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C,l j'P\T ',! \'\' 1 \' PROGRAM GUI DE NlJI.lBER TWO HUNDRED A,'JD FOURTEEN, published by the Jack Straw I,!emorial Foundatioll, ; a non-profit, tax exempt organi zati on that OWllS and operates two radio stations, KRAB in Seattle '13rows{~ at tJu 1~ and KBOO in Portland. This here youre looking at thence is the program guide of KRAB. It is not is .50 tnj oy tl-6 ~ sold, but given free of charge to the financial supporters and volunteers 0;-' Ki·~\i;. Subscription rates for the station are: that yo," Cost aC~ $25 regular yearly subscription $15 niminun (like minimum only 5tn5t pronounced without all the uml auts oj titnt. and other clutterables)

REPEAT TIMES OF CERTAIN PROGRAMS ARE LISTED IN PARENTHESIS AFTER THE EVENING PROGRAM LISTING, AND REFER TO THE TIME THE PROGRAM WILL BE PLAYED THE NEXT MORNING, UNLESS A DAY IS ALSO LISTED, IN WHICH CASE ITS THE TIME THE PROGRAl'

KRAB 1408 N.c- 4.2.114i 9029 Roosevelt Way N.E. Seattle, Washington 98115 DAY- NIGHT-SUNDAY LA2-5111 20,000 e.r.p. 107.7 on yer dial

For those of you expecting a marathon this May, you're in good or bad luck, depending on how you look at it. We've decided to delay the Marathon till October, when, hopefully, the area will be in better financial condition (we don't want to get a bunch of bloody turnips and no money for our fun) Also, by October, we'll have some money for publicity, and matching funds, and be better prepared. Thanks to all those who read about the now defunct Marathon in the last guide and offered to help. There was one. Thanks, Dave •

. f R.EJ'\ONT at- 35tl-\.

EASTIAKE GALLERIES

CUSTOM PICTURE FRAMING ANTIQUES

2920 EASTLAKE AVE. E. SEATTLE. WASH. 98102 EA 9_2241

- .. JACK STRAW MEMORIAL FOUNDATION °Board of Trusteeso .:pI ONE£R. 6QU,A~ Jon Gallant President Dave Rowland Vice President Bob Friede Treasurer Sook:l.or~ Byron D. Coney Secretary Helen Norton, Steve Menasian, Gary Margason, G. E.T~. palmer, Nancy Keith, Roger Ferguson, Hike Duffy ***********************************************

KRAB STAPH

Greg Palmer Station Manager Michael Wiater Program Director Steve Menasi an Chief Engineer :800\(6- Bob Friede 1,lusic Director Bill Seymour Production l1anager Nick Whitmer Production Assistants ANT'Q.UE~­ Trudi Friede Subscription Lady COL. ... 6C,.A8L.£, C. Ralph Palmer Bookkeeper Phil Bannon Guide Ad Hanager 'TEMS~ Carol Costello Guide Overseer Lorna Dawson Guide Layout Benjamin F. Dawson Engineering Director Horning Honcho Phil Munger Sneeci Hearn Personnel AND: scarborough, serebrin, stickler, smith, shurman, silverman, smith, sherlock, sale, west, wiater, west, white, winston, wilson, baltic, brown, c. bruce, a.l.s.brigade, munger, mish'alani, mikel­ son, marshall, m'pondo, macdonald, palm, putnam, prothero, price; parker, freeman, francisco" vei­ nus, golding, garfias, garre, davies, hosner, hanson, herbert, hogue, krasnowsky, jarvi, jame­ son, ohashi, boyce, campbell, unger, garfield, rowley, powley t gammon and spinach.

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BREAKDOWN OF MUSIC PREFERENCES

35 34 NUMBER OF RESPONDANTS WHO LISTEN FOR MUSIC: 105 30 TOTAL COMMENTS: 160

25 25 25 25 NOTES: Respondants who listen to more than one type of music are included once in each group they mentioned. Respondants who 20 said merely 'music' are included in the GENERAL category. 15 15

10 9 8 8 7 5 4 0 I ethnic general classical jazz blues old jazz rock folk bluegrass smith and jones

GRAPHS COMPILED FROM RUSPCN~,tE· TO clU vOLUNTAR'{ QUESTION AT THE BOT1'0I1 ell' THE BALI C! - BY W. A. SEYMOUR 6 105 BASIC BREAKDOWN OF RESPONSES TO QUESTIONAIRE INCLUDED IN ELECTION BALLOT 100 TOTAL RESPONDANTS: 187

80 74 TOTAL COMMENTS: 249

NOTE: Respondants who listened for both music and spoken word programming are counted once in each of those two groups. Excep­ 60 tion: Those who said only 'everything' or 'variety of programming' etc. are in­ cluded in the third group but not the first two. 40 40 28

20

o

~~US IC SPOKEN WORD EVERYTIIING, OTHER COMMENTS DONT LISTEN VARIETY, ETC not related to but support programming the concept of free ra- dio!

BASIC BREAKDOWN OF SPOKEN WORD PREFERENCES

3() 30 30 NUMBER OF RESPONDANTS WHO LISTEN FOR SPOKEN WORD PROGRAMS: 74 TOTAL COMMENTS 122 25

20

15 15 13 11 10

6 6 5 4 4 3 o I I I political drama comment speeches general documen- interviews morning readings other comedy rnd table lectures taries repeats programs L-______poetry specials ~ 7

l "ttd NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BROADCASTERS

1771 N STREET. N.W . • WASHINGTON. D.C. 20038 • 283.31:100

February 1971

Dear Broadcaster:

I 1m s ll:i."e that you are av'are of the FCC's proposed rulemaking tha.t ;J:)~lld prevent you from eve,," bei:"1.g able trJ expand your comnll..mi­ ca.tions operati~ms in :/0ur ':l?rket. :'he FCC i5 tX'ying to say to you that Y':Ju are good epough to oper2.te just vlhiit YO'l no\! have and nothing more--no grc:-rt.h, no expansion, and no diversification into other IniSS of c02.T:Junication. Not a very good prospect fo:::, your future, is it?

The NAB has undertaken ~he task of meeting the FCC's challenge t:) all broa~~~Gtcrs head-on, and has au~horized the creation of a special t~sk force to prepare the broadcast industry's ca3e. The expenditures for this effort will be at lC2..st $300,000; the NAB Board of Directors has marked $100,000 for the fight. At the time the Boa:::,d made its $100,000 commitment, I stated to them th:,d: there was no doubt in my mind that the nation I s broadcasters "..'O~lc1 quickly put up the additional $200,000. The response to i:'ef:';-:ing this cOJ:uni tment so far has been unanimous wherever I have mac;; a "e:i."3 :)nal appeal. Unfortun2_tely, time does not permit me to ct:,ll O~ everyone pe~sonally.

A funding formula has been established that asks each radio station to contribute an amount equal to ten times its highest Tilinl,-t:e rate. Please make out your check for the proper amount, and mail it to ~~:le l'AG in W2'~'hington, DoC., attention Evei"ett Revercomb. The c'!-;cck F;r,o'.lld be identified as "Task Force Funds".

'n~e FCC fil:: ng deadline is ilTL"'.cdi2.te. Due to the extreme shortnesd of tiD.?, Y01..'r check is needed right now. Please let us haOle it by retul'"'ll. mail.

D.;ugJas L. HD.l1Ship, C:l,~ir:m2.n \!,.:.~;d D?; Croup on !'redia S-tru.ct:J.re and Se.l!vic~

rLi1:jg

b mORninG SCHEDULE 7· II Am WEEKDAYS

110NDAY, MAY 3 Phil's Favorites with ;':\1 ' ':,::'" :'

TUESDAY, MAY 4 7 a.m.- Early English ~I::!sters, Part One. 9 a.m.- Music of Franz Liszt

WEDNESDAY, MAY 5 ~Iusic and Poetry of Southeast Asia, Part One

TdURSDAY, ~1AY 6 7 a.m.- Early English Masters, Part Two. 9 a.m.- Folksongs arranged by Holst and Vaughan Wi lli ams • '

FRIDAY, MAY 7 Music and Poetry of Southeast Asia, Part Two

~10NDAY, MAY 10 7 am- Early English Masters, Part Three. 9 a. m. - Modern Guitar anu Lute Music

TUESDAY, MAY 11 Twentieth Century Cantatas, Part One- sacred

WEDNESDAY, ~1AY 12 Music of Northwest Africa

TdURSDAY, MAY 13 Twentieth Century Cantatas, Part Two- secular

FRIDAY, HAY 14 Music of Egypt, the Sudan and Ethiopia

MONDAY, Ilay 17 7 a.m.- Motets of the High Baroque, Part One. 9 a.m.- Modern Chamber Music of Eastern Europe, Part One.

TUESDAY, MAY 18 Irish, Scottish, Celtic and other Folksongs

WEDNESDAY, MAY 19 7 a.m. ~1otets of the High Baroque, Part Two 9 a.m.- Modern Chamber Music of Eastern Europe, Part Two. of Eastern Europe THURSDAY, MAY 20 Classical'Music Requests. Call Phil at LA2-5lll

FRIDAY, MAY 21 Ethnic ~lusic Requests.

MONDAY, MAY 24 7 a.m.- Italian Madrigals. 9 a.m. Dramatic Music of Stravinsky, Part One.

TUESDAY, MAY 25 South Indian Songs and Dances

WEDNESDAY, MAY 26 7 a.m.- English Madrigals. 9 a.m. Dramatic Music of Stravinsky, Part Two.

THURSDAY, MAY 27 North Indian Songs and Dances

FRIDAY, MAY 28 7 a.m.- French 11adrigals. 9 a.m.- Music of Messian

MONDAY, MAY 31 Central Asian Songs and Dances

Ben Dawson,

Steve Henasian, :~"!J~~~~~~

the engin-

eering folk

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anything made - from belt buckles to fU'rniture to SATURDAY, MAY 1, 1971 SUNDAY, MAY 2

7:00 am TIlE MORNING SHaH 10:00 am A CHILD'S GARDEN OF VEGETABLES- with the proud owner of a new Toyota, Ilr. 10:00 JAZZ FOR A SATURDAY MORNING- with An­ America First, Dick Parker. A new drew Alexis feature of this outs tanding program will be a series of improvised inter­ kookiekookielendameyourcombkookiekookielendamey views, such as that heard recently wi th the world's oldest ventriloquist. 5:00 pm TRADITIONAL APACHE SONGS- soog by Phillip Cassadore. All o~ the songs 12 noon HUSIC FOR HAXIHILIAN- Rias Chamber comprising part one deal Ilith GAN, a Chorus, plus instrumentalists. (Angel) collecti ve nilme for the tlountain Spi ri ts, tradi tional spiri tual/super­ 1:00 pm YOKYOKU: HA0I4RO IIIIDERA SHISHI- Japan­ natural friends of the Apache. Part ese music two includes such songs as '~here does the sound come from?' 'This is 2:00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON- with Bob a good life," Horse's lament,' & Gwynne 'This world is very alive,' a song of Silas .lohn, much revered Apache elder 5:00 SYMPOSIUM ON RACISM- the first of sev­ and prophet who taught it to Phi 1- eral programs produced by Al Schwartz lip Cassadore's father, Clan Chieftan of KBOO, and recorded at the University Broken Arrow. (Canyon) of Oregon. Discussing the issues sor­ rounding racism were Harry Edwards, 5:35 GAGAKU: SHUN-NOHDEN SATIO- lead by Ono Assistant Professor of Sociology(U. Gagakukai of California at Berkeley) and Art NOHGAKU, vocal-TENKU Pearl, Professor of Education at the YUYA- performed by Hisao Kanse, Shizuo University of Oregon. (12:15) Kanse, Yukimasa Isso, Kingo Missu. (From the Anthology of Traditional 6:00 MUSIC FOR THE END-BLOWN FLUTE- Robert Japanese Music, Ducretet-Thomson) Garfias presents music for this instru­ ment from allover the world, including 6:00 THE EVENING RAAG- Ramnad Krishnan India, Persia, North Africa, Japan Kaccheri, with T. Ranganathan, mridan­ and Bali. gam, singing Camatic vocal music in the classical style. (Explorer) Fol­ 7:00 NOTES FOR TIlE NIGHT lowed by Ali Akbar Khan ,lr,

8:30 URBAN BLUES- with Dick Shurman

8:15 TOOTHPICK, LISBON AND TIlE ORCAS ISLANDS­ 10:00 TINY FREEMAN'S BLUEGRASS AT A NEI'{ TIME! Contemporary poetry with Michael and Bluegrass moves up an hour, for those Joanne Wiater. Works: Anne Waldman: in Tiny's audience who haven't been BABY BREAKDOWN (Bobbs-Merrill); Jona­ getting their full beauty rest on Sat­ than Williams: AN EAR IN BARTRAM'S urday night. Tiny doesn't need any TREE ('Selected Poems 1957-1967') beauty rest, 'cause he'S so gorgeous (Chapel Hill); PREVERT (in the Unicorn already. French Series); and, Ron Loewinsohn: MEAT AIR: Poems 1957-1969 (Harcourt­ Brace and World). (11:30) 11 9:00 BIRDS ON A MAY MORNING- music concrete, GYORGY LIGETI (b. 1933) LUX AETERNA ('66 if you will, approved by the Audubon ARNE MELLNAS (b. 1933) SUCCSIM ('64) Society of Rhode Island, and including MAREK KOPELENT (1932) MATKA 36 bird songs. (Droll Yankees) The Chorus of the North-German Radio, Hamburg, directed by Helmut Franz 9:20 BAOULE'" KODE-'" from the center of the (DGG Avant Garde) Ivory Coast, 1961, with special empha­ sis in vocal polyphony. 9:15 HUSIC OF THE PRINCES OF DAHOMEY- Festi­ val of the Tohossou. 10:00 EXQUISITE CADAVERS- would Andy call this kinky? 9:45 BJORN FONGAARD (1919- )- "GALAXY," for three electronically treated quar­ 11:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS- or this? ter-tone guitars, played and edited by Bjorn Fongaard. (Philips) 1:00 am ROSWELL'S RUT- or this? Well, perhaps. 10:00 JEAN SHEPHERD- from ImR, New York. Mr. Radio or Raddio, as Big Al Smith used to say, is now Mr. Television with his own show (Jean Shepherd's' America) on NET Sunday nights at 8:00 p.m. Mr. Shepherd replaced Kukla, Fran and Ollie, because he promised to work cheaper than Fletcher Rabbi t. (11: 30) MONDAY, MAY 3 11:00 AFTER HOURS- Jon Gallant, with one 5:00 pm LOU HARRISON- scabby fingernail on a late quartet Pacificka Rondo, for an orchestra of of Bee., anarchist style, and perhaps Western and Oriental instruments a Topic or two. Four Pieces For Harp Two Pieces For Psaltery Music for Violin, with various instru­ ments, European, Asian, African. (Desto) 5: 50 SWEDISH FI DDLE MUS I C- from Sve ri ges Radio: Rattviks Spelmanslag (Fiddler's tea,n): 5 selections. Fiddle Duets from Dalarna by Rojas TUESDAY, MAY 4 Jonas and Dyrsmeds Olsson: 7 se­ lections. 5:00 pm TRADITIONAL NAVAJO SONGS- a selection Fiddle Duets from Halsingland by Eric of songs originally issued as 78s by Ost and Theodor Ohlson: 2 select­ Canyon Records, and featuring such In­ ions. dian artists as Reg Begay, Ed Lee Fiddle Duets by Gosta Sandstrom and Natay, Roger ~IcCabe, Joe Lee of Luk­ Eric Sahlstrom from Uppland: 7 achuchai, and the Mesa Verde National selections. Park Team Singers. Fiddle Duets and solos from Gotland by Svante Pettersson and Sigvard 5:35 GIDAYO- vocal with shamisen-TAIKOKI Huldt: 6 selections. JUDANINE, performed by Tsunadayu Taka,noto, Yahi chi Take zawa 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT KIYOMOTO, vocal with shamisen-KANDA MATSURI, performed by Sumidayu 7:05 COMMENTARY (11:00) Kiyomoto, Kiji Kiyomoto, Kichi Nosuke Kjyomoto. (From the An- 7:30 SYMPOSIUM ON RACISr,l- from the Uni ver­ thology of Tradi tiona!" Japanese sity of Oregon, with Dr. Nathan Hare, Music, Ducretet-Thomson) Dennis Banks, Eddie Benton, Harry Edwards and Francisco Rodriguez. Pro­ 6:00 THE EVENING RAAG- Kirwani, by Ali duced by Al Schwartz of KBOO. (12: 15) Akbar Khan, sarod, with Shankar Ghosh, tabla. (World Pacific) And, 'The Pulse 8:30 DAVID BEDFORD (1937- ): TWO POEMS FOR of Tanam' with N. Nageswara Rao, vina, CHORUS ON WORDS OF KENNETH PATCHEN (66) wi th five Carnatic Ragas. (Explorer) 1. "0 now the drenched Land wakes." 2. "The great Birds" 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT 12 7:05 COMMENTARY- The Future of the Univer­ sity District- a serie5 on said subject, culminating in a grand panel discussion in JWle. We hope to have viewpoints of members of U District organizations, business organizations; and the Univer­ sity itself. Every Tuesday night in May. (11:00) WEDNESDAY, MAY 5 7:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS- with Willi .. Mandel of Berkeley. (KPFA) From now on Wednesdays, KRAB will be on the air all (11:30) day, from the end of the morning repeats to:

7:45 THEATRE REVIEW- James Mish'alani 3:00 pm MUSIC OF INDIA- Raga Kirwani, Ali Akbar (11:45) Khan, sarode, with introduction to In­ dian music by All India Radio. 8:00 A POEM IN CYCLES AND BELLS- for tape Raga Kausi-Kanada, Bahadur Khan, sarode, recorder and orchestra, by Shankar Ghosh, tabla (Concert Tape) and Vladimir Ussachevsky. A PIECE FOR TAPE RECORDER- by Vladimir 5: 30 THE SWORD IN THE STONE, Part 19- T.II. Ussachevsky. White's 1939 classic of the Arthurian SUITE FRO!,l 'KING LEAR' - by Otto Luening Legend, made into a rather horrendous and Vladimir Ussachevsky. The Orson cartoon feature by Walt Disney. As we Welles, New York Center production. near the end of the book, Kay prepares (CRI) to become a knight, and Wart goes to visit the badger. The author once 8:30 PAUL GOODMAN: THE HORAL AMBIGUITY' revealed that of all the animals in OF AMERICA- 'The Psychology of Being the book, he most agrees with the bad­ Powerless.' (CBC ~~ssey Lectures) ger.

9:00 ELECTRONIC MUSIC- presented by Jerry 5:50 LETTERS AND THINGS- The folks around Jensen of New Dimensions in Music. the station talk to the folks around the radio. 6:10 THE BAROQUE LUTE- Walter Gerwig, with works by J .S. Bacli, Buxtehude, Pachel­ bel. (Nonesuch) 10:00 ROOTS 35-Texas and Louisiana 1927-1932 -Blind Lemon Jefferson: Bed Springs 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT Blues, Struck Sorrow Blues, Saturday Night Spender Blues, Empty House 7:05 COMMENTARY (11: 00) Blues -Willie Reed: Leavin' Home 7:30 THE PUBLIC DEFENDER- Hembers of the -Texas Bill Day, Billiken Johnson, Alex Seattle Public Defenders Office con­ Moore and Coley Jones: Billiken's tinue their program of advice on Weary Blues criminal (as opposed to civil) matters. -Gene Campbell: Wandering Blues, Robbin' (11: 30) and Stealin' Blues -Billiken Johnson, Fred Adams, Willie 8:00 FROM THE UPPER VOLTA- a river in West Tyson and Oct'ave Gaspard: Sun Beam Africa, in Ghana, featuring singing, Blues, Interurban Blues drums, 2 fiddles, plucked lute and -Coley Jones: Drunkard's Special xylophone. - Wi 11 ard "Ramb lin , .. Thomas: Hard To Rule Woman Blues, Sawmill /loan, No 8:30 THE HEMLOCK REVIEW- Randy Francisco, Baby Blues, Ramb lin , Mind Blues with comments, interviews, reviews, -King Soloman Hill: Whoopee Blues surveys and introspections on education. Generally the topic for the specific 11:00 GET YOUR HEART RIGIIT- Jay Stickler program is mentioned on Notes For and jazz. The Night a few nights before the pro­ gram. (12:00)

9:15 OPEN TIME

10:30 THE LETTERS OF GEORGE JACKSON- read by Jeffrey Winston. 13 THURSDAY, MAY 6 7:30 OPEN TIME

3:30 pm THE SWORD IN THE STONE, Part 20- 9: 10 GAGAKU-KAGURA UTA, Shinto Ceremonial "The embryo was man." The Badger music. Sung by two groups, who alter­ concludes his tale. nate verses, acc. by Gagaku musicians. A short melody to begin, The song of 3:50 GENDING DJAWA- Javanese Gamelan, from Invitation, Quick Dance of the Korean Lokananta records. God, Ritual Verses, Prelude, Prayer for Longevity, Quick-Tempo Songs, Rit­ 4:25 BAUERN, TANZ, UND STRASSENLIEDER IN ual vers es, Prelude, "Asakura," place DEUTSCHLAND UM 1500- a record of name, song, Finale, and, Finale and humorous and bawdy songs of the 16th a quicker tempo. (.Japanese Victor) century. Performed by Studio der Fruhen Musik. (Das Alte Werk) 10 :30 THE LETTERS OF GEORGE JACKSON- read by Jeffrey Winston. 5:15 THE BOOK REVIEW- with Joanne Wiater. Today reviewing THE RASBERRY EXER­ 11:00 JUST JAZZ- with Herb Hannum CISES, by Rasberry and Grenway. (Freetone Publishing Company) (12:30)

5:30 BALTIC'S BOT SPOP- Milt Jackson

7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT SATURDAY, MAY 8

7:05 COMMENTARY (11:00) 7:00 am THE MORNING SHOW 7:30 FILM REVIEW- Peter Hogue and Richard 10:00 JAZZ FOR A SATURDAY MORNING- Andrew Jameson never have to say they're sorry. Alexis Doo wah. (12 :00) ifgodisgoodheisnotgodifgodisgodheisnotgoodtakethe 8:00 SYMPOSIUM ON RACISM- this part of the discussion at the University of Oregon 5:00 pm SANTUR- Persian Zither, played by Nas­ includes Rick Jackson, David Aquilar ser Rastegar-Nejad: Dastgah tlahur and and Ray Eaglin. (KBOO, produced by Bayat-E-Esfahan and Saghinameh. Al Schwartz) (12:45) 5:25 PUEBLO INDIAN SONGS FROM SAN JUAN, 9:00 SUNDAY- If everyone lit just one little NEW MEXICO- two separate groups of candle, what a bright world this would singers, each under the leadership of beeeeeee. The Roachdale Radio Network Peter V. Aguino, sing: Evening Dance, reveals this Commie propaganda in terms Winter Buffalo Dance, Summer Buffalo of the writings of Kant, Schopenhauer, Dance, Turtle Dance, Cloud Dance, and Durwwood Kirby. How much wood would Basket Dance, Butterfly Dance, Peace­ a Durwwood wood, if a ••• forget it. Pipe Dance, and, Eagle Dance. (Canyon) (11: 30) 6:00 THE EVENING RAAG- Shivkumar Sharma, 9:30 VINTAGE JAZZ- Hal Sherlock santoor, and Brijbhushan, guitar. Fol­ lowed by Ali Akbar Khan, and Zilla-Kafi. 11 :00 GARFIAS- ethno-music-'people'-music­ (Odeon) soon to be moving to a new day and time 7: 00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT

7:05 OPEN TIME

8:00 WHY A NEW CONSTITUTION?- The first of a FRIDAY, MAY 7 series of discussions, centering on the New Model Constitution for the United , 3:30 pm REPEAT OF GARFIAS FROM THE NIGHT BEFORE States. Donald McDonald interviews Rex­ ford G. Tugwell, the man who drafted 5:30 KRUMHORNS AND KINGS- Dick Palm, with it. (CSDI) (12 Noon Monday) music from Europe 1250-1750 8:30 URBAN BLUES- Dick Shurman, an hour 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT earlier

7:05 COMMENTARY- Frank Krasnowsky 10:00 BLUEGRASS- with Tiny Freeman, spaghetti (12: 30 Monday) cooker extraordinaire. 14- SUNDAY, MAY 9 5:35 OPEN TIME

10:00 am A CHILD'S GARDEN OF VEGETABLES- Rich­ 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT ard 'Dick' Parker, your host, with guitar music, Frank Zappa, Richie Va­ 7:05 COMMENTARY- Presented by members of lens, Bach, and his own particular the Seattle Draft Counseling Office. brand of merriment, ala Peter Lind (11 :00) Hayes. 7:30 A~ ARGUMENT FOR THE NEW MODEL CONSTI­ 12:00 noon J.S. BACH: CANTATA BIVV 84- 'Ich bin TUTION- Robert M. Hutchins and C. vergnugt mit meinem Glucke". Performed Herman Pritchett discuss the arguments by the Westfalische Kantorei (Cantate) for. (CSDI) (12:15)

12:25 TORELLI TRUMPET CONCERTOS AND SCARLATTI 8:00 SMITTY'S OLD RECORDS- In the midst of CANTATAS- Barock-Ensemble, Adolf his regular program, Earl Smith presents Scherbaum, playing on modern instruments, a special half hour of Paul Whitman's but very well. (DGG) Symphonic Jazz, featuring such stars as Bix Beiderbecke. 1:15 PEOPLE IN THE SKY- by Michael Czajkow­ ski, created on the Buchla modular 9:00 ALFRED JANSON: CANON FOR CHAMBER OR­ electronic music system. (Cardinal) CHESTRA AND MAGNETIC TAPE (1964)­ with Astri Herseth, soprano; Willy An­ 2:00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON- with Don dreson, piano; Kare Kolberg, organ; Mills Bjorn Jon Johansen, saxophone; Knut Guettler, double bass; Per Erik 5:00 OPEN TIME Thorson, percussion. Conducted by SVerre Bruland. (Philips) 6:30 THE MOULDY FYGGE- with Val Golding and nostalgic jazz. 9:15 OPEN TIME

7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT 10:00 JEAN SHEPHERD-from WOR in New York, Mr. Radio's most recent Playboy ar­ 7:05 COMMENTARY (11:00) ticle is THE UNFORGETTABLE EXHIBI­ TION GAME OF THE GIANTS VERSUS THE 7:30 WlTOLD LUTOSLAWSKI: String Quartet DODGERS, TROPICAL BUSH LEAGUE. (11:30) KRZYSTOF PENDERECKI: "Quartetto per archi" 11 :00 NOTHING- Nancy Keith TOSHIRO MAYAZUMI: "Prelude for String Quartet" Performed by the Lasalle-Quartett. (DGG Avant Garde)

8:15 POETS AROUND HERE (11:30) TUESDAY, MAY 11 8:45 OPEN TIME 5:00 SHAMISEN AND VOICE- Kyoku Nexumi 9:30 KING BISCUIT TIME- Robert West and (Japanese Victor) Cliff Butler 5:20 AOINO-UE NO KYOKU-Song: Kin-ichi 11:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS- Ray Serebrin on Nakanoshima; Keiko Nakanoshima the incline, with the program as close Koto: Seiju Suzuki; Junzo Yoshida to rock as we get. Sangen: Shozo Shinagawa Composed by Kengyo Yamada. The plot j 1:00 am ROSWELL'S RUT- jazz of this song is based on the "Tale of Genj i." It tells of the love of two women, Rokujo-Miyasudokoro and J Aoino-ue, for the same man: Hikaru Genji, the hero of the story. (Japanese Victor) MONDAY, MAY 10 6:00 THE EVENING RMG- Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, 5:00 pm VORTEX- electronic works by David Tal­ singer, with Goonkali and Malkauns. cott, Henry Jacobs, William Lough­ Followed by Darbari Kanada. (Odeon) borough and Gordon Longfe 11 ow. (Folkways) 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT

IS IIOTID 1m BIIIlIT

lOOK TO IIDIIIIT SURDIT liT 23 IDllSSIDlon,e do//alt Pia PlaSOI DVla 2" onlt!. ID allUIIID 141110USI TIVlal 3111 IISTLIKI 14ST

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ILUlaalSS OLD TIIIT ILUIS lOCI JAZZ

COil ON IN. IIVI 4 100D Till. IRD HELP :J{fll~fJJ SURVIVE TIl SUIIIB

l J K RA'B-F "'1 PRESENTS , THREE SUNDAYS IN MAY

~A 'BA1{OQUE CHAMBE'l{ SE1{!ES

Complete Sonatas of 'Bach ~ Handel for FLUTE ~ HA'l{PSICHO'l{D

MAY 2nd, 9th & 16th at the MERRILL HOUSE -919 HarvardE. at 3:30 in the afternoon FLUTE SCOTT GOFF, Principal Flutist, Seattle Symphony HARPSICHORD JOSEPH LEVINE, Assoc. Cond., Seattle Symphony CONTINUO MORGAN GRIFFEN, Prin.Bassoonist, Seattle Symph.

Series subscription: $10, pay to KRAB Sustaining Fund Mail check or phone reservations to: Mrs Byron Coney, 1047 Belmont Place East, Seattle 98102,EA 4-9549 or Mrs John Erickson, 28,j28 Park Road, Edmonds 98020

Dr ,

7:05 COMMENTARY- The Future ? of the Uni­ Pret ty Mama Bl ues, Bring It Wi th You versity District. (11:00) When You Come. This program ends the series. ROOTS 7:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS- William records are compjled and produced by Mandel reads his own translations, Evelyn Parth in Brunn, Austria, and and comments on Soviet Life, as revealed when new albums become available to in the Soviet press. (KPFA) (11: 30) us, they will be scheduled.

7:45 THE BONNY BUNCH OF ROSES- Seamis Ennis 11 :00 GET YOUR HEART RIGHT- Jazz with Jay plays Irish Uillean Pipes, Tin Whistle, Stickler and sjngs folk songs of Ireland. The Ui llean Pipes is a chamber instrument, in contrast to the great Highland Pipes, which is an outdoor instrument, as you would know if you ever lived next door to a pipe player. Uillean Pipes are powered by an underarm bel­ lows. The pipes are distinguished by their ability to playa few chords: 1. A Little Bench of Rushes (pipes) 2. The Kerry Recruit (song) 3. The first house in Connaught and WEDNESDAY, MAY 12 The Copper Plate Reel (pipes) 4. The Farmer's Cursed Wife (song) 3:00 pm MUSIC OF INDIA- Sid Brown presents 5. An Leanbh Sidhe (pipes) Raga Chandranandan, Ali Akbar Khan, 6. An Clar Bod-deil (song) sarode, Shankar Ghosh, tabla. 7. The Thrush in the Straw (tin whistle) 5: 30 THE SWORD IN THE STONE, Part 21- 8. The Cuckoo's Hornpipe (tin whistle) Wart No More: EXPLICIT LIBER PRIMUS. 9. The Bonny Bunch of Roses (song) The final reading of T.H. Whi te' s 10. Gol Na Mban 'San Ar (pipes) book, the first section of the 11. The Wealthy Squire (song) trilogy The Once and Future King. 12. Medley (pipes) Perhaps in the future, we'll Hogan's Favorite launch into book two (The Queen The Connaught Nam's Rambles Of Air and Darkness) in which The Lark in the Morning Arthur begins his reign as King. When the Cock Crows it is Day 13. Marrow Bones (song) 5:50 MUSIC OF THE MESTIZOS- with Robert 14. Will You Come With Me Over the Garfias. Mountains (pipes) 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT 8:30 PAUL GOODMAN: TIlE MORAL AMBIGUITY OF 7:05 AMERICA- "Is American Democracy COMMENTARY (11:00) Viable?" (CBC Massey Lectures) 7:30 LEGAL SERVICES- Statutory Exemptions, 9:00 LES STRUCTURES SONORES LASRY-BASCHET­ a discussion of what kinds of property Rapsodie de Budapest are exempt when an individual has a Quatour pour trois judgement against him; also the special Moelle de Lion exemptions under the Bankruptcy Act. Paludisme With Peter Greenfield and Hal Hodgins. Jeux D'Ombres (ballet) (11: 30) (BAM) 8:00 AFRICAN TIMES- Simon M'Pondo with the 9:30 AND AINT I A WOMAN?- Produced by the modern culture of a continent. (12:00) Anna Louise Strong Brigade of Women's Liberation. (11:45) 8:30 THE HEMLOCK REVIEW- Randy Francisco and information about education, especially 10:00 ROOTS 36- Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers, in the Seattle area. (12:30) recorded in Memphis and Chicago 1928- 9:15 OPEN TIME 1930; Minglewood Blues, Pig Ankle Strut, Feather Bed, Cairo Rag, Bugle Call Rag, 10:30 Viola Lee Blues, Riley's Wagon, Last THE LETTERS OF GEORGE JACKSON- read Chance Blues, Fourth and Beale, Tired by Jeffrey Winston Chicken Blues, Walk Right In, Mule Get Up In The Alley. Jonestown Blues. 11 :00 SOMETHING BUT DON'T EXPECT ANYTHING 18 THURSDAY, MAY 13 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT

3:30 pm KURDISH MUSIC FROM WESTERN IRAN 7:05 COMMENTARY (12: IS ~Ionday)

4:20 TRADITIONAL MUSIC AND SONGS OF 7:30 open time SUNDA: West Java- on 'la,boite ~ musique,' with all descriptions in 7:45 ALFRED JANSON (b. 1937): NOCTURNE, French, so listen instead. on a text by Nietzsche, for mixed chior, harp, two celli and two percus­ 5:15 THE BOOK REVIEW- with Colette Menasian sion groups. The Norwegian Soloist looking at USING WAYSIDE PLANTS, by Chior, conducted by Knut Nystedt. Nelson Coon, published by Hearthside (Philips) \ Press, Inc. (12 :-00) 8:00 ROSMERSHOLM, By Henrich Ibsen­ I 5:30 FORTIES JAZZ- Barry West is a cheeky Presented by the Breadline Theatre. fellow. On 'June 14, 1885, Ibsen addressed a workers' proce!lsion in Trondheim, 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT saying that, "An element of nobility must find its way into our public 7:05 COMMENTARY- Bill Hanson, representing life, into our government, among our the Seattle World Without War Council representatives and into our press. (11:00) Of course I am not thinking of nobility of birth, nor of money, nor a nobility 7:30 THE FILM REVIEW- Peter Hogue and Rich­ of learning, nor even of ability or ard Jameson (12:15) talent. What I am thinking of is a no­ bility of character, of mind and of 8:00 NAVAJO SONGS- the last songs of Ed Lee will. That alone can liberate us. This Natay, recorded in 1966. Mr. Natay was aristocracy which I hope our people considered to be the finest, as well will be provided with, will come to as the most authentic, of Navajo sing­ us ••• from two groups which so far have ers on records. (Canyon) not suffered irreparable damage under party pressure. It will come to us from 8:30 WRITING A HISTORY OF SEATTLE- Roger our women and from our workers. The Sale presents a review of other books transformation of social conditions written on Seattle, or involving its which is now being undertaken in the citizens; done at this time because rest of Europe is very largely concerned the affairs of the left up to and in­ with the future status of the workers cluding the General Strike of 1919 are and of women. That is what I am hoping the best reported and recorded of all and waiting for, that is what I shall those that ever happened in the city. work for, all I can." The work that Murray Morgan, Anna Louise Strong, the Ibsen refers to here, remains in the biography of George Vanderveer and the four-act drama Rosmersholm (1886). autobiography of Hulet Wells, Norman The action takes place at--Rosmersholm, Clark's work on Prohibition and the an old estate near a little town on a Everett l1assacre, Bill Speidel, novels fjord in the west of Norway. which use Seattle as a background, etc. John Rosmer, owner of Rosmersholm, (11: 30) formerly the parish clergyman, will be played by Raymond Jarvi; Rebecca West, 9:00 LEFT PRESS REVIEW- with Frank Kras­ by Susan Marshall; Kroll, Rosmer's nowsky. (12:45) brother-in-law and the headmaster of the local school, by Ivars Mikelson; 9:30 CLASSIC JAZZ- Mike Duffy assembles Ulrick Brendel, by Sverre Arestad; another program of the greats of old jazz. Peder Mortensgaard, by James Mish'ala­ ni; and Mrs. Helseth, by Charlotte 1 11:00 GARFIAS- with garfi as Ritchie. (12:45 Wednesday, May 19) ~ 10: 30 OPEN TIME 11:00 BUMBLING WITH BALTIC FRIDAY, MAY 14

3:30 pm garfias repeat

5:30 KRUMHORNS AND KINGS- baroque music with Dick Palm (9 7: 00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT SATURDAY, MAY 15 7:05 COMMENTARY (11:00) 7:00 am THE MORNING SH1W 7:30 THE PERCUSSIONS OF STRASBOURG: 10:00 JAZZ FOR A SATURDAY MORNING­ Milan Stibilj: Eperview de ta with Andrew Alexis Faiblesse, Domine (1964) Text­ Henri Michaux howyagonnakeepemdownonthefarmaftertheyveseenparee Makoto Shinohara: Alternances (1961-1962) 5:00 JACOB DRUCKMAN: ANIMUS III, AND SYNAPSE Peter Schat: Signalement (1961) VALENTINE- for instruments and electron­ All composed for and played by the ic tape. Arthur Bloom, clarinet, and six members of The Percussions of Alvin Brehm, contrabass. Realized at Strasbourg. (Limelight) the Columbia-Princeton Electronic /·lusic Center. (A Nonesuch Records Commission, 8:15 TOOTHPICK, LISBON &THE ORCAS ISLANDS­ 1971) Contemporary poetry with Michael and Joanne Wiater. Works: Edward Darn: 5:35 OPEN TIME THE NEWLY FALLEN (Totem): Theodore Ens lin: AGREEMENT AND BACK (Eli zabeth) ; 6:00 THE EVENING RMG- Hari Prqsad Qlaurasia, Fernando Alegria: INSTRUCTIONS FOR UN­ flutE, acc. by Manikrao Popatkar, tab la, DRESSING THE HUMAN RACE (Kayak); with Marwa and Des/Mishra Pilu. Followed Clayton Eshleman: THE HOUSE OF IBUKI by Omkarnath Thakur, singer, with two (Sumak); Lew Welch: THE SONG lIT. TAM­ l-Ialkauns. (Odeon) ALPAIS SINGS (Sand Doller); and, Lavine Niedecker: T & G (Jargon So­ ;':00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT ciety) (11: 30) 7:05 OPEN TIME 9:00 THE ALEXANDER HAMILTON OF TIlE HUDSON RIVER DAY LINE- Through the 8:00 ANARO,Y IS ORDER: GOVERNMENT IS CIVIL Highlands of the Hudson River by WAR- readings by Jon Gallant Daylight. Recorded and composed by Peter Kilham. SLIP WHISTLE: AS SHIP 8:30 URBAN BLUFS-· with droll Dick Shurman LEAVES PIER 81, NORTH RIVj:~~. Main Engine slow ahead and Condenser Water 10:00 BLUEGRASS- with the King of the Circulating Pump. SALUTE TO S.S. Road, Tiny Argo Freeman CASTILLO MANZANARES. Main Engine picking up speed. Also Condenser Water Circulating Pump &Air Pump. SALUTE, S.S. CATSKILL OF BRIDGEPORT. Formerly freight boat on Catskill Evening Line. Bilge Pump. Main Engine. DAY LINE SUNDAY, MAY 16 LANDING WHISTLE: long-short-long. Purser announcing Bear Mt. Lowering 10:00 am A CHILD'S GARDEN OF VEGETABLES- Dick Ramp (chain noise), running out gang­ Parker presents his special salute to way, 'GOOD.' CAST OFF WHISTLE. Inside the Daub lemint Twins, Murray and AI. Paddle Box picking up speed, outboard bearing thumping. LAST SALUTE TO FERRY­ 12:00 ANTOINE BUSNOIS: CHANSONS- The None­ BOAT ORANGE IN NEWBURGH BAY. Paddles such Consort, conducted by Joshua full ahead. TWO WHISTLE HARMONY SAL­ Rifkin. (Nonesuch) UTE. WHISTLE FROM WAY OFF. FAREWELL! Triple Expansion Side-Wheeler, pro­ 12: 35 pm MEDIEVAL MUSIC SUNG AND PLAYED- by the duced by Droll Yankees. Manitoba University Consort. 9:20 SHAKUHACHI- a Japanese end-blown 1:15 LUCY STEWART: TRADITIONAL SINGER flute, here played solo. FROM ABERDEENSHIRE, SCOTLAND- singing from Volume I-Child Ballads: The Bat­ 10:00 EXQUISITE CADAVERS- who turn over to tle 0' Harlaw, Two Pretty Boys, Tif­ the music, with Roger Veinus. ty's Annie, The Laird 0' Drum, Doon By The Greenwood Sidie 0, The Beggar 11:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS- Ray Serebrin, King, The Bonnie !-loose 0' Airlie, the fastest corn-shucker in Union Barbary Allen, The Swan Swims So Bon­ Bay Village. nie O. (Folkways) 1 :00 am ROSWELL'S RUT- and then, and then .•• 5:00 OPEN TIME jazz. 20 MONDAY, I>IAY 17 6:00 THE EVENING RAAG- Yeshwantrai Puro­ hit, singer, with ~lalkauns-Bi1ampat 5:00 pm VINKO GLOBOKAR, T[W/.IBONE- and ~'lalkauns-Drut and Sohini-Thumree. Globokar: Discours II for five trom­ Followed by the Ali Brothers, singers, bones (1967-8), all played by the wi th Poorvi and Tarana. (Odeon) composer, with electronic help Luciano Berio: Sequenza V (1966) 7:00 NOTES FOR TIlE NIGHT Karlheinz Stockhausen: Solo (1966) Carlos Roque Alsina: Consecuenza ('66) 7:05 CO~NTARY- The Future? of the U Dis­ (DGG Avant Garde) trict (11 :00)

5:50 OPEN TIME 7:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS- with ---- William Mandel, author of Russia 6:30 ••. THEREFORE CHOnSE LIFE: TIle E17l Re-examined. (KPFA) (11: 30-)-- '1assey Lectures- Presentet1 by Dr. (ieorge Wald, 1967 Nobe 1 Pri ~e Winner 7:45 THEATRE REVIEW- James 11ish'alani (11:45) and Higgens Prof". of Biolo?y at Harvard. Part One: ONE WI'T'H TI[E 'f!,lT"r:~C;r: 8:00 ROBERT BLY- a reading by the poet and editor of the little literary magazine, 'The Seventies' (formerly 'The Sixties' 7:00 NOTES FOR TIlE NIGIIT and before that 'The Fifties'), author of SI LENCE IN TIlE SNOWY FIELDS (Wes­ 7:05 COr.~ENTARY (11:00) leyan)and THE LIGHT AROUND THE BODY (Harper and Row), as well as the re­ 7:30 MUSIC OF VIETNAM- examples from a French cent THE TOOTII r.l0THER NAKED AT LAST Boi te ~ Husique record with descriptions (City Lights). He received the by Robert Garfias. National Book Award for 1968. The re­ cording was made at Pacific Lutheran 8:30 STRENr:Tl I El Itr:SERVE- the motto of the in Tacoma, March 19,1971, by Michael U.S. Array -'('<;erve, which is here Wiater. (2:00) anali 'wel , along with the Reserve it­ se If, by Bi 11 Schechner of WBAI. 10:00 CHERRY BALL BLUES- Memphis ~Iinnie and (12 :45) Kansas Joe I1cCoy, recorded 1929-1936: Goin' Back To Texas, I'm Talking About 9:00 KOTO MUSIC OF JAPAN- composed by Mi t­ You, Bumble Bee, I'm Going Back Horne, suzaki Kengyo (C. 1853) Don't Want No Woman, Georgia Skin, I Don't Want No Woman I Have to Give My 9:20 MUSIC OF UGANDA: SOGA TRIBE- 7 topical Money To, I'm wild About Hy Stuff, My songs with lyre, 6 flute tunes, 2 horn Mary Blues, Cherry Ball Blues, Botherin' and rum tunes, 2 topical songs with' That Thing, Beat It Right, Stinging horn and drum, and a dance with drums. Snake Blues, Chickasaw Train Blues (Low (Int. Library of African Music/Sound Down Dirty Thing), Dirty Mother For of Africa) You, You Can't Give It Away, He's In The Ring (Doing That Same Old Thing), 10:00 JEAN SHEPHERD- a heavy favorite in the Black Cat Blues recent KRAB-KBOO poll. (WOR) (11:30) 11:00 GET YOUR HEART RIGHT- jazz, with 11 :00 JON GALLANT AFTER HOURS- is just like Jay Stickler Jon Gallant before hours, except that he chortles more. Jon Gallant is one of the great true chortlers af our time.

WEDNESDAY, /.lAy 19

3:00 MUSIC OF INDIA, with Sid Brown. Ragas Zi lla Kafi and Desh Malh ar, TUESDAY, /.lAy 18 performed by Ali Akbar Khan and Shankar Ghosh. 5:00 pm WHY NOT SNEEZE- the literature of Dada and Anti-Dada; readings, in­ 5 :30 GEORG PHILIPP TELEMANN- Six So- ventions, musis, etcetera. Gert­ natas for Recorder and Basso Con­ rude Stein, Kenneth Koch and other tinuo, Frans Bruggen, acc. by Gustav I New York poets, Dick Higgens, and Leonhardt and Anne Bylsma. (Das Alte ! something else. With Peter Hogue. Werk) i i I 21 I L 6:20 BADEN POWELL-'A VONTADE' from Rio Brecht's ST. JOAN OF THE STOCKYARDS, de Janeiro, with compositions by here speaking and answering questions Carlos Jobim, Vinicius de Moraes and about translation with other faculty. Dorival Caymmi. (Barclay) Introduced by Dr. Frank Warnke. Re­ corded 3-12-71 by Jean Vincent. 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT (11 :50)

7:05 COMMENTARY Brock Evans (11: 00:' 9:00 OPEN TIME

7:30 THE PUBLIC DEFENDER (11:30) 9:30 VINTAGE JAZZ- with Hal Sherlock

8:00 MUSIC FROM TI-!E REPUBLIC OF GUINEA­ 11 :00 SOMETHING BUT DON'T EXPECT ANYTHING­ Chorus, xylophone, drum-trumpet-gong­ uhhhhhh ..••• voice music, harp-lute, songs with drums and castanets, one string vio­ lin and rattles, song and chorus with drums, and, a l"!alinke ballad sung by a woman with guitar acc. FRIDAY, MAY 21 8: 30 THE HEMLOCK REVIEW- Randy Francis co with some view on Education. (12:00) 3:30 pm GARFIAS repeated from Wednesday night

9:15 OPEN TIME 5:30 KRUMHORNS AND KINGS- Dick Palm wi th early Western music 10:00 GARFIAS 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT

7:05 COMMENTARY- Frank Krasnowsky (2:15 Monday)

THURSDAY, MAY 20 7:30 OPEN TIME

3:30 pm LETTERS AND THINGS- recent winner 8:20 SARA- In the very large country of of a Skokie Foundation Grant. We Chad, Africa, are a people known as have to give them $1.43 every time the Sara. This is their music: 'Nal we do the program. kaya,' played after a harvest. With 12 bamboo whistles of differing sizes; 3:50 GAGAKU- Etenraku/Shundeika (Flowers a long vertical drum; a conical drum. in a Spring garden) and, Hassan 'Ndo Banan' is the initiation of girls. (Dance of the Crane). They sing and vibrate their ornaments of large copper rings and belts of 4:25 GAMELM~ MUSIC OF JAVA- Gending Kombang metal bells, 'To,' a dance with solo Mara and Bonangan Gending Tukung, re­ and choir singing, whistling and clap­ corded in-1963 in Surakarta. (Philips) ping, while the two male dancers stamp and rattle metal rings worn on the 5:15 THE BOOK REVIEW- Joanne Wiater dis­ ankle. 'Nar,' or funeral music, for cussing Virginia Hunt Newman's women singing solo and in chorus. TEACHING AN INFANT TO SWIM (Har­ 'Beul,' which is a ceremonial dance, court, Brace and Javonovitch) accompanied by xylophone and drum. 'Praises in honor of traditional chiefs, 5: 30 BALTIC'S BOP STOP- Tenorman Wardell sung by Andre Toujibe, ace. himself on Gray an 8-stringed bow-harp.' 'Kaba' music during a festival dance, ace. by bam-' 7:00 NOTES FOR TIlE NI GHT boo whistles, xylophone, vertical drum, barrel-drum, small animal horn. 7:05 COMMENTARY (11:00) 'Pa roman,' performed during a funeral. A man singing, ace. by 2 xylophones, 7:30 THE FILM REVIEW- Peter Hogue and a vertical drum, a conical drum. And Richard Jameson (11:30) 'Mbile,' music to encourage warriors, a solo xylophone player. (Ocora) 7:50 THE ART OF TR~~SLATION- Frank Jones, of the University of Washington Com­ 9:00 CHARLES OLSON: POETRY OF ART parative Literature Department and AND POETRY OF AFFECT- a discussion of recent winner of the National Book a distinction Mr. Olson makes, in a Award for translation of Berthold lecture at the State University of New 22 York at Cortland, October 1967. The 8:00 LET'S MAKE OUR PRESENT CONSTITUTION talk includes extensive comments on WORK- Excerpts from public debates a­ John Wieners and Ed Sanders, as well bout the New Model Constitution, with as Gertrude Stein's A GEOGRAPHY OF THE Ramsey Clark and others. The Center . Charles Olson, who offers a free copy of the New Model died last year, is the author of numer­ Constitution to interested listeners. ous books of poetry, including THE Write The Center For The Study Of MAXIMUS POEMS, and is the prime mover Democratic Institutions, Box 4068, of the Black Mountain school of poets. Santa Barbara, Cali fornia. (l: 15 Tues.) (Pacifica) (1:15 Monday) 8:30 URBAN BLUES- wt. heavy/ht. high 10:00 MUSIC OF MAURITANIA- played by profes­ sional musicians, on 4-stringed lute, 10:00 BLUEGRASS- The only music in America harp, kettle drum and calabash. 110des: named for a kind of l,'l~·!1. Seini Karr, Seini Vagho, Vagho, Vagho. Hauritania is an Islamic Republic in NW Africa, which is today part of Morocco and Algeria. SUNDAY, MAY 23 10:30 THE PRISON RIOTS- dis­ cussed in retrospect by City Correction 10:00 am A CHILD'D GARDENED OF VEGETABLEl)­ Department officers who had been held As Peter Cottontail's mother used as hostages. Produced by Bob Kuttner to say 'EAT YOUR CARROTS!' (You for WBAI 10/7/70, this program remains see, Mrs. Cottontail's prob:en was timely in that no improvements have that she had to go through life been made in New York City's prisons known as Mrs. Cot t on t ai t, and as since. (12:45 Monday) • a "Iember of the Women's Liberaticn Movenent, she never kne'" whether 11:00 DR. SPIDER- X2 + y2 Z2, or the co- men were being respectful to her or efficient of radio. making s exis t remark s. Eventually, her pro~lem became so acute that she had to change her name, and leave old man Cottontail, who started it all. She is now living in Des Moines, Iowa, under the SATURDAY, MAY 22 name Di ck Parker.

7 am THE MORNING SHOW 12:00 VIVALDI, TARTINI, PURCELL ZAi\:ETTI­ Camerata Bariloche. under the di­ 10:00 JAZZ FOR A SATURDAY MORNING- Andrew rection of Alberto Lysy. violin. Alexis (Odyssey)

acceptingforgeorgecscottistheunitedstatesarmyledby 12:45 pm MUSIC OF THE MEDIEVAL COmT AND COUNTRYSIDE, New York Pro Musica, 5:00 pm THE POPULAR DEMOCRATIC FRONT: POLICIES Noah Greenberg, musical director. AND AIMS- an interview with Sulemein (De cca) Hadi, who is in charge of foreign re­ lations for the Popular Democratic 1:30 KOTO MUSIC OF JAPAN- a recital by t:le Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Miyagi Family, Kazue, voice: Kiyoko, a Marxist-Leninist group in the United koto; and Michiyo, shamisen. 'Chidori' Command of the Palestine Liberation by Yoshizawa (mid-19th cent. composer); Groups. Recorded in B~irut, in Novem­ 'Aki no koto no ha;1 and 'Chaondo,' ber, 1969, by Colin Edwards. (12:45 Mon.) by Kikuoka • (japanese Vi~tor) + 5: 30 OPEN TIME 2:00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOCN -Steve Brown 6:00 THE EVENING RAAG- Vijay Raghavrao, 5:00 NORTIIWEST I1USIC- First, Jan Robbins flute, with Abhogi, Amrut-Varshini and and tvIax Schwensen, local folksingers Mishra-Piloo. Followed by K.P. Aruna­ who have developed keen vocal h3.rmony. chalam, playing the nagasvaram, which Max provides guitar accompaniement is like the shenai. (Odeon) for these songs, all wTltten by Jan and Max. Second, Mike Dumovlch 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT plays and sings six orig~nal impro­ visations on 12- and 6- string gui­ 7:05 OPEN TIME tars. Produced by Steve Brown.

23 HElKE BIWA- narrative sing] ng to the SA.NTUR- Persian zither, playec by 6:00 6: Ie acc. of the Biw2., a four stringed lute Nasser Rastegar-Nejad; Dastg~l play-ed with a lar6'~ plectrum. The ["iwa Homayun and .1astgah Shustani wi th is carved from wood. TIle text is from poem. the TALU; OF mE IlEIKE, a Japanese cluss:ic. Firs':, 'Gion Shoji,· ther. 6:30 TlIE ~lOULDY FYGGL- old jazz with 'kogo. ' Val Golding N')TES FOR TIlE NIGHT 7:00 NOTES FOR T'IE NTGliT 7:05 COMMENTARY- Seattle Draft Counseling 7:05 CO;,IM::::NTARY (11 :00) (11 :00) CLASSICAL HUSIC OF IRAN- Dastgah S/s­ 7:30 7:30 TIlE FUNDN~NTAL ISSUE: THE SHARING terns: OF POWER- Rexford G. Tugwell with in­ 1. Dastgah of Hahcur troduction by Harry S. Ashmore, dis­ 2. Avaz of Esfa1an cussing the orginal drafting 0 f the 3. Avaz 0::' Afshari Constitution. (CSDI) (12:15) 4. Dastgah of Shour 5. Dastgah of Chahrg~h 8:00 SMITTY'S OLD RECORDS- Another hour wi th 6. Das t gall of Homayoun Earl Smith, who tonight presents a 7. Drum Solo special section of music with a 1920's (Folhlays) beat.

8:15 POETS AROUND HERE 9:00 VALIHA MADAGASCAR- from l~alagasy, the sound of the valiha. (Ocora) 8:45 DO PUNTS HAVE FEELINGS? Clive Paxi:er, head of the Baxter Lie Detecti on Agen­ 10:00 JEAN SIlEPHERD- from WOR, New York. cy a:1d a specialist i.n the use of be (11: 30) detectors in research, talks about his use of lie detectors to determine emo­ 11 :00 NOTHING WITI! NN'lCY KEITH-who's tion in 1)lants. ,'Ir. Baxter has for t"'1e concert tone grand. past 8 y~a::-s bc,en t;1e chairman of the research and instrument cCJmmittee for the polygraph field. His talk discusses eXFeriments he has been conducting now for several years. aimed at assessing consciousness in plants. This tape was recorded in October, 1970, at a TUESDAY, MAY 25 meeting 0:: the Spi ri tual Frontiers Fellowship in New York City. (Pacifica) 5:00 pm WHY NOT SNEEZE- with Peter Hogue (12:00) 6:00 THE EVENING RAAG- Bhimsen Joshi, sing­ KD!G BISCUIT Tlr,IE- Robert liest and 9:30 er, with l1iyan-Ki-Todi and Puria­ Cliff Butler Dhanashri and Thumri: Followed by Malkauns. (Odeon) 11:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS- Ray Serebrin, with rock and jazzy rock 7:00 NOTES FOR TIlE NIGHT

1 :00 am ROSWELL'S RUT- rocky jazz 7:05 COMMENTARY- The Future ? of the U District (11:00)

7:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS- with William Mandel Berkeley. (KPFA) (11: 30)

8:00 INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC OF 'filE YEAR 1600- in France, England, Germany and Brittany. Performed by the Concentus Musicus Ensemble of Renaissance and KARLHEIliZ STOCKHAUSEN- 'Grup~)en for 5:00 pm Baroque Instruments (of Vienna), on 3 Orchestras' (1955-57) directed by viols, violins, Renaissance recorders, the compospr. And, 'Carre for 4 Orch­ trombone and percussion, all orginals estras and L Choirs,' (1958-59), Dir­ ected by t-Iaurici.o Kagel, .'lndrzej Mark­ or replicas. This album is a collect­ or's item, having recently go~e out o~!ski, Mjchaell~iel':m, and the CO!Tl­ of print. (Bach Guild) p"ser. (DGG Avant Sarde) WANTED! A VOTE FOR EVERY CHILD

""lIE BOARD BELIEVES mAT mE CITIZENS OF SEATTLE ARE ENTITLED TO KNOW mE BLEAK

PICTURE CI1NFRONTIllG TIlE CITY I S 80,0(1) SCHOOL CHILDREN IN THf: 1971-72 SCHOOL YEAR SHOULD

'!HE OFERATIOl\S LEVY FAIL ON TUESDAY, MA.Y 1R.

NEARLY ONE '1'(-!IRD OF THE EDUCATIOKAI PROGRAM IS FUNDED BY SPECIAL LEVIES. THE

LEVY REQUEST FOR $30,111,ClOI) IS $10 HILLION LESS THAN mE LEVY NOW BEING COLLECTED.

LEVY FAILURE WOULD FIRST OF ALL MEAN A PAYROLL REDUCTION OF $10 MILLION.

APROXIMATELY 1,201) PERSONS WOULD BE ADDED TO THE LIST OF UNEMPLOYED.

SUC~ A SIG'HFICANT LOSS OF PERSONNEL WOULD MEAN THAT STUDENT PROGRAMS WOULD BE

REDUCED TO HINHruM REQ1JIRH!ENTS FOR GRADUATION, ELIMINATING OR REDllCING PROGRAMS DE­

SIGNED FOR THE TALENTED fiND GIFTED AND FOR PUPILS WITH LEARNING DIFFICULTIES •••

CLASS SIZES WOULD BE INCREASED APPROXIMATELY 20°0.

C1ITBM'1:S IN INSTRUCTION WOULD BE MADE IN THE WORK-EXPERIENCE AND VOCATIONAL

EDlkATION PROGRAMS... REDlJCTIONS WILL ALSO BE MAllE IN COUNSELINr, AND LIBRARY

SERVICE IF THE LEVY FAILS.

HATNTENANCE WOULD BE REDUCED TO A MINIMUM AND CUT BY $1,166,000.

A CIIT OF NEARLY A BILLION DOLLARS WOULD BE INITIATED IN ADMINISTRATIVE AND

SUnPORT SERVICES. lvITH LEVY FAILURE, ALL STIPENDS OR SUPPLElIPITAL REHTJNERATIONS WOULD BE ELIM- I PlATED r:OR EXTRA-r:TJRRICULAR ACTIVITIES, DEPARTMENT HEADS, AND OTHER WORV. REYOND REGULAR TEACHING ASSIGNI1ENTS.

-----Portions 0-1' a,statement issued to the press April 14,1971,

by Mrs. Forrest Smith, P~esident, Board 0-1' Directors, Seattle Public Schools ..

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20 Sl';\.';] ';1. SU:i:;:; OF TIlE !(ENAL:;')t~~"CE- Vi,> ~) . 15 ;\.u~s. h.E.H.;);:)j01S- discusslr:l~ female

tori,] de lo~ .\I!geles, '"ith .\1'5 :lusicae. social ro1e:-: in Af"pic:l 2.n:J the U.S. J l,\ngcl) the failure of the Uni ted ;"'it! on:; to mediate international disJlu and 9: 30 ,\;"0 t\I\1 I ,\ ',(In\:;':- Topics for liber­ the dangers of fascist mill. Lsm. atcu \,Olllen, l'l'ouuceu by the Anna Louise (1:15) Strong Brigaue. 10:00 GARFIAS- At a new time! 10:00 BUllS IlI,IIIHI, SIJ\RISE- Piano and vocal [)" Lc' ro\ ':'11'1', accompanied by gui tar­ i - t ',,'l'lp;lC'r Blackwell, recorded in \C" JrL :lnu St. Louis 1932-1934; 'ght liour Blues, Hean ~·listreater '. Ilurry [lown Sunshine, Corn Likker !;:l"~':--J Shady Lane Blues, Blues Before ',,:,('1Se, Take a Walk Around the Corner, '1\ "oman's Gone \vrong, Southbound Blues, Barre Ihouse Woman, I Be lieve I' 11 ~lake A Change, Bobo Stomp, Big Four Blues, Hustler's Blues, Shining Pistol, It's Too Short. Tl!URSDAY, MAY 27 GET YOUR lIEART RIGIIT- .Tazz almost all night with .Tay Stickler 3:30 pm HEINRICH SCHUTZ, SnlPHONIAE SACRAE- 9 Concertos from Book 1 (1629) Solo­ ists and instrumentalists under the direction of Helmuth Rilling. (Nonesuch)

4:20 GAI-IELANS OF BALI

5:15 THE BOOK. REVIEW- with Joanne \\Ii ater. Once, Dice, Trice by Alastair Reid, mJINE:SDJW, MAY 26 drawings by Ben Shawn. (Little,Brown) and, A Shuffle Book by Richard Hefter pm MUSIC OF INDIA- with Sid Brown. and ~lartin Stephen I-Ioskof. (Golden Sarangi demonstration with Ram Press) (12:00) Narayan, and Raga ~larawa: Ram 5: 30 FORTIES JAZZ- with mad Barry West, the Narayan, sarangi, M. ~lishra, tabla. bomber of 42nd Street. 7:00 OPEN THIJE NOTES FOR TIlE NIGHT 7:05 COMMENTARY (11: 00) .•• 11!EkEFo~zr~ Cll()0S): LIE1~: The 1971 Mr.sscy Lectu""es- P

COMMENTARY-David Hughes (11:00) 8:30 WRITING A HISTORY OF SEATTLE- with Roger Sale. We are a bit confused as 7:30 LEGAL SERVICES- Consumer Protection to where Dr. Sale is in the glowing a discussion of common protection a~ history of the Queen City. Thus, this well as Truth in Lending, collection program will either be what was listed agency practices and insurance for for the last program (and thus, you creditors. (11:30) should consult Thursday, May 13 listings) or, it will be the first of AFRICA,\J TIMES- Simon M' Pondo, with a two-part program on the General cultural coverage of Africa. (12:00) Strike of 1919. (11:30)

THE HHlLOCK REVIEW-R'andy Francisco, 9:30 CLASSIC JAZZ- "like Duffy with alternative Education reports and analysis. (12: 30) 11 :00 SOMETHING BUT DON'T EXPECT ANYTHING 21 212 Fourth Ave. South, Seattle, Wash. 98104 Phone MA 2 - 9135 ------Hours I Monday thru Friday 10 AM - 8 PM Saturdays Noon - 9 PM AUA Closed Sundays & Holidays

MEN U S

AJAM - Chicken Bar-B-Que on $1.75 A LA CARTE bamboo skewers, peanut sauce, SATE - 5 skewers egg, seasoned veg. & rice EGG ROLLS FRIED RICE - Plain 1.00 SATE BABI - Pork Bar-B-Que on 1.50 ROLLED EGGS W STEAMED MEAT bamboo skewers, seasoned veg. 1.00 & rice SEMUR BEEF (Stewed beef) 1.25 CHICKEN MUSHROOMS 1. 25 HOEZARENSLA - vegetables, fruits ATJAR - Seasoned veg. 0.40 & meat salads. Large 1.60 Steamed Rice 0.25 Cold & refreshing small 0.90 Peanut Sauce 0.10

RIJSTTAFEL - Rice dish w variety 1. 75 SANDWICHES dishes. shrimp, beef, egg, bean curd, seasoned veg. Ham Ham & egg NASI SEMUR - Stewed beef w onions 1.50 Bacon & egg & tomatoes, served w rice DESSERT AJAM DJAMUR - Chicken mushrooms w 1.50 onions, served w rice Home made cookies 0.25 NASI GORENG - FRIED RICE, served BEVERAGES w seasoned vegetables. Coffee, Tea Combination Fried rice & Milk Meat Rolls 1.50 Iced Tea Corned Beef & Ham 1. 50 Orange Juice Chicken 1.30 Pepsi Roast Pork 1.35 ADDITIONAL. DADAR GULUNG - Rolled eggs w 1.60 steamed meat, veg. & rice

LUMPIA - Indonesian egg rolls 1.50 w seasoned veg.

BAKMI - Pork noodles 1.25

WON TON SOUP 0.60

MEAT ROLLS - served w vegetables 1.60 & gravy

GADO GADO - Javanese style steamed 1.30 vegetable salads, w peanut-flavored dressing

------'f'~r.

'FRIDAY. MAY 2B 10:00 JAZZ FOR A SATURDAY 11,;RNING- with Andrew Alexis ¢' 3:30 pm Garfias, repeated from Wednesday night s tatis t i csprovethatpeoplewi thnofeetareshorterth an 5:30 KRUf,nIORNS AND KINGS- with Dick Palm, occasionally demonstrating the nuances 5:00 pm SONGS FROM THE PIMA- from Arizona, Amo of early I'lestern classical music Richards and his group. A storage-type basket is used as the drum, which is 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NI GHT struck with a stick. Note that the words are difficult even for the pres­ 7:05 CO~IMENTARY (11:00) ent Pima to translate into modern speech, so some of the language is 7:30 ISLAMIC MUSIC OF CHAD- from Africa, obs cure even to the singers. (Canyon) muslim music from the center of the continent.llost of the performances 5:30 OPEN TIME are by professional musicians, whose characteristic instruments are: con­ 6:00 THE EVENING RAAG- Ali Akbar Khan, with ical oboe, long metal trumpets, drums Misra ~land and Goojjari Todi. (Con­ with two skins and snares, and, 3- noisseur Society) Followed by K.P. stringed lute. A number of them were Arunachalam, with nagasvaram, or recorded in Fort-Lamy, the capital, Carnatic shenai. (Odeon) in the studios of Radio Chad. 'Kan­ inga,' a song to encourage warriors: 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT women singing, acc. by 5-stringed bow­ harp and calabash rattles. 'Canoe 7:05 OPEN TIME music' with the intent to encourage and strengthen, with several dif­ 8:00 ANARCHY IS ORDER: GOVERNMENT IS CIVIL ferent drums and 2 straight, metal WAR- readings in the Anarchist tradi­ flutes. Issa Chauffeur, acc. himself tion by Jon Gallant on 3-stringed lute, with a song to encourage young girls to dance. 'Karo,' 8:30 URBAN BLUES- with urbane Dick Shurman an amusement for orchestra of flutes and drums. 'Mba dou nasara,' or 10:00 BLUEGRASS- Tiny Freeman tries Ortho­ music of praise, for orchestra of oboe Gro on his nuckles for faster dorko­ and drums. The last selection is 14 phone playing and it doesn't do a damn minutes long, and is a greeting to thing. the village chief by the orchestra, consisting of oboe, long tin trumpets (they look to be 7-8 feet long) and several drums. (Ocora)

8:10 MAYO-KEBBI- a region to the southwest of Chad, on the border with North Cam­ eroon. This is the non-Muslim music from the west of this region.

8:50 OPEN TIME SUNDAY, MAY 30

11:00 BUMBLING WITH BALTIC- jazz with the 10:00 A CHILD'S GARDEN OF VEGETABLES­ Captain. Gather round the radio, kids, cause today Uncle Dick Parker is going to read the unexpurgated Rabbit Hill J ,. I Learn why Momma. thinks the kid is such a schlemiel! Learn why Gramps doesn't live at home any more. Learn what the statue in the Big ~0 Folks' house really represents! r . 12:00 A TREASURY OF MUSIC OF THE RENAIS­ , SA.NCE- Singers and instrumental- ti ists of La Societe de Musique D'Autre­ fois; music of 15th and 16th century SATURDAY, MAY 29 France, 15th century Italy, and 16th centurr England, play,=d on old and ne'.' instruments. (Elektra) 29 1:45 OPEN TIME LOGS, with Bertram Turetzky and elec­ tronic sounds realized on Moog and 2:00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON- Bob Buchla synthesi zers at UCLA. (CRI) Gwynne 10:00 EXQUISITE CADAVERS- Roger Veil .us, in 5:00 CALVIN HAMPTON- CATCH-UP for tape a tradition not yet dead. recorder and two pianos. (Odyssey) followed by: 11 :00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS- Ray Screbrin, pre­ An interview with Mr. Hampton who re­ pablum songs, for the very young at cently, in fact, the day this tape heart: rock and jazz, of surts was made, performed his own compo­ sition for organ, at St. Marks in 1 :00 am ROSWELL'S RUT- jazz all night Seattle, under the, auspices of New Dimensions in Music in Seattle. With Mr. Hampton were Richard Kruger and Jerry Jensen of New Dimensions, and Michael Wiater of KRAB. (12:15 Mon.) MONDAY, MAY 31 followed by: TRIPLE PLAY, composed by Calvin Hamp­ 5:00 pm ARABIC AND DRUSE MUSIC- beginning with ton, for Ondes Ilartenot and Two Pia­ Oud music. (Folkways) nos, He len McGi 11, andes ;lartenot. (Odyssey) 5:50 GERD ZACHER, ORGAN- Mauricio Kagel: Fantasia for Organ 6:20 OPEN TIME wi th obbligati Juan Allende-Blin: Sonorites 7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT Gyorgy Ligeti: Volumina and Etude No.1 'Harmonies' 7:05 COMMENTARY -John Prothero (DGG Avant Garde

7:30 AFIi! n!l[' 0101 R- panorama de la musique 6:40 HETU- 4 pieces (1965) and in, '~ltale: the instrumental music MESSIAEN- Merle Noir, for ondes marte­ of : ~ylophones, percussions, not and piano. With Jean Laurendeau, orl, ,,;, harps, zithers, lutes, clarinet and ondes martenot and flutL,', clarinets, etc. Louise Forand, piano.

7:00 NOTES FOR THE NIGHT

8:15 TOOTHPICK, LISBON &THE ORCAS ISLANDS­ 7:05 COMMENTARY- The Future? of the U ContempOl-ary poetry with Michael and District (11:00) Joanne \ii:1ter. Works by: Gerard tLlanga :CHIC DEATH (Pym­ 7: 30 SONGS FROM LAGUNA INDIAN PUEBLO: NEW Randall); Howard McCord: Sm4E NOTES MEXICO- featuring, as all of part one, TO GARY SNYDER'S MYTHS AND TEXTS (Sand the group of fast and slow Arrow and Doller); Robert Creeley: ST. MARTIN'S Eagle Dance Songs used for ceremonials, ('~l'=k Sparrow) and, A QUICK GRAPH: with the Laguna Pueblo singers. -,t ed Notes and Ess ays (Four (Canyon) ) (11:30) 8:00 EARLY r4US1C- a live concert with Dick 9:00 SEA AT CASTLE HILL NEWPORT R.I.­ Palm, of Krumhorns and Kines. Baroque ,,('corded and composed by Peter Kilham. and Renaissance sounds live at the (A Droll Yankees Production) station. 9:20 TREE >::JS1C- by Paul Chihara, who was .9 00 OPEN TIME born in Seattle in 1938, but who no longer lives here. Works: WILLOW WILLO\\, , with Harvey Sollberger, bass flute and others of the Group for Contemporary Music at Columbia University, with Herbert Price, tuba LOGS, with Bertram Turetzky, string bass 10:00 JEAN SHEPHERD- The graduate of the BRANCHES, with Arthur Weisberg, bas­ Morey Amsterdam School of Comedy soon, and others tells gut-busters. (\\'OR) (11:30) DRIFTWOOD, with the Philadelphia Quartet 11:00 AFTER HOURS- with Jon Gallant 30 RAM DAS TELLS liIS OIvN STORY. TWO HOURS ON CASSETTE. $7.50, TAX INCLU['ED. MAIL OrCER AND

CHECK TO: WE ft\TERPRISE, 1019 BELMONT PLACE E.

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-.-- antf1~&r ltydiOrW l~y~iatD' 'R16tOty FRIENDS OF KRAB presents traditional and contem­ porary music of Venezuela and the Shona people of Rhodesia in concert at 8:00 p.m. Friday and Saturday evenings, Hay 2R & 29 at the ACT Thea­ lMO' tre, located at First Avenue West and Roy Street. Per~orming will be art

CON.TUN'T'O 1,0S HER~IANOS APARICIO Rafael Angel Aparicio, harp etterarr cl'itici6m Rafael De Jesus Aparicio, cuatro Howard Goodman, string bass Byong Won Lee, maracas Robert r.arfias. maracas &'m01'e THE MARAIRE TRIO Abraham Maraire, mbira ---~---- Arthur Marairp-, hosho Lora Chiora, voice mond''ll-frid'aJ z.-1- Tickets will be sold at the box office only, be­ fore each evening's performance, and will cost satura'V' noon -5 $1 per person. As we would like to start on time, please come early. MaximuVl seating capa­ city is 423. For further information, call Bob Friede at 329-9032. 31 .. -

2{ oosevert w~ X'E. Seatt{e, WM~ton 98115

ADDRESS CORRECTION REQUESTEr::

I