Pacificans - it's election time in all station areas, and here are my strong
recommendations for the KPFK Station Board.
I've loved Pacifica since hearing the McCarthy hearings as a UC Berkeley
freshman, and had a strong relationship to KPFK since  its beginning, in
1959 and the forming group's office/station was a few blocks from the Ash
Grove (estbl. in '58).   AG music was
a core on their radio, from the beginning, and their guiding principles
matched my own. I got directly involved in 1999 in taking back the Network
from a gang that evicserated its principles, fired people like Amy Goodman,
and the National Board elected itself! After
we won the battle, on the streets and in court, the group I helped found won
a majority of seats on KPFK's LSB.  We included
Sonali Kolhatkar and Alan Minsky as station reps, and listener reps,
including me.  My experience there convinced me that what the station needs
is people not only with Pacifica's principles and dedication, but with
non-profit and professional experience in the real world, especially in
tough times - like now.  I, the endorsers below and others have selected
this roster from among the many applicants we've met and vetted.  I urge you
to consider our slate.  The voices of Pacifica are invaluable and unique -
unfortunately. 
Ed
 
  _____  

From: Kim Kaufman [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, November 12, 2012 10:20 PM
To: Shawn Casey O'Brien; Grace Aaron; Ken Aaron; Lamont2; Fred Blair;
Summer2; Margie Murray; Ed Pearl  
Subject: KPFK Local Station Board Election
 
Dear Friends - 
 
Below is some information regarding the KPFK elections for Local Station
Board.  I am running for a second term with a slate of good people and I am
asking for your vote for me and my slate.  If you are a listener-subscriber
you will be receiving a ballot any day.  These elections are important for
the governance of the station.  Please feel free to email me with any
questions you might have and also forward to anyone you know who is a KPFK
listener.  Thank you.    
 
Kim Kaufman
KPFK, Local Station Board, Treasurer
 
 
KPFK Local Station Board Election 2012
 
Please go to www.candidateslate.org <http://www.candidateslate.org/>  to see
more on the candidates below and read our Platform about what we stand for
in helping KPFK (also below).   Please like our Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/#!/pages/Candidate-slate-KPFK-board-election-2012/4
31421506919155
 
 
Re-elect these two current board members - vote #1 and #2:  
 
Kim Kaufman -                                                       John De
Simio - 
current board member (Treasurer)                        current board member
Artist, Election Integrity activist
Professional publicist   
 
Elect all these new candidates in any order #3, #4, #5, #6, #7, #8:  
 
Ali Ahmadpour
      Iran-American, Art History professor, activist for social justice
 
Roberta Eidman
      IT consultant, teacher, writer, photographer, workshop facilitator.
 
Dave Johnson
      Economics degree, KPFK events volunteer 
 
Will Ryan 
      Musician; experience on other non-profit boards
 
J B Wagoner
      Occupy activist, works for non-profit that serves people with
developmental disabilities 
 
Lauren Windsor
      Multimedia journalist, degree in business/entrepreneurship; Occupy
activist and activist to overturn Citizens United
 
Please vote for all the candidates, ranking them from 1 through 8 on the STV
voting ballot.  After that we recommend a vote for John Wenger and John
Vollbrecht.  
 
For any questions, further information, or if you would like to endorse us,
please contact me at [email protected] or call me at 323-650-9860.  
 
 
OBJECTIVES
We are a group of listener-sponsors (subscribers) who have come together to
help preserve and promote KPFK radio.
KPFK is dedicated to quality, non-commercial, listener-sponsored
broadcasting. It is the progressive home of a First Amendment Radio Station,
based on the Pacifica Foundation Mission Statement, and governed by the
Local Station Board whose representatives are democratically elected.
To better serve the Pacifica mission our objectives are to solidify sound
governance, accountable management, and healthy finances, by encouraging and
supporting compelling radio that expands listenership and membership.
As communication models and technologies change, KPFK must serve as a bridge
between two generations of media and two generations of listeners, as the
experienced boomers and seniors pass the baton and the mission to the young
who see, listen, communicate, and act differently.
We on this Committee work together to pass on a stronger, healthier, more
useful, and more necessary KPFK.
 
PLATFORM 
. The original KPFK mission: tapping into the most talented community in the
world and using the biggest transmitter west of the Mississippi to bring you
fearless free speech that is relevant, reality-based, and community focused.
. Sound, accountable stewardship of the KPFK that YOU own -- radio that
informs, empowers and serves you.
. An end to divisive political infighting that paralyzes governance,
alienates listeners, and distracts from our shared Pacifica mission.
. Responsible governance that attracts and supports skilled, competent
management by engaging in relevant oversight and addressing fiscal reality.
. Efficient operations and financial and organizational transparency.
. Improved and expanded integration of Internet and social media, in order
to reach larger audiences at less cost.
. A robust internship program aligned with trade schools and universities.
. Greater outreach to diverse and underserved communities with a particular
aim of attracting younger listeners.
. Expanded promotion and marketing to increase listenership and financial
support.
. Exploring new ideas to expand fundraising while staying true to the
Mission Statement.
. Full compliance with FCC regulations and labor laws, and universal
accessibility for the disabled.
. Enhanced journalistic standards in programming, and a restored local news
department that delivers essential news and voices. 
. Independent and unbiased radio that is informative, accurate, challenging,
stimulating, useful, well produced, and compelling - and that attracts
listeners and supporters.
 
 
Endorsed by:  
 
Jan Goodman
Ed Pearl   
Dorothy Reik (President, Progressive Democrats of Santa Monica
Mountains)(for id purposes only)
Grace Aaron, former Pacifica iED and PNB Chair  
Ken Aaron, LSB Board Member
Ricco Ross, former LSB board member & chair
Lauren Steiner, Occupy Activist
Lamont Yeakey, LSB Board Member
Fred Blair, LSB Board Member
Margie Murray, LSB Vice-Chair, Valley Dems United
 
* * *
 
Here's a fine review of what looks like a great film, with the class
analysis that is almost always 
curtained on television. In the print edition Ken says he's not really
political, just honest. Hopefully,  
he'll learn that being perceptive and honest usually includes 'politics,'
and keep growing. Watch it.
Ed
 
 
<http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/tv/showtracker/la-et-st-dust-bowl-2012
1117,0,7488388.story>
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/tv/showtracker/la-et-st-dust-bowl-20121
117,0,7488388.story

Review: Ken Burns' 'The Dust Bowl' a timely, exceptional endeavor


Ken Burns is at his storytelling best in PBS' 'The Dust Bowl,' a moving,
four-hour chronicle of the 1930s 'man-made' disaster that has modern-day
relevance.

By Robert Lloyd, Los Angeles Times Television Critic 
November 17, 2012
Ken Burns, public television's signature chronicler of great American
moments, pastimes and inventions, has turned his Ken Burns Effect loose upon
"The Dust Bowl." One would say it was almost inevitable that two things so
huge were bound to meet.
The four-hour film premieres Sunday and Monday on
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/economy-business-finance/media-industry/televi
sion-industry/pbs-%28tv-network%29-ORCRP000015299.topic> PBS and tells the
story of the great drought that befell the Southern plains in the 1930s and
the poor farming practices that made it into something far worse.
Though it has the pokey pace and flat affect of his other films - for Burns,
history is elegy - it is also one of his best works: more tightly focused
than usual in time and place, with a clear shape, dramatic arcs and a
conclusion that is at once cautionary and moving, topical and timeless.
 
<http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/tv/showtracker/la-et-st-ken-burns-dust
-bowl-pictures,0,6223885.photogallery> PHOTOS: Images from 'The Dust Bowl'
It is also a kind of monster movie, which, like a lot of monster movies,
begins with acts of overweening human ambition, heedlessness and greed: "It
was the worst man-made disaster in American history," says narrator
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/entertainment/peter-coyote-PECLB001167.topic>
Peter Coyote, bearing down on the words "man-made." The conditions for
catastrophe, centered in the Oklahoma panhandle and neighboring parts of
Texas, New Mexico, Kansas and Colorado, were laid down in the conversion of
a flat, windy, dry land, "almost wholly unfit for cultivation" in one early
estimate, into a sea of wheat.
A number of wet years, plus the encouragements of the federal government,
land speculators and bogus science, made all seem well for a while. But then
the rain stopped, and the soil, already weakened by mechanical farming
techniques - often for absentee "suitcase farmers" with no emotional
attachment to the land - turned to dirt. Then the winds that formed the
prairie gathered it up into black walls of dust, as much as 10,000 feet high
and 200 miles wide, that rolled across the land, blotting out the sun,
getting under doors and into the lungs, sometimes causing "dust
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/health/diseases-illnesses/pneumonia-HEDAI00000
61.topic> pneumonia," which could be fatal.
"We lived in a brown world." says Dorothy Kleffman, of Guymon, Okla., one of
two dozen Dust Bowl survivors Burns has interviewed. Most were children or
teenagers in those years and they are as full of feeling as of fact as they
recall dresses made from flour or feed sacks, the joy of precipitation
("we'd ... hold our hands up and let it hit our hand and our face and just
almost worship that rain") or the time one woman's brother swallowed two
dimes and "my mother made him use a slop jar to go to the bathroom until she
dug those dimes out."
 
<http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/la-ca-2012-celebrity_pictures
,0,3379596.photogallery> PHOTOS: Celebrities by the Times
That's because the story of the Dust Bowl is also a story of the Great
Depression. Burns follows some of his subjects down Route 66 to California,
the odyssey that gave John Steinbeck
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/entertainment/movies/the-grapes-of-wrath-%28mo
vie%29-ENMV0011602.topic> "The Grapes of Wrath," but mostly sticks to the
panhandle and the farmers who stuck it out: "next-year people," hoping for
the best and continually disappointed.
Burns lines up a lot of facts and films and some very fine photos - under
the New Deal's Farm Security Administration, hundreds of thousands of images
were made by photographers including Walker Evans, Dorothea Lange and
others. Dust Bowl balladeer
<http://www.latimes.com/topic/entertainment/music/woody-guthrie-PECLB002140.
topic> Woody Guthrie comes on the scene at the close of Part 1 and sets the
stage for Part 2, a welcome break from what seems like endless parlor
renditions on the soundtrack of "Hard Times" and "Home on the Range."
The film also has relevance to present-day arguments about our effect on the
natural world and our responsibility to it, as well as the place of
government in regulating these interactions. The people of the panhandle
were not at first especially comfortable with the programs that helped keep
them (and their livelihood) alive.
The Roosevelt administration itself was divided on whether to let it all go
back to grassland or bring farmers to a better way of farming. In the end,
they did both.
"People who think only in terms of the moment scoff at our efforts,"
President Roosevelt said in a 1938 speech in Amarillo, Texas. That the
scoffing goes on makes this bit of history feel urgent.
 <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]
--
'The Dust Bowl'
KOCE: 8 and 10 pm
Sunday and Monday
  _____  

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