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- ==Phrack Magazine==
-
- Volume Five, Issue Forty-Five, File 24 of 28
-
- ****************************************************************************
-
- [The following is a message we received from Radio Free Berkeley
- regarding their movement and radio kits. I think these guys
- have a great thing going, and I personally am taking measures
- to get involved, (in my own special way.) Now Austin FCC, don't
- get your sphincters in a tizzy, because you won't be fining me
- anytime soon, but you never know who that broadcaster is, now do
- you?]
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Chris,
-
- I have enclosed the most current newsletter from FRB is this email.
- Mondo 2000 just came out and has a 14 page article on Guerilla media with
- a lot of information about FRB and others. We are trying to encourage as
- many people as possible to obtain transmitters and take to the air
- waves. If this happens, it will be very difficult for the FCC to do very
- much, especially in areas of the country where the nearest FCC office is
- 500 to 1000 miles away. It is extremely important that the stranglehold
- on the free flow of ideas, information, art and culture be broken not
- only here but around the world as well. China has just clamped down on
- broadcasting there, only state approved outlets and all satellite dishes
- have been banned was well. We intend on putting an international
- shortwave station on the air, first broadcast will be New Years Eve. It
- will be a call for no borders, tear down the walls and party down. We hope
- to get people in the Bay Area who are in exile from their home countries
- for political activity to do 10 to 20 minutes programs in their
- native language which we will broadcast around the world on the 20 meter
- band. Needless to say, the FEDS and their corporate masters are going to
- take a rather dim view of all this. Their armies and police can not be
- everywhere at once, however.
-
- Anyway, good to hear from you. Let me know if you need further information.
-
- Stephen Dunifer
- Free Radio Berkeley
-
-
- -------------------------
-
- RECLAIMING THE AIRWAVES
- Published by Free Radio Berkeley & Free Communications Coalition
- October 1993
-
- New Email Address: FRBSPD@CRL.COM
-
- Submissions encouraged and welcomed
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ***** FCC Uses 20 SF Cops to Obtain ID *****
-
- In a scene resembling a French noir film, one person associated with
- San Francisco Liberation Radio was detained by 20 SF police officers until
- his ID could be presented to FCC agent David Doon. At approximately 9:30
- PM on Wednesday, September 22, Richard Edmondson was approached by David
- Doon who asked for identification. After refusing to produce
- identification and answer any questions, Richard drove away and was
- stopped on Webster St. by SF police officers who blocked off the entire
- northbound lane of the street with 8 vehicles. A confused scene ensued
- wherein the police officers had virtually no idea of what was going on or
- why they such massive backup had been called. Richard was ordered to get
- out of his vehicle with his hands up and in clear sight by clearly agitated
- SF police who subsequently handcuffed him. SF police officers were heard
- to say "who is this guy" and "what do we have him for" - for several
- minutes these questions went unanswered. By the time the FCC agent arrived
- to examine Richard's ID there were at least 20 SF police officers on the
- scene. After learning of what was going on some of the officers were
- clearly exasperated at having their time wasted by this FCC agent. A few
- were amused and asked for information regarding San Francisco Liberation
- Radio's frequency and broadcast schedule. After Richard's ID was verified
- he was released without any further consequences by the SF police.
- Richard described it this way, "Before it was all over there were at
- least 20 police officers on the scene. They were all so pumped up with
- adrenaline you would have thought I had committed the crime of the century.
- It was clearly irresponsible for this FCC agent to call for such a massive
- response without giving clear reason or instruction to the SF police. When
- police officers go into a situation not knowing the details they naturally
- assume the worst. For one dark moment I feared my life was in danger."
- Clearly, this was an obvious case of overreaction by FCC agent David
- Doon who clearly endangered the life of Richard Edmondson by calling in
- such a massive police response. The FCC must be held accountable for the
- actions of their agents who use such extremely excessive and reactionary
- methods to suppress a growing micro power broadcasting movement. It would
- have sufficed for David Doon to have written down the license plate # of
- Richard's vehicle and run a DMV check. As more micro power broadcasters go
- on the air in the Bay area and Northern California we can anticipate
- further actions by the FCC to harass and intimidate those involved.
- However, we shall not be moved by their threats and police state tactics.
-
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ***** BUSH RADIO UNDER ATTACK IN SOUTH AFRICA *****
-
- 4 October, 1993
-
- AMARC Solidarity Action Network received this urgent demand today
- from Bush Radio, a community radio project in Cape Town, South
- Africa.
-
- An Action Alert was first issued in support of Bush Radio when its
- equipment was seized in May. For a copy of that Alert, send a request
- to amarc@web.apc.org.30th September, 1993
-
- OPEN LETTER RE: PROSECUTION OF BUSH RADIO
-
- To Bush Radio's Members, Users Friends and Supporters
-
- Bush Radio is being prosecuted for starting a community radio
- station. We are charged on three counts:
- 1. illegal broadcasting
- 2. illegal possession of broadcast apparatus, and
- 3. obstructing the course of justice.
-
- These charges are being leveled at two of our members, who face
- stiff penalties: R10,000 and/or 3 years imprisonment each on the
- first two counts alone.
-
- The first court appearance is set for October 13. We now need
- your support to stop the victimization of genuine community radio
- before it even gets going.
-
- Bush radio is a community radio initiative, owned and controlled
- by its membership, a wide range of organizations and individuals.
- For more than two years we planned and talked about going on air.
- Our attempts to get a broadcasting license from the Ministry for
- Home Affairs were repeatedly frustrated, and our membership
- eventually decided that we should go ahead without one.
-
- So from 4 - 8 pm on Sunday April 1993, listeners on the Cape
- Flats heard a mix of programs produced and presented by our
- "networkers" (volunteer producers from the community). Scores of
- other people were there, and all of them had a chance to go on
- air, most of them for the first time in their lives.
-
- In the week that followed the state seized our transmission
- equipment, effectively silencing us on the eve of our second
- broadcast, scheduled for May 1st. About six weeks later we were
- warned that the state was considering laying charges against us.
- Last week charge sheets were served on our lawyers, to appear
- before a regional court on October 13th.
-
- For the state to take such action at this time seems to
- contradict their professed commitment to a more open South
- Africa. We are being charged in terms of laws inspired by
- apartheid at the very same time that new legislation passes
- through parliament - including bills for the transitional
- Executive Council and an Independent Broadcasting Authority,
- drawn up by parties at the negotiations.
-
- The enforcement of these charges could have serious consequences
- for us at Bush Radio. For an organization which employs a staff
- of only two people, we do a disproportionate amount of work, and
- can ill afford to be spending time on defending unnecessary legal
- action. Bush Radio runs a range of training programs aimed at
- bringing new voices into the broadcasting environment. We work
- with a number of organizations, producing programs that are
- distributed either on audio-cassette or on other radio stations.
- Substantial time and energy is invested in building up a network
- of volunteers, the backbone of a truly participatory community
- radio. A lot of time is spent providing support to others who
- want to start radio stations in their own communities.
-
- Despite our modest resources, Bush radio has become something of
- a "flagship" for the emerging community radio sector in SouthAfrica.
- For us to be criminalized could weaken the growth of this
- new sector which holds such real potential for communities
- wanting to control their own development.
-
- We were always open and peaceful in our methods, and feel that
- this treatment is misplaced. To drag us through the courts is a
- waste of time and money, not only for Bush Radio but also for the
- taxpayer who foots the bill.
-
- We hope the charges might be dropped, and seek your support in
- making our case. What can you do?
-
- At this stage we ask that you write letters. They should be:
- "To whom it may concern,"
-
- The content of your letter would depend on your relationship with
- Bush Radio.
-
- If you are a member, we'd like you to say why you think it's
- inappropriate for us to be prosecuted, and include a statement of
- solidarity.
-
- If you are a client, we'd like you to say why you think it's
- inappropriate for us to be prosecuted, and include a statement of
- solidarity.
-
- If you are a client, we'd like to hear about the value of service
- you have derived from Bush Radio, and we would like you to be
- specific about what we did together.
-
- If you are a friend, or supporter, please write whatever you feel
- is appropriate, and we'd appreciate comments on how this kind of
- action undermines confidence in the nature of change in our
- country.
-
- Please send these letters to:
- BUSH RADIO at fax no.:
- +(27-21) 448-5451
-
- and send originals to:
- P.O. Box 13290
- Mowbray, 7705
- Cape Town, South Africa
-
- We should receive these letters by Friday 8th October, or as soon
- as possible thereafter.
-
- Thanking you in anticipation,
-
- JEANNE DU TOIT
- Secretary for the Coordinating Committee
-
-
- The Solidarity Action Network is an initiative of AMARC,
- the World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters.
-
- Action Alerts are posted in the conference amarc.radio
- carried by many members of the APC Network.
-
- Email users who do not have access to the APC Network
- can receive Action Alerts directly by contacting AMARC.
-
- For more information about AMARC or the
- Action Network, contact us at:
-
- 3575 St-Laurent, # 704 - Montreal, Quebec - H2X 2T7 Canada
- Fax: +(514) 849-7129 - Tel: +(514) 982-0351
- Email: amarc@web.apc.org
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- ***** FREEDOM OF COMMUNICATION *****
-
-
- >From Zeke Teflon's book - Complete Manual of Pirate Radio
-
- Freedom of communication is a basic human right. Like all rights,
- freedom of communication consists of being able to exercise your
- abilities with- out interference. Government cannot give you your
- abilities, but it sure as hell can (and will) interfere with you when
- you exercise them. Government cannot give you rights. It can only
- take them from you. If all governments (goons with guns forcing others
- to follow their dictates through violence and coercion) were to
- cease to exist, human rights would certainly not cease along with
- them.
-
- The naive objection could be raised that while governments cannot
- give you rights, they can protect them by preventing your fellow citizens
- from interfering with you. That's the theory. In practice, governments
- rarely 'protect' citizens' rights, and then only when it suits their
- political purposes. Invariably, when governments feel the least
- bit threatened, they place their own 'security' needs above the human
- rights they supposedly safeguard. Through- out history the vilest
- and most consistent violators of human rights have been governments.
- Governments, along with their bedfellows, organized religions, have
- been responsible for the overwhelming bulk of human rights violations
- in every human civilization.
-
- We cannot look to government to protect our rights. We have to do
- it ourselves, and an effective means of doing that is by exercising
- our rights. Use 'em or lose 'em.
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ***** Connecting to the Net *****
-
- One of the best tools for the immediate transfer of news, information
- and discussion is the Internet. With any basic computer and a modem, world
- wide access is just a few keystrokes away. In the Bay Area one of the best
- Interest access providers is CRL, for a flat rate of $18 per month you will
- have all the Interent resources available to you. Resources include the
- ability to send email to anyone else in the world who is on the net as
- well, check out hundreds of news groups for the latest and weirdest
- happenings, send breaking news and information to other community
- broadcasters, etc.
- At the moment we are working on a way to digitally record and compress
- 5 to 15 minute audio spots into a computer file which can be sent anywhere
- in the world where there is a computer to receive it. With an inexpensive
- digital recording and playback card which plugs into any basic PC system,
- micro power broadcasters will be able to send and receive these spots to
- and from anywhere in the world. This completely bypasses the rather
- expensive satellite feeds and makes for a much more decentralized system of
- distribution. If you are interested in this project please contact us.
- To reach CRL in regards to an Internet account give them a call (415) 381-
- 2800.
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ***** MICRO POWER BROADCASTING, TECHNOLOGY FOR THE PEOPLE *****
-
- With circuit board dimensions of 2" x 4 1/2", a five
- watt FM micro power transmitter is capable of covering a community
- 3-5 miles in radius. Such compact and inexpensive technology has
- the possibility of giving each and every community its own voice. Stephen
- Dunifer with Free Radio Berkeley has been designing and developing
- this unit along with a series of other transmitters, amplifiers and
- antennas over the last year. Mass produced RF transistors and
- communications IC's have made it possible to design and build stable and
- clean transmitters and amplifiers for a fraction of the cost of brand name
- type accepted equipment. Even the entry level 5 watt kit, using only three
- transistors, is very stable once tuned and set up.
- Even more sophisticated phase lock loop (PLL) frequency
- control designs are not that much more expensive to design and produce. At
- this moment, several individuals are working on low cost PLL designs
- which should meet current FCC requirements for frequency stability. When
- these designs are finished they will be available in kit form and
- assembled as well (for shipment outside US only).
- What does it take to put a micro power broadcasting operation
- on the air ? First off, less than $500. A basic 5 watt FM transmitter,
- output filter (very necessary to reduce output harmonics), coax cable
- (50-100 ft RG8), antenna and power supply (battery or 12 volt regulated
- and filtered unit) is going to cost about $125-150. This is assuming
- assembly of kit and antenna. Next, a VHF power meter ($30-$40 at
- Radio Shack), a dummy load (make from resistors or $19 at Radio Shack)
- and a frequency counter ($50-150) are needed for tuning and keeping
- things optimized. Beyond those requirements one sort of audio source
- (line level -10 dbm, .3 volts) or another is needed to feed the
- transmitter. This source can be a walkman type cassette unit, a mixing
- board, tape deck, etc. Granted this is not a professional studio but for
- low budget community operations, it does not take top end gear. Creativity
- and determination as shown by many community stations can certainly make
- up the difference.
- Once all the equipment has been assembled and arranged,
- a suitable place needs to be found for the operation and setting up
- the antenna. With FM, which is line of sight transmission, the higher
- the antenna the better. Depending on the regulations and political
- climate of the country in which you live, your operation may need
- to be portable for rapid set-up and break down. That seems especially
- true here in the United Corporate Snakes of America.
- At the core of this is the potential to set up loosely
- coupled autonomous networks of communication around entire planet,
- outside the grasp of corporate/government control. This is the goal
- of the Free Communications Coalition, the umbrella organization which
- is being formed to support, defend and encourage micro power broadcasting.
- Micro power technology makes this possible through a
- combination of low power. inexpensive FM, AM, TV and shortwave
- transmitters. Free Radio Berkeley, San Francisco Liberation Radio and
- other interested parties will be placing an international shortwave station
- on the air (100-300 watts initially at 40 meters - 7.4 to 7.5 Mhz range,
- increasing to 1000) sometime in November, 1993. If we had to use
- tube designs, doing such an operation would be impossible due to the
- portability requirements. Instead, relatively inexpensive transistor
- designs allow to us build linear shortwave amplifiers capable of output
- powers exceeding 1000 watts while running off a bank of lead acid
- batteries. Certainly, within the normal definitions, 100 to 1000
- watts on shortwave is definitely beyond the usual micropower definition.
- However, when right wing evangelical ranters are running 100-500 KW it
- could be considered to be micropower. At the moment, Free Radio Berkeley is
- offering an entire line of transmitter and amplifier kits for FM
- broadcasting along with antenna and equipment designs. Assembled
- units are available for sale outside the US only. A rather effective
- antenna can be built using common hardware store parts for about $10. Our
- work will be expanding to include UHF & VHF TV, AM and shortwave designs.
- We would like to find other engineers and technically
- inclined people to help increase these efforts since we are a rather
- small design and development operation. Further, we need such technically
- inclined people to act as advisors and facilitators in the process
- of helping people build, test, tune, and setup their transmitters
- and antennas. That way, we can create a pool of people across the
- country and world who will be available to lend a technical hand to
- those who wish put micropower broadcasting operations on the air.
-
- Let a thousand transmitters bloom
-
- Stephen Dunifer
- Free Radio Berkeley / Free Communications Coalition - the People's FCC
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Freedom of Broadcasting in Italy
-
- Just for you to know, back in 1974/75 Radio Milano International in
- Milano (not associated with us) started as the first private-pirate
- FM station in this country, operating from a van which kept moving
- around the town to avoid the PTT authorities (equivalent of the FCC).
- RMI brought the first regular stereo programs to Italy, good music
- not heard before on state channels, as the other stations which came
- after them did. They also went to court and fought for "free", private
- radio and freedom of speech over radio and won against the old Postal
- law which considered broadcasting as State Monopoly. Today RMI is
- one of the major national radio networks with hundreds of repeaters
- all over the Italian peninsula, while thousands of private radio and
- TV stations obtained authorizations to broadcast legally over the
- years.
- If you have a story to tell on pirate radio, or information to share
- (voice/paper/email), please get in touch with us. On shortwave we reach
- also many European Pirates who would love to hear from you. (We indeed
- carried "legally" some of the pirates programs in the past in order
- to offer them better coverage to their "alternative" programs. Something
- we would also like to do again the future.)
-
- Please send email to 100020.1013@compuserve.com, including a phone
- number and times when we can call possibly you from Europe for an
- interview. We will guarantee anonymity if so desired, since our Shortwave
- transmissions may also be heard in the USA. We'll love to hear from
- you! 73, Alfredo --- Alfredo E. Cotroneo, President, NEXUS-International
- Broadcasting Association PO BOX 10980, I-20110 Milano, Italy phone:
- +39-2-266 6971 | fax: +39-2-706 38151
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Notes from the Net on the FCC
-
- One person writes about his FCC bust on the Usenet newsgroup
- alt.radio.pirate:
-
- When I was busted in 1984, the FCC used a tan-colored
- buick passenger car. The passenger seat had been ripped out and was
- replaced with a rack of receiving equipment--nothing special, just
- commercially-available stuff. In the trunk was a pair of batteries
- driving inverters. The engine had a second alternator to charge the
- batteries. Beneath the vinyl roof was a direction-finding antenna
- array that was connected to an indicator on the dashboard. They'd
- just drive in the direction indicated until they reached the transmitter.
- That car served 3-4 states in the Northwestern US. How
- do I know all this? After the guy finished writing me up, I asked
- him to show me his equipment. After all, I showed him mine. He started
- to say no, but then changed his mind since there was nothing secret
- involved.
-
- Don Hackler responds:
-
- When I was engineering an directional AM broadcast station,
- the station was inspected by two FCC engineers driving a similar car.
- The roof had been removed and replaced with a fiber glass replica
- of the original. The antennae were embedded in the new roof, and
- there were no indications of anything `special' about the roof, inside
- or out.
- I was given a ride in the car to go check some of the
- monitor points with a field-strength meter. The passenger bucket
- seat had been replaced by a 3 foot tall rack on a swivel mount, so
- the driver or a passenger in back could operate the equipment. The
- rack had a slip cover made of upholstery vinyl that matched the car's
- interior. They refused (nicely) to let me see the equipment, but
- said it was just standard equipment; i.e. a spectrum analyzer and
- some general coverage receivers.
- I never understood why they didn't allow a peek, but
- I assumed it was probably some policy they were following. That was
- my first, and so far only, FCC inspection.
-
- Don Hackler - donh@shakala.com Shakala BBS (ClanZen Radio Network)
- Sunnyvale, CA 1-408-734-2289
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ***** Why Support Micro-Power Broadcasting? *****
-
-
- Number One: The issue is freedom of speech. It's truly
- shocking what the Federal Communications Commission has allowed to
- happen. Media access is becoming too restricted for regular people
- to get their message across. As each day passes, radio, television,
- and newspaper media gets gobbled up pac-man style by big outfits like
- Sony/CBS, GE/NBC, ATT, ABC, Time-Warner Communications, Hearst, Gannett,
- Disney, Ted Turner, or even Fox. Our local media mogul, James Gabbert,
- owns an AM, FM, and television station in the same area. Middle America
- gets bombarded with religious broadcasters and urban areas get millions
- of watts of commercial crap beaming out from huge towers. Arbitron
- and Neilson decide which stations have what percentage of the listening
- audience. This situation must be changed so that truly free communication
- can have a chance to survive. In the 90's we need some space on the
- broadcast bands for community radio and television. Cable TV is promising
- hundreds of channels to choose from, but most of this stuff will be
- generated by the existing media networks. The problem here is that
- minority opinions are not heard. Censorship can not be tolerated
- in a democratic society. Freedom of information is what we need.
- Number Two: The technology has changed. It used to be very expensive
- to run a radio station. With modern electronics, however, small radio
- stations can be on the air with a minimal investment. In fact, people
- in Japan have been doing micro-power broadcasting for years. Most
- people in the U.S. just have AM, FM, and TV receivers. To reach these
- people, you usually have to buy advertising time on a commercial station.
- That's assuming some station is willing to broadcast your tape! What we
- want is true public access to the airwaves for everyone, not just
- the rich and powerful. The cloud of secrecy about broadcasting has
- lifted and now we know that media power has been stolen by our own
- government, and sold to the highest bidder. People need media access
- because human beings have a natural need to communicate with each
- other. Cable TV and Audio service should feature input from the
- community at large. The old concept of standing on a soap box and
- calling out to your fellow citizens will not work in the computer
- age.
- Number Three: Health Concerns about Radio energy, in large doses,
- it is considered by some to be a real health hazard. Incidence of
- leukemia and cancer runs high among men who work on high power transmitting
- towers. People in San Francisco get blasted with literally millions
- of watts of energy coming from Sutro Tower. This is because some
- radio and television stations want to be picked up 100 miles away.
- Scientific opinion on the effects of exposure to radio waves varies quite a
- bit, but if you're one of those people living up near Sutro Tower, maybe
- you should move. Micro-power is the sane way to use radio and tv. The
- space on the radio and tv dial should be spread around to all interested
- parties, not just a small group of companies. Broadcast power levels
- for all stations should come down to safer levels.
-
- -Paul Griffin
-
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ***** KITS FROM FREE RADIO BERKELEY *****
-
-
- First, a word from our legal department:
-
- For educational purposes only. These kits are offered for the furtherance
- of one's knowledge regarding radio frequency design and principles. At all
- times during operation the assembled unit must be connected to a dummy
- load. Part 15 of the FCC rules prohibits an antenna being used with these
- units. All responsibilities for the ultimate use of these kits are born
- solely by the builder and/or operator.
-
-
- KITS AVAILABLE NOW !
-
-
- All kits are complete and come with professionally manufactured, drilled
- and tinned PC boards. All coils are pre-wound. Each unit, unless
- specified, requires 12 volts for proper operation. Full instructions and
- diagrams included.
-
-
- 5 Watt FM Transmitter - $45
-
- An improved version of the Panaxis 5 watt design with a much more
- rugged output transistor capable of producing 6-7 watts. Oscillator is a
- stable FET based VFO.
-
-
- 6 watt RF Amplifier - $25
-
- Uses the same output transistor as above. Will produce 6 watts for
- 1/2 watt input drive. Easy, quick assembly.
-
-
- 15 watt RF Amplifier - $35
- Uses a very high gain (14dB) RF transistor to boost a 1/2 watt input
- to 15 watts. Complete with PC Board and all required parts.
-
-
- 25-30 watt RF Amplifier - $35
-
- Will produce full power with an input drive of 4-5 watts.
-
-
- 1/2 to 1 watt Amplifier - $18
-
- 1/2 to 1 watt output for an input power of 10 mw. Great for boosting
- lower power VFOs.
-
-
- Output Filter Kit - $5.00
-
- A seven element low pass filter, composed of 4 coils and 3 capacitors, to
- flatten those harmonics. Specify cutoff frequency desired.
-
-
- COMING REAL SOON !
-
-
- 1/2 - 1 watt Stereo Broadcast Transmitter - $35
-
- A vast improvement over the Ramsey FM-10. It uses the BA1404 IC as a
- stereo modulator only to modulate a FET vfo, buffer and amp chain. Better
- audio input filtering and bypassing. IC voltage regulation for the 2.5
- volt supply for the BA1404. A very rugged output stage and collector
- voltage bypassing make this unit stand out from all other transmitter
- designs using the BA1404 chip.
-
-
- Stereo Audio Processor - $Price to be determined
-
- A combined stereo generator using the BA1404 coupled with compandor ICs for
- compression and limiting of audio signals
-
-
- If you have any other particular requirements please let us know. Custom
- design and fabrication services are available including PC layout and
- production. Full CAD services as well.
-
-
- Proceeds from the sales of these kits go to the furtherance of micro power
- broadcasting, bringing a voice of empowerment to every community.
-
- Please add $3.00 for handling and shipping for each kit.
-
- Payment to be made out to cash or to Stephen Dunifer, we are still working
- out the bank trip. Send to:
-
- Free Radio Berkeley
- 1442 A Walnut St., #406
- Berkeley, CA 94709
-
- Voice mail: (510) 464-3041
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- On the Air
-
- Free Radio Berkeley - Sundays from 9 PM to 12 Midnight at 88.1 FM. Call
- their voice mail # (510) 464-3041 for further information. Or write them:
- 1442 A Walnut St., #406, Berkeley, 94709.
-
- San Francisco Liberation Radio - Wednesdays & Saturdays from 8 PM to 10 PM
- at 93.7 FM. Call their voice mail # (415) 487-6308 for further information
- and to help out. Or write them: San Francisco Liberation Radio, 350 7th.
- Ave, Box35, San Francisco CA, 94118.
-
- Southern Marin, San Rafael Area - schedule not known at this time, try
- 87.9 FM.
-
- Southern Marin, Sausalito - left end of the dial most every night, try 87.9
- FM.
-
- Mission District, SF - LaRaza station, schedule not known, try 87.9 FM
-
- Santa Cruz - Either on the air or soon to be, schedule & frequency not
- known at this time
-
- More stations taking to the air all the time, look for a whole network
- to be happening in Berkeley. An attendee of the New York City workshop is
- on the air in Connecticut with 5 watts as Ragged Mountain Liberation Radio.
- Phone calls are coming in from around the country, keep those calls and
- letters coming.
- From San Francisco Liberation Radio: Each SFLR program closes with
- the words: "Fascists are like cockroaches. Shine a light on them and they
- scurry away. And together, you and I can be the light." Richard Edmondson
- of SFLR, author of that slogan, said, "Well, first and foremost of all it
- seemed like a truism, and it seemed like the sort of phrase to end a radio
- program with - catchy."
- Stephen Dunifer with Free Radio Berkeley added, "Yes, but cockroaches
- do not carry guns". One of Free Radio Berkeley's favorite tag lines is
- "Are you going to continue to live the lie or are you going to act the truth
- ?
- Both San Francisco Liberation Radio and Free Radio Berkeley have been
- carrying a lot of very diverse and interesting programming ranging from
- Food Not Bombs Radio Network programs to Jello Biafra declaring that
- Urinalysis is Freedom to local street interviews to an interview with the
- former program director at Pacicifa station WPFW in Washington, DC. If you
- are interested in producing programs, conducting news gathering and
- interviews, etc. or have tapes of your band, performance piece, etc. or
- wish to help out in any other way, please contact either Free Radio
- Berkeley or San Francisco Liberation Radio. Tapes may be mailed to the
- return address on this newsletter in care of Free Radio Berkeley. Let your
- voices and performance art be heard !
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- In the Media
-
- Within the last few months, a considerable amount of media attention
- has been focused on Micropower Broadcasting. Articles have appeared in the
- East Bay Express, SF Weekly, Bay Guardian, Oakland Tribune, San Jose
- Mercury, Daily Cal, SF Chronicle, Berkeley Voice and New York Daily News.
- CNN put together a news story about Free Radio Berkeley which aired
- nationally and was picked up and rebroadcast by Channel 2 in Oakland.
- More coverage is expected to be forthcoming. An article may appear in
- the New York Times. KQED radio is working on a story. A fifteen page
- article on guerilla media will be in Mondo 2000, due out the first of
- November. Channel 31 (Marin County) is covering one of the broadcast
- operations in San Rafael. A press and info packet is going to be sent out
- around the country. Any help you can offer in the area of community and
- media outreach would be greatly appreciated. It is our intent to build an
- international movement and coalition. Contact the Free Communications
- Coalition (510) 464-3041
-
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- FUND RAISING VIDEO PARTY
-
- Featuring: Pump Up the Volume, Medium Cool and videos
- from Black Liberation Radio
-
- Saturday, November 13 - 8 PM
- 809 B Allston Way, Berkeley
-
- (two blocks south of University Ave., between 5th and 6th streets)
-
- $5-? donation. Free popcorn provided. Help us pay our operational
- expenses.
-
- ___________________________________________________________________________
-
-
- HELP TAKE BACK THE AIRWAVES
- FREE COMMUNICATIONS COALITION MEETING
-
- Saturday, November 13 - 5 PM
- 809 B Allston Way, Berkeley
-
- With the dramatic increase in publicity (Free Radio Berkeley made the
- front page of the Sunday New York Times - Oct. 24) and response we have
- experienced in the last month or so, it is rather important that all of us
- who are concerned with the defense, support and promotion of micro power
- broadcasting come together to plan and create a strategy which will lead to
- the Free Communications Coalition (the Peoples' FCC) becoming an
- international umbrella under which micropower broadcasting can flourish.
-
- To that end, you are invited to attend the meeting of the Free
- Communications Coalition on Saturday, November 13 at 5 PM. It will be held
- at 809 B Allston Way (between 5th & 6th streets) in Berkeley. This will be
- a pot luck dinner meeting, bring a vegetarian dish to share. Following, at
- 8PM will be a video benefit, see above for further details.
-
-