Program

Stop rape!

Drawing on a variety of sources, including the New Woman's Survival Catalogue and Eve Norman's speech before a San Bernardino symposium on forcible rape, this program examines the social and psychological aspects of rape and reports on who is doing what in search of a solution. Produced by Tiji.

The Trojan Women

Production of a tragic play by Euripides, set on the morning after the fall of Troy.

Football wives

Pam Josephson, Diane Youngblood and Clarice Alexander, all wives of professional football players, reveal how much they relate to other women, to themselves, and to their husbands' world of institutionalized violence. Also discussed are their attitudes toward being in the public eye, the sexual peccadilloes of professional athletes, and football as mass media escape.

After the news : work / Selma James ; interviewed by Nanette Rainone.

Selma James, proponent of the idea of "Wages for Housework", is interviewed by WBAI's Nanette Rainone. James discusses the American vs. the European reception to the idea of wages for housework, the performance of prescribed sex roles and the reproduction of the labor force, and how to move from the unwaged work of housewives to the refusal of work altogether.

What have women done?

Based on the book published by the San Francisco Women's History Group, this program documents the history of working women in U.S. history. Produced by Barbara Cady.

Masters and Johnson speak at the University of New Mexico

William H. Masters (1915 - 2001) and Virginia E. Johnson (1925 - 2013), the St. Louis-based sexologists better known as Masters & Johnson, discuss sex and religion, sex facts and fallacies, the aging factor in sex, approaches to sex, and misinformation about sex, at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque in December 3, 1973. A lively question and answer period follows their talk.
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