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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 
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WlMwovk 


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or 
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HAITIAN  MOODS 


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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. 


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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 

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"FesTWAL  l?ECo£DS"  "R)l|>  MaTif  "  cvn± 
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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. 


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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 

„ 

, 

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11  \* 

1    CWr'Ol    1 

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rss^t!. 

«•» 

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Los  A 

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4623  Biant  Si    Los 
(213i  240  4350 

Angeles  C 

90039 

T*f* 


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Los  Angeles  (Southwest) 

13208  So  F.gueioa  Si    Los  Angeles  Ca  90061 
1213)5321671 


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MBS   DtfVt 

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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 

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I  ird 

■>, 

MRESU   KVO         C>1 

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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. 


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Please  let  us  knowl  Mail  coupon  to 
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TAPE   RECOROER  ADDICTS: 

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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 

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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 


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CARPET  CLEANING 
UPHOLSTERY  CLEANING 
Ralph  Meyer.  454  2234 
Eleven  years  serving 
KPFK  listeners' 
BUILDING   OR    REMODELING 
Complete  Service- 
Design  Plans,   Construction 
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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 

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Interior,  Exterior 

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-933-1091 

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LITTLE  GUY 

give  him  a  chance. 

House  and  apartment  cleaning 

Michael  Parmeley 

396-0488 


PAINTER 

WHO 

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sured. 

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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 


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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 
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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  . 


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