SUPPORT KPFK AND YOUR LOCAL
COMPOSERS AND MUSICIANS!
los ANqeles
cIar.net sociETy
WIMR-7 STEREO
Featuring clarinetists David Atkins, Roy a" Antonio, Julian Spear and Hugo Raimondi
Works by Harold Owen, Donal Michalsky, Frank Campo and George Heussenstamm
Assisted by pianist Sharon Davis and percussionist Karen Ervin
$5.98 plus tax
WlMwovk
Order through your record dealer
or
Western International Music, Inc.
2859 Holt Avenue, Los Angeles, California 90034 .
COLLECTOR'S SERIES
y<*ti
HAITIAN MOODS
.t>w>
•«CHET
Tn
KPFK SPECIAL PRICE $3.95
'Shipping and sales tax is included in price
Fill out MAIL ORDER BLANK and send with
check (No CO D )
To MUSIC MAGIC A
617 So La Brea B#
Los Angeles. Calif 90036 ^
SLP 52 SONGS OF THE LINCOLN
AND INTERNATIONAL BRIGADES,
Original and Authorized (Pal* Stager, B-eii
lomn Botch Hawat. Erntl Ruth, Woody
Guthria and Choru*)
SLP 23 JAZZ AT THE PHILHARMO-
NIC, ORIGINAL VOLUME I (PRE-
SENTED BY NORMAN GRANZ)
SLP 83* PATRICK GALVIN:
IrijS Rebel Songs, Vol. I (with guitar
banjo
OHD
ARTIST TITLE
SLP 1
BURL IVES Th. Mtoybn^ $V*n<jjr<
SLP 2
RICHARD DVERBENNET TOM C*ni M.mJT.I
SLP 3
CAHLOS MONTOVA (IFUntncoVol t
SLPX 5
AMERICAN FOLASAY Vol 1 & II Wnc Artnu
SIP* 1
CHAIN ; - ||-n Guttvrw S I»i>
■ E OF IRON CtiYpao Vol 1
ES Vol l
SLf»S IB
BILL BCNOCR T'*arlH>nitSa»riOI Th* 0*d
SLP 20
'
SLP JM
iAMCSP JOHNSON N» Vort Jul
SLP 22
COLEMAN HAWKINS Onjm.ii wih i(i»k«ii
SLP .'2
JAZZ A I 'J,... -.. Gum
SLP 2-t
SLP 25
• LEWIS Etooy* Vloof* S, Bk*
SLP 29
IONS Vol II Tap Mite MMI
SIP tB
' W RlJSSfLLRosl"-*" Vol 1
>.OODV GUTMRU A C HOUSTON Co*bo. So**
SLPX 39
LEAOBELLV ri.in*t|lo^ t»
SLP JO
ART TATUV SOLOS '- TRIO Slrovt F, G'-MI
SI 9 M
WOODV GUTHRIE & C HOUSTON folk So»gt Vol 1
SIONEVBECHET Hitikin Mtmiji
INA 1
■
1
PACIFICA RADIO
LOS ANGELES
Cover photo: Detail of "Navajos", taken circa 1900 by Edward S. Curtis.
From a collection in the public library of the city of Seattle, Washington.
THE VOLUNTEERS
are all those people who donate their time and energy to keep this place going.
They produce programs, review cultural events, edit tapes, gather news, type,
file, answer phones— in short, without them we wouldn't be here. Thanks.
Joe Adams, David Ainsworth, Kathy Alef, David Arias, Decia Baker, Bob Beck,
Jan Breidenbach, Ruth Buell, Alvaro Cardona-Hine. Ridgley Cummings, Judith
Dancofi, Madeleine Deutsch, Michael Elliott, Paul Faulkner, Sandford Fidell,
Mike Fitzpatrick, Ten Friedrichs. Joe Gaul, Cy Cius, Greg Gorelick, Bob Gowa,
Georg Gugelberger, Tom Halle, Ethlie Herman, Doris Herrscher, Al Hirshfield,
Peggy Hotter, Dave Johnson, Alan Kanter, David Kaplan, Sheila Katzmarek, Joe
Klebanoff, Barbara Kraft, Linda Krausen, Alma Landsberger, Francine Lipsker,
Stephen Mamber, Bill Margolis, Maureen Mcllroy, Louis Miranda Jr., Sam
Mittleman, Charles Morgan, Marsha Necheles, Josh Newman, Richard Nielsen,
Robin O'Brian, Earl Ofari, Bob Olson, Constance Pfeifer, Robert Richard, Ron
Richo, Ron Ridenour, Gregg Roebuck, Brian Rosenberg, A. P. Russo, Tom
Sandford, Cynthis Sears, Phil Silver, Dave Simpson, Pearl Skotnes, William
Strother, Tony Thompson, Richard Toscan, Richard Triscari, Phil Turtle, Paul
Vangelisti, Bill Vestal, Susan Zeifman
THE STAFF
General Manager: Witl Lewis; Program Director: Ruth Hirschman; Public Affairs:
Mike Hodel, Director; Mary Bess; News: Miriam Bjerre; Barbara Cady; Andres
Chavez; Dennis Levitt; Don Roeck; Music: David Cloud, Director; Katherine
Calkin; Paul Vorwerk; Drama & Literature: Everett Frost, Director; Clare Loeb;
Production: Rick Bralver, Director; Rachel Kurn, Traffic; Mitchell Harding;
Steven Tyler; Engineering: Don Wilson, Chief Engineer; Promotion Director:
Barbara Spark; Folio Editor: Jane Gordon; Accountant: Eric Shapiro; KPFK
Christmas Faire Director: Jeanne Morgan
PACIFICA BOARD
National: R. Gordon Agnew (KPFA); Jody Blazek (KPFT); Henry M. Elson (KPFA)
George Fox (WBAI); Carolyn Goodman (President of Pacifica); Hallock Hoffman
(KPFK); Rudy Hurwich (KPFA); Hannah Levin (WBAI); David Lopez (KPFT);
Thelma Mettzer (KPFT); Max Palevsky (KPFK); Robert Powsner (KPFK); Jonas
Rosenfieid Jr. (KPFK); Albert Ruben (WBAI); Frank Wyle (KPFK)
Local: Mary Bess, Roscoe Lee Browne, Mae Churchill, Digby Diehl, David DworsKi,
David Finkel, Sam Francis, Everett Frost, Frank Gehry, Leonard Goldman, Stanley
M. Gortikov, Richard S. Gunther, Brownlee Haydon, Ruth Hirschman, Mitchell
Harding, Mike Hodel, Hallock Hoffman, Celes King III, Robert Klein, Louis Licht,
Ronald M. Loeb, Brian G. Manion, Isabelle Navarre, Frederick Nicholas, Anais Nin,
Max Palevsky, Marshall Pearlman, John Phillips, Robert Powsner, Robert Radnitz,
Joyce Reid Rosenberg, Jonas Rosenfieid Jr., Richard Rosetti, Paul Saltman, Gerhard
Samuel, Avery Schreiber, Marvin Segelman, Pearl Skotnes, Frederic Sutherland,
Jolyn West, Haskell Wexler, Frank Wyle, Floyd Yudelson. Ex Officio: Will Lewis,
Barbara Spark
The KPFK Folio is not sold, it is sent free to each subscriber supporting our
non-profit, non-commercial, educational station, and contains the most
accurate possible listing of the programs broadcast.
Our transmitter is on Mount Wilson. We broadcast in stereo multiplex with
an effective radiated power of 1 1 2,000 Watts. Our studios and offices are at
3729 Cahuenga Blvd. W. in N. Hollywood. Mailing address is KPFK, Los
Angeles 90038. Phone is 877-27 1 1 from Los Angeles, or 984-27 1 1 from
the San Fernando Valley and beach cities.
KPFK is owned and operated by the Pacifica Foundation, a non-profit
institution. Other Pacifica stations are KPFA, Berkeley, CA 94704; WBAI,
New York, N.Y. 10021; and KPFT, Houston, TX 77002. An application for
a fifth station is pending in Washington, D.C. Subscriptions are transferable.
o m <
Q > m
| 3
P s
a. a
Sm» 2,
O (5'
i 9.1 1
£■ 3- ? 5 -
5
3»>
>
2
3- 3
3 ,, °
Q. <Q fa 5
Q 5 2 §
3 c ? ?
» * 3- x
» »?;
£ (D 3
° 3- »*>
J- CB n
2 J) =: ft>
3 1 I *
S X v.
3 *
CO t H
oo c
§ ?£
S =. o
" 5 >
00 3 z
i- ^- m
> " 2
- o m
nj'<
<° ° ~
2 O
gcT*
F>2j O
f3
9 2
O) C
CI v>
?
CD
o
"O
CD
OJ
3
o
3
CO
3
CO
Q.
a
O)
SF
71
J]F
a
m
>
G3
c
a.
0
CI
a
3
o
o
k
13
O
c
a
a
3
s
CD
3 a
— 03
O Si
I a
u - s T
a
o
o
a
in
3"
CO
I =
O at
o. -a
-t n
n
o a
* <
THE
FESTIVAL
PLAYERS OF i U\
CALIFORNIA 4
The second in their series
of Chamber Music Concerts
live from the auditorium at KPFK.
The program for Wednesday,
November I, 8:00 p.m.:
Patricia Garside, flute
Mildred O'Donnell, viola
Suzanne Baldeston, harp
playing music by
Thiriet, Bax, Ibert, Berlioz
Badings, Haydn, and Debussy
No admission charge.
Bring a pillow to sit on.
KPFK's studios,
3729 Cahuenga Blvd. W.
in North Hollywood.
Haste & Hirsty Volvo Pacific
11647 Ventura Blvd., Studio City
(3 blocks East of Laurel Canyon)
Phone: 766-3847 or 877-0864
FACTORY AUTHORIZED DEALER
FACTORY TRAINED MECHANICS
LEASE PLAN AVAILABLE
OVERSEAS DELIVERY
SPECIALISTS
(Volvo)
fiat
LAEMMLE FINE ARTS THEATRES
LOS FELIZ
NO 4-2169
coming soon:
FRENCH FILM FESTIVAL
"TO DIE OF LOVE"
ESQUIRE
Pasadena
SY 3 6149
MU 4-1774
November 8:
"BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE"
PLAZA
Westwood
TR 9-9077
GR 7-0097
now showing:
"A SEPA RA TE PEACE"
(from the novel by John Knowles )
REGENT
Westwood
BR 2-0501
477-0059
November IS:
Frank Perry's
"PLAY IT AS IT LAYS"
THE ROYAL
West L. A.
473-1636
270-4110
soon. ..A beautiful romantic film:
"THE ANONYMOUS VENETIAN"
MONICA TWIN THEATRES
Always a choice of two outstanding programs
MONICA I
451-8686
Call theater for program
MONICA II
451-8686
451-8688
166-1707
piano technician
Specialist in the repair anl tuning cj hevioari instruments.
CKY FARMS
Ghown
ROASTING
AND FRYING
CHICKEN
NO PRfSfRVATIVt AODfD
FROM SMOG FREE APPLE VALLEY
ZACKY FARM'S PRESENTS
The very finest - Locally grown and Processed
POULTRY
No preservatives are used in the processing of
ZACKY FARMS FRYERS & ROASTERS
Just lots of T.L.C. (Tender Loving Care)
Ask your butcher tor Zacky Farms Chicken
If he can't supply you
call 283-8481; 443-1349; 784-4050
In Orange county call: 523-1481,
or write Zacky, 2325 Lome. S El Monte 91 733
for the address of a Zacky dealer
2acky farMS
GiLy&uua GtoaJn
ROASTING
AND FRYING
CHICKEN
NO PRfSERVAtlVf ADDIP
HIGHLIGHTS:
The Electoral Collage
will provide a week-long, high-intensity probe into the issues and individuals who comprise Election Year 1972.
Live panels and open phones, taped documentaries and surrealistic aspects of the political process will combine
to give you the information you need to vote intelligently on November 7th. You'll hear:
-Victims of the political process
—The ethnic voter
—The ballot propositions
—Irreverent views of the election
—And, the Main Event
discussed and argued. Plus, of course, music and drama which are tied to the theme.
It all begins Wednesday, November 1st, 7:00 p.m. and continues every evening through the pre-election week.
KPFK's election night coverage will begin at 7:00 p.m. and run until it's all over. We'll have reporters at the
campaign headquarters, and we'll have in-studio guests who will try to keep the evening from being just a string
of numbers.
We can't tell who we project as the winner based on our computers, but we can try to let you know why the
vote is going as it is, and we'll have some comedy and music to keep it in perspective.
More than that....?
Tune in and find out.
music;
The Bruno Walter Legacy: beginning a ten-part
series. This month on Thursday evenings, the
9th, 16th, and 30th at 8:00 p.m.
Joan Sutherland as Stella in The Tales of Hoffman, on
the Sunday Opera, Sunday the 19th at 1:00 p.m.
Thanksgiving?
This holiday of traditional family
feasting has always been tinged by
the irony of past and present treat-
ment of the original Americans. It
strikes us as appropriate this month
to highlight programming dealing
with the history and the culture of
the American Indian.
HATRED OF MEN WITH BLACK HAIR
I hear voices praising Tshombe, and the Portuguese
In Angola, these are the men who skinned Little Crow)
We are all their sons, skulking
In back rooms, selling nails with trembling hands!
We distrust every person on earth with black hair;
We send teams to overthrow Chief Joseph's government;
We train natives to kill Presidents with blowdarts;
We have men loosening the naits on Noah's ark.
The State Department floats in the heavy jellies near the bottom
Like exhausted crustaceans, like squids who are confused.
Sending out beams of black light to the open sea.
Fighting their fraternal feeling for the great landlords.
We have violet rays that light up the jungles at night, showing
The friendly populations; we are teaching the children of ritual
To overcome their longing for life, and we send
Sparks of black light that fit the holes in the generals' eyes.
Underneath all the cement of the Pentagon
There is a drop of Indian blood preserved in snow:
Preserved from a trail of blood that once led away
From the stockade, over the snow, the trail now lost.
Robert Bly
The Firesign Theatre's
Big Book of Plays
Is Here.
Whoopee!
(7
j Straight Arrow Books
1382 Natoma Street
San Francisco, CA 94103
Please send me, prepaid,
the following.
Name
Address
City
Zip
The Firesign Theatre reveals the
history of the future. And they're
funny, too. If you've bought their
records (over 900,000 sold; they're
America's best-selling comedy
album group), you already have
the clues. Now you can have the
truth, because The Big Book of
Plays has all their scripts on a nice
linear page, including all the words
and sounds to
Waiting For The Electrician Or
Someone Like Him
How Can You Be In Two Places At
Once When You're Not Any-
where At All
Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me
The Pliers
I Think We're All Bozos On This
Bus
Lots of funny pictures, too, plus
explanations and comments by
The Firesign Theatre themselves.
If you haven't met them, you should.
They're all about how weird it is—
and how to cope with it. They can
take you back to old radio shows or
forward to 1984 with a flick of their
dial. When you read The Firesign
Theatre, The Firesign Theatre
reads you.
•fr F0£K 0>AlNfcE FESTIVAL *
With The iA3EKTx4iseM'+
YTtMJIkfAtow «*l ike Xjo34o<Mj Kibo ♦
BORING KbCo f NSeMgifi^£««3)£Si
-T^^V^Wt^^MCt/ Wit-*
"FesTWAL l?ECo£DS" "R)l|> MaTif " cvn±
BTM\o Pood -Atookl6 oTti&l $ooOi£S- a***-
\ MASS Po&DANattq lepeyMA&o CASeTTA »
SoHDAY-Ncx/.S<#-NooiitoepN\-?7S7l?AHcllflb-VAHlJ<tfs.
1 Wednesday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
With Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and fellow travellers
bringing you news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe by Theodora Kroeber, tells
the story of a small band of California Indians whose last
survivor, Ishi, managed to put off the extinction of the
entire Yahee tribe. Part 1 of 22 parts, to be aired over the
month of November. There will also be a program of con-
versations with Theodora Kroeber, wherein she relates the
story of experiences over the years with American Indians
while researching her books. See details listed under Tues-
day the 21st at 10:00 p.m.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
11:00 MAKIN' IT
A series by and for low-income families, produced
by the Neighborhood Adult Participation Project.
11:30
COMMUNITY ARTS
With Decia Baker.
1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
w
illUr-.TOrV 4- 1 -
wirotu-#
cioe;
r.wv
4 .: M
2:00 WINTER SOLDIER INVESTIGATION, II
Vietnam Veterans Against the War Investigation
of Veteran Drug Addiction. Excerpts from testimony re-
corded at Baruch College in New York City, August 2nd
and 3rd, 1972. The focus of the discussion includes drug
availability and abuse in the military, U.S. Government
involvement in the drug trade and the inadequacy of drug
treatment programs offered by the military and Veterans'
Administration. Produced for Pacifica by Miriam Rosen of
WBAI.
3:30
MUSIC AT THE CROSSROADS
With Lance Williams.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Piano Music of Stockhausen. Karl heinz Stockhau-
sen (1928- ) is one of the most prolific of contemporary
avant-garde composers. His compositions for the piano are
especially noteworthy. On today's program some early
works and a very recent one. Stockhausen: Klavierstuecke
I— VI; Aloys Kontarsky, piano; CBS 3221 008. Stockhau-
sen: Mantra; Alfons and Aloys Kontarsky, piano; Deutsche
Grammophon 2530208. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, field reports, edi-
torial contrasts, and Stephen Mamber reviewing current
Los Angeles film fare. Produced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 VOICE OF THE UNION OF VIETNAMESE
IN THE U.S.
The Electoral
KPFK's answer to pre-election blues. From 7:00 p.m. until midnight tonight,
our regular evening programming is replaced by special, in-depth coverage of
the issues, individuals, and perspectives vital to this year's historic election.
Collage!
WITCH HUNT
Five people who experienced the witch hunts of
the 50's and beyond, discuss their experiences.
Panelists: Jerry Voorhis, Dalton Trumbo, Profes-
sors John Coughey and Fred Warner Neal, attorney
Ben Margolis, and Adrian Scott. Moderator: Mike
Hodel. Produced by Ida Honorof.
THE MAN FROM TERRE HAUTE
AND HIS CAUSE
One, two, three
Who are we?
We're for Debs, Eugene V!
First Democrat, then Populist, and finally socialist,
organizer, and human being. A look at the only
presidential candidate to campaign from a Georgia
prison. Produced by Mary Bess.
CALIFORNIA MARIJUANA INITIATIVE
A live panel discussion bringing together both
proponents and opponents of this controversial
initiave measure-to clear the smoke from the
marijuana question as posed in Proposition 19.
Hosted by Mary Bess.
2 thursday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and fellow travellers bring
you the news and other timely pieces.
9:25
9:30
REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe by Theodora Kroeber. From
the drama of Indian history at the end of the 19th, begin-
ning of the 20th century, comes the story of Ishi, the last
Yahee Indian to survive. Selections are read by Virginia
Maynard. Part 2 in a 22 part series.
10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC
Canadian folk songs: songs and ballads of the
lumber camps. Program material courtesy of Radio Canada.
Stereo.
10:30 THE GERMAN LIED
On today's program, songs by Franz Schubert, in-
cluding Der Erlkoenig, Heidenroeslein, and Gretchen am
Spinnrad. First of six parts. Tapes courtesy of Deutsche
Welle.
11:00 THE ADVOCATES
The audio portion of KCET's forum.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
A program of vocal duets by Bach and Handel.
Katherine Calkin hosts.
2:00 NAZIS: THE TWISTED MYTH
To what extent was the Nazi manipulation of a
symbol responsible for the victory of National Socialism?
Different attitudes are expressed by Jungian analysts Drs.
James Kirsch and Max Zeller, historian Walter Sokol from
Stanford, Juris Svendsen and James Karens from theater
departments at Cal Arts and UCLA. Also Dr. Judd Marmor
who talks about the political extremist from an eclectic
Freudian viewpoint. Nazi marches are also heard in this
montage produced and written by Clare Spark Loeb for
last year's Myth Month.
4:00
5:00
FOLK SCENE
Roz and Howard Larman host.
DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and Bob Gottlieb with a book review. Pro-
duced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 WILLIAM WINTER
In,,,:;
tn::::::::i:ii:;;;i;i:j:i::::::i:;;;t::u:;u;:;:iu;;:t:iti:u;::.:.:.:.:....,.::.::....
The Electoral
Liiiiii
THE JEWISH VOTE
Members of the Jewish
community in Los An-
geles talk about the can-
didates and the heated
controversy they've gen-
erated. Open phones to
the audience are featured.
VIETNAM: A REPORTER REMEMBERS
Gloria Emerson, who covered the war in Vietnam
from 1970 to early 1972, talks with Nick Egleson
about her experiences and her conclusions. She is
the only reporter besides Pacifica's Judy Coburn to
have her credential revoked by the government of
South Vietnam, because her reports did not reflect
favorably on their policies. Ms. Emerson is on leave
from the New York Times, completing a book.
NEWS VS. MEDIA
The role which the mass media has played in this
-in every-election, is pivotal. All important news
stories must happen in the morning, to guarantee
their appearance on The Evening News.... Dennis
Levitt explores this problem with members of the
mass media.
THESE TROUBLESOME PRIESTS
A modest history of the non-violent
resistance movement stemming from
the actions of the Baltimore 4,
culminating in the actions of the
Camden 28. With a special emphasis
on Daniel and Phillip Berrigan. Pro-
duced by Jo Maynes and Mary Bess.
3 friday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul and fellow travellers bring
you the news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe: Preserving Yahee ways
through cunning and moral as well as physical strength,
Ishi remains the last survivor of his tribe. From the book
by Theodora Kroeber, read by Virginia Maynard. Part 3
in the 22-part series.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
11:00 WOMEN FOR LEGISLATIVE ACTION
With Dorothy Eletz.
11:30 WILLIAM MANDEL
Soviet press and periodicals reviewed.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
New Releases. A survey of what's new on discs
from here and abroad. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 CRITIQUE
A look at current books, film, music, theater.
::;;:::;::::::;:::;;:::::;;:;:;::::;
Collage!
THE CHOOSING OF A D.A.
Includes interviews with both major contend-
ers for the Los Angeles District Attorney's
office: District Attorney Joseph Busch, and
deputy D.A. Vincent Bugliosi, the challenger.
Produced by Don Roeck.
THE DEATH PROPOSITION
Proponents and opponents of Proposition 17, the
Death Penalty Initiative, discuss their views on
whether California should reinstitute the death
penalty. Lowell Ponte and Mike Hodel moderate.
THE CHICANO VOTE
Is there a "Chicano vote"? Will it shun the Demo-
crats and rally behind La Raza Unida? Andres
Chavez, KPFK Public Affairs producer, hosts a
program devoted to these and other topics relevant
to this election.
2:30 WRITE ON!
A weekly program examining issues, ideas, move-
ments, magazines, and whatever seems of interest in the
literary world. Produced by Paul Vangelisti and Bill Mar-
golis.
3:30
5:00
IMPRESSIONS
Ed Hamilton, with a program of jazz.
DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports and commentary from Richard Gollance of
the Gay Community Services Center. Produced by Barbara
Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 FOREIGN PRESS REPORT: Israel
With Oded E'dan.
6:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
KPFK continues its in-depth probe into the vital issues,
individuals, and perspectives around Election Year 1972.
From 7:00 p.m. until Hour 25, our regular evening pro-
gramming is replaced by all you need to know to lose
those pre-election week blues.
11:00 HOUR 25: sf
Three hours of science and science fiction. With
John Henry Thong, Kathy Calkin and Mike Hodel.
2:00 SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
Old radio shows, mellow music, and satire and
comedy, topped off with another episode of the new "I
love a mystery" scarey serial, which goes down as the sun
comes up. Jovial Jay Lacey hosts.
Saturday 4
8:00
EARLY MORNING RAGAS
Music for the early hours of the day from the
timeless traditions of India.
8:30 KRISHNAMURTI
The renowned spiritual leader in a series of talks
given this year and made available through the Krishna-
murti Foundation.
9:00 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
"It isn't really anywhere, it's somewhere else
instead!" Programs for Young People with Ruth Buell, the
former Lunch Fair Five, and special guests.. .some of whom
we hope will be You, from time to time! A full hour of
stories, plays, music, and other magic— too much to men-
tion here. There's reilly no such thing as "children's litera-
ture"...if it's good, it's for everyone.. .so everyone is invited!
(Title is from a poem by A. A. Milne.)
10:30
FOLK MUSIC
With John Davis.
12:30 TRANS
An exploration of current work toward a new
civilization. Programs coordinated by Amanda Foulger,
with assistance from James and Debra Farrell and Carl
Heussenstam.
1:30 STUDENT MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE
A look at the antiwar movement.
2:00
THE ELECTORAL COLLAGE:
Is there a Black Vote?
3:30
4:30
5:30
6:00
6:30
Kaimu hosts
a panel of
divergent
viewpoints
from the
black
community
PABLO NERUDA IN NEW YORK
See Wednesday the 8th at 11:00 p.m. for details.
DOROTHY HEALEY
Communist commentary (with open phones).
STUDENT UNION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE
THE SATURDAY NEWS
THE ELECTORAL COLLAGE:
The Afro-American and the Electoral Process
Frank Greenwood discusses this approach to the
system with an open phone for you to participate.
7:30
9:00
PREACHIN' THE BLUES
Frank Scott, with music both live and recorded.
ZYMURGY
is the art and science of fermentation. It is also
a radio program designed to ferment interest in the arts.
Tune in for a sip. Everett Frost and David Cloud host.
11:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
Destination Fire: "Sound of Fire." It Pays to be
Ignorant: What beverage comes from tea leaves?
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
5 Sunday
8:00 THE MUSIC OF JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH
A Bach program for the guitar including Chaconne
from Partita No. 2 in D minor for solo violin; Little Pre-
lude in C minor; Sarabande and Bouree from Suite in E
minor; Prelude and Fugue from the Partita in C minor;
Prelude, Fugue and Allegro in E flat major, Julian Bream,
guitar; Westminster XWN 18428.
9:00 COME TO LIFE
A human growth center of the air, hosted by
Herschel Lymon.
10:00 GATHER ROUND THE STAKE
With Tom Ritt and open phones.
12:00 SPECTRUM
With Carlos Hagen.
1:00 THE SUNDAY OPERA
Strauss: Die Frau ohne Schatten. Soloists: Leonie
Rysanek, Elisabeth Hoengen, Emmy Loose, Christel Goltz,
Hans Hopf, Kurt Boehme, Paul Schoeffler. Karl Boehm
conducts the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra. Richmond
SRS 64503. Stereo. Fred Hyatt hosts.
5:00
MARGARET WRIGHT
Telling it like it is, with open phones.
6:00 THE SUNDAY NEWS
6:30 CHICANO CREATIVE ARTS
7:30 LIVE IN CONCERT:
CALIFORNIA CHAMBER SYMPHONY
Direct from Royce Hall, UCLA, the
opening concert of the California
Chamber Symphony's 1972-73 season.
Founder/conductor Henri Temianka
directs a program of the music of J.S.
Bach and his sons. Featured soloists
are Eddy Manson, harmonica virtuoso,
and Louise Di Tullio, flute. David
Henri Temianka Cloud hosts. Stereo.
10:00 FOLK SCENE
A program of traditional and contemporary folk
music, often with guests. Howard and Roz Larman host.
12:30 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
6 monday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
With Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and fellow travellers
bringing you news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe: Based on the story of the
last Yahee Indian, Theodora Kroeber's book is divided into
22 parts and read by Virginia Maynard. A taped conversa-
tion with the author will be aired on Tuesday the 21st at
10:00 p.m.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
11:00 OPEN HOUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
A program of oratorio and cantata arias for the
soprano voice by Bach and Handel. Katherine Calkin hosts.
2:00 THE FUNCTION OF MYTHOLOGY IN CULTURE
Series of lectures by Dr. Joseph Campbell, author
of 77?e Hero with a Thousand Faces and numerous other
books on mythology. Dr. Campbell continues his studies
with this series on Oriental mythology. Part 1: Buddism in
China.
10
2:30 VIETNAM: A REPORTER REMEMBERS
Rebroadcast from Thursday the 6th during the
Electoral Collage of that evening: an interview with N.Y.
Times reporter Gloria Emerson, who covered the war in
Vietnam from early 1970 to early 1972. The only reporter
besides Pacifica's Judy Coburn to have her credential re-
voked by the South Vietnamese government because of
her political position.
3:00 POEMS OF LOVE, DOUBT AND STRUGGLE
By Todd Gitlin....born in New York City in 1943.
"Came of age" in 1960, into the student peace movement.
Worked with Students for a Democratic Society 1963 5,
and with the JOIN Community Union '65-7. JOIN, which
stood f it "Jobs or Income Now," was and Economic Re-
search and Action Project of SDS which, among other
things, culminated in a book co-edited by Todd and Nanci
Hollander: Uptown: Poor Whites in Chicago. He worked
with the San Francisco Express-Times in 1968, and has
since worked with other movements and publications; is
now teaching at San Jose State New College and at the
(Marxist-oriented) Bay Area School. Gitlin also edited
Campfires of the Resistance: Poetrv from the Movement
(Bobbs Merrill, 1972), which contains a couple of poems in
this recording.
3:30
5:00
JAZZ IN THE AFTERNOON
With Jass Thomas.
DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports and commentary from the Sierra Club. Pro-
duced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 CONSUMER REPORT
With Ida Honorof.
The Electoral Collage!
The concluding episode in KPFK's pre-election coverage.
From 7:00 p.m. until midnight, we proceed fearlessly on
to E-Day, arming you with information on issues, individ-
uals and perspectives relevant to what we'll all be doing
tomorrow.
THE MAIN EVENT
America's great quadriennial event reenacted. The
challenger vs. the champion. Representatives of
McGovern and Nixon debate and take phone calls
from you, the voter. Hosted by Mike Hodel. Live.
Followed by a taped debate between Robert Finch,
White House Assistant to President Nixon, and for-
mer Governor Edmund G. Brown for McGovern.
Taped by Don Roeck in Los Angeles in September.
HAVE I GOT A PROPOSITION FOR YOU!
How do_ initiatives reach the ballot.. .and why?
A case study of Proposition 22. Produced by Mary
Bess.
PHANTASMAGORA ELECTION ZAPPP
From darkness they come
And all from the same bin
No matter who you vote for
The government gets in
For two hours we ramble
Through the elections and inhibitions
Scintillating senses
And smashing traditions
From Watergate and Mitchell
To crime in the suites
The polls are all closed
Should we vote in the streets?
Vietnamese are dying
While oil floats ashore
Wall Streets running wild
Need we say more ?
CALIFORNIA'S VIETNAM OBITUARY
From midnight until we finish, the KFPK Staff and
renowned friends of KPFK, will read the awesome
list of those who have died or who are missing in
action, all sent 10,000 miles away from their homes
in California, by those who claim to represent
our interest in Vietnam.
11
7 tuesday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident .
8:30 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
News and other timely pieces from Don Roeck,
Joe Gaul, et alium.
9:00 ELECTION
DAY SPECIAL:
"365 Days (The Length
of One Tour in Vietnam)"
By Ronald J. Glasser, MD.
(Published by Braziller). A
complete reading of an
award-winning book about
the large agonies and small
pleasures of the War in
Vietnam. The author was
an Army pediatrician a
assigned for one year to
a large Army hospital in
Japan. He was supposed
to treat dependents'
children but wound up
doing what he could for
burned and broken 18
and 19 year old Amer-
ican wounded "children"
who came through
Japan. "365 Days" is
their story, not the
author's. The reader is
John Lithgow, a pro-
fessional actor. Editing by
Produced and directed for
WBAI. In seven parts with
Some Marines upon return from
Vietnam duty.
.*"■: >
Kathy Dobkin and Lory Bodger.
radio by Larry Josephson of
musical interludes.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 FOREIGN PRESS REPORT
7:00 ELECTION 1972
The polls are closing, the longest night of the
year begins. We'll fill it with news, opinion, music, com-
edy and miscellaneous stuff. Field reports from Miriam
Bjerre, Mary Bess and Andres Chavez; in-house conver-
sation moderated by Mike Hodel, with guests. Listen for
our computer to predict the winner(s) as soon as we
find the plug. I think it's somewhere here in the hall...
8 Wednesday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
With Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and fellow travellers,
bringing you news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe tells the story of a small
band of California Indians whose last survivor, Ishi, man-
aged to put off the extinction of the entire Yahee tribe.
Written by Theodora Kroeber and read by Virginia May-
ard, today's reading is part 5 in a series of 22 parts.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
11:00 MAKIN' IT
A series by and for low-income families, produced
by the Neighborhood Adult Participation Project.
i
11:30
COMMUNITY ARTS
With Decia Baker.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
French Chamber Music. Saint-Saens: Septet for
Piano, Trumpet, and Strings; Menahem Pressler, piano;
Harry Glantz, trumpet; Philip Sklar, bass; Guilet String
Quartet; Heliodor HS25012. Franck: Cello Sonata, Zara
Nelsova, cello; Grant Johannesen, piano; Golden Crest
CRS 40899. D'lndy: Suite in Olden Style for Two Flutes,
Trumpet, and Strings; Julius Baker and Claude Monteux,
flutes; Harry Glantz, trumpet; Philip Sklar, bass; Guilet
String Quartet; Heliodor HS 25012. Poulenc: Cello Sonata;
Zara Nelsova, cello; Grant Johannesen, piano; Golden Crest
CRS 40899. Faure: Piano Quartet No. 1; Alexander Schnei-
der, violin; Milton Katims, viola; Frank Miller, cello;
Mieczyslaw Horszowski, piano; Columbia ML 5343. David
Cloud hosts.
1:55
REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
2:00 THE FUNCTION OF MYTHOLOGY IN CULTURE
Series of lectures by Dr. Joseph Campbell, author
of The Hero with a Thousand Faces and numerous other
books on mythology. Dr. Campbell continues his studies
with this series on Oriental mythology. Today; Buddhism
in China, part 2.
2:30 POETRY OUT LOUD (No. 5)
A "magazine" of oral poetry produced by Klyde
Watkins and Peter Harleman consisting of audio compo-
sitions performed independent of text— hence full of
screams, whispers and the full range of the human voice.
IN MEMORIUM: LEE MORGAN
Five jazz musicians play a tribute to a friend and
fellow musician, trumpeter Lee Morgan. Bobbi Humphrey,
flute; Harold Nabern, piano; Billy Harper, tenor sax; Bob
Cranshaw, bass; and Freddie Waits, drums. Produced by
Carl de Santo and the Music Department of WBAI.
Recorded in stereo by David Rapkin.
12
3:30
5:00
MUSIC AT THE CROSSROADS
With Lance Williams.
DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, field reports, edi-
torial contrasts, and Stephen Mamber reviewing current
Los Angeles film fare. Produced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45
VOICE OF THE UNION
OF VIETNAMESE IN THE U.S.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00
CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
Songs of non-liberation: a survey
of popular songs
which reflect the
immense extent of
male chauvinism
that permeates
relations between
men and women in
middle and rural
America. (Resched-
uled; not broadcast
in September due to
pre-emption.)
9:00 FILMEX
The SECOND annual Los Angeles International Film
Exposition (November 9-19) is previewed and anticipated in
this program produced by KPFK film critics Stephen Mam-
ber and Bob Mundy. (To be rebroadcast Thursday the 9th
at 3:00 p.m.)
10:00 MUSIC FROM MOSCOW
A conc&rt by the USSR State Symphony Orch-
estra. Miaskovsky: Symphony No. 27 in C minor. Op. 85.
Prokofieff: Piano Concerto No. 5 in G major. Op. 55;
Sviatoslav Richter, piano; USSR State Symphony Orches-
tra; Yevgeny Svetlanov conducting. Recorded live in the
Great Hall of the Moscow Conservatory. Tapes courtesy
of Radio Moscow.
11:00 PABLO NERUDA IN NEW YORK
Part 1: Neruda reads four poems in Spanish which
are preceeded by English translations. Recorded at Colum-
bia University, 13 April 1972. Part 2: Neruda addresses
P.E.N.'s 50th Anniversary Dinner on the 10thof April. He
is introduced by Arthur Miller. From WBAI.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
9 thursday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasure of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul et al bring you the news
and other timely pieces.
9:25 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis, your friendly General Manager.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe by Tlrwdora Kroeber.
From the drama of Indian history at the end of the 19th,
beginning of the 20th century, comes the story of Ishi, the
last Yahee Indian to survive. Selections are read by Vir-
ginia Maynard. Part 6 in a 22-part series.
10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC
Canadian Folk Songs: miscellaneous work songs.
Program material courtesy of Radio Canada. Stereo.
10:30 THE GERMAN LIED
More songs of Schubert today, from the cycles
Die Schoene Muellerin, Winterreise, and Schwanengesang.
Second of six parts. Tape courtesy of Deutsche Welle.
11:00
THE ADVOCATES
The audio portion of KCET's forum.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Today's concert features examples of the various
types of medieval organa (vocal polyphony). Katherine
Calkin hosts.
2:00 ENZENSBERGER INTERVIEWED
Hans Magnus Enzensberger, West Berlin poet,
playwrite, and editor is interviewed from Germany by
Ronnie Davis, former Director of the San Francisco Mime
Troupe. One of Germany's finest poets, Enzensberger, who
cut short a visit to the United States to go to Cuba a few
years ago, wrote an important letter to the U.S. from Cuba
explaining his actions. Produced for KPFA by Ronnie Da-
vis.
3:00 FILMEX
Rebroadcast from Wednesday the 8th, 9:00 p.m.
4:00 FOLK SCENE
With Howard and Roz Larman.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and Bob Gottlieb with a book review. Barbara
Cady produces.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 WILLIAM WINTER
7:00
8:00
OPEN HOUR
THE BRUNO WALTER LEGACY - I
Walter recalled: interviews with Leonard Bernstein,
Lotte Lehmann, and others. Beethoven: Violin Concerto;
Joseph Szigeti, violin; New York Philharmonic (recorded in
1947). Mahler: Adagietto from Symphony No. 5; Vienna
Philharmonic Orchestra (recorded in 1938). Program ma-
terial courtesy of Educational Broadcasting Associates.
9:30 KPFK PRESENTS KFAC
On Sunday, September 24, 1972, a public meet-
ing was held at the Wilshire-Ebell Theater in Los Angeles
to discuss recent programming and format changes on Los
Angeles' only full-time classical music station KFAC. As a
public service, KPFK presents highlights from that unusual,
illuminating, and often explosive gathering. Produced by
William Malloch, Mike Hodel and David Cloud, with tech-
nical assistance from Joe Adams and Mark Rosenthal. (To
be rebroadcast Tuesday the 14th, at 2:00 p.m.)
13
10:30 JOHNNY GOT HIS GUN
A dramatized stereo adaptation of Dalton Trumbo's
devastating anti-war novel, dedicated to the refuse of all
wars, both living and dead. A stark reminder to us that the
pervasive horror of war does not end with the conclusion
of the late evening news or the casualty reports. Adapta-
tion for radio by David Rapkin and Milton Hoffman, star-
ring Patrick Shea, produced by Charles Potter with techni-
cal effects by David Rapkin. (To be rebroadcast Saturday
the 11th at 3:30 p.m. )
11:30 APOGEE
Mitchell Harding provides subjective, eclectic,
opinionated fuel for the next turn of the great wheel.
12:00 NIGHTANGELS
Engineer Rick battles with the whitenoise.
11:30 HOPI EARTH PROPHECY
Details of this program are listed under Thursday
the 23rd, 11:30 p.m.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Cantatas of J.S. Bach. Bach: Cantata No. 32
("Liebster Jesu, mein Verlangen"); Elly Ameling, soprano;
Hermann Prey, bass; German Bach Soloists conducted by
Helmut Winschermann; Phillips 6500080; Cantata No. 68
("Also hat Gott die Welt geliebt"); Ursula Buckel, soprano;
Jakob Staempfli, bass; Kassel Vocal Soloists and German
Bach Soloists conducted by Klaus Ziegler; Nonesuch H
71256; Cantata No. 57 ("Selig is der Mann"); Elly Ameling,
soprano; Hermann Prey, bass; German Bach Soloists con-
ducted by Helmut Winschermann; Phillips 6500080; Can-
tata No. 172 ("Erschallet, ihr Lieder, erklinget ihr Saiten");
Ursula Buckel, soprano; Irma Keller, alto; Theo Altmeyer,
tenor; Jakob Staempfli, bass; Kassel Vocal Soloists and
German Bach Soloists conducted by Kfaus Ziegler; None-
such H 71256. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00
2:30
CRITIQUE
A look at current books, film, music, theater.
WRITE ON!
A weekly program examining issues, ideas,
movements, magazines, and whatever seems of interest
in the literary world. Produced by Paul Vangelisti and
Bill Margolis.
lO friday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, et alium bringing you the
news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe by Theodora Kroeber, read
by Virginia Maynard: Preserving Yahee ways through cun-
ning and moral as well as physical strength, Ishi remains
the last survivor of his tribe. Part 7 in a 22-part series.
10:00
11:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
DESCENT OF WOMAN
If you ask any school kid
what prehistoric society was like,
you're sure to hear about cave men
pulling women around by the hair.
Until recently, archeologists (mostly
male) never attributed much importance to the role of the
female, in determining the direction of prehistoric devel-
opment. Elaine Morgan, a Welsh laywoman, published a
book in May called The Descent of Woman which questions
the interpretations male archeologists have given to rather
sketchy data, wherein all progress of the species revolves
around the progress of Big Hunter. Ms. Morgan proposes
what she feels are more logical theories concerning the pre-
historic development and present state of humanity. Pro-
duced by Lois Hansen and Julia Curtis for KPFA.
3:30 IMPRESSIONS
Ed Hamilton, with a program of jazz.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and commentary from Richard Gollance of
the Gay Community Sen/ices Center. Produced by Barbara
Cady.
6:00
6:45
6:55
7:00
LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
FOREIGN PRESS REPORT: Japan
With Professor Hans Baerwald, UCLA.
REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis, KPFK's General Manager.
THE OTHER MINORITY
Mitch Pomerantz hosts this regular feature dealing
with problems of the handicapped. A guest panel will talk
and open phone lines to the audience.
8:00 LOWELL PONTE
An hour of comment and opinion from the Right.
9:00 MUNDO CHICANO
With Antonio Salazar.
wa fr»w • 6ft. Witt
HOLLYWOOD — 6743 Hollywood Blvd.
CANOOA PARK — Topanga Plaza 6B3-S191
COSTA MESA — S Coast Plaza 540-2191
aVUuTJUJMU)— Valley Plaza 832-2815
PALOS VERGES — Peninsula Center 941-2416
SAN BERNARDINO — Inland Center 889-8335
SAN DIEQO— Mission Valley Center 291 1315
UONTCLAIR — Monlclair Plaza S24-M72
Carlsbad — Plaza Camlno Real 729-5988
OXNAflO — The Esplanade 445-2188
All Shires Open
Mo.i Ens.
<Cloeed Sundays]
14
11:00 HOUR 25: sf
Methusela's Children listen to Kathy Calkin, John
Henry Thong and Mike Hodel. But then they don't have to
go to bed until 1975.
2:00 SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
Old radio shows, mellow music, and satire and
comedy— concluding , as the sun comes up, with the "I
love a mystery" scarey serial. Jay Lacey hosts.
11 Saturday
8:00 EARLY MORNING RAGAS
Music for the early hours of the day from the
timeless traditions of India.
8:30 KRISHNAMURTI
The renowned spiritual leader in a series of talks
given this year and made available through the Krishna-
murti Foundation.
9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
Programs for Young People with Ruth Buell,
the former Lunch Fair Five, and special guests. ..some
of whom we hope will be You, from time to time.
10:30
FOLK MUSIC
With John Davis.
12 Sunday
8:00 THE MUSIC OF JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH
Cantata No. 210, "O holden Tag." Magda Laszlo,
soprano; Hermann Scherchen conducts the Vienna State
Opera Orchestra. Westminster XWN 18396. Orgelbuechlein
Nos. 15-23. Carl Weinrich, organ. Westminster XWN 18110.
9:00 COME TO LIFE
A human growth center of the air, hosted by
Herschel Lymon.
10:00 GATHER 'ROUND THE STAKE
With Tom Ritt and open phones.
12:00
SPECTRUM
With Carlos Hagen.
12:30 TRANS
1:00 THE SUNDAY OPERA
Monteverdi: The Coronation of Poppea. Soloists:
Magda Laszlo, Richard Lewis, Frances Bible, Oralia Dom-
inguez, Lydia Marimpietri, Hugues Cuenod, Carlo Cava,
John Shirley-Quirk. John Pritchard conducts the Glynde-
bourne Festival Chorus and Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.
Seraphim SIB 6073. Stereo. Fred Hyatt hosts.
5:00 MARGARET WRIGHT
Telling it like it is, with open phones.
6:00 THE SUNDAY NEWS
1:30
2:00
3:30
THE STUDENT MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE
A look at the antiwar movement.
NOMMO
With Kaimu.
JOHNNY GOT HIS GUN
A dramatized, stereo adaptation of " I he Dead,"
the first half of Dalton Trumbo's important novel,
Johnny Got His Gun. A stunning radio adaptation by
Milton Hoffman and David Rapkin, starring Patrick Shea,
produced by Charles Potter with technical effects by
David Rapkin.
4:30
DOROTHY HEALEY
Communist commentary (with open phones).
5:30 STUDENT UNION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE
6:00
6:30
7:30
9:00
THE SATURDAY NEWS
FRANK GREENWOOD
PREACHIN' THE BLUES
Frank Scott, with music both live and recorded.
ZYMURGY
"ART DEGRADED IMAGINATION DENIED
WAR GOVERNED THE NATIONS" is Blake's formula
that we (David Cloud and Everett Frost) try to undo
weekly.
11:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
Gangbusters: The Onion Jar Case; It's Joan Davis
Time: Guest is Danny Thomas.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
6:30 CHICANO CREATIVE ARTS
7:30 MUSIC FROM OBERLIN
Bach: Prelude and Fugue in E minor, BVW 548;
John Rees, organ. Mozart: Trio for Violin, Cello, and
Piano, K 542; Kazuka Numanami, violin; Richard Kapu
schinski, cello; John Owings, piano. Beethoven: Piano
Sonata No. 31 in A flat. Op. 110; Alyce LeBlanc, piano.
Recorded live in concert at Oberlin Conservatory of Music
in Oberlin, Ohio. Stereo.
8:30 ADRIENNE RICH READING HER POEMS
Poems from two of her earliest books, Snapshots,
of a Daughter-in-Law and Necessities of Life, published by
W. W. Norton & Co. From a series of women poets reading
their work produced by Mimi Weisbord Anderson at WBAI.
(To be rebroadcast Wednesday the 15th at 2:30 p.m.)
8:45 BINAURAL THEATER:
The Genuine Plastic Marriage. Boredom and dis-
illusion affect a "normal" marriage but self-relevation only
leads to a widening of the gap between this husband and
wife. Written by Julian Dickon and recorded in binaural
stereo which produces 3-dimensional sound with headphones.
(To be rebroadcast Wednesday the 15th at 2:45 p.m.)
9:30 FOLK SCENE
A program of traditional and contemporary folk
music, often with guests. Howard and Roz Larman host.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
13 monday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk hosts.
15
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
With Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and fellow travellers
bringing you news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe is the story of the last
Yahee Indian to resist the violent fate of destruction by
settlers and gold seekers. His story is told by Theodora
Kroeber and read here by Virginia Maynard.
10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetla.
11:00 OPEN HOUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
A program of oratorio and cantata arias for the
alto voice by Bach and Handel. Katherine Calkin hosts.
2:00 THE FUNCTION OF MYTHOLOGY IN CULTURE
The 3rd in a series of lectures by Dr. Joseph
Campbell, author of The Hero with a Thousand Faces and
numerous other books on mythology. Dr. Campbell con-
tinues his studies with this series on Oriental mythology.
Today's lecture: Comparison of Eastern and Western Myth-
ology.
2:30 THE ABORTION BATTLE RAGES ON
Ida Honorof interviews Dr. Paul Marx, Professor
of Sociology at St. John's University and author of The
Death Peddlers-War on the Unborn; and Mary Petrinovich
with the National Organization of Women (NOW) and the
Women's Clinic in Los Angeles.
3:30
JAZZ IN THE AFTERNOON
With Jass Thomas.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports and commentary from the Sierra Club. Pro-
duced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 CONSUMER REPORT
With Ida Honorof.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00 LA RAZA NUEVA
With Moctezuma Esparza.
Music Not For Export's
Joseph Cooper:
P.S. 114 1946
Stuyvesant High 1950
CCNY 1954
"Messiah of record
collectors"— M. Slonimsky,
Encyclopedic Directory of
Hobbyists (W.W. Morton
& Co.. 1967).
Now lives in Hollywood,
an area most conducive
to his search for inner
spiritual fulfillment.
folio apologizes for having
omitted J.C. from October
edition. Photo: Allen Zak
16
9:00 MUSIC NOT FOR EXPORT
Dessau Light and Heavy. Paul Dessau: Mozart-
Adaptation/ Staatskapelle Berlin; Otmar Suitner conductor.
Requiem for Lumumba; Sylvia Geszty, soprano; Vladimir
Bauer, baritone; Ekkehard Schall and Guenter Naumann,
speakers; Leipzig Symphony Orchestra and Chorus; Herbert
Kagel conductor.
10:00 THE WILLIAM MALLOCH PROGRAM
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
14 tuesday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul and fellow travellers bring
you news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe is the story of the last
Yahee Indian to resist the violent fate of destruction by
settlers and gold seekers. His story is told by Theodora
Kroeber and read here by Virginia Maynard. Part 9 in a
22-part series.
10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC
Traditional Japanese Music. Two works for the
shakuhachi, Shika-no-tone and Iwashimizu. Tapes courtesy
of Japan Broadcasting Corporation. Stereo.
10:30 MUSIC FROM GERMANY
Contemporary vocal music by Hanns Eisler and
Rolf Liebermann based on poetry by Bertold Brecht.
David Berger hosts. Tapes courtesy of the Association of
German Broadcasters. Stereo.
11:00 THE PLIGHT OF WOMEN IN BROADCASTING
Lois Hansen, Ellen Dubrowin and Deborah Janone
of KPFA visited executives at nine representative Bay Area
radio and TV stations and asked them about the status of
women employees there .
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Three American Originals. Louis Moreau Gott-
schalk: Symphony No. 2 ("Montevideo"); Vienna State
Opera Orchestra conducted by Igor Buketoff; Turnabout
TVS 34440-42. The Banana Tree; Frank Glazer, piano;
Concert Disc CS 217. The Union-Concert Paraphrase on
National Airs; Eugene List, piano; Vienna State Opera
Orchestra conducted by Igor Buketoff; Turnabout TVS
34440-42. Scott Joplin: Maple Leaf Rag: Pine App'} Rag;
Solace— A Mexican Serenade; Euphonic Sounds; Magnetic
Rag; Joshua Rifkin, piano; Nonesuch H 71248 and H
71264. George Gershwin: Three Preludes; Frank Glazer,
piano; Concert Disc CS 217. Cuban Overture; Variations
on "I Got Rhythm" for Piano and Orchestra; Earl Wild,
piano; Boston Pops conducted by Arthur Fiedler; RCA
LSC 2586. David Cloud hosts. Stereo. (Rescheduled from
September)
2:00 KPFK PRESENTS KFAC
Rebroadcast from Thursday the 9th, 9:30 p.m.
3:00 A LANGSTON HUGHES MEMORIAL
See Thursday the 23rd, 6:00 p.m. for details.
4:00
5:00
FOLK MUSIC
With John Davis.
DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
fiald reports and commentary from feminist groups. Pro-
duced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
7:00 FILMEX
Los Angeles' SECOND annual International Film
Exhibition. KPFK film critics Stephen Mamber and Bob
Mundy turn in a critique and progress report. (To be re-
broadcast Thursday the 16th at 2:00 p.m.)
6:45 FOREIGN PRESS REPORT: Latin America
With Professor Donald Bray, Cal. State, L.A.
7:30 OPEN HOUR
8:30 REPORT TO/FROM THE LISTENERS
The KPFK staff would like to share news of
the station, letters we receive from listeners, and other
relevant information with you. We invite you to phone v^f ]
in your input, comments, criticisms, during this hour. J\i
9:30 CHAMBER MUSIC FROM THE NETHERLANDS
Franz Danzi: Wind Quintet in B flat (8). Kees Van
Baaren: Trio for Flute, Clarinet, and Bassoon (8). Willem
Pijper: Wind Quintet (8). Danzi Wind Quintet. Program
material courtesy of Radio Nederland. Stereo.
10:00 HOW TERRIBLY STRANGE TO BE SEVENTY
A look at what it must be like to be old by people
who are nowhere near being so, and by people who do face
the problems, tensions, and enjoyment of age— the elderly.
This program was produced by Jenny Levine and Marc
Spector, at WBAI. (To be rebroadcast Monday the 20th at
2:30 p.m.)
10:30 ONE MAN'S OPINION: PROFILE OF GEORGE
PUTNAM. For over twenty years, George Putnam
has been one of the most controversial and popular t3'e-
vision news personalities in Los Angeles. He is the highest-
paid newsman in the business, making over $300,000 per
year ($50,000 more than Walter Cronkite). His program
has recently adopted a new format in which a studio aud-
ience "talks back" to him and his colleagues following
their newscast. Alan Farley interviewed him and his assoc-
iates, Hal Fishman, following one of these programs, and
this program is a distillation of his views. The subjects
range from "Happy News," "it's a bunch of crap..." to
Vietnam protesters, "...take them all and drop them be-
hind the DMZ." From KPFA. (To be rebroadcast Monday
the 20th at 3:00 p.m.)
11:00 REDEALING
The best of the previous week's Dealing programs,
produced by Barbara Cady.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
15 Wednesday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul and fellow travellers bring
you the news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe tells the story of a small
band of California Indians whose last survivor, Ishi, Man-
aged to put off the extinction of the entire Yahee tribe.
Written by Theodora Kroeber and read by Virginia May-
nard, today's reading is the 10th in a 22-part series.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
11:00 MAKIN' IT
A series by and for low-inome families, produced
by the Neighborhood Adult Participation Project.
11:30
COMMUNITY ARTS
With Decia Baker.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Recent Henze. Hans Werner Henze: Symphony
No. 6; London Symphony Orchestra; Hans Werner Henze
conducting; DGG 2530261. The Tedious Way to the Place
of Natascha Ungeheuer; William Pearson, baritone; The
Fires of London; Philip Jones Brass Quintet; Gunter Ham-
pel Free Jazz Ensemble; Hans Werner Henze conducting;
DGG 2530212. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
1:55
2:00
REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
THE FUNCTION OF MYTHOLOGY IN CULTURE
Fourth in a series of lectures by Dr. Joseph Camp-
bell, on the subject of Oriental mythology. Today's topic:
Tantric Kundalini Yoga.
2:30
2:45
ADRIENNE RICH READING HER POEMS
Rebroadcast from Sunday the 12th at 8:30 p.m.
BINAURAL THEATER: The Genuine Plastic
Marriage. Rebroadcast from Sunday the 12th
at 8:45 p.m.
3:30 MUSIC AT THE CROSSROADS
With Lance Williams.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and Stephen Mamber reviewing current Los
Angeles film fare. Produced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 VOICE OF THE UNION
OF VIETNAMESE IN THE U.S.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
How coal mining really was and is in Appalachia.
Part 1. Nolan Hubbs is a courageous coal miner now total-
ly crippled with the dreaded "black lung" disease that af-
fects so many miners. On the porch of his home in Appal-
achia he talks with Carlos Hagen and tells vividly the story
of his life in the coal mines. His conversation is supple-
mented with a number of pertinent songs and comment-
aries. This is a poignant documentary on the poverty,
exploitation, strip mining and virtual slavery that afflicts
Appalachia. Part 2 will be aired next Wednesday at 8:00.
17
Special Wholesale l/Vbrehouse
Group Purchase Plan
(NOT AVAILABLE TO THE GENERAL PUBLIC)
pacifica
kpf k-fm 90.7
FOR KPFK SUBSCRIBERS:
Arrangements have been made with the Capitol Tire Sales/Warehouses, Inc., whereby
you may purchase at wholesale warehouse prices, through their special Wholesale
Warehouse Group Purchase Plan.
This program enables you to buy at substantial savings, from Capitol's many ware-
houses, various automotive items.. .first line premium quality tires manufactured by
the leading tire producers, Monroe E-Z Ride shock absorbers, top quality heavy-duty
batteries produced by the manufacturers of Exide and Willard batteries, chrome auto
wheels, heavy-duty truck wheels, mufflers and auto stereos, all produced by the world's
leading manufacturers.. .all sold exclusively with Capitol's written guarantee.
The enclosed special WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE GROUP PURCHASE PLAN price list
clearly shows the prices, products and guarantees available only to members, whereas
the Group Membership Card, attached to the price list, shows your nearest warehouse
location, plus 19 others you may use at any time during your travels* ...open Mondays
through Fridays, 8:00 - 7:00 p.m., and Saturdays 8:00 - 5:00 p.m.
Major credit cards are accepted, or terms may be arranged. ..be sure to present your
Group Membership Card when you make purchases through this program; Capitol Ware-
houses are NOT open to the general public.
This special service is a free benefit arranged for KPFK subscribers and their families.
Van Nuys Warehouse at 7628 Densmore is opening about
10/1/72, and Rialto Warehouse on the corner of Valley
Blvd. at Lilac St. (serving the San Bernardino-Riverside-
Ontario Metropolitan area) is opening about 11/1/72.
mm
SPECIAL f
make spec
mufflers, i
All tires showr
first line quali
tires, retreads
policy! All tire
most well knov
tires are manu
Govt, required
Capitol Wareh(
CONFIDENTIAL
Wholesale Warehouse
Price Schedule
CAPITOL TIRE SALES
WAREHOUSES, INC.
c Copyright 1972. AM rights reserved.
Permission to reproduce all or part
SPECIAL
WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE
GROUP PURCHASE PLAN
PERMANENT MEMBERSHIP CARD
(Not Available to the General Public)
PERMANENT MEMBERSHIP CARD
J
KPFK-FM ■ LISTENER SPONSOR
KPFK-FM • LISTENER SPONSOR
GROUP NO-
SPECIAL WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE
GROUP PURCHASE PLAN
CAPITOL
TIRE SALES/WAREHOUSES,
INC.
By special arrangement, this membership card en-
titles the bearer to special wholesale warehouse
prices on new tires, shock absorbers, auto batteries,
wheels, mufflers, and other products.
Membership and guarantee valid at all
Capitol Tire Sales Warehouses in the United States
SPECIAL WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE
GROUP PURCHASE PLAN
CAPITOL
TIRE SALES/WAREHOUSES, INC.
By special arrangement, this membership card en-
titles the bearer to special wholesale warehouse
prices on new tires, shock absorbers, auto batteries,
wheels, mufflers, and other products.
Membership and guarantee valid at all
Capitol Tire Sales Warehouses in the United States
CAPITOL'S EXCLUSIVE "NO TIME LIMIT" GUARANTEE
WORKMANSHIP AND MATERIAL - If any tire sold by Capitol tails due to
defects in workmanship and material during the first 25% of tread wear, it
will be replaced free of charge Failures beyond 25% of tread wear will be
replaced on the basis of tread wear, prorated on the purchase price plus
Federal Excise Tax.
ROAD HAZARD — Any failure that occuts due to road hazards will be re-
placed on the basis of tread wear, prorated on the purchase price plus Fed-
eral Excise Tax. Repairable punctures not included.
NO TIME LIMIT WEAR GUARANTEE - Capitol guarantees the original pur-
chaser will receive full mileage paid for or be given prorata credit on a new
tire, based on the purchase price prorated on the basis of mileage
EXAMPLE: If a $20 00 1
15.000 miles, the cost of a ne
th a
30.000 mile guarantee wears smooth at
i is $10,00 plus Federal Excise Tax.
Capitol's tread wear guarantee is predicated on proper wheel alignment and
normal driving conditions at normal speeds. Correct inflation pressures, fre-
quent rotation of tires and general good vehicle maintenance will assist in
achieving greater tire mileage, and promote safety m driving.
Excessive speed, overloading, fast starts and quick stops adversely affect tire
mileage. Safe driving habits promote longer tire life — as well as your own.
COMPLETE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION - This guarantee covers tires used
in normal passenger car service to original purchaser only, but does not
cover: mileage on front wheel drive vehicles, pickup trucks, campers, special
type vehicles, buses or travel trailers, tires used in any form of racing,
including drag strips, tires damaged by willful abuse, fire, collision, mechan-
ical defects on vehicles, theft, or passenger tires used in commercial serv-
ice on trucks or taxicabs. Defective tires must be returned to any Capitol
Tire Sales Warehouse for adjustment under this exclusive guarantee.
PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE
DYNACOR BELTED -2+2
78 Series
DYNACOR BELTED 2 2
the world's largest tire
40.000-mile tread wear,
ship guarantee
- Manufactured by one of
makers Twin whitewall —
oad hazard and workman-
Size
Takes
Place
Of
Cash & Carry
Warehouse
Group Price
Fed.
Excise
Tax
C 78 13
(700
13)
18.61
2 00
D-78-14
(695
14)
20.95
2 37
E78-14
(735
14)
18.76
2 37
F78 14
(775
14)
19.93
2.54
G78 14
(825
14)
20.98
2 69
H78-14
(855
14)
_22.85
2 95
J78-14
(885
14)
23.91
3.05
F7815
(775
15)
20.90
2 62
G78 15
(825
15)
21.89
? 80
H78-15
(855
15)
22 96
3 01
J78-15
(900
15)
23.92
3 12
L78-15
(915
15)
24.91
3 27
RADIAL STEEL
70 and 78 Series
RADIAL STEEL BELTCD-Tubeless blackwalls manu-
factured by one of the world's most respected tire
makers 50. 000- mile tread wear, workmanship and
road hazard guarantee.
155SR13
165SR13
155SR15
165SR15
185 7013
(560 13) 26.94
1 48
(590 600-13) 28.86
(560 15) 29.96
(59015) 31.85
(70013) 31.89
1.65
LARGE RADIAL PLY
70 and 78 Series
NOTE: Radials for
npact cars on page
RADIAL BELTED 2+4 Slim Line White Tubeless
Manufactured by one of the world's largest tire
makers. 2 ply polyester cord body plus 4 plies rayon
belts. 6-ply tread. 50.000-mile tread wear, workman-
ship and road hazard guarantee
Size
BR78-13
ER78-14
FR78-14
GR78-14
HR78-14
BR78-15
FR78-15
GR78-15
HR78 15
JR78-15
LR78-15
AR70-13
DR70-14
FR70-14
GR70-14
Takes
Place
Of
(700-13)
(735-14)
(775-14)
(825-14)
(855-14)
(600 735-
(775 15)
(815 825-
(845 855
(900 855-
Cash & Carry
Warehouse
Group Price
~27T94~
27.90
29.90
31.96
(915
(650
(735
15 (775
15 (825
-15)
-13)
-14)
14
-14
33.85
15)28.92"
29.90
15) 31.96
15)~33T85
15) 35.90"
37.85
26.87
27.93
15) 32.80
15) 34.78
Fed.
Excise
Tax
1.95
2 47
2 61
2.88
3 10
2 52
2.69
2.85
3 21
3 44
3.51
1.92
2 39
2.82
3.01
FIBERGLASS BELTED
70 and 78 Series
FIBERGLASS BELTED - Manuactured by one of the
world's largest tire makers Polyester cord 4- fiber-
glass belts - wide tread Dual whitewall. 50.000-
mile tread wear, road hazard and workmanship
guarantee
Takes Cash & Carry Fed.
Size Place Warehouse Excise
Of Group Price Tax
C78 13
E78 14
F78 14
G78-14
H78-14
J78 14
G78-15
H7815
J78-15
L78 15
E70-14
F70 14
G70-14
H70-14
G70 15
H70 15
(700 13)
(735-14)
(775-14)
(82514)
(855-14)
(885-14)
(825-15)
(855 15)
(900-15)
(915-15)
(735-14)
(775-14)
(825 14)
(855 14)
(82515)
(855-15)
28.92
25.90
26.95
28.90
29.95
23.95
24.96
25.96
28.95
27.96
28.95
2.00
2.34
2.54
269
2.95
3 05
2 80
301
2.96
3.27
2.51
2.64
2.84
3 05
2.87
3.11
* STEEL BELTED * SUPER 70 and 78 SERIES
185 7014 (700 735-14) 32,92
1 62
1.91
1.85
1.95
"BELTS OF STEEL"-SUPER 78 STEEL BELTEO-Manufactured by one of the wo
Polyester cord *- steel, belts, whitewall. 50.000 mile tread wear, road hazard and
Id's largest tire makers,
workmanship guarantee.
A70 13
D70 14
E70 14
F70 14
G70 14
(650 13)
(695^14)
(735-14)
(775 14)
(825-14)
25.89
28.92
2 4/
? 87
29.87
30.87
31.80
2 97
G70-15
H78 14
H78 15
3 15 J78-15
3.03 L78 15
(825-15)
(855-14)
(855 15)
(900 15)
(91515)
34.85
33.97
34.80
36.79
38.80
345
3.22
3.47
3.23
3.56
CASH AND CARRY
PRICES •
•Pren
FINANCING AVAILABLE • MOUNTING. BALANCING AND INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
mm is our designation. No industry-wide standards exist for premium fires.
CONVENTIONAL WIDTH TIRES
FULL 4 PLY NYLON
world's largest tire
30.000 mtle tread we;
ship guarantee
Manufactured by one of the
makers Whitehall Written
. road hazard and workman-
650-13
Cash & Carry
Warehouse
Group Price
14.98
700 1?
695-14
735 14
15.76
Fed.
Excise
Tax
1.76
1.95
15.92
15.96
775 14
825 14
16.82
17X2
1.95
2.01
2 14
2 32
855-14
885-14
735 15
775-15
825-15
855-15
900 15
18.89
2.50
19.90
2.81
16.78
16.92
2 01
2 16
17.94
2 3 7
18.90
2.54
20.93
2.89
600-16 TTBL
13.65
1 84
EXTRA STRENGTH
4 + 2 FIBERGLASS BELTED
FIBERGLASS BELTED 4 I 2. The strongest ever'
Manufactured by one of the world's largest tire
makers. Twin whitewall. 4 full ply polyester cord 4
2 fiberglass cord belts. 6 ply tread - 50.000-mile
tread wear, road hazard and workmanship guarantee
78 SERIES TOUR PLY
FULL 4 PLV POLYESTER - New wide look. Manu
ied by one of the world's largest tire makers
Whitehall 36.000 mile tread wear, road hazard and
win km, mship guarantee Dynacor
Takes Cash & Carry Fed.
Size Place Warehouse Excise
Of Group Price Tax
Takes
Place
Of
Cash & Carry Fed.
Warehouse Excise
Group Price Tax
A78-13
C78-14
(600
E78 14
F78-14
G78-14
H78 14
J7S 14
(695
E78 15
F78 15
(735
(775
(825
(855
(885
(735
G78 15
(775
(825
JUZ&15
J78-15
_C85_5_
L78 15
(900
(915
13)
14)
20.87
22.88
14)
14)
14)
14)
14)
15)
24.84
26.72
27.93
29.85
30.93
24.94
15)
26.95
1.86
2 17
2 50
2.55
2 67
2.93
3.01
2 23
2.75
15)
27.93
L5L
29.90
2 77
2 98
15L
30.93
15)
31.88
3 08
3.22
FIBERGLASS BELTED
SUPER WIDE SWINGER
FIBERGLASS BELTED SWINGER - Raised white
letters. Manufactured by one of the world's largest
tire makers Newest look — Super Wide 60 series,
up to 10 inches wide — Fiberglass belted polyester
cord.
E60 15
F60-14
G60 14
J60 15
(73515) 27.89
15 (775 14 15) 28.96
15(825-14 15) 29.91
2,88
2 81
(90015)
32.98
2.93
3.53
L60 14 15 (915 14/15) 34.79 3.76
A78-13*
C78-13
B78-14*
E78 14
F78-14
G78 14
H7814
J78-14
F78-15
G78-15
H78-15
900-15
L78-15
(600, 650 J^)
(700-13)
(600 650-14)
(735
(775
(825
(855
(900
(775
(825
(855-15)
(91515)
14)
14)
14)
14)
14)
15)
15)
15.95
19.45
16.95
20.88
21.92
23.90
24.80
20.90
21.92
23.90
24.80
25.90
1.86
1 95
200
2.24
2.39
2.56
2.75
2.95
2.43
2.63
2.81
2.90
3.16
WIDE OVAL TIRES
FULL 4 PLY POLYESTER CORD - WIDE RIDE -
Raised white letters Manufactured by one of the
world's largest tire makers.
A70 13
D70 14
F70-14
(650 13)
(735 141
(7 75 14)
G70 14
H70-14
G70 15
H70 15
(825 14)
(855-14)
(82515)
(85515)
20.78
~2iT90~
T5Wt
~24".98
24.98
1 76
2 24
2 55
2 72
2qo
2.84
2.98
INDUSTRIAL - BOAT TRAILER
NYLON CORD
400 480
400 480
400 480
400 480
570 500
530 450
530 450
12
12**
4 Ply
4 Ply
4 Ply
4 Ply
6 Ply
4 Ply
4 Ply
5.95
52
7.65
61
8.30
75
9.60
.89
1 07
9.80
9.95
91
10.65
1 00
MUD AND SNOW TIRES
FULL 4 PLY
by one of th
white or bl
guarantee
NYLON MUD & SNOW - ManufactL
e word's largest tire makers. Tubeless,
ack Road hazard and workmanship
650 13
19.72
1 76
700 13
19.98
C78 14
(695 14)
19.80
£.78- 14 f 735- 14} 20.96
F78 14
(77514)
21.87
G78-14
(825 14)
22.90
H78 14
(855 14i
23.95
J78-14
560-15
(885 14)
24.75
18.75
E7.
F7;
15
15
(73515) 20.96
G78 15
(775 15)
22.80
H78-15
(825 15) 23.70
J78 15
(85515)
24.80
K78-15
(88515) 25.74
178-15
(900 15)
25.90
(91515)
26.85
1.95
1 94
2.01
2.38
2.55
2.74
2 '-I
1.74
2 08
2 42
2 64
2 80
2 96
..89
COMPACT AND
IMPORTED CAR TIRES
SPORT PREMIUM - Tubeless blackball - 30.000-
mile tread wear, road hazard and workmanship
guarantee Add $1 00 for whitewalls
Sire
Cash & Carry
Warehouse
Group Price
Fed.
Excise
Tax
550 12
13.90
1.37
600 12
13.90
1.44
520-13
12.90
1.34
560 13
13.90
1.48
600 1 3
13.90
1.60
560 15
13.90
1.74
600-15
14.90
1 91
560-14
13.90
1.54
RADIAL PLY TIRES FOR
COMPACT & IMPORTED CARS
RADIAL BELTEO-Tubeless blackwalls manufactured
by one of the world's most respected radial tire
makers. 40.000 mile written tread wear, road hazard,
workmanship and material guarantee
Takes
Place
Of
Cash & Carry Fed.
Warehouse Excise
Group Price Tax
BLACKWALL TUBELESS
145SR
155SR
165SR
175SR
155SR
165SR
175SR
185SR
155SR
165SR l1
(55013)
(56013)
(590 600-13)
(640 65013)
(560-14)
(590 600-14)
(640 650-14)
(700-14)
(560-15)
(5
21.95
22.89
24.98
26.69
26.93
27.90
25.94
1.35
1 39
1.66
1 96
1 52
1 85
1 94
2.02
1 63
30-15)
26.97
1.92
3.19
NOTE: Large radials on Page 1.
BELTED MUD AND SNOW TIRES
HIGH TRACTION FIBERGLASS BELTED - Manu
factured by one of the world's largest tire makers
2 bias plies polyester cord — 2 fiberglass belts —
white or black Road hazard and workmanship
guarantee
C78 14
(695-14)
22.92
2 15
E78 14
(735 14)
23.95
2 37
F78-14
(775 14)
24.83
2.54
G78-14
(825 14)
25.90
2 69
H78 14
(855 14)
26.85
2 95
J78 14
(885-14)
28.65
3.05
F78-15
(775 15)
24.85
262
G78 15
(825 15)
25.90
2.80
H78 15
(855 15)
26.93
3.01
J78-15
(885-15)
28.65
3.12
L78-15
(915 15)
29.95
3.27
REQUIRED CODING SYSTEM OF TIRE PRODUCERS
The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Act of 1966 and the Motor Vehicle Safety Standard No. 109 require that each
tire be labeled with the name of the manufacturer or his brand name and an approved code mark to permit the seller
to identify the manufacturer of the tire to the purchaser upon request. All tires listed on this schedule are manufac-
tured by the world's major producers or their subsidiaries.
Ask to see the maker's identifying code mark and Capitol's list of manufacturers
CASH AND CARRY PRICES • FINANCING AVAILABLE • MOUNTING. BALANCING AND INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
LIMOUSINE - AMBULANCE
8-PLY RATING HEAVY DUTY
WHITEWALL - NYLON CORD
Size
Ply Rating
89015 Hiway 8
890-15 Mud Snow 8
Cash & Carry
Warehouse
Group Price
35.95
Fed
Excise
Tax
3 81
3.81
COMMERCIAL HIWAY TRUCK
NYLON CORD TUBE TYPE
670 15
700 15
700 15
600 16
650 16
70016
750 16
700 17
700-17
75017
700 18
18.95
21.90
24.89
17.95
20.86
23.85
30.91
26.78
30.85
33.90
37.73
2.42
2.87
3.17
2.38
2.61
3.01
3.72
3.34
3 72
4 27
3.97
COMMERCIAL HIWAY TRUCK
NYLON CORD TUBELESS
700 13
700 13
700-14
20.89
23.86
20.88
2.30
2.57
2.45
700 14
8
24.95
2 68
6 70 15
6
19.60
2 68
717. 5
6
26.85
3.27
8-17.5
8
32.95
Voo
8-19.5
8
37.85
4.65
CAMPER - DUPLEX TYPE
NYLON CORD TUBELESS HIWAY
800 16.5
800 16 5
8.75 16 5
9.50 16 5
9.50 16 5
10-16.5
^0 16.5
1216.5
"12-16.5
28.87
30.79
35.88
40.92
10
45.84
38.83
4095
10
46.94
53.85
3 29
3.56
401
4.63
465
4 29
4.71
585
6.34
COMMERCIAL NYLON CORD
EX. TRACTION MUD & SNOW
670-15
670 15Tbless
20.95
21.95
2 82
3.11
700-15
6
23.95
3 23
600-16
6
20.90
2 60
65016
6
22.95
? 95
700-16
6
25.95
3 28
75016
8
35.80
4 18
700-17
8
35.92
4.44
750-17
8
38.72
4.95
CAMPER - DUPLEX TYPE
Nylon Cord Mud & Snow Traction
800-16.5
S0CTT6.5
8
29.89
10-16.5
30.97
10-16.5
40.77
3 45
3 68
4 56
12 16.5
42.87
4.96
12-16.5
10
48.98
6.14
56.75
6.51
BELTED TRUCK TIRES -
Premium Hiway Rib
Manufactured by one of the world's
largest tire makers
Cash & Carry
Warehouse
Group Price
Sue
E78-14
E78-14
G78-15
H78-15
H78 15
F78-16
H7816
178-16
800-165
Replaces
(700-14)
1700-14)
(670 '710-151
(700151
(700-15)
(650-16)
700-161
(750-161
Ply
Rating
lube
less
Tube
Type
27.96 -
"233U ="~
2B.85
28 80
2595
25 90
26.85
— 24.81
— 27.98
— 36.89
39.88 —
Excise
T»
3.06
3.08
3 99.'3.33
3.99/3.64
3.65
3.24
3 90
4 20
3.56
AUTOMOTIVE BATTERIES
Made by the world's largest battery
manufacturer
CAPITOL HEAVY DUTY - 42 month serv.ee guatan
tee : These sizes fit most 12-volt American and
foreign cars.
:no trade required
Group No
Cash & Carry
Warehouse
Group Price
24C 42 Months
15.95
29NF
15.95
22F
15.95
24 F
15.95
60
15.95
53
15.95
42-VW
16.95
CAPITOL !
W HIGH D
,UPER HEAVY
RAIN EXTRAS
DUTY- FOR
60-MONTH
CARS LOADED
GUARANTEED
24 6
0 Months
19.95
29NF '■
19.95
22F
19.95
24F
19.95
60
19.95
27
21.95
27F
21.95
CAPITOL
6 month guar I
HEAVY DUTY
6-VOLT
- 3
1 3
5 Months
12.95
19L-VW
13) OR
C A P I T O L' S
IMMEDIATE
BATTERY
REPLACEMENT
GUARANTEE
If battery is found defective and will
not hold a charge:
(1) FREE replacement within 90 days of
purchase.
(2) After 90 days, CAPITOL will replace
battery, charging a pro-rata amount
based on the original purchase price
and the number of months used.
EXAMPLE: If a 42 month battery,
costing $15.95,. fails in 20 months,
you get a new battery for $7.60.
(Applies to original owner and cars used
in normal passenger car service only.)
DURABLE, PROTECTIVE
AUTO FLOOR MATS
Finest Quality — Wholesale Prices
STYLES. COLORS AND SIZES FOR MOST
MAKES OF AUTOS, TRUCKS AND BOATS
CHROME WHEELS
DELUXE PREMIUM CHROME WHEELS - One year
workmanship and material guarantee
Cash 8. Carry
Warehouse
Group Price
Cash & Carry
Warehouse
Group Price
14x6 Solid Dish Chrome 15.90 Slotted Chrome 17.85
14x7 Solid Dish Chrome 17 90 Slotted Chrome 18.85
1 5x6 Solid Dish Chrome 17.90 Slotted Chrome 19.95
15*7 Solid Dish Chrome 19.95 Slotted Chrome 20.95
STEEL CAMPER WHEELS
WIDE FOOT PRINT
Customer satisfaction is unconditionally
guaranteed.
Complete Range of Bolt Circle Centers
and
Negative Positive Offsets
for Duplex and Camper Uses.
E-Z RIDE SHOCK ABSORBERS
Made by one of the world's largest
shock absorber manufacturers
DELUXE STO DUTY — Exceeds original
equipment quality — 24,000-mile or 24-
month* guarantee — $3.95 each — 4 for
$15.00.
LIFETIME HEAVY DUTY — Lifetime* guar-
antee — as long as you own your car. $6.40
each — 4 for $23.00.
EXTRA HEAVY DUTY — Lifetime guarantee
— as long as you own your car. $7.90 each
— 4 for $29.00. Beyond compare for spe-
cial or heavy duty service — Racing profile.
R0ADMASTER LEVELING UNIT FOR OVER-
LOADS—Front and rear — 30,000-mile*
guarantee — $12.75 each.
LOW WHOLESALE PRICES ON
AIR SHOCKS.
MONROE AIR SHOCKS or MAREMONT
WEIGHT LIFTERS — At low wholesale
prices.
MUFFLERS
PREMIUM HEAVY DUTY - ALLOY COATED STEEL -
DOUBLE WRAPPED - Manuactured by one of the
world's largest muffler makers. Universal type — fits
most American cars.
Cash and Carry Group Price
Adapters if needed
UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
QUALITY AUTO STEREO
AND TAPE DECKS
EXCELLENT SELECTIONS AT ALL
WAREHOUSE LOCATIONS
QUALITY BEYOND COMPARE
AT LOW WHOLESALES PRICES
S9.95
.95
EASY FINANCING!
• Budget Pay Plan or use:
• Your Credit Union
• Your Bankamericard
• Your Master Charge
CASH AND CARRY PRICES • FINANCING AVAILABLE • MOUNTING, BALANCING AND INSTALLATION AVAILABLE
»@r A
CAPITOL TIRE SALES
WAREHOUSES, INC.
mm
CALIFORNIA
WAREHOUSE LOCATIONS
Call any warehouse for other locations throughout the United States
KEEP IN YOUR GLOVE COMPARTMENT FOR FUTURE USE
"^C
„
,
\jjj
11 \*
1 CWr'Ol 1
«\*
^j
rss^t!.
«•»
\ J**^
Los A
ngeles
4623 Biant Si Los
(213i 240 4350
Angeles C
90039
T*f*
K
Los Angeles (Southwest)
13208 So F.gueioa Si Los Angeles Ca 90061
1213)5321671
u
4$&
//
J^
fy
/
MBS DtfVt
jw^^J
\
CAPITOL TIRE
SAlES/WAlEHOUSt. inc.
I
Sa
n Francisco
101 So Van Ness
Ave San Franc
sco C
94103
1415)621 2336
NEW
LOCATION
San Jose
1 760 Roaers A»e San Jose Ca 95112
l408i 287 9112
San Diego
5433 Games Sl San Diego Ca 921 10
(7141 291 9150
Stockton
4137 Coionado Ave Stockton Ca 95204
12091465 5616
Sacramento
1831 2nd Street lal S> Sacramento Ca 95814
I9l6i 443 2526
1
CAMTOt THE
SAits/vMtMxrie, iwc
f
unsu '*
I ird
■>,
MRESU KVO C>1
ft
a
i
1
Artesia
17116So Alburns A^e Arles.a Ca 90701
12131 924 3351
San Mateo
4220 Olympic Ave San Mateo Ca 94403
14151 574-7223
\
t 1
. ■ • 1
Garden*,
Sugg
o
\
Sancov Si
t
J SOeiman
Way
y
San Fernando Valley Area
7628 Oensmoie Ave Van Nuy*. Ca 91406
1213)994 9435
*
O
San
Bernardino
.v<* . Sam Snead
*V>~ Goll Course
'
Riverside
San Bernardino Riverside Area
484 W Valley Blvd Riallo Ca 92376
1714) 877 3421
^^^*\
1
1 "m.?LI"i
/-=.,.»..,
\v
^Sftssa
Anaheim
2020 A Howell Ave Anaheim Ca 92806
I714i 639 9440
Inglewood
977 W Hyde Park Blvd Inglewood Ca 90302
12131 671 0466
Oakland Area
2059 Williams St San leandrn Ca 94577
(415i 351 8434
OREGON
909 Garfield St Eugene 97402 15031 342 7601
904 S E Division Sl , Portland 97202, (5031 233 2431
TEXAS
615 S lamai, Austin 78704, (5121444 6524
31 70 Irving Blvd Oallas 75247. {2141 634 0550
7341-AOoowood Pk. Ft Worth 76118 (8171 284-4881
HOURS 8 7 WEEKDAYS— SATURDAYS 8 5
WASHINGTON
422 S Forest Seattle 98134 12061 624 8970
6422 E Second Ave . Spokane 99206, (5091 535 8733
2628 S Tacoma Way Tacoma 98409 (2061 473-1550
Copy'ight 1972 All Rrghtt R*»*rv»d
the
/TfiFF
6472 Santa Monica Boulevard Hollywood. California 90038
The Newsweekly with
Prescience
19
9:00 CONVERSATIONS WITH THE BEWILDERED
Eugen Loebl , one of Czechoslovakia's leading
Marxist theorists, imprisoned in the Slansky trials of 1952,
in exile in the United States since the Russian invasion of
1968, discusses his Marxist philosophy and his encounters
with the American New Left— hence the title of the pro-
yam, taken from his forthcoming book of the same title
(Schenckman Publishing Co., 1972). Tapes courtesy Um-
brella Productions.
10:00 INTERNATIONAL CONCERT HOUR
Dvorak: Suite for Orchestra, Op. 98b ("American
Suite"); Southwest German Radio Orchestra; Hubert Rei-
chert conducting (22). Borodin: Symphony No. 1 in E flat'
Southwest German Radio Orchestra; Kurt Brass conducting
(35). Tapes courtesy of Deutsche Welle. Stereo.
11:00 AMONG CONSENTING ADULTS
Can learning about sex modify our sexual respon-
siveness and behavior? Jeremy Shapiro's new series, an out-
growth of his course on sex at California Institute of the
Arts, this month takes a look at a basic question on human sex-
uality. This and future programs may include the partici-
pation of Cal Arts students, guests from the healing profes-
sions, and (always) you in the listening audience. Co-pro-
duced by Barbara Spark.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
16 thursday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
News and other timely pieces reported by Don
Roeck and Joe Gaul, with a little help from their friends.
9:25
9:30
REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe by Theodora Kroeber.
From the drama of Indian history at the end of the 19th,
beginning of the 20th century, comes the story of Ishi, the
last Yahee Indian to survive. Selections are read by Virgin-
ia Maynard. Part 11 in a 22-part series.
10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC
Canadian folk songs: sociable and social songs.
Program material courtesy of Radio Canada. Stereo.
10:30 THE GERMAN LIED
Songs of Felix Mendelssohn and Robert Schumann
including On Wings of Song and Mondnacht by Mendel-
ssohn and Die Beiden Grenadiere by Schumann. Third of
six parts. Tapes courtesy of Deutsche Welle.
11:00
THE ADVOCATES
The audio portion of KCET's forum.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Renaissance Vignettes: A whirlwind survey of
Renaissance music, featuring compositions of less than
three minutes' duration. Katherine Calkin hosts.
2:30 HOUR 25: STAR TREK
Gene Roddenberry, the creator of Star Trek and
D.C. Fontana, associate producer, dropped by KPFK's sf
show this spring. They spoke with Mike Hodel, Kathy Cal-
kin and John Henry Thong about the demise of this show,
the cult that it engendered and some of their favorite pro-
grams in the series.
4:00
FOLK SCENE
Roz and Howard Larman host.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and Bob Gottlieb with his weekly book review.
Produced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 WILLIAM WINTER
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00 THE BRUNO WALTER LEGACY - II
Walter discusses Mozart's Symphony No. 38.
Mozart: Symphony No. 38. Wagner: Siegfried Idyll.
Brahms: Symphony No. 2; Paris Radio Orchestra (record-
ed in 1955). Program material courtesy of Educational
Broadcasting Associates.
9:30 HANGING
A play by Dyanne Asimow Simon about a deca-
dent expatriate in Southern Spain who goes to ultimate
lengths to preserve her revolutionary identity. First read at
the Actors' Studio in May, it features Judith Roberts, Herb
Voland, Kres Mersky, Rick Dreyfuss, Mark Leonard, Logan
Ramsey, Angela Clarke, Carol Ries, and Paul Camen. Dir-
ected by Roger L. Simon. (To be rebroadcast Tuesday the
21st at 2:00 p.m.)
11:30 APOGEE
Mitchell Harding provides subjective, eclectic,
opinionated fuel for the next turn of the great wheel.
12:00 NIGHTANGELS
Engineer Rick, or, the Transmitter's Revenge.
17 friday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
News and other timely pieces, brought to you by
Don Roeck and Joe Gaul, with a little help from friends.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe by Theodora Kroeber, read
by Virginia Maynard. Preserving Yahee ways through cun-
ning and moral as well as physical strength, Ishi remains
the last survivor of his tribe. Part 12 in a 22-part series.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
2:00 FILMEX
Rebroadcast from Tuesday the 14th, 7:00 p.m.
11:00
WOMEN FOR LEGISLATIVE ACTION
With Dorothy Eletz.
11:30
WILLIAM MAIMDEL
Soviet Press Report.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Music of Carlos Chavez. Chavez: Soli I for Oboe,
Qarinet, Bassoon, and Trumpet; Sally van den Berg, Anas-
tasio Flores, Louis Salomons, Felipe Leon; Soli II for Wind
Quintet; Ruben Islas, Sally van den Berg, Anastasio Flores,
Louis Salomons, Vicente Zarzo; Odyssey Y 31534. Sym-
phony No. 3; Orquesta Nacional de Mexico; Carlos Chavez
conducting; CBS 32 31 0001. Soli IV for Horn, Trumpet,
and Trombone; Vicente Zarzo, Felipe Leon, Clemente San-
abria; Odyssey Y 31534. Suite from the Ballet "Horsepow-
er'VLouisville Orchestra; Jorge Mester conducting; Louis-
ville S-711. David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00
2:30
CRITIQUE
A look at current books, film, music, theater.
WRITE ON!
A weekly program examining issues, ideas, move-
ments, magazines, and whatever seems of interest in the
literary world. Produced by Paul Vangelisti and Bill Margo-
lis.
IMPRESSIONS
3:30
5:00
Ed Hamilton, with a program of jazz.
DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and commentary from Richard Gollance of
the Gay Community Services Center. Produced by Barbara
Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News.
6:45 FOREIGN PRESS REPORT: Denmark
With Klaus Bjerre, from Copenhagen.
6:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00 LOWELL PONTE
An hour of comment and opinion from the Right.
9:00 MUNDO CHICANO
With Antonio Salazar.
11:00 HOUR 25: sf
Southern California's only radio program devoted
to sf. Kinda makes you want to choke up, doesn't it?
2:00 SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
Old radio shows, mellow music, and satire and
comedy, all interspersed with Jay Lacey. The grand finale,
which you don't want to miss, is the neverending next
episode in the "I love a mystery" scarey serial at sunrise.
18 Saturday
8:00 EARLY MORNING RAGAS
Music for the early hours of the day from the
timeless traditions of India.
8:30 KRISHNAMURTI
The renowned spiritual leader in a series of talks
given this year and made available through the Krishna-
murti Foundation.
9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
For and with young people, hosted by Ruth Buell.
10:30 FOLK MUSIC
With John Davis.
12:30 TRANS
An exploration of current work toward a new
civilization. Programs coordinated by Amanda Foulger,
with assistance from James and Debra Farrell and Carl
Heussenstam.
1:30 STUDENT MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE
A look at the antiwar movement.
2:00 NOMMO
With Kaimu.
330 CONVERSATIONS WITH THE BEWILDERED
Rebroadcast from Wednesday the 15th, 9:00 p.m.
4:30 DOROTHY HEALEY
Communist commentary, with open phones.
5:30 STUDENT UNION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE
6:00 THE SATURDAY NEWS
6:30 FRANK GREENWOOD
7:30 PREACHIN' THE BLUES
Frank Scott, with music both live and recorded.
c
ustomer
dubs
THE NEWS IGNORED BY OTHERS
Duplicate tapes of most of the programs broadcast on
KPFK are available to the public. These dubs are made on
new, high quality tape at 3% i.p.s on 7-inch reels (5-inch
reels available on request) and cost:
S7.50 for the first half-hour, S5.00 for each additional
half-hour; plus 5% state sales tax.
For information, write-to KPFK, Los Angeles 90038,
Attn: Customer Dubs.
21
9:00 ZYMURGY
Fermentation. This is not a program about wine-
making. It is, however, intoxicating. Everett Frost and
David Cloud invite you to tune in for a sip.
11:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
Gunsmoke starring William Conrad; Have Gun,
Will Travel starring John Dehner; The Unexpected: Night-
mare.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
19 Sunday
8:00 THE MUSIC OF JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH
Jesu Meine Freude: Wilhelm Ehmann conducts the
Westfaelische Kantorei. Cantate 656 011. Orgelbuechlein
Nos. 1-14. Carl Weinrich, organ. Westminster XWN 18110.
English Suite No. 6 in D minor: Fernando Valenti, harpsi-
chord. Westminster XWN 18385.
9:00 COME TO LIFE
A human growth center of the air, hosted by
Herschel Lymon.
10:00 GATHER 'ROUND THE STAKE
With Tom Ritt and open phones.
12:00
1:00
SPECTRUM
With Carlos Hagen.
THE SUNDAY OPERA
Offenbach: The Tales of Hoffman. Soloists: Joan
Sutherland, Placido Domingo, Gabriel Bacquier, Huguette
Tourangeau, Hugues Cuenod; Richard Bonynge conducts
Orchestre de la Suisse Romande and Chorus. London OSA
13106. Stereo. Fred Hyatt hosts.
5:00 MARGARET WRIGHT
Telling it like it is, with open phones.
6:00 THE SUNDAY NEWS
6:30 CHICANO CREATIVE ARTS
7:30 MUSIC FROM OBERLIN
Mozart: Divertimento in E flat, K 166; Oberlin
Wind Ensemble; Kenneth Moore conductor. Satie: Gym-
nopedies Nos. 1 and 3; Stephen Hammer, oboe; Student
Ensemble. Ives: Symphony No. 2; Oberlin Chamber Or-
chestra; Robert Baustian conductor. Recorded live in
concert at Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Oberlin, Ohio.
Stereo.
8:30 DAVID MELTZER READING HIS POETRY
David Meltzer, Bay Area poet and publisher of
Tree Books, reads Bark, an episodic poemic on dogs and
the dog's life. Meltzer continues his experiments and art-
istic stretchings in the form and depth of poetry. (To be
rebroadcast Wednesday the 22nd at 2:30 p.m.)
9:00 BINAURAL THEATER:
All Night Store. An experimental play concerning
one woman's walk down a lonely road. Written by E. G.
Burrows who is the director of the National Center for
Audio Experimentation. Also. The Yellow Room. A col-
lage of love poems from Donald Hall's book of the same
name, published by Harper and Row. Read by the author.
Both productions are in binaural sound. (To be rebroad-
cast Wednesday the 22nd at 3:00 p.m.)
9:30 FOLK SCENE
A program of traditional and contemporary folk
music, often with guests. Roz and Howard Larman host.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
20 monday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
With Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and fellow travellers
bringing you news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe: Based on the story of the
last Yahee Indian, Theodora Kroeber's book is divided into
22 parts and read by Virginia Maynard. Part 13.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Caserta.
11:00 OPEN HOUR
12:00 NOON CONCERT
A program of oratorio and cantata arias for the
tenor voice by Bach and Handel. Katherine Calkin hosts.
2:00 THE FUNCTION OF MYTHOLOGY IN CULTURE
Series of lectures by Dr. Joseph Campbell, author
of The Hero with a Thousand Faces and numerous other
books on mythology. Dr. Campbell continues his studies
with this series on Oriental mythology. Today: Tantric
Kundalini Yoga, part 2.
2:30 HOW TERRIBLY STRANGE TO BE SEVENTY
Rebroadcast from Tuesday the 14th at 10:00 p.m.
3:00
3:30
5:00
ONE MAN'S OPINION: A profile of George Putnam
Rebroadcast from Tuesday the 14th at 10:30 p.m.
JAZZ IN THE AFTERNOON
With Jass Thomas.
DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports and commentary from the Sierra Club. Pro-
duced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 CONSUMER REPORT
With Ida Honorof.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00
9:00
LA RAZA NUEVA
With Moctezuma Esparza.
MUSIC NOT FOR EXPORT
Mediterranean Swede. Gosta Nystroem: Theater
Suite No. Four — The Merchant of Venice ; Swedish Radio
Symphony Orchestra, Sixten Ehrling conductor (Sveriges
Radio SRHLP 1 105). Sinfonia del Mare - Elisabeth Soed-
erstroem, soprano; Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra,
Stig Westerberg (Swedish Society Discofil SLT 33207).
22
10:00 THE WILLIAM MALLOCH PROGRAM
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
21 tuesday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul and fellow travellers bring
you news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe is the story of the last
Yahee Indian to resist the violent fate of destruction by
settlers and gold seekers. His story is told by Theodora
Kroeber and read here by Virginia Maynard. Part 14 in a
22 part series. Tonight at 10:00 p.m. you can hear an
interview with Ms. Kroeber, discussing her personal exper-
iences with American Indians while preparing this and
other booVs.
10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC
Sounds of Africa. Philemon Hou hosts.
10:30 MUSIC FROM GERMANY
An all-Beethoven program— some of the rarely
heard canons and two movements from the Trio in D ma-
jor. David Berger hosts. Tapes courtesy of the Association
of German Broadcasters. Stereo.
11:00 A LADY DOESN'T TAKE KARATE
Eight Bay Area feminists talk about learning kar-
ate, both in traditional oriental schools and in the newer,
women-only self defense classes. Some of the women are
young, some older, some gay, others living with men, but
all feel that a woman who intends to go about day and
night as a free person had better learn to defend herself.
It's a joyful conversation for the most part, as women
discover that their bodies can become an extension of
their will and personality instead of just something for
men to whistle at. Moderated by Lois Hansen, from KPFA.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Music of Nikolai Miaskovsky (1881-1950): String
Quartet No. 9, Op. 62; USSR Bolshoi Theater Quartet; Mel-
odiya 33 D 015335-36; Cello Concerto, Op. 66; Mstislav
Rostropovbh, cello; Philharmonia Orchestra conducted by
Sir Malcolm Sargent; RCA LM 2016; Symphony No. 3,
Op. 15; USSR State Symphony Orchestra; Yergeny Svet-
lanov conducting; Melodiya C 01015-16. David Cloud hosts.
2:00
4:00
5:00
HANGING
Rebroadcast from Thursday the 16th at 9:30 p.m.
FOLK MUSIC
With John Davis.
DEALING
Music for the body, intervievs, editorial contrasts,
field reports and commentary from feminist groups. Pro-
duced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 FOREIGN PRESS REPORT: Africa
With Professor Michael Lofchie, African Studies
Center, UCLA.
7:00 FILMEX
KPFK film critics Stephen Mamber and Bob
Mundy offer a round up and critical analysis of Los
Angeles' just concluded SECOND annual international
film exposition. (To be rebroadcast Friday the 24th at
2:00 p.m.)
7:30 OPEN HOUR
8:30 CHAMBER MUSIC FROM THE NETHERLANDS
Ton de Leeuw: Sonatine (6). Wolfgang Wijdeveid:
Largetto from Violin Sonata (5). Olivier Messiaen: Theme
and Variations (12). Theo Olof, violin; Janine Dacosta,
piano. Program material courtesy of Radio Nederland.
Stereo.
9:00 MORNINGSTAR/EVENINGSTAR
Northwest poet Harry MacCormack recounts
American Indian narrative teachings gleaned from North-
western and Cheyenne tribes— and helps us to interpret
or "perceive" them in order to apply their archetypal
content to our own lives. MacCormack is author of Teach-
ings From the People forthcoming in Spring 1973 from
Harper Row; and a long epic. The Displaced Warrior broad-
cast on KPFK last spring. (To be rebroadcast Tuesday the
28th at 2:00 p.m.)
10:00 DISCUSSION WITH THEODORA KROEBER
Theodora Kroeber whose book Ishi in Two Worlds
is the Morning Reading (9:30 a.m. weekdays) this month,
discusses her and her husband's life researching, living with,
and understanding traditional American Indian mores. The
discussion is based on her book of autobiographical remin-
iscences, Alfred Kroeber: A Personal Recollection.
11:00 REDEALING
The best of the previous week's Dealing programs,
produced by Barbara Cady.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
22 Wednesday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk hosts.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
With Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and friends.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Theodora Kroeber's Ishi, Last of His Tribe, read
by Virginia Maynard. Part 15 of 22.
10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
11:00 MAKIN' IT
A series by and for low-income families, produced
by the Neighborhood Adult Participation Project.
11:30 COMMUNITY ARTS
With Decia Baker.
23
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Baroque and early classical wind concertos: Hertel:
Double Concerto in E flat for Trumpet, Oboe and Strings;
E. Tarr, trumpet; H. Hucke, oboe; Consortium Musicum,
F. Lehan conductor; Nonesuch H71270. C.P.E.Bach: Con-
certo in E flat for Oboe and Strings; H. Hucke, oboe; Col-
legium Aureum; R. Rheinhardt conductor; Victrola VICS
1463. L. Mozart: Concerto in D for Trumpet, Two Horns
and Strings; E. Tarr, trumpet; Consortium Musicum; F. Lehan
conductor; Nonesuch H71270. Haydn: Concerto in D for
Hunting Horn, Two Oboes and Strings; E. Penzel, horn; Col-
legium Aureum; Victrola VICS 1324. J.N. Hummel: Con-
certo in E for Trumpet and Orchestra; E. Tarr, trumpet;
Consortium Musicum; F. Lehan conductor; Nonesuch H
71270. Mozart: Concerto in B flat for Bassoon and Orch-
estra; Gwydion Brooke, bassoon; Royal Philharmonic Orch-
estra; Sir T. Beecham conductor; Seraphim S60193. David
Cloud hosts. Stereo.
1:55
2:00
REPORT TO THE LISTENER
Will Lewis, KPFK General Manager, tells all.
THE FUNCTION OF MYTHOLOGY IN CULTURE
Dr. Joseph Campbell, author of The Hero with a
Thousand Faces and numerous other books on mythology,
continues in his series of lectures on Oriental mythology.
Today: The Individual Adventure.
2:30
3:00
DAVID MELTZER READING HIS POEMS
Rebroadcast from Sunday the 19th, 8:30 p.m.
BINAURAL THEATER:
All Night Store and The Yellow Room. Rebroad-
cast from Sunday the 19th, 9:00 p.m.
3:30
MUSIC AT THE CROSSROADS
With Lance Williams.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
How coal mining really was and is in Appalachia.
Part 2. From the porch of his home in Appalachia, Nolan
Hubbs continues telling the story of his life in the coal
mines of Eastern Kentucky. Nolan is now totally crippled
with "black lung," the dreaded disease of coal miners. The
story of this courageous miner is supplemented with a
number of pertinent songs and commentaries. The result
is a powerful documentary on strip mining and the pover-
ty, exploitation and virtual slavery that afflicts Appalachia.
9:00 PEACE IN OUR TIME?
Dr. Eduard Goldstucker, eminence grise of Czecho-
slovakia's Dubcek government and Communist Party mem-
ber from 1933 to 1970, gives a critical analysis of commu-
nism's strategic ends and the tactical means used to achieve
them from the time of the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution to
the present-and how this relates to the Cold War. From the
Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions.
10:00 INTERNATIONAL CONCERT HOUR
Hindemith: Concerto for Trumpet, Bassoon, and
String Orchestra; Hans Pott, trumpet; Wolfgang Buttler,
bassoon; Strings of the Hessian Radio Symphony Orchestra;
Dean Dixon conducting (17). Stravinsky: Pulcinella Suite;
Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra; Colin Davis conduct-
ing (21). Tapes courtesy of Deutsche Welle. Stereo.
11:00 BUCKMINSTER FULLER ON SPACESHIP EARTH
The soundtrack of the film by that title produced
and directed by Robert Snyder, in which Fuller discusses
his life and thought. Audio engineering by Richard Aber
and Martin Andrews. Tape courtesy of Robert Snyder Films.
(To be rebroadcast Thursday the 30th at 3:00 p.m.)
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and Stephen Mamber reviewing current Los
Angeles film fare. A Barbara Cady Production.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 VOICE OF THE UNION OF
VIETNAMESE IN THE U.S.
/MoNing?
Please let us knowl Mail coupon to
KPFK, Los Angeles, Ca. 90038
NEW (effective as of
Name
Address
City
OLD:
Z.p
Address
more classified
for sale
Cm
Z.p
TAPE RECOROER ADDICTS:
From our sound library of over 5,000 items
(comedy, radio programs, TV special*, mu-
sic, lectures, over 300 ptays, curiosities, |««,
Complete sound tracks of movies • includ-
ing dialog), we will sell yoj a copy of what-
ever we legally may - on good quality 1600
foot tape Send SS for the first half hour, $4
for each additional half hour with your re-
quest Recording will be at 3% i.p.t., in
stereo it available, unless you specify other-
wise Your check returned if we can't fill
order, Minimum order $9 Sound Museum,
23700 Canzonet, Woodland Hills 9I364
Phone 346-6684
We are not record pirates We will duplicate
for you only records and tapes not comm-
erciaily available.
12:00 MARATHON CONCERT NO. 1
An all-night survey in depth, for true believers
only. Tonight, all the recorded symphonies of Nikolai
Miaskovsky (1881-1950): Nos. 3, 5, 6, 7, 15-19, 21,
23, 25, and 27. Brought to you by David Cloud and Joe
Cooper, who go back into shock therapy right after the
concert is over.
Rare and Unusual
Cacti - Succulents - Tropicals
Landscaping - Free Estimates
1311 Fernwood Pac Dr 455-1176
KPFK FOLIO ADVERTISING RATES
Your advertising is seen by 1 2,000 folio re-
cipients AND their friends each month, ALL
month long. Please call KPFK to discuss
your special advertising needs.
CLASSIFIED: $1 /line; $5 minimum
DISPLAY call about new rates
DEADLINE: first day of month
preceding publication date.
Right reserved to raise rates without notice.
Prevailing contracts for insertions which run
beyond the first issue affected by a new rate
will be acknowledged at the old rate. All ad-
vertising is subject to publisher's approval.
24
THANKSGIVING DAY Thursday 23
Celebrate Thanksgiving with KPFK as the station cancels
most of its regular programs and gives the news depart-
ment the day off. While most traditional holiday salutes
center on the Pilgrims, KPFK has chosen to spotlight the
American Indian.
pencil drawing by Jeff Kay e
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor
Paul Vorwerk with music for a
Thanksgiving morning.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe. Theo-
dora Kroeber's story of the last Yahee
Indian to survive the violence of turn-
of-the-century California. Virginia May
nard reads part 16 in the 22-part series
10:00 BURY MY HEART
AT WOUNDED KNEE
A special presentation for this Thank:
giving Day: An American Indian's vie
of the history of the West. The authc
is Dee Brown. Read by Russell Ayers,
Shunatona Mifaunwy, Trudy Tanaya
Torres, Carole Clark, and Suzan Shown.
The program was produced by WBAI's Suzan Shown and
sponsored by the American Indian Community House. In
seven parts wi :h musical interludes.
5:00 WITH THESE YOUR EYES YOU SHALL
RECOVER: The Navajo Blanket
The fact that famous 20th century abstract artists have
been collecting 19th century Navajo blankets probably
accounts for the first exhibition of Indian Art in an art
museum. Anthony Berlant and Mary Hunt Kahlenberg
organized this milestone exhibition and wrote the catalog
for the show at the L.A. County Museum which will travel
extensively here and in Europe. They speak with Clare
Spark Loeb about technical and social relevancies and
raise important issues about utility, non-alienation and
artist in society. The conversation is interwoven with po-
ems, chants, stories and excerpts from a recent article on
strip mining in Black Mesa which underline the decline of
the blanket as a result of cultural and economic imperial-
ism.
6:00 A LANGSTON HUGHES MEMORIAL
The late Black poet and playwrite was an import-
ant forerunner to Black Consciousness. In this program,
Hughes reads from his work and discusses it 's place in his
life with producer Duke Johnson in a tape made at Hughes'
home shortly before his death.
7:00 A THANKSGIVING CONCERT
Ives: Thanksgiving (from the
Holidays Symphony); New York Phil-
harmonic; Leonard Bernstein conducts;
Columbia MS 7147. Griffes: Two
Sketches on Indian Themes; Kohon
Quartet; Vox SVBX 5301. Ives: Song
for the Harvest Season; Jan de Gaetani ,
mezzo-soprano; American Brass Quin-
tet; Nonesuch H 71222. MacDowell:
Suite No. 2 ("Indian Suite"); Eastman-
Rochester Symphony Orchestra;
Howard Hanson conducts; Mercury
SR 90422. Ives: 777e Indians; Bos-
ton Chamber Ensemble; Harold Far-
berman conducts; Cambridge 1804.
Work: Autumn Walk; Eastman Wind
Ensemble; Frederick Fennell con-
ducts; Mercury SR 90220. Ives: Three Harvest Home Chor-
ales; Gregg Smith Singers; Columbia Chamber Ensemble;
Gregg Smith conducts; Columbia MS 6921.
9:00 JOHN BROWN'S BODY
Stephen Vincent Benet's epic on the Civil War is
given a dramatic reading by Tyrone Power, Dame Judith
Anderson, and Raymond Massey under the direction of
the late Charles Laughton (a Columbia Masterworks re-
cording).
11:00 APOGEE
Mitchell Harding provides subjective, eclectic,
opinionated Thanksgiving fuel for the next turn of the
great wheel.
11:30 HOPI EARTH PROPHECY
Thomas Banyakya, a traditional Hopi translator
and tribal elder, speaks to UCLA students, Earth Day 1970.
He discusses the Hopi world view as it relates to the mean-
ing of life and the care of the earth.
24 friday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk hosts.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and others with the news.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe by Theodora Kroeber read
by Virginia Maynard. Preserving Yahee ways through cun-
ning and moral as well as physical strength, Ishi remains
the last survi»or of his tribe. Part 17 in a 22 part series.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
11:00 THE OTHER MINORITY
Mitch Pomerantz hosts this regular feature dealing
with the problems of the handicapped. A guest panel will
talk and open phone lines to the audience.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
A Handel Secular Oratorio. A live performance
from the 1971 Hitzacker Summer Music Festival of Han-
del's L'allegro, it pensieroso, ed il moderato. The soloists
are Barbara Rondelli, soprano; Kurt Equiluz, tenor; and
Kurt Moll, bass. Guenther Weissenborn conducts the South-
west German Chamber Orchestra and the Bergedorf Cham-
ber Choir. David Cloud hosts. Stereo. Tapes courtesy of
Deutsche Welle.
2:00 CRITIQUE
A rebroadcast of the roundup and critical analysis
segment of Filmex, Los Angeles' SECOND annual interna-
tional film exposition, with Stephen Mamber and Bob Mun-
dy.
2:30
WRITE ON!
A weekly program examining issues, ideas, move-
ments, magazines, and whatever seems of interest in 'ho
* a i/-. r I r-\ Dr/\rJi ir^^/J kw Dill f\ f\ ■••, r /-i /-\ I l j- ^ r-. /A Dii il
gelisti.
nes, anu wnaiever seems or interest in the
literary world. Produced by Bill Margolis and Paul Van-
3:30 IMPRESSIONS
Ed Hamilton, with a program of jazz.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and commentary from Richard Gollance of
the Gay Community Services Center. Produced by Barbara
Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 FOREIGN PRESS REPORT : Germany
With Julius Kirn.
6:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00 LOWELL PONTE
An hour of comment and opinion from the Right.
9:00
MUNDO CHICANO
With Antonio Salazar.
11:00 HOUR 25: sf
The Great Bird of the Galaxy comes to roost on
KPFK's transmitter. Mike Hodel, Kathy Calkin and John
Henry Thong sweep up after it.
2:00 SOFT CORE PHONOGRAPHY
Old radio shows, mellow music, satire & comedy,
and Jay Lacey, all night long. Gr?et the sun with the next
episode in the "I love a mystery" scarey serial.
25 Saturday
8:00 EARLY MORNING RAGAS
Music for the early hours of the day from the
timeless traditions of India.
8:30 KRISHNAMURTI
The renowned spiritual leader in a series of talks
given this year. Made available through the Krishnamurti
Foundation.
9:30 HALFWAY DOWN THE STAIRS
"It isn't really anywhere, it's somewhere else
instead!" Programs for Young People with Ruth Buell,
the former Lunch Fair Five, and special guests. ..some
of whom we hope will be you, from time to time!
(Title is from a poem by A. A. Milne)
12:30 TRANS
Exploring current work toward a new
civilization. The programs are coordinated by Amanda
Foulger, with assistance from James and Debra Farrell
and Carl Heussenstam.
1:30 THE STUDENT MOBILIZATION COMMITTEE
A look at the antiwar movement.
2:00 NOMMO
With Kaimu.
3:30 PEACE IN OUR TIME?
Rebroadcast from Wednesday the 22nd, 9:00 p.m.
4:30 DOROTHY HEALEY
Communist Commentary (with open phones).
5:30 STUDENT UNION FOR PEACE AND JUSTICE
6:00 THE SATURDAY NEWS
6:30 FRANK GREENWOOD
7:30 PREACHIN' THE BLUES
Frank Scott, with music both live and recorded.
9:00 ZYMURGY
The gristly roots of ideas going into action; as the
wind veers, in periplum. Poundian phrases to describe a
program designed to ferment interest in the arts. David
Cloud and Everett Frost host.
11:00 THE BIG BROADCAST
Treasury Agent: "Know Your Money," Blondie
starring Penny Singleton and Arthur Lake.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
26 Sunday
8:00 THE MUSIC OF JOHANN SEBASTIAN BACH
Komm, Jesu, Komm: Wilhelm Ehmann conducts
the Westfaelische Kantorei. Cantate 656 011. French Suite
No. 4 in E major: Fernando Valenti, harpsichord. West-
minster XWN 18385. Lobet den Herrn: Cantate 656 011.
French Suite No. 5 in E minor. Westminster XWN 18385.
9:00 COME TO LIFE
A human growth center of the air, hosted by
Herschel Lymon.
10:00
GATHER 'ROUND THE STAKE
With Tom Ritt and open phones.
10:30
FOLK MUSIC
With John Davis.
12:00 SPECTRUM
With Carlos Hagen.
1:00 THE TENOR OF THE TIMES
A repeat of Fred Hyatt's tribute to Giuseppe
Anselmi, lyric tenor of early 20th century noted for his
style and elegance.
1:30 THE SUNDAY OPERA
Verdi: La Traviata. Soloists: Beverly Sills, Nikolai
Gedda, Rolando Panerai. Aldo Ceddato conducts the Roy-
al Philharmonic Orchestra. Angel S 3780. Stereo. Fred
Hyatt hosts.
26
5:00 MARGARET WRIGHT
Telling it like it is, with open phones.
6:00 THE SUNDAY NEWS
6:30 CHICANO CREATIVE ARTS
7:30 MUSIC FROM OBERLIN
Chopin: Four Mazurkas. Op. 68; Ballade No. 2,
Op. 38; Frank Weinstock, piano. Chopin: Ballade No. 4,
Op. 52; Miles Mauny, piano. Chopin: Cello Sonata, Op. 65;
Nella Hunkins, cello; Joseph Schwartz, piano. Recorded
live in concert at Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Oberlin,
Ohio. Stereo.
8:30 ROBIN MORGAN READING HER POEMS
Robin Morgan reads poems, mostly feminist,
from her forthcoming book. Monster, published by Ran-
dom House. From a series of woman poets reading their
work produced by Mimi Weisbord Anderson, at WBAI.
(to be rebroadcast Wednesday the 29th at 2:30 p.m.)
9:00 BINAURAL THEATER: Echoes
Another fine radio play produced by the Binaural
Theater in two-channel stereo. Put on your headphones, or
sit in the middle of your room and you will experience
three-dimensional radio. Echoes was written by Rhys Ad-
rian and concerns an elderly couple whose reminiscence
creates a life of short "echoes", (to be rebroadcast Wed-
nesday the 29th at 3:00 p.m.)
9:30 FOLK SCENE
A program of traditional and contemporary folk
music, often with guests. Roz and Howard Larman host.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
27 monday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
With Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and fellow travellers
bringing you news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe. Based on the story of the
last Yahee Indian, Theodora Kroeber's book is divided into
22 parts and read by Virginia Maynard. Part 18.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
11:00 OPEN HOUR
12:00
NOON CONCERT
A program of oratorio and cantata arias for the
bass voice by Bach and Handel. Katherine Calkin hosts.
2:00 THE FUNCTION OF MYTHOLOGY IN CULTURE
Series of lectures by Dr. Joseph Campbell, author
of The Hero with a Thousand Faces and numerous other
books on mythology. Dr. Campbell continues his studies
with this series on Oriental mythology. Today: The Indi-
vidual Adventure, part 2.
2:30 PERSPECTIVES IN THERAPY
Helen Landgarten examines different approaches
to self-realization, growth and change.
3:30
5:00
JAZZ IN THE AFTERNOON
With Jass Thomas.
DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field rep:rts and commentary from the Sierra Club. Pro-
duced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45
CONSUMER REPORT
With Ida Honorof.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00 LA RAZA NUEVA #^|
With Moctezuma Esparza CT^
9:00 MUSIC NOT FOR EXPORT >^
French Composers in Eclipse. Yves Baudrier: Le
Musicien dans la Cite— 3adio Symphony Orchestra of
Strasbourg, Georges Tzipine conductor. Andre Jolivet:
Symphony No. One- French National Radio Orchestra,
Georges Tzipine conductor. Daniel- Lesur: Pastorale-
Chamber Orchestra of the French Radio, Edouard Linden-
berg conductor.
10:00 THE WILLIAM MALLOCH PROGRAM
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
28 tuesday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Pajl Vxwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul and fellow travellers bring
you news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe is the story of the last
Yahee Indian to resist the violent fate of destruction by
settlers and gold seekers. His story is told by Theodora
Kroeber and read here by Virginia Maynard. Part 19 of
22 parts.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
Sounds of Africa. Philemon Hou hosts.
10:30 MUSIC FROM GERMANY
Today's program opens with a choral song by
Robert Schumann and concludes with Franz Berwald's
Sinfonie Singuliere. David Berger hosts. Tapes courtesy of
the Association of German Broadcasters. Stereo.
11:00 DREAM POWER
Betty Roszak interviews Dr. Ann Faraday about
her recently published book entitled Dream Power. They
discuss the wider implications of dreams aside from Freud-
ian interpretations and statistical analysis: dream recollec-
tion, dream amnesia, deja vu dreams, self-awareness dreams
and dreamscapes. From KPFA.
27
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Lesser-known works of Tchaikovsky: String Quar-
tet No. 3; Vlach Quartet; Crossroads 22 16 0122; Hamlet;
USSR Symphony Orchestra; Yergeny Svetlanov conducting;
Melodiya/Angel SR-40167; Allegro for Piano and Orches-
tra; Igor Ahukov, piano; Moscow Radio Symphony Orch-
estra; Mikhail Yurovsky conducting; Melodiya/Angel SR-
40188; The Tempest; USSR Symphony Orchestra; Yer-
geny Svetlanov conducting; Melodiya/Angel SR-40166.
David Cloud hosts. Stereo.
2:00 MORNINGSTAR/EVENINGSTAR
Rebroadcast from Tuesday the 21st, 9:00 p.m.
3:00 DDDottoRRRe AlexaNNdeRRR
Details of this program listed under Wednesday
the 29th at 9:00 p.m.
4:00 FOLK MUSIC
With John Davis.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports and commentary from feminist groups. Pro-
duced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 FOREIGN PRESS REPORT: France
With George Cleyet.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00 CZECH-MATE IN PRAGUE -or- THE DAY THE
CZECH BOUNCED... East Germany 1953.. .Hun-
gary 1956. ...Then the Soviet Union drafted a resolution
pledging to live in peace and harmony with its neighbors
and to "respect" the "territorial integrity" of all nations...
August, 1968, CZECHAGO....Were there similarities be-
tween the unDemocratic Convention and Prague? Were the
Warsaw Pact countries moving to stop West Germany or
to stop Czechoslovakia from going capitalist? Or were they
moving to stop Dubcek & Co. from giving a human face
to socialism in Eastern Europe? What is the explanation
for the series (at least 8 at last count) of political trials
going on there now? Produced by Dennis Levitt.
10:00 INTERNATIONAL CONCERT HOUR
Sibelius: Humoreskes for Violin and Orchestra,
Op. 87; Wim Stenz, violin; NDR Symphony Orchestra, Ri-
chard Kraus conducting (6). Pfitzner: Concerto for Cello
and Orchestra, Op. 42; Klaus Storck, cello; Hessian Radio
Symphony Orchestra, Hermann Michael conducting (17).
Strauss: Also Sprach Zarathustra, Op. 30; Bavarian Radio
Symphony Orchestra, Joseph Keilberth conducting (34).
Tapes courtesy of Deutsche Welle. Stereo.
11:00 REDEALING
The best of the previous week's Dealing programs,
produced by Barbara Cady.
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
Make today the day you convince someone you know
PHONE to subscrjDe to KPFK. The effort you make to
A convince a friend to support your radio station will
FRIEND f^V dividends in better programming, as well as the
knowledge you have strengthened the voice of free
I (JUA T radio in Southern California.
29 Wednesday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
With Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and fellow travellers,
bringing you the news and other timely pieces.
9:30 THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe, by Theodora Kroeber, read
by Virginia Maynard. This is the story of a small band of
California Indians whose last survivor, Ishi, managed to put
off the extinction of the entire tribe. Part 20 of 22 parts.
10:00
ETHNIC MUSIC
With Mario Casetta.
11:00 MAKIN' IT
A series by and for low-income families, produced
by the Neighborhood Adult Participation Project.
11:30 COMMUNITY ARTS
With Decia Baker.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
New releases. David Cloud, KPFK's Music Director,
takes a look at and a listen to the latest offerings on disc.
Stereo.
1:55 REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
2:00 THE FUNCTION OF MYTHOLOGY IN CULTURE
Dr. Joseph Campbell, author of The Hero with a
Thousand Faces and numerous other books on mythology,
continues today in his series of lectures on Oriental Myth-
ology with: Comparison of Eastern and Western Mythology.
2:30 ROBIN MORGAN READING HER POEMS
Rebroadcast from Sunday the 26th, 8:30 p.m.
3:00 BINAURAL THEATER: Echoes
Rebroadcast from Sunday the 26th, 9:00 p.m.
3:30 MUSIC AT THE CROSSROADS
With Lance Williams.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, fnterviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and Stephen Mamber reviewing current Los
Angeles film fare. Produced by Barbara Cady.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 VOICE OF THE UNION
OF VIETNAMESE IN THE U.S.
7:00 OPEN HOUR
8:00 CARLOS HAGEN PRESENTS
The Sounds and Soul of Rural America. On the
last Wednesday of each month, Carlos Hagen presents the
favorite sounds and artists of country, rural, working Am-
28
9:00 DDDottoRRRe AlexaNNdeRRRR
Charles Amirkhanian, KPFA Sound Sensitivity
Information Director, performs open-heart surgery on the
Pacifica transmitter as the subscribers whimper in unison
around a C-Major triad. The general theme is writings
from the past (primitive poetry from Jerome Rothenberg's
Technicians of the Sacred) and writings for the future
(visionary manifestos from the first issue of Attitudes Mag-
azine, published by hippy futurists in the Arizona desert).
10:00 INTERNATIONAL CONCERT HOUR
Reger: A Romantic Suite, Op. 125; NDR Sym-
phony Orchestra; Hans Schmidt-lsserstedt conducting (29).
Mendelssohn: Violin Concerto, Op. 64; Wanda Wilkomirska
violin; Southwest German Radio Orchestra; Hans Drewanz
conducting (27). Tapes courtesy of Deutsche Welle. Stereo.
11:00 BINAURAL THEATER: The Timepiece
Light humor in the story of a clock and a man
who gradually goes mad. The plays of Stanley Eveling have
been acclaimed in America and abroad. Compared to Pinter
for his innovative drama, Eveling has also written The Lu-
natic and Dear Rosenberg. Listen to this unusual drama
with stereo headphones for the best, most three-dimension-
al effect. (To be rebroadcast on Thursday the 30th at
2:00 p.m.)
11:30 THE MAKING OF AVANTI!
A critical and anecdotal encounter with the mak-
ing of Billy Wilder's forthcoming film, which was shot in
Italy. KPFK film critic Bob Mundy reads a chapter from
his forthcoming book. (To be rebroadcast Thursday the
30th at 2:30 p.m.)
12:00 CAPTAIN MIDNIGHT
30 thursday
6:00 MORNING CONCERT
Pacifica Singers' conductor Paul Vorwerk displays
well known and not so well known sonic treasures of the
Occident.
9:00 MORNING INFORMATION SERVICE
Don Roeck, Joe Gaul, and fellow travellers bring
you the news and other timely pieces.
9:25
9:30
REPORT TO THE LISTENER
From Will Lewis.
THE MORNING READING
Ishi, Last of His Tribe. Theodora Kroeber's story
of Ishi, the last Yahee Indian to survive the violent fate of
destruction by settlers and gold seekers in California at the
turn of the century. Virginia Maynard reads part 21 in the
22 part series.
10:00 ETHNIC MUSIC
Canadian folk songs; riddle songs and traditional
ballads. Program material courtesy of Radio Canada. Stereo.
10:30 THE GERMAN LIED
Today's program is devoted to songs of Johannes
Brahms and includes Feldeinsamkeit, Wie bist du meine
Koenigin, and He, Ziguener. Fourth of six parts. Tapes are
courtesy of Deutsche Welle.
12:00 NOON CONCERT
Georg Phillip Telemann was a very prolific bar-
oque composer who produced much fine music, but no
masterworks. Probably his most memorable compositions
were the trio sonatas which were of a consistent high qual-
ity. Today's concert will feature a selection of Telemann's
trio sonatas for various obbligato instruments and continue
Katherine Calkin hosts.
2:00 BINAURAL THEATER: The Timepiece
Rebroadcast from Wednesday the 29th, 11:00 p.m.
2:30 THE MAKING OF AVANTI!
Rebroadcast from Wednesday the 29th, 11:30 p.m.
3:00 BUCKMINSTER FULLER ON SPACESHIP EARTH
Rebroadcast from Wednesday the 22nd, 11:00 p.m.
4:00 FOLK SCENE
Howard and Roz Larman host.
5:00 DEALING
Music for the body, interviews, editorial contrasts,
field reports, and Bob Gottlieb's book review. Produced by
Barbara Cady in living color.
6:00 LIFE ON EARTH: The Evening News
6:45 WILLIAM WINTER
7:00
lews A
ft
11:00
THE ADVOCATES
The audio portion of KCET's forum.
NATIONAL LIBERATION:
THE STORY OF CHANUKA
Jewish Resistance to oppression, from ancient
Palestine to present day Israel. Presented by Hashomer
Hatzair, Socialist Zionist Youth.
8:00 THE BRUNO WALTER LEGACY - III
Weber: Overture to Euryanthe; Bavarian State
Orchestra (recorded in 1950). Walter discusses Mahler's
Symphony No. 1. Mahler: Symphony No. 1; New York
Philharmonic. Program material courtesy of Educational
Broadcasting Associates.
9:30 THE CHERRY
ORCHARD
The Tyrone Guthrie pro-
duction of Anton Chekov's I
play, starring Jessica Tandy. |
Characters caught in the
social and economic reor-
ganization of a nation for
which they bear the re-
sponsibility—yet cannot
fathom. The economic or-
der in which they were
once necessary has de-
cayed-these vestiges of
the past must be cleared
from power before the future can take its proper form—
the poignancy of the loss is both gentle and grim.
11:30 APOGEE
Mitchell Harding provides subjective, eclectic,
opinionated fuel for the next turn of the great wheel.
12:00 NIGHTANGELS
Engineer Rick and/ or whitenoise.
29
Get involved!
[READ THE FREE PRESS]
subscribe
$8 for 52 issues
$13 for 104 issues
name
address
.city
"L.A. FREEP, 6013 Hollywood Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif. 90028. (P.S.— Add S3 additional Postage
lor CANADA & MEXICO. S5 'or the rest of the World. APO-FPO's are sent in wrappers. Send
CHECK or MONEY ORDER ONLY).
CUS6IFIED
services
CARPET CLEANING
UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
Ralph Meyer. 454 2234
Eleven years serving
KPFK listeners'
BUILDING OR REMODELING
Complete Service-
Design Plans, Construction
ABE OSHEROFF - 821-7184
FUNERAL REFORM
Funeral Reform anybody? 7"ne Memorial
Society Movement prevents exploitation of
the bereaved. (Non-profit). Los Angeles
Funeral Society. Inc. 2224 West 14th Street
Los Angeles. California 90006.
Phone: 383-4620
LICENSED
PAINTING &
DECORATING
Resider
tial.
Interior, Exterior
For
Free Estimate
Call
SISKINO-
-933-1091
eves.
LITTLE GUY
give him a chance.
House and apartment cleaning
Michael Parmeley
396-0488
PAINTER
WHO
LIKES HIS
WORK
Small Repairs
Licensed-ln
sured.
NO
5-0179
John
Godel
SAVE YOUR SIGHT
by the
DR. BATES METHOD
of eye training
243 N. Isabel Street
Glendale 91206 244-2803
PRINTING-BEST/CHEAPEST AROUND
Colored ink, recycled paper, at regular
prices. 100 lettersize $2.85, 1000 $8.25.
BAYROCK 1639 W. Washington Blvd.
Venice. 396-6551. Open 6 days a week.
NEW PRINCIPLE DISCOVERED
That makes intense emotional
relating with others joyful
Institute of Ability 363-9902
to arrange introductory session
PIANOS FOR RENT
Victorian Uprights
in sound playing condition
$10 - 12 / month 662-2949
FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH
OF LOS ANGELES
"The church of contemporary involvement"
Peter Christiansen, Minister
Educational Activities
Waldemar Hille, Organist
Sunday Services — 1 1 :00 a.m.
2936 W. Eighth St. (near Vermont)
instruction
LOU MAURY PIANO SCHOOL
Individual Instruction
for children and adults.
4354 Tujunga Ave , No. Hollywood
769-4523 877 3847
CLASSIC GUITAR STUDIO
Qualified private instruction in classic guitar,
"coaching, repertoire study by Richard Pattie.
Beginners welcome. Fine guitars and lutes by
Julius Gtdo. Call us at 848-5785 or 225-6395.
3729 Merchant
T.L.C. DOG TRAINING
Affection Training
18 years experience
SMALL CLASSES
828-7257
VARDA ULLMAN IS
ACCEPTING PIANO STUDENTS
Write her c/o KPFK
MUSICIANS AND SINGERS
Lessons or Classes
in theory, harmony, sight-singing,
arranging, etc. Your home or mine.
Ron Webb, 628-5025, day or evening.
COOKING BASICALLY FRENCH
Qualified instruction in basic techniques
necessary for preparation of classic and
provincial French dishes: crepes, souffles,
duck a I'orange, and many more. Limited
enrollment. Call Lois Siegel, 788-1878.
-POLITICAL-
KPFK Subscriber Running for Congress
(26th - Rees, inc.) in Peace & Freedom
Party. Favors: civil liberties, including elim-
ination of victimless crime laws; non-inter-
ventionist foreign policy; immediate with-
drawal from Indochina; consumer coopera-
tives instead of capitalism or socialism;
Equal Rights Amendment; reducing the mil-
itary-industrial complex and the social-in-
dustrial complex (lower federal taxes and
expenditures); zero population growth; zero
consumption growth. OPPOSES: National
health schemes; federal funding of educa-
tion and child-care centers; water flouri-
dation. BALLOT ISSUES: "Yes" on mari-
juana decriminalization; coastline protection
and privacy. "No" on death penalty, anti-
integration, anti-farm workers, obscenity-
banning and property tax.
Candidate is an initiative petition or-
ganizer (abortion, marijuana, etc.); active
in co-operative movement & recycling; mem-
ber of ACLU, ZPG and People's Lobby.
Your vote plus financial and time contri-
butions would be appreciated. Contact Mike
Timko, J 1444 Olympic Blvd. No. 96, L.A.
90064; 478-2471.
places
for tAow *ho aP>
o*0" *»oogh *> oar*
'I Kalier't
arelnn-tttV
Dtnn.r Dnlr Irwn $ f M
J Lurch Hon tbni Frl. from 11 30 « »
ALL CREDIT CARDS HONORED
1)125 »»«tur. Hid.. Shmun Oiki. 7UHII
Eut it VtodHUft
THE LOFT
House of Authentic Indonesian Food
* Ethnic Entertainment Nightly
1353 Westwood Bl. L.A. 90024
PHONE: 477-5392
PLAN TO SPEND YOUR
THANKSGIVING HOLIDAYS
at Greenwood Lodge in the Santa Cruz Mts
For information, write P 0. Box 828.
Soquel, Calif, or call GReenwood 5-9995 or
GReenwood 5-9552 (area code 4081
mSCOTBEO'
Natural Foods to a Gourmet's Taste.
Phone 455 9079 for Reservations.
Rich and Marj Dehr
Closed Tuesdays
MEADOWLARK. GAIN HEALTH: Mental-
ly, Physically, Spiritually. Program Relaxa-
tion Methods, Counseling, Art Exploration,
Meditation. Facilities: Lodging, Nutritious
Meals, Expansive Grounds, Pool. Inquire:
Evarts Loomis, M.D Director, Meadowlark.
26126 Fairview Ave., Hemet, Calif. 92343.
books
PAPA BACH BOOK SHOP
11312 Santa Monica Blvd
West L.A.
Open Sunday til 9
DIAL "GRUBERG"
THE LONG MARCH BOOKSTORE
NEWSREEL DOCUMENTARY FILMS
715 South Parkview Street
Los Angeles, Ca.
Phone (213) 384 3856
more classified on page 24
31
. . . HOW IT ALL BEGAN
AND WHERE IT MIGHT JUST END
KPFK's address is 3729 Cahuenga Blvd. One day someone
multiplied those numbers by $5.00 and discovered that the
product was $18,645-about two- thirds of KPFK's current
monthly operating budget. If 3729 subscribers would each
chip in $5.00 per month, we reasoned, we could easily raise
the other third of the budget through a modest increase in
subscribers plus the normal percentage of renewals-without
the need ever for a Marathon.
And so the 3729 Club was born.
Our goal is 3729 persons, each contributing $5.00 a month.
A dream? Well, because the Marathon fell short of its goal,
we need about 2700 new members.
What do you get in return, besides the warm feeling that
you're insuring the future of your radio station?
The answer is the unique 3729 Club membership card. When
you present that card to the merchants listed on these pages,
you receive substantial and legitimate discounts and savings.
Regardless of your membership status in the 3729 Club, you
can support KPFK by checking the 3729 Club listings and,
whenever possible, dealing with these KPFK supporters.
For an additional $5.00 handling charge, you can receive
dual membership in the 3729 Club and the California Con-
sumers Club (you save the $25.00 CCC membership fee).
Listings in the 3729 Club do not reflect the endorsement of KPFK or
its listeners by the businesses or individuals, or vice-versa.
Mail to: KPFK / Los Angeles, Calif. / 90038
PLEASE PRINT:
City
-Zip
Current subscriber. Please "convert" me to 3729 Club member.
$5.00 enclosed (first month contribution).
Current subscriber. Please "convert" me to 3729 Club plus CCC
member. $10.00 enclosed ($5 00 handling charge plus $5.00
first month contribution).
New subscriber. Please enroll me in the 3729 Club. $5.00
enclosed (first month contribution).
New subscriber Please enroll me iri the 3729 Club plus the
CCC $10.00 enclosed ($5 00 handling charge plus $5.00 first
month contribution).
As a 3729 Club member, I understand that I will donate a minimum
of $60.00 to KPFK annually at the rate of $5 00 per month.
Signed .
ART GALLERIES
See CRAFTS & GALLERIES
ART SUPPLIES/FRAMING
AZTECA FRAME CO. 5219 Lankershim. N.H.; 877-1026 10%-50%
CLINTON ART SUPPLY 126 N. LaBrea; 9363166 15%
THE LEVIN CO.. INC. (painting and photo framesl
334 N. LaBrea. 938-2888 25%
AUTOMOTIVE
GLOBAL A.B.C. AUTOMOBILE SALES ANO LEASING
203 S. Verdugo Rd., Glendale; 245-7224
Cars at $100-300 below dealer price.
HUSCO AUTO PARTS 726 Mission St., S. Pasadena
799-4171 25% plus 25% to KPFK (except fair-trade)
TED'S MOTORS 4884 University Ave., San Diego, 281-6251 10%
BOOKS
ARK BOOKSTORE 3971 State St., Santa Barbara
(Except textbooksl 805-964-3656 10%
BLUE DOOR BOOKSTORE 3823 Fifth Ave.,
San Diego; 7 1 4-298-861 0 1 0%
BOOKS ETC. OF SHERMAN OAKS
4336 Van Nuys BI.,Sh. Oaks; 788-4336 10%
A CHANGE OF HOBBITT speculative fiction
1101 Gavley (mezzanine), Westwood 10%
EMERALD SHOP (books, picture frames, Zen & Eastern booksl
2321 Wilshire Blvd., Santa Monica; 828-1519 15%
ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITTANICA
6922 Hollywood Blvd., Rm. 707; 462-3345
MIDNIGHT SPECIAL (radical books, periodicals, posters, pamphlets)
1335V4 W. Washington Bl., Venice; 392-7412 10%
PAPA BACH BOOK SHOP 10%
11312 Santa Monica Bl., W.L.A.; dial "GRUBERG"
BOUTIQUES & GIFT SHOPS
HEAD 'N SOUL HEAD SHOP 20%
149 S. Western, Hwd.; 386-9171 (except waterbeds)
THE HIDERY (leather shop)
13551'/. Ventura Bl.; 789-8066
JON'S DRAWER 13538% Ventura Blvd.,
Sherman Oaks; 783-9507
PLAYMATES (Ladies' and children's discount boutique)
6438 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood
1 1 105 E. Washington Blvd., Whittier
124 Golden Mall, Burbank
R. BAGG, LTD. 1 16-A Main St., Seal Beach; 431-4898
TOMNODDY FAIRE (Gift shop)
1006 Broxton, W.L.A.; 473-3170
10%
10%
10%
10%
10%
BUSINESS EQUIPMENT
ABACUS TYPEWRITER SERVICE & SALES
1 1569 Santa Monica Blvd.; 473-2424 10%
CAFES/RESTAURANTS/FOODS
ALFIE'S RESTAURANT
8768 Sunset Bl., Hwd.; 655-6100 10%
HADARIM (ethnic dance, ethnic food, ethnic gifts)
1204 N. Fairfax, L.A.; 656-9292 10%
H.E.L.P. UNLIMITED VEGETARIAN RESTAURANT
7910 W. Third St., L.A.; 653-4357 (dinners only) 10%
HIDDEN HEALTH NATURAL FOODS RESTAURANT
11622 Ventura Blvd., St. City; 769-9801 (dinners) 10%
THE NINE MUSES RESTAURANT
6609 Santa Monica Blvd.; 462-0819 10%
SUNRISE NATURAL FOODS 3817 Sunset Blvd.
662-6161 10%
CARPET CLEANING
MEYER, RALPH 216 Amalfi Dr.. S.M.; 454-2334 10%
MIGHTY MAN 5428 Crenshaw Blvd., LA; 296-0599 10%
CRAFTS & GALLERIES
RICHARD BAUMAN LEATHERCRAFTS
108 5th St., Huntington Bch; 714-536-4268 20%
CANTERBURY FAIRE (handcrafted wares, supplies, classes, books)
8000 Sunset Blvd., 654-5454 (Exc. books & fine arts) 10%
CANYON GALLERY 137 S. Topanga Canyon Blvd.; 455-2108
8155 Melrose Ave.; 653-5090 10%
SANDY CORBIN HAIRCUTTING
14322 Ventura Blvd.. Sherman Oaks; 783-9080 20%
CREATIVE HAND WEAVERS 3824 Sunset Bl; 662-6231 10%
DAVID'S LEATHER WORKS
(leather goods, furniture, jewelry, ceramics-to-order)
33 N. Fair Oaks, Pasadena; 793-7848 10%
GINGER DUNLAP POTTERY 514 N. Hoover; 666-7966 10%
32
7he^C9Club
10%
10%
10%
EDWIN HIRSCHHORN, DIRECT METAL SCULPTURE
1034 S.Citrus. 983-8794
HYBRID VIGOR (ceramics and crafts shopl
8 N. First St., Alhambra; 576-8349
PASADENA CRAFT GUILD
601 E. Green St.. Pasadena. 792-6792
PEOPLE FARM (leather goods!
Range 2W, Township 14 South, Section 5, Northeast
corner, San Diego, Rt. 1. Box 983, Escondido 10%
ELECTRONICS
A-OK ELECTRONICS 3801 S Broadway, 235-4419
10% to 50% on Std. Newark or Allied prices
FABRICS
BOB SMITH DRAPERIES 14515 Tyler St., Sylmar
367-3726 (on fabrics!
PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES
ARTS PHOTO SHOP 2151 Sunset Blvd.; 386-8874
10%
25%
FURNITURE
FOGEL FURNITURE 3025 Crenshaw Blvd.
Call Mr. Fogel, 732-7101 40%
HOTELS
See VACATIONS
INSTRUCTION
ROBERT FREDERICK BEHRENS
Piano lessons in your home; 820-1058 20%
CENTER FOR SENSORY DEVELOPMENT
1034 S. Citrus Ave.; 938-8794
COHN, MATTHEW (speed reading!
15015 Ventura Bl., Sherman Oaks; 784-1425 10%
PSYCHOLOGICAL ASTROLOGICAL SCHOOL
Box 222, Glendale; 241-5044 10% classes. 20% textbooks
T.L.C. DOG TRAINING
1645 Stanford St., Santa Monica; 828-7257 10%
JEWELERS
DAVENPORT JEWELERS (engraving & watchmaking)
7135 Lindley Ave., Reseda; 343-5021 20%
JOSEPH'S RING SHOP (custom made jewelry)
1423 S. Coast Hwy„ Laguna Beach
714-494-5060 (except purchases over $5001 20%
SILBERMAN, HERB (custom jewelry)
607 Hill St.; 622-4433 10%-40%
MOTELS
HALLMARK HOUSE MOTOR HOTEL (room rentals!
7023 Sunset Bl. Hwd; 464-8344 10%
MUSIC & MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
ANGELES PIANO COMPANY 10800 Washington Blvd.,
Culver City; 839-8714 10%
GLOBE MUSIC CO. (new and old sheet music!
950 N. Western Ave.; 465-1777 10%-15%
HILLTOP VIOLIN AND VIOLA SHOP 16635 Gazeley St.,
Saugus; 805-251-0714 10%
UNIVERSITY MUSIC CENTER 1 1833 Wilshire Bl; 478-4686 10%
PAINT & WALLPAPER
GRANADA HILLS PAINT & WALLPAPER
17722 Chatsworth, Granada Hills; 363-1901
PAINTING CONTRACTORS
JOHN GODEL (housepainting)
1815 Griffith Park Blvd.; 666-8874
10%
10%
15%
20%-50%
10%-35%
10%-4O%
20%
PHARMACIES
ART'S PHARMACY 12830 E. Rosecrans, Norwalk. 921-2524 10%
PRINTERS
AART PRINTING CO. offset printing 10%
18643 Ventura Bl., Tarzana; 345-4685 plus 10% to KPFK
COLOR MAGIC 617 S. LaBrsa; 931-4392; 937-9603 10%
GPS/LADY PRINTER 10%
10968 Ventura BL. St. City; 980-4299; 985-5620
RESTAURANTS
See CAFES/
SCHOOLS
See INSTRUCTION
SOUND EQUIPMENT & SERVICE
HIGH FIDELITY HOUSE 563 S. Fair Oaks.
Pasadena; 795-4118 10%-20%
MARK PAPEL ELECTRONICS/STEREO EAST
249 S. Atlantic Bl.; EL. A.; 263-7506 10%
SOUND EQUIPMENT RENTAL COMPANY
8535 Appian Way; 654-1600
STEREO HAPPY
5202 Vineland, N. Hwd.; 761-3100
UNIVERSITY STEREO (except fair traded items)
4626% Van NuysBI.. Sherman Oaks; 981-1731
3378 Overland BL. W.L.A.; 839-2216
2725 E. Pacific Coast Hwy., LB.; 434-0981
VALLEY SOUND MUSIC CENTER (repairing)
3705 Cahuenga BL; N Hwd.; 980-3910
THEATERS
CINECIENEGA 755 N. LaCienega Blvd.
657-2801 Student discount rate
CORBIN THEATER 19620 Ventura Bl.. Tarzana; 345-2222
VAGABOND THEATER 2509 Wilshire; 387-2171
Student and senior citizen discount
TRAVEL
U.S. TRAVEL BUREAU/CLUB MEDITERRANEE
11478 Burbank Bl. (P.O. Box 691, N. Hwd
877-2623. Membership fee refund.
UPHOLSTERY
A.H.SMITH 839 N.Spaulding; 626-2222 25%
VACATIONS
GREENWOOD LODGE (except July 4 and Labor Day!
P.O. Box 828. Soquel; 408-475-9995 10%
WEARING APPAREL
Also see BOUTIQUES
PANTS FACTORY 5066 Lankershim Bl; 980-9512 10%
MISCELLANEOUS
ANTIQUE POOL TABLE COMPANY (Old and new tables)
Long Beach; call for appointment, 597-3876 10%
GREATER LOS ANGELES PATROL (guard service)
15015 Ventura BL; Sherman Oaks; 784-4125 10%
INTERNATIONAL STORY CONSULTANT
P.O. Box 5502, Santa Monica; 396-1664 15%-20%
JRM PRODUCTS (Alpha wave biofeedback instruments)
704 Santa Monica BL. S.M.; 392-7427 10%
THE OLFACTORY (incense manufacturer)
2217 Pontius, W. LA. .478-8901 35%
THE OPEN TRAIL (back -packing equipment)
1318 N. Grand Ave., Santa Ana; 714-836-6474 10%
SAFETY & SECURITY SYSTEMS Heavy duty locks, alarms,
security ironwork. Rick Barr, 273-3033 10-20%
PHOTOGRAPHERS
GROSSMAN PORTRAIT AND WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY
Woodland Hills; 888-8405 10% & up
PHOTOGRAPHY BY GORDON
4339 Sunset Blvd.; 665-8498 10%
SHAKLEE DISTRIBUTOR. FRANK SHERWOOD
Basic H cleaning products, food supplements, toiletries-
men, women, children. Box 85321 .LA. 90072
466-2466 All profits to KPFK 15%8iup
ELIZABETH THURSTON (Dist. Vitarox Green Life Products)
Write to 806 N. Alvarado. LA. 90026 10%
33
Subscribe
to LA and
discover your
hometown .
L A is a new weekly newspaper designed to tell you
what you need to know about Los Angeles — our
beautiful, lonely, freaky, friendly, vulgar, frag-
mented, apocalyptic hometown supercity.
We'll do it with an old-fashioned countrified
approach. That means telling you what your fasci-
nating neighbors — be they superstars or just plain
folks — are all about. And it means digging deep to
expose corruption and the bad guy6. But mostly it
means connecting with you personally, where it
really counts.
Like telling you where Los Angeles is right,
where it's wrong, and more: how to understand it,
survive it, enjoy it, and, perhaps, even change it.
Some of the ways L A will help you live better
and cheaper:
•fe With honest guides to good and bad restau-
rants — and the tame for records, movies and books
— satisfying off-beat jobs, inexpensive doctors, and
used furniture. ^VFree classified ads through which
you can sell a bike or buy a bed. t? Sound advice on
how to buy a house, cook a goose, fight the bill col-
lectors, cope with the i.hone company, cure a wart
or buy a used car. -£j A free work bank through
which you can exchange labor with a doctor, lawyer,
mechanic or painter — with no money involved.
Karl Fleming, a long time reporter and editor
of Newsweek, is L A's editor. He invites you to par-
ticipate in the discovery and rediscovery of your
hometown.
And if you please, he wishes you to meet and
mingle with L A's talented, lively staff.
Martin Mull
made his new album
in six days...
..and on the seventh
he tested.
Capricorn Records
Manufactured by Warner Bros. Records tnc
NATURALLY CROWN
■JlllllONY FARMfrt 'tje
A PRODUCT OF PROGRAMMED NATIVE CATTLE PRODUCTION \ ^SH
BEGINNING WITH CATTLE SELECTION FOLLOWED BY V^
SPECIAL HANDLING A-EEDING PROCEDURES THAT NEVER T
SUBJECT THE CATTLE TO GROWTH STIMULANTS OF ANY
TYPE PESTICIDE SPRAYS AND DIPS NORMAL TO PRODUCTION
NOR ANTIBIOTICS DURING HARMONY S_ FEEDING PERIOD
AVAILABLE AT..
THOUSAND OAKS MEAT LOCKER, 2684
Thousand Oaks Blvd., Thousand Oaks, Calif. Phone
(805)495 3211
HARMONY FARMS, 2824 Foothill Blvd., La
Crescenta, Calif. Phone 248-3068
CATTLEMANS BEEF OUTLET, 2585 W. 5th,
Oxnard, Calif. Phone 483 9593/648 1949
CO-OP MARKET. 2021 Barrington, Santa Monica,
Calif. Phone 478-0221
MEAT IS GOOD FOR YOU. AND BETTER FOR YOU
WHEN PRODUCED NATURALLY TENDERLY «.
KNOWLEDGEABLY BY .
° xo E .g
o" £ m ™ §
g °-co ao
*H<Jl
~ *- * u o
o >T § JO JC
■a 3°>* a
.2 aj.™u- §
CO "- CO- £
S> j2 ,™ o «
o ^ O >- u
£j - o -a
O =.£.".8
c>» 0,0
OCN > r-
-0 is .x <o
C (O U X
3 ■- 3 0)
O C SI-
LL O ra «
5 9.00 o
~ " O D r-'
SiSg-go
Cv 3"IS
*« - - n3
■O-CLLW E
^ raO. oj O
«^:ic
5 O ra'_
HARMONY FARMS