Blvd.
Redondo Beach 316-2485
Sheehan's Foreign Car
1945Placentia
Costa Mesa (714) 642-5133
Frank Monise Sports Cars
1843 E. Walnut
Pasadena 795 8741
Specialty & regular work.
T & H Import Service
7217 Geyser Ave.
Reseda 343 41 12
Lotus/British
British Automotive, Ltd.
579 Garfield, Eugene, Or
(503) 484 2043
Believe it or not: Morris Minor/
Parts Catalog/Restoration.
John Willburn
11423Gradwell St.
Lake wood 865 2910
Fanatical Morgan Service.
Austin Healey Enterprises
8728 Van Alden Ave.
Northridge 9930867
Herb's
81 OW Commonwealth Ave.
Fullerton (714) 525 8261
Listener recommendation.
Brittania Auto Service
2715 Lincoln Blvd.
Santa Monica 3959166, 452 3981
Listener recommendation.
Autowerkes
7452 Talbert
Huntington Beach (714) 842-2277
Listener recommendation.
MG— Triumph
12725 San Fernando Rd. (in back)
Sylmar 362 5535
BMW
Wagonmeister II
1311 So. Glendale Ave.
Glendale 243 7600
BDS European
5040 Lincoln Ave.
Cypress (714) 827-8850
(213) 598-1051
Good friends, good mectianics.
Cesar's Auto Repair
1527 Broadway
Santa Monica 394-61 16
Bert's Foreign Car Service
518 E. 2nd St.
Santa Ana (714) 543-0815
Rick Nelson BMW (Independent)
7121 Alabama Ave.
Canoga Park 346-9363
Audi House
1502 W. Anaheim
Harbor City 325-3605
Audi/BMW/Porsche.
Broadway Service Garage
1404 E. Broadway
Long Beach 436 6495
Good German car service.
Los Alamitos Motors
3570 E. Cerritos Ave.
Los Alamitos 431 -2594
Auto Mechanika
4330 Woodman Ave.
Sherman Oaks 788-3386
Listener recommendation.
Quality Motors
529 N. Pacific Coast Hwy.
Redondo Beach 374 3279
Listener recommendation.
Eddie Meyer Engineering
646 N. LaPoer
W. Hollywood 652-5482
Expert fuel injection and other
work.
Peugeot/BMW Service Center
20944 Van Owen
Canoga Park 999-4300
Listener recommendation.
Platti German Car
442 S. Raymond
Pasadena 681-2599
DATSUN (See NISSAN/DATSUN)
EXOTIC/RARE
Don Runnall's Citroen
3003 Pico Blvd.
Santa Monica 828-7542
Old people, new people, SM &
Maserati service too.
Overseas Garage
2435 E. Anaheim
Long Beach 434-9627
Borgward.
Jack Sanders Citroen
8145 So. Byron
Whittier 693-0177
Racing Services West
338A E. Carson
Carson 835 7398
Exceptional mechanical & machine
work for exotics.
Bill Rudd Motors
14326 Oxnard St.
Van Nuys 988 7833
What was good enough for Harrah's
should be good enough . . .
Vintage Racing Service
14600 Arminta (in rear)
Van Nuys 787 3520 (x 39)
June FOLIO PAGE 22
Challenger Motors
6065 Melrose
4666622
Excellent Citroen
service.
& Maserati
Gorden Imports
14330 Isei
Santa Fe Springs 802 1 608
Amphicar.
Ital Meccanica
15562 Producer Lane
Huntington Beach (714) 893-5096
Fiat/Lancia-Ferrari- LamboMaser.
Dave Bean Engineering
925 Punta Gorda
Santa Barbara (805) 962 8125
Lotus/JensenHealey /Aston Martin/
other British.
Import Auto Center
2739Gundry Ave.
Signal Hill 426-5656
Lotus.
FIAT
Two Brothers Automotive
10406 Burbank Blvd.
No. Hywd. 980-4408
Scandia Auto Imports
14021 E. Whittier Blvd.
Whittier 698-0547
Good dealer service.
Giani's Ital-car Garage
24505 Hawthorne
Torrance 373-4406
Actually ASKS for Lancia.
Fiat Joe Italian Imports
5601 Pacific Blvd.
Huntington Park 588 6056
PBS Engineering
11602 Anabel St.
Garden Grove (714) 534-6700
Engine & chassis modifications for
current Fiat & Lancia. Street &
Racing.
Ital Meccanica
15562 Producer Lane
Huntington Beach (714) 893-5096
HONDA
Bill Krause Honda
5208 W. Centinela
Westchester 649 2440
Good dealer service.
Valley Auto Works
21444 Ingomar St.
CanogaPark 999 0210
Highly recommended.
Pacific Honda
4697 Convoy St
San Diego (714) 565-8022
Good dealer service.
Ask for Rick Blakemore.
Modesti's Independent Repair
12205 Jefferson Blvd.
Culver City 827-2400
Honda is all they independently re-
pair.
Japan Auto Parts & Engine Rebuild
239 W. 15th
LA 748-6188
Excellent.
Hollywood Honda
651 1 Santa Monica Blvd.
Hollywood 466-3251
Good dealer service.
Loesche's
177 S. Patterson
Santa Barbara (805) 967-3873
MAZDA/COURIER
Sunrise Automotive
4438 Manhattan Beach Blvd.
Lawndale 371-4626
Rotary repair, other Japanese.
RE Automotive Specialties
10711 Garden Grove Blvd.
Garden Grove (714) 638-1622
Richard Werren Mazda
910 E. Whittier Blvd.
La Habra 694-3655
Good dealer.
Import Auto Cobbler
2739 Gundry Ave.
Signal Hill 426-5656
Lotus/Rotary Mazda, BMC.
Regular repair and modification.
Racing Beat
1291 Hancock
Anaheim (714) 779-8677
Rotary engine modifications, RX 7
modifications.
JAGUAR
Ed West
1941 Jan Marie Place
Tustin (714) 832-2683
Jaguar parts, service, restoration.
Britannia Auto Service
2715 Lincoln Blvd.
Santa Monica 395 9166, 452-3981
Listener recommendation.
So. Bay Imported Car Service
640 Torrance Blvd.
Redondo Beach 316-2485.
Over 30 years same location.
British receptionist!
MERCEDES BENZ
Broadway Service Garage
1404 E. Broadway
Long Beach 436-6495
Eddie Meyer Engineering
646 No. LaPeer
W. Hywd. 652-5482
Expert fuel injection work & every-
thing else. Other "exotics."
Wagonmeister II
1311 S. Glendale Ave.
Glendale 243-7600
Highly recommended.
Siegfried's Foreign Auto Repair
10527 Santa Monica Blvd.
LA 474-4315
Silver Star Motors
1433 W. Pac. Coast Hwy.
Harbor City 530-0593
Excellent Mercedes service includ-
ing diesels, especially late models.
W. I. Simonson
1626 Wilshire Blvd.
Santa Monica 870-4841
Good dealer service.
June FOLIO PAGE 23
Los Alamitos Motors
3570 E. Cerritos Ave.
Los Alamitos 431 2594
Auto Mechanika
4330 Woodman Ave.
Sherman Oaks 788 3386
Listener recommendation.
Platti German Car
442 S. Raymond
Pasadena 681 2599
NISSAN/DATSUN
JMO of America
133 So Euclid St.
Fullerton (714) 738 0621
Higt)ly recommended.
Overseas Garage
2435 E. Anaheim
Long Beach 434 9627
Borgward too.
Japan Auto Parts & Engine Rebuild
239 W. 15th
LA 748 6188
Excellent.
Sunrise Automotive
4438 Manhattan Beach Blvd.
Lawndale 371-4626
Marina Z
2101 Lincoln Blvd. '
Venice 822 3895
Datsun Z cars only.
OPEL (Not Isuzu)
Butlln Buick
19350 Sherman Way
Reseda 342 3111
Ask for Tony.
PEUGEOT
Henry's Garage
7022 Canby Ave.
Reseda 343 7284
Highly recommended.
Import Auto Sales
1460 Long Beach Blvd.
Long Beach 599 3536
Good dealer.
Helane Motors
1420 Valley Blvd.
Alhambra 289 9121
Wagonmeister II
1311 S. Glendale Ave.
Glendale 243 7600
Still recommended.
BZ Imports
410 Main St.
Huntington Beach
(714) 960 5481
Good dealer.
Danny's Auto Service
301 N. Victory Blvd.
Burbank 842 6808
Listener recommendation.
So. Bay Imported Car
640 Torrance Blvd.
Redondo Beach 316-2485
Peugeot/BMW Service Center
20944 Van Owen
Canoga Park 999 4300
Listener recommendation.
PORSCHE
Lomita Porsche Service
26122 So. Western Ave.
Lomita 534-3631
Wagonmeister I!
1311 S. Glendale Ave.
Glendale 243-7600
Audi House
1502 W. Anaheim
harbor City 325 3605
A udi/BM W /Porsche.
North American Racing Works
7355 Canby Ave.
Reseda 881 1222
John's Place
1136 E. Willow
Signal Hill 433 1777
Andial Porsche
3207 S. Shannon
Santa Ana (714) 957-3900
Edelweiss Porsche
19070 Hawthorne Blvd.
Torrance 542 6611
Diro Alfa/Porsche
1414 Pac. Coast Hwy.
Harbor City 539-5582
Broadway Service Garage
1404 E. Broadway
Long Beach 436-6495
Good German car service.
Siegfried's Foreign Auto Repair
10527 Santa Monica Blvd.
LA 474 4315
FAT Performance
1450 N. Glassel
Orange (714) 639-2833
RENAULT
Henry's Garage
7022 Canby Ave.
Reseda 343-7284
BZ Imports
410 Main St.
Huntington Bch.
(714)960-5481
Danny's Auto Service
301 N. Victory Blvd.
Burbank 842 6808
Specializes in Le Car (R5).
Orange Coast AMC/Renault
2524 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa (714) 549 8023
Division Imports
819 S. Brand Blvd.
Glendale 241-5101
Bob Brown Motors
8835 Cuyamaca St.
Santee (619) 448-6757
SAAB
Lars Bjorkquist
1276 University
San Diego (714) 299-1244
Scandia Auto Imports
14021 E. Whittier Blvd.
Whittier 698-0547
Best dealer service reported to us.
Import Motor Works
1651 No. Serrano
LA 463-3412
Swedish American Imports
1635 Ohms Way
Costa Mesa 1714) 646-7731
Excellent, including turbo. Also
Porsche Turbo and RR.
June FOLIO PAGE 24
Auto Mechanlka
4330 Woodman Ave.
Sherman Oaks 788 3386
Listener recommendation.
Herb's
Blow. Commonwealth Ave.
Fullerton (714) 525 8261
Listener recommendation.
TOYOTA
JMO of America
133 So. Euclid
Fullerton (714) 738-0621
Sunrise Automotive
4438 Manhattan Beach Blvd.
Lawndale 371-4626
Japan Auto Parts
& Engine Rebuild
239 W. 15th St.
LA 748 6188
Excellent.
Kishi Brothers
11608 Venice Blvd.
LA 397-0059
VW
Emil's VW Service
1525 W. Burbank Blvd.
Burbank 845-7530
Vlady's Repair
7625 Apperson
Tujunga 352-1115
Balboa Import Garage
7814 Balboa Blvd.
Van Nuys 994-6225
South Bay Foreign Car Repair
22857 Arlington Ave.
Torrance 325-2466
Broadway Service Garage
1404 E. Broadway
Long Beach 436-6495
German Motors
912 E. 4th Street
Long Beach 436-0580
International Motors
1079 E. Wardlow Blvd.
Long Beach 595-1869
Carl & Harry's
2401 E. 10th Street
Long Beach 439-3693
Vladmir's Volkswagen
14724 Hawthorne Blvd.
Lawndale 675 1689
VW Schlosserei
4201 E, Florence Ave.
Bell 773 7615
Rosecrans Auto Haus
2605 Artesia Blvd.
Redondo Beach 371 3321
Wagonmeister II
131 1 So. Glendale Ave.
Glendale 243-7600
George Winkler
Independent Repair of VW
851 E. Thousand Oaks Blvd.
Thousand Oaks (805) 495-0519
FAT Performance
1450 No. Glassel
Orange (714) 639 2833
Regular & specialty work, and
Porsche.
Gerhardt Ehrmann
Bohn Bros. VW
7416 Westminster Ave.
Westminster (714) 898-8500
Siegfried's Foreign Auto Repair
10527 Santa Monica Blvd.
LA 474-4315
Monterey VW Repair
5825 Monterey Rd.
LA 257-3671
Listener recommendation.
A-1 Volkswagen
7957 Van Nuys Blvd.
Van Nuys 894-7075, 785-4112
Free loaners and towing.
B & G Imports
1603 S. La Cienega
LA 276-0854
Listener recommendation.
VOLVO
Volspec Engineering
15929 Clark Ave.
Bellflower 866-3771
Regular & specialty.
Import Service Center
1914 Del Amo Blvd.
Torrunce 328 1981
Ex factory Voico svc.
Highly recommended.
Nilssen Volvo
21436 Incjomar St.
Canoga Park 346 3666
BVA
1522 Broadway
Santa Monica 393-9889
Voivo Service
15620 Inglewood
Manhattan Beach 679-0147
Listener recommendation.
Herb's
810 W. Commonwealth Ave.
Fullerton (714) 5258261
Listener recommendation.
BODY& PAINT
Gordon's Auto Body
638 Torrance Blvd.
Redondo Beach 372-0020
Excellent import.
Leo Sanchez Auto Painting
4061 So, Broadway
LA 234-7184
Excellent.
B & R Auto Body
2755 E. Slauson
Huntington Park 588 3381
Good and reasonable.
Harbor Body Shop
402 W Anaheim
Wilmington 830-6455
Good work, fair prices.
Huntington Auto Services
610 Main Street
Huntington Beach
(714) 536-2507
Good ol' garage /body shop
General service & repair.
DnS Auto Body
12130 Washington Blvd.
Whittier 693- 1020
Porsche/BMW/MBZ/domestics, unit
body specialist, custom work, ex-
cellent painting.
June FOLIO PAGE 25
Quality Auto Painting
27793 Jackson Ave.
Romoland (near Hemet)
(714) 679-8590 (after 6 pm)
Show quality paint at reasonable
prices, worth the trip. Fiberglass
also.
Master Auto Body
1653 11th Street
Santa Monica 450-7155
Alfa/BMW/MBZetc.
MACHINE WORK
M & R Machine & Engine
547 W. Garfield
Glendale 246-4834
High quality machine work &
engine rebuilding.
Anderson's Crank Grinding
5651 Sorrento
Long Beach 439 4359
Portable automotive machine work:
boring, cranks. Restoration work.
Lightning Machine Co.
3420 Hancock
San Diego (619) 295-2212
Import machine work.
Hydrohead
15826 Hawthorne Blvd.
Lawndale 371 7587
Good machine work, fair prices.
Cannon Engineering Co.
10921 Chandler
No. Hywd. 508-0123
Drive shafts, flywheels, general
machine work. Good prices.
Wilcap
2930 W.Sepulveda Blvd.
Torrance 326-9200
Engine adaptors, flywheels, diesel
installations, experimental work.
Kennedy Engineered Products
10202 Glenoaks Blvd.
Pacoima 899-2612
Engine adaptors & mounts.
Bob Mullen & Co.
340 E Carson
Carson 835 0686
Chrysler head specialist, but all
head work is excellent.
PBS Engineering
11602 Anabel Street
Garden Grove (714) 534 6700
Engine &' chassis modifications for
current Fiat & Lancia, street &
racing.
Racing Beat
2020 E. Howell "N"
Anaheim (714) 634 9050
Rotary engine modifications, RX 7
modifications.
Hitchcock Enterprises
2350 E Spring Street
Long Beach 426-6745
Racing quality engine balancing.
Langford Engineering
1226 West 256th Street
Harbor City 539 3333
Design & fabrication of almost any-
thing in metal: special mounts, pul-
leys, turbo installations, manifolds,
etc.
RADIATOR
West Valley Radiator
14136 Oxnard
Van Nuys 782-8231
Special & regular.
Santa Monica Radiator Works
1537 Lincoln Blvd.
Santa Monica 395 2196
Excellent work, including classic
repair.
Balboa Radiators
8804 S. Vermont
LA 752 7797
Atlas Radiator
10122 Norwalk Blvd.
Santa Fe Springs 944 6185
USED PARTS
Used parts are where you find
them. Don't concern yourself too
much with warranties-make sure
you're getting a good one the first
time. Make sure it's the correct
part Know what the part would
cost new to help arrive at the price
used. Try not to use the teletype or
"wire" service. The yards listed
have been fair, or, if not that, they
at least have scarce parts.
General Auto Parts
1361 W. Anaheim
Long Beach 437 7414
VW only.
Les' Auto Salvage
1508 So. Alameda
Compton 774 2832
Huge. VWonly.
Brooks Auto Service
13025 S. Alameda
Compton 638-4144
Used import parts.
Ban Foreign Auto Parts
2101 E. Anaheim
Wilmington 436-9231
Cheap, import only.
A-Kin Auto Salvage
12105 Branford Street
Pacoima 897-3040
Volvo only.
Alpine Foreign Auto Dismantling
337 West Ave. 26
LA 221 3126
BMW only.
Curt's Auto Wrecking
8254 Tujunga
Sun Valley 768-3350
Corvair.
Eberhardt's Tire Center
2335 E. Orangethorpe Ave.
Fullerton (714)871-9810
Used & new tires. Honest & in-
expensive.
Cross Roads Auto Salvage
1241 Riverside
Mira Loma (714) 685-7421
Norm or Paul.
Felling Enterprises
PC. Box 90
Topanga 455-1886
Isetta, Messerschmitt parts-
May have stuff for Honda S-600 &
others.
Ernest Light
102 E. Fondale
Azusa 331-8820
Peugeot 403 parts.
Pit Stop Auto Wrecking
12341 Branford Street
Sun Valley 899 0226
June FOLIO PAGE 26
Marv's
11021 Tuxford Street
Sun Valley 875 2781
Chevrolet only~6 mos. parts war-
ranty.
AIR CONDITIONING
Auto Air Conditioning
325 AlamitosBlvd.
Long Beach 4360709
Regular & special installations & re-
pair work. Tune-ups, brakes.
Sullivan's Speedo & Tach Service
4311 W. Sunset Blvd.
LA 664-4758
Good for air cond. too, including
foreign cars with difficult a/c ser-
vice.
C.C. Cassell's
1142East Ave. J-1
Lancaster (805) 948-2375
Listener recommendation.
Power Unit Exchange
3209 S. Main Street
LA 749-1073
Excellent prices on exchange/re-
built a/c components.
UPHOLSTERY
Interiors by L. Strom
7351 Canby Street
Reseda 705-2410
High ility VW & Porsche.
Pacific Vinyl
8310 Cerritos Ave.
Stanton (714)828-8865
Interiors for mini-trucks, Datsun Z,
do-it-yourself kits, jeep windows.
Ron's Custom Upholstery
520 E. Anaheim
Long Beach 435-3012
Good quality, good prices.
Acme Headlining Co.
550 W. 16th Street
Long Beach 591-3361
Sales only, huge stock.
Robbins Auto Tops
1453 Lincoln Blvd.
Santa Monica 393-2705
Excellent tops: you install, they
install, or have someone do it for
you. Other stuff too.
Rick's Auto Upholstery & Tops
4379 Sunset Blvd.
LA 666 9269
Good work, good prices, but don't
be in a hurry.
Barbara Willburn
5073 Melbourne Dr.
Cypress (714) 828 3127
Morgan upholstery— it's an art.
Nacho's Upholstery
5433 Laurel Canyon
No. Hollyw/ood 985 5825
12443 Victory Blvd.
No. Hollywood 985-9344
Two locations to serve you better-
listener recommendation.
ALIGNMENT /BRAKES/
FRONT END WORK
Sears, Goodyear, Mark C. Bloome,
Fedco, etc., and nearly every new
car dealer aggressively sells "front
end" work. Most of it is unneces-
sary. Your best defense is to read
the shop manual that pertains to
your particular car and make sure
that the sf > checks the car proper-
ly. Especially for American cars it
is possible to use superior after-
market parts (moog, TRW, etc.)
that are better than the factory
parts and may be less expensive as
well.
Replacement of disc brake pads
is quite easy on most cars. The pads
themselves are usually $15 or less
when you buy them at an auto
parts store. Beware unnecessary
replacement of rotors. They seldom
need turning. Again, your manual
is your best friend.
Nate Jones
1865 Redondo
Signal Hill 597-3369
Very high quality work. Specializes
in Mercedes, Porsche, BMW.
Bagge & Son
4155 Sepulveda Blvd.
Culver City 397-7341
The Safety Shop
3007 W. Burbank Blvd.
Burbank 846 1868
Boots & Tommy's
8700 Washington Blvd.
Culver City 839-7506
Red's Frame & Wheel
1631 E. Wilshirc Ave.
Santa Ana (714) 953 9202
Irvine's Alignment Service
24906 S Normandie Ave.
Harbor City 326 6611
Excellent alignment & frame work.
Mo torhomes to racing cars.
Tommy & Son Brakes
5929 Figueroa
LA 255 4849
Listener recommendation.
Dick Cash Alignment
606 W. Broadway
Glendale 247-2779
Listener recommendation.
Spence Auto Alignment
1133 S. Central
Glendale 244-7228
Hollywood Spring & Axle
6009 W. Sunset Blvd.
Hollywood 464-4051
Chapin's Alignment
13438 Telegraph Rd.
Whittier 944 1218
BOOKS /MANUALS/
MAGAZINES /MODELS
Milestone Autobooks
3524 W. Magnolia Blvd.
Burblnk 849-1294
Enormous supply of books, manu-
als, magazines, posters, calendars,
used magazines. Also library ser-
vices and bulletin board.
Motoring World
18746 Sherman Way
Reseda 344-4101
Same as above but much srpaller.
Book City
6627-31 Hollywood Blvd.
Hollywood 466-1049
New & used. Odd manuals.
Everybody's Book Shop
317 W. 6th Street
LA 623-6234
Used & magazine collections.
June FOLIO PAGE 27
RESTORATION
Racing Services West
338A East Carson
Carson 835 7398
One of the best in the world-
Ferrari, Maserati, Delage. Excep-
tional machine & mechanical ser-
vices.
Bill Rudd Motors
14326 Oxnard St.
Van Nuys 988 7833
Superb Ferrari service.
Buchanan's Frame Shop
629 E. Garvey Ave.
Monterey Park 280 4003
Wire wheel construction & repair,
motorcycle frame straightening.
Sebastian Dominguez Coachwofk
23892 Madison St.
Torrance 375 1413
Fine steel & aluminum restoration
and construction.
Racing Restoration, Inc.
1652 W 15th Street
Long Beach
Restoration for pre-war BMW,
Veritas, AFM, AWE. etc.
Austin Healey Enterprises
8728 Van Alden Ave.
Northridge 993-0867
John Willburn
11423GradwellSt.
Lakevifood 865 2910
Fanatical Morgan service.
Barbara Willburn
5073 Melbourne Dr.
Cypress (714) 828-3127
Morgan upholstery— it's an art.
Ed West
1941 Jan Marie Place
Tustin (714) 832 2688
Jaguar— parts-service— restoration.
Del Rey Marine Service
4058 E. Del Rey Ave.
Marina Del Rey 822 2277
Excellent mechanical restoration,
especially Cadillac.
Vintage Racing Service
14600 Arnninta (in rear)
Van Nuys 787-3520 (x 39)
Felling Enterprises
P.O Box 90
Topanga 455 1886
Isetta, Messerschmitt parts-may
have stuff for Honda S 600 and
others.
Weber Specialist
338-4766, after 6 pm
Obsolete Weber carb. service.
Modern too.
British Automotive Ltd.
579 Garfeild
Eugene, Or. (503) 484 2043
Believe it or not: Morris Minor /
parts catalog / restoration.
R. Straman
779 W. 16th Street
Costa Mesa (714) 548-6611
Ferrari roadster conversion, superb
quality restoration.
Mustang Service Center
7465 Coldwater Cyn.
No. Hollywood 765 1196
Complete, serious restoration.
Tom's Auto Restoration
380 S. East End Ave.
Pomona (714) 623-5046
ELECTRIC
Asom Electric
9224 W. Olympic
LA 274 9326
Imports. Excellent.
Hollywood Generator Exchange
5255 Santa Monica Blvd.
Hollywood 663 9316
Good service, import & domestic.
A-B Auto Electric
10960 Moorpark
No. Hywd. 763 8626
Import.
Delta Battery
14300 Oxnard St.
Van Nuys 994 9416
Valley Auto Electrical
2601 W. Mission
Alhambra 282 4656
TIRES
4-Day Tire Stores
All over.
Good prices. Own tire warranty.
Michelin and others.
Wesco
8441 Sepulveda
Van Nuys 894-3700
Specialty tires (Pirelli, P-7 , etc.)
balancing, mounting, specialty
wheels.
Nate Jones
1865 Redondo
Signal Hill 597 3369
Very high quality mounting &
balancing. Nitrogen inflation. Align-
ment
Downey Hi-Performance Tire
872 4th St.
Santa Rosa (707) 527-5920
Mail-order; hi-performance retreads
(P-6, etc.); money-back guarantee.
AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSIONS
Crabtree Automatics
4307 W. Magnolia Blvd.
Burbank 845-9117
Atlas Transmissions
5046 Lincoln Ave.
Cypress (714) 826-9500
Stu's A. E. Transmissions
5531 Cherry Ave.
Long Beach 428-4641
Ace Transmissions
2641 Crenshaw
LA 737 4115
Over-the-counter or installed. Try
getting a wholesale price.
Atlas Transmissions
3707 W 190th Street
Torrance 532-3717
In addition to Cypress.
Russ' Transmission
7254Woodley
Van Nuys 994-0394
June FOLIO PAGE 28
SPECIAL SUPPLIERS
& SERVICES
Perfect Wheel
nil W ElSegundo
Gardena 756-9512
Make or modify disc wheels for any
car or truck.
Auto Haus
6460 Dale Street
BuenaPark (714) 521 5120,
(213) 941 5007
Stores all over. Call for locations.
VW parts & accessories, on & off
road.
Bell Equipment Co.
4400 N. Figueroa St,
LA 221-0272
Fox Valley tools & other equip-
ment.
Bruce MacLean
21 Park Ave.
Venice 392 4308
Parts for older Jags & Triumphs,
advice, semi-friendly counsel.
Datsun Competition Parts
190th St. & Harbor Fwy.
Dick Roberts, Director
532-3111
Just like Paul Newman uses.
Mueller Fabrications
7251 Garden Grove Blvd.
(714) 891-9555
Flywheels, clutches, headers, etc.
for British & others.
M.G. Mitten
44 S. Chester
Pasadena 681-4531
Auto stuff.
Vilem Haan
10305 Santa Monica Blvd.
West LA 272-6688
More!
Parts & Polish
12952 Washington Blvd.
LA 306-5366
Opel, BMW, Datsun, Porsche, high
performance & regular parts, Weber
kits for Opel & BMW, information.
Clearinghouse for slalom info.
Globe Engines
1153N. Stanford
LA 770-2577
Vega engine rebuilds.
Exoticar
14312 Mansel Ave.
Law/ndale 970 0127
Early Alfa parts.
Glendale Auto Detail
316 E. Maple
Glendale 242 7203
Deluxe wash/wax & Armour-All;
listener recommendation.
Profitt Restorations
1652 W, 15th Street
Long Beach 432-7282
Vintage racing restorations, alumi-
num body repair, obsolete parts
and info for obsolete imports;
Skoda, Metropolitan, etc.
Deist Safety Equipment
641 Sonera
Burbank 245-6411
Sear belts, rollbars, etc.
Power Unit Exchange
3209 S. Main Street
LA 749-1073
Excellent prices on exchange/re-
built power steering & brake
units; a/c compressors.
S.W. Import Rehuilders
320 E. Dyer Road
Santa Ana (714) 979-8628
Remanufactured VW engines &
parts.
ARKAY In-..
14009 S. Crenshaw
Hawthorne 675-9161
Turbo kits for FIX- 7, VW diesel,
MG, Triumph, Subaru, Toyota,
Mazda and more.
PBS Engineering
11602 Anabel Street
Garden Grove (714) 534-6700
Engine & chassis modifications for
current Fiat & Lancia, street &
racing.
Racing Beat
1291 Hancock
Anaheim (714) 779-8677
Rotary engine modifications, RX-7
modifications.
Ed West
1941 Jan Marie Place
Tustin (714)832-2688
Jaguar parts, service, restoration.
Plastic Bumper Repair
13915 Lit Rue Street
San Fernjndo 365-3241
Just what it says at very good
prices.
Borrani Wire Wheel
328 Lincoln Blvd.
Venice 399 9492
Restores. repairs, builds wire
wheels.
Michael Long
1202 LeGrau Ave.
LA 255-1375
Can reproduce rare lenses, other
plastic parts.
AK Miller's Garage
9225 E. Slauson
Pico Rivera 949 8383
949-2548 (engineering)
Regular repair, propane conver-
sions, modification.
Impco Carburetlon Inc.
16916 S.Gridley Road
Cerritos 860-6666
Propane conversion equipment.
Sullivan's Speedo & Tach Service
4311 W. Sunset Blvd.
LA 664-4758
Very good instrument repair.
Tower Parts & Service
610 S. Venice Blvd.
West LA 450 3740
Instruments & Koni shocks, good
prices.
Motor Sport Service
1400 E. 2nd Street
Jamestown NY 14701
Saab performaoce parts.
The Toy Store
503 Boccaccio
Venice 396-1790
High performance parts for Toyota
only. Excellent.
TRD
18425 S. Western Ave.
Gardena 532-1232
Factory Toyota high performance
parts. Ask for Lucky.
Impac/Redline
19701 Magellan Drive
Torrance 327-8180
Ask for John Concialdi.
June FOLIO PAGE 29
Cannon Induction
820 E. Ortega Street
Santa Barbara (805) 962 0028
Weber carbs, A/fs, expert advice.
Say hello to Garry.
The Weber Specialist
338 4766, after 6 pm
Obsolete Weber carb. service,
modern too.
British Automotive, Ltd.
579 Garfield
Eugene, Or. (503) 484-2043
Believe It or not: Morris Minor /
parts catalog /restoration.
Felling Enterprises
P.O. Box 90
Topanga 455- 1886
Isetta, Messerschmitt parts-may
have stuff for Honda S-600 and
others.
MUFFLERS
Rocket Muffler
913 W. Magnolia Blvd.
Burbank 848-2281
Modern Muffler
21 16 So. Pacific
San Pedro 831 4551
J & J Muffler Service
509 S. La Brea
Inglevv'ood 674-5335
Porter Muffler
500 W, Colorado
Glendale 242 3616
Maggie's Muffler
21734 Norwalk Blvd.
Hawaiian Gardens 429-5766
AUTO RADIO
Andy's Auto Radio
Sherman Oaks 990 0633
Ex tremely high-quality radio
stallations. Not inexpensive.
CLUBS / CLASSES / SERVICES
Clubs
If you own an out-of-production
car (Studebaker, Edsel, Kaiser,
Nash, Hudson, etc.) or nearly any
import or special interest car there
is a club that can provide informa-
tion, parts, repairs, moral support,
social functions, competition, sales
help, literature and everything that
I have overlooked. Meetings are an-
nounced in the L.A. Times in the
Pit-Stop section on the auto-classi-
fied page.
W. P. Chrysler Club
No, Hollywood 980 7500
COMMUNITY SERVICES
L.A. County Road Repair
2268422
Fix potholes, etc.
L.A. City Road Repair
485-5661
Repair within 24 hours— call and
save your tires and shocks.
Fallen or Low-Hanging Tree Re-
moval
City 485-5675
County 794-0956 or 655-631 1
24-Hour Highway Conditions
626 7231
CHP recording.
cm in DAr:c to
KPFKFilmClub
The KPFK Film Club holds
private screenings (for members
only) of first-run movies. The
selection of films is tempered in
part by availability from our sup-
pliers, who have needs and priori-
ties of their own,
RESERVATIONS
Our present procedure allows
ihe opportunity to make reserva-
tions for two on the Thursday
evening before the weekend
screening(s). Reservations times will
generally be 6 pm to 9 pm when we
have two showings, and between
6 pm and 8 pm (or whenever we're
full) when there is a single screen-
ing. Call 985-5735. There may be
times when a screening will be com-
pletely filled ... we are sorry when
this happens, and are working on
various plans, such as alphabetical
restrictions, which will be an-
nounced.
Even with a reservation number,
your seat will only be held until 10
minutes before announced screen-
ing time. This will allow those on
the waiting list (when there is one)
to be seated while the lights are still
on, and cut down on unwelcome in-
terruptions as the film begins. We
feel that this is an equitable method
of dealing with the constantly
changing needs of our membership,
and hope you agree.
Usually, the Film Club informa-
tion can be found in your current
Folio. However, information about
upcoming films may not be con
firmed by the Folio press deadline.
There are two other ways this in-
formation is made available to you:
1) Listen to KPFK 90.7 FM at 9
am, 6 pm and midnight to hear
Film Club announcements; 2) Send
a pack of plain, regulation-size, self-
ad dressed stamped postal cards to
KPFK (currently 13 cents).
Please note: Please do not call
985-5735 on Film Club business
at any other times. This line is used
for call in programs and pledging
during fund drives exclusively, ex-
cept for the announced Film Club
reservation hours. (The station's
..,_,-,. t,.. „:„„.- ■;„„, 3rp 877 2711
and 984-2711). 985-5735 is not
connected to the station switch
board.
It is critical that no reserva-
tions calls come in before 6 pm,
as you wi II either go on the air
when you do not intend to, or in-
terfere with our receiving dona-
tions from other listeners. Thank
you for your cooperation.
Here's to seeing you at the
movies!
DOROTHY-Continued from page 3
tain catch phrases that cover all possibilities and subsume all reality. It's
what is known in the Party as the 'class approach'. And what that repre-
sents is some mystical quality that makes any pronouncement the Party
has on any issue supposedly representative of the best interests of the
working class, always, inevitably and everywhere. If your approach hap-
pens to be different, then you're classless, you become petit bourgeois.
"I was never interested in debate for debate's sake, but I've always
believed it to be essential for better policy to emerge. To think that
Marxism can be reduced to a set of recipes is to make a mockery out of
one of its essential qualities, dialectics, which requires a sensitivity to what
is new, an ability to see the truth itself as revolutionary. You can't educate
people to understand what Marx called 'the real movement of history' if
you're forbidden to talk about the mistakes of the past. Unless you're able
to learn from the experience of the pioneer socialist countries, you're
going to have to settle for repeating all their mistakes. So it wasn't only
democracy within our local American party that I was concerned with,
but democracy as a decisive question facing the socialist world. Democracy
is not a luxury. It's not peripheral. It's essential to the development of
communist society."
With this awareness and open theoretical approach and commitment to
socialist democracy Dorothy has continued the struggle, first in the New
American Movement and then in the DSA. We in Los Angeles have been
particularly fortunate to share some of Dorothy's experiences and ideas
through her Sunday morning broadcasts on "Marxist Commentary", now
known simply as "Dorothy Ray Healey."
L.A. WOMEN'S
COMMUNITY CHORUS
BENEFIT CONCERT
music
compo*«d • arrongsd • conductvd
by WOMEN
Saturday. July 9*8 p.m.
Embassy Auditorium • 843 S. Grand, LA
$8 adv. $9 at door (no one turned oway for lock ot $)
Spanish translations * Signing • Wheelchair Access
For childcars Information call Syd at 39t-2921
June FOLIO PAGE 31
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June FOLIO PAGE 33
Classified
Guitar lessons for all ages. Experi-
enced teacher. Classical-Folk Pop
styles. Reasonable rates. Van Nuys
area. Call Ellen at 780 9362.
Room with kitchen privileges, with-
in 10 mile radius of KPFK, needed
bv newly retired secretary, either
on rental basis or return for ser-
vices. Frances 358-5534.
DEFEND GINNY FOAT
Support one of our most effective
leaders. Your contribution may
mean the difference between life
and death for Ginny Foat. If we do
not support a woman who has given
so much of her life for us, who will
we support? And who will support
us?
Ginny Foat Defense Fund
543 N. Fairfax Ave. No. 303
Los Angeles, CA. 90036
Audiocassettes ""
Pacifica Radio Archives
I
lo( a n e M cataloc send SOt m stamps w
• • • •
Ptifici Ktdio Archintt. Dtpt. A S31S Vinict tl.. In Anfiltt, CA 90019
Licensed MFC Therapists providing
reasonable counseling for marriage/
divorce problems, family dysfunc-
tions, testing/assessments for child-
ren with special problems. Location
Beverly Hills and Glendale. For info
call Anne/AI Bodin (213) 478-3614
What exactly does
EARWORKS
do?
Earworks designs and installs musi-
cally satisfying home audio sys
tems, or counsels you in your own
equipment purchase. A housecall
diagnosis and repair service is also
available.
Discount stores are not good places
to go for advice. Market pressures
force them to recommend compo-
nents for reasons that have nothing
to do with how well they reproduce
music. Earworks' principal stock-in-
trade is information and know-how,
wedded to a reliable sense of how
real, live music sounds. Earworks
isn't beholden to any manufacturer.
We can't offer you discounts, but
we can guide you toward the most
musical system in your price range.
If you wish, your system will be set
up and voiced by a thoroughly ex-
perienced audio professional. Please
call for more information.
Peter Sutheim's I
earworks
PRIVATL AUDIO PRACTICE
(213) 255 2425
Visualize world peace. Participate
in a community group meditation.
Sponsored by Arcana Workshops,
a meditation training center.
Friday, June 24, 7:45 p.m.
80 Morningside Drive
Manhattan Beach
379-9990 or 540-8689
No charge
DIVORCE MEDIATIONS and con
flict resolutions are available to you
on sliding fee scale by professional
counselors. To keep your self-
esteem and keep your relationships
communicating openly, call
478-6668.
Maria Joyouspirit Jimakas, PhD
THIS AD COULD BE YOURS
Classified ads are only S10 per col
■jmn inch, typesetting included.
Maximum of 6 lines per inch. This
is a sample Interested? Call the
Fo/Zo at (213) 877-2711.
June FOLIO PAGE 34
ECKANKAR
A Universal Teaching
Free Introductory Film
and talk, Weds. 8 p.m.
(213) 386-2893 (recording)
czYjotzerztori^s
A Book Shop 1818 N. Vermont Ave.
Los Angeles 90027
(213) 664-3882
520 E. Colorado Blvd.
Pasadena 91101
(213) 681-6803
A classified ad in the Folio reaches
20,000 homes . . . call (213)
877-2711 and ask for Folio . . .
meiDin
The Fourth Tower of Inverness
Moon Over Morocco
The Incredible Adventures
of Jack Flanders
Great Adventure Serials on Cassettes!
For complete informalion, write to:
ZBS, fLD. t\, Fori Edward, NY 12828
JjqPiDOlA lElSGTHS
"The Harbor Area's Only Independently
Owned and Operated Community Newspaper."
Random Lengths is a free speech community
paper that presents issues from alternative
perspectives not commonly found in the regular
print media. We openly solicit articles from all
people in the community. Subscriptions $3.50
per year.
RANDOM LENGTHS
P.O. Box 731
San Pedro, CA 90733
FOLIO
Full page: 7" wide, 9% deep $300
Half page: 7" wide, 4% deep Si 50
Column 21^" wide, min. 3" deep
Inch rate $12
Full column (9%" deep) $100
Half column (4%" deep) S55
Back Cover: 7" wide, 7" deep $300
Classified: SIO per column inch,
typesetting included. No art, just
words. 40 characters per line, incl.
spaces & punctuation. Or, 25 char-
acters per line of ALL CAPS. Max.
6 lines per inch.
Payment in Advance! Please submit
payment with your copy, since we
have no money tor billing or fol-
low-up, and no one to do it.
Deadline: 1st of the month prece-
ding the month of publication (e.g.,
Feb. 1 for the March edition, etc).
One week before that if there is
any work to do to get it ready I
Camera Ready: The above prices
are for camera ready art (except
for the classified). Typesetting &
art production services can be ne-
gotiated at SlO/hour (SIO min.),
with an extra week required before
deadline. S5 for all reductions, en-
largements, half-tones, etc.-that's
below our cost.
Folio Editors: Susan Tewes (art)
and Sheri Weinberg (typesetting)
3729 Cahuenga Blvd. West
North Hollywood, CA 91604
(213) 877 2711
June FOLIO PAGE 35
HEAR
JAMES
BURFORD
V.P.SO. CALIF. ADA
"SENIOR CITIZENS REPORT"
KPFK
90.7 FM
WEDNESDAYS 6 -AS PM
Publicized as a public service by
Southern California Chapter Americans (or Democratic Action
7250 Franklin Avenue, Los Angeles 90046 85 1 -6382
REGGAE SOUL CALYPSO
BARTON'S RECORD & GIFT SHOP
For the Latest American i West Indian Records A Tapes
Hours: 12 Noon to 10:00 p. m. • Open 7 Days
4018 Buckingham Rd.
Los Angeles, Calif. 90008
PHONE (213) 298-9338
i^#
^^■^
F6fO'3/lH ^co^ ^^OF
X
\
1
• /
!(«-
"AVANT-GARDE"? "FREE JAZZ"? "ELECTRONIC MUSIC"?
Or some of the most hard -to -categorize music on the planet? We think
that's a better definition. And that's why we stock those hard -to -find
LPs by such important innovators as:
ART ENSEMBLE OF CHICAGO • ALBERT AYLER • DEREK BAILEY
HAN BENNINK- LUCIANO BERIO • ANTHONY BRAXTON
PETER BROETZMANN • GAVIN BRYARS • JOHN CAGE • CAPTAIN
BEEFHEART • COMPANY • LUC FERRARI • FRED FRITH
GUNTER HAMPEL • INSTANT COMPOSERS POOL • MAURICIO
KAGEL- EVAN PARKER • KRYZYSZTOF PENDERECKI • KARL-
HEINZ STOCKHAUSEN • SUN RA ... and, yes. Many. Many More!
»^i
-9-^
^
POO'^/IH • 110/ 0. l^ALNUr • P/I$APBNA • 9^9-33>5'J
June FOLIO PAGE 36
«!^
® . ot to sav outrageous,
^mmmmmm.
and stock up- ^>"=
June FOLIO PAGE 37
Your Subscription
The Computer.
Our computer is located in Saiita
Barbara. Your payment may not go
into the computer as quickly as you
might think because payments go to
our lockbox and through the bank
before they are fed into the compu
ter. This process often takes more
than a week from the time you send
your payment. So, if you send your
check by the 1st of the month, you
may receive the Folio for the fol-
lowing month.
Bill Payment.
Always send a bill with your check!
We cannot credit your account cor-
rectly unless we know exactly what
your check is paying for. If you send
a check for a pledge payment with-
out a bill, you might get credit for
a new subscription and still be bil-
led for your original pledge.
First Class Folio Mailing.
The Folio is mailed Second Class,
and should take 2 to 5 days to get
to most places. Unfortunately, our
experience has not been good, esp-
ecially with outlying areas. First
Class mailing is available for $10 ex
tra per year (prorated at 85 cents
per month for current subsrciptions).
If you get your Folio on time but
would like to receive it well before
the first of the month, you may want
to get the First Class service.
I Didn't Get My Folio . . .
The Folio IS mailed before the 24th
of the month. If you have not re-
ceived your Folio by the first of the
month:
1) Check your subscription expira
tion date on the previous Folio mail
ing label (upper right hand corner of
label).
2) Make sure you haven't moved
without notifying us.
3) If you haven't moved and are cur-
rently enrolled as a subscriber, con-
tact your local postmaster about de
livery.
4) Send us a previous Folio label
with an explanatory note and request
a new Folio be sent to you.
June FOLIO PAGE 38
Moving / Address Changes.
If you move, your Folio will not be
forwarded unless you have requested
Second Class forwarding from the
Post Office. The best way to ecpedite
an address change and assure contin
ued receipt of the Folio is to contact
us in writing 6 weeks before you
move, giving us your name, old zip-
code, and new address. There is an
address form on the back page of the
Folio that you can clip: it already
has your current mailing label on its
back. Always include your account
number at the top of your Folio la-
bel for instant handling. Address
changes that we get back from the
Post Office cost us 25 cents apiece.
Changes can take 8 weeks to affect
your account.
Prisoner Subscriptions.
KPFK sends a free subscription to
any prisoner upon request.
Cassette Folios for the Print Hand-
icapped.The Folio is available on
cassette (returnable) to all print
handicapped subscribers. If you'd
like to receive the Cassette Folio,
please tear off the address label on
the back of your Folio and send it
along with a note (or you may call).
Within 2 months, you'll be receiving
your complete program guide on
cassette. The cassettes are returned
to us at the end of each month to be
re-used.
Exchange Mailing Lists.
KPFK exchanges and rents its sub-
scriber lists to other organizations of
common interest (Channel 28, Ralph
Nader, ACLU, etc.). If you don't
want to be on exchange mailing lists,
send your Folio label to the Subscri-
ptions Department and ask for an
"NJ" code. Your name will then be
automatically excluded from all mail-
ings except for the Folio and other
communications from KPFK.
MAIL COUPONS AND CHECKS TO KPFK SUBSCRIBER SERVICES
P.O. BOX 40490, SANTA BARBARA, CA. 93103-9990
( ) New subscription
( ) S30 / year regular rate.
( ) $15 / year low income.
( ) $75 /year Film Club
( ) Renewal
( ) $15 / Vj year.
( ) $ 8/ % year.
( ) $40 down Film Club, then bill $5 /mo.
+ $5 service ($80 total)
Film Club Conversion of Your Current Subscription
($15 credit given--new subscription for 12 months created.)
( ) $60 Full Payment.
Gift Subscription
Check subscription rate above, and be sure to include BOTH the name and
address of your gift recipient and your name, address, and current Folio
label.
Name
Address
City and Zip
Volunteer Page
They turn the station on and off. and make it go between. They run errands, produce
programs, engineer, stuff envelopes, answer phones, build things, help at off-air events -
in other words, we couldn't exist without them. Those not listed elsewhere m the Folio
are:
Kamran Afary / Laurien Alexandre
/ Marlene Alvarado / Richard Am-
romin / Art Aratin / Fred Azad /
Neal Baker / Richard Ballou / Nor-
ma Barragan / Greg Battes / Horace
Beasley / Jeff Bickel / Bruce Bid-
lack / John Bliss / Michael Bos /
George Braddock / Frankie Briscoe
/ Pamela Burton / Josy Catoggio /
Lucia Chappelle / Elisa Chavez /
Louise Chevlin / Peter Cole / Terry
Craig / Peter Cutler / Loren De
Phillips / Sandy Dickerson / Dino
Di Muro / Gar Downing / Lisa Ed-
mundson / Michael lllliot / Ron
Ehrenberg / Richard Emmet /
Susan English / Andrew Exier /
Debi Fidler / Diane Finegood /
Marianne Finkelstien / Frances
Fischer / Steve Powers / David
Fradkin / Scott Eraser / Robert
Galin / Dave Gardner / John Glass /
Keith Gill / Gera Golden / Greg
Gordon / Keith Goshorn / Gail Val-
erie Griffen / Robert Griffin / Dan
Halpert / Nancy Hamilton / Bill
Handelsman / Burt Handelsman
/ Rich Hansen / Jim Harris / Libby
Harding / Madeleine Herrold /
Bernardo Hernandez / Frank Her-
nandez / Skip Hockett / Sixto
Huaypacho / David Hunt / Dennis
Johnson / Michael Jondreau /
moving?
Your Folio will NOT be forwarded
automatically to your new address.
It will be returned to us after a few
weeks with your new address on
- probably not in time for the next
Folio. So to avoid missing out, fill
out this coupon and return it to us,
with your current (old address) la-
bel still attached to the reverse side.
/ Susan Judy / Ella Kaumeyer /
Hugh Kenny / Susan Kernes / Jens
Klindt / Richard Kuchar / Chuck
Larson / Melanie Lewis / Roger
Lighty / Ruben Lopez / Michael
Lovelace / Elizabeth Luye / Iris
Mann / Mark / Ana Maya /Theresa
Mazurek / Phil Medlin / Michael
Miasnikov / Steve Mitchell / Sam
Mittelman / Thomas Moody /
Ralph Neil / Calvin Ogawa / Leslie
Otsuki / Phoenix / Robert Portillo
/ Mike Powell / Anthony Price /
Belle Rabinowitz / Jan Rabson /
John Ratliff /Don Roberts /Wen-
dy Ross / Edith Royal / David
Royer / Leslie Salles /Tom Scallon
/ Diane Schmidt / Maya Schoen /
Celia Schwartz / Elliot Shifter /
Rich Shea / Robby Shear / Bob
Sheldon / Lester Silverman /
Robert Smartt / Joan Sprague /
Marsha Steinberg /Helen Steinmetz
/ Darly Sterret / Charles Stewart /
Catherine Stifter / Timothy Stirton
/ Ron Streicher / Mitchell Syrop /
Ed Thomas / Janet Thomas /
Modestine Thornton / Elissa Tree /
Howard Vanucci / Patricia Vargas
Cooper / Andy Vavrick / Bill Vestal
/ Barbara Warren / John Watson /
Bert White / Linda Whitehead /
PLEASE PRINT!
Jane Willits / Kim Wilson / Steve
Wilson / Thomas Wozny / and all
others we rvay have inadvertently
omitted.
SUZI
877 2711
Name
New Address .
City
State
-Zip
Mail to: Subscriptions. KPFK. 3729 Cahuenga Blvd.. No. Hollywood. CA. 91604.
June FOLIO PAGE 39
Help KPFK & help yourself
BOOK SALE
THE ORANGE COUNTY AND SAN DIEGO FRIENDS OF KPFK
ARE HOLDING A BOOK SALE
SATURDAY &SUNDAY,JUNE4& 5 IN LAGUNA BEACH
KPFK FRIENDS will be part of a larger book sale organized by the Friends of Laguna Beach Library
at Laguna Beach Library
in Laguna Beach
For information and book donation drop-off times and dates
Call Bill (714) 833-6572 or (714) 552-3188
ALL PROCEEDSTO KPFK
KPFK Folio
Second-Class Postage Paid
at Studio City CA and at
(ISSN-0274-4856)
P.O. Box 8639
additional mailing offices
Universal City CA 91608
Studios at 3729 Cahuenga Blvd. West
North Hollywood CA 91604
TIME VALUE
Program material
Pacifica Radio -Los Angeles