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\").- page2 krab progran1 guide

PROGRAM LISTING #121 AUGUST 28 - SEPTH'lBER. lOa 1967

KRAB~ 107.7 Me :{SEATTLE); KBOO~ 90.7 MC (PORTLAND) TEL: LAs lagrimas de la Senora Do1orosa 2 - 5111 THESE BROADCAST STATIONS ARE NON-COMMERCIAL, tax­ exempt, free-form operations depending completely on listener support in the form of volunteer help, blood, and yearly contributions of $20 (reg) I $12 (min), and $6 (9 mos, students) for which you re­ ceive kisses and this program guide mailed out bi­ weekly •.. ALL THE PROGRAMS HEREIN are marked for repeat (R) the following morning between 10 AM & 1 PM. As well, there is the usual wake-ern-up with Nino de ~1a rchena, Javanese Bamelan, and de Mississ­ i ppi blues from 7 AM to 10.

"WHY DON'T YOU GET OUT OF TOWN," she said. Her voice was heavy and ominous, fire breathing into the telephone r eceiver like a dragon. "Why don't you ~ row up? A lot of people don!t like you in this city, and t he sooner you ge t out, the better." He r voice (and my ear) was clog£ed wi th too many non-filter cigarettes and bad sherry. I tried to concentrate on all the space-sounds between the words---you know the telephone noises: spook child­ ren babbling up the stairs ,. clanks and shrieks, the furry s ounds of electrons being shoved all over the universe. "N o- one asked you t o come here; and you start tearing down the community, as if anyone cared what you were saying." Pause. A circuit locks in somewhere---a mini-voice screeches s omewhere ar ound the dark edges, where the cur­ t ain of prot ons fight with the space of neutrons. " It's a good place ,. with good pee-pIe. A f i ne communi ty, and you ;:ome here and !.": tart in on it, like a s i 11y chi Id. They don I t like you, you know. Why don ' t / cu pe t out? .. II "ll/h o's she c~ : Ll ng ab out?" I wonde r---"who does she mean when sh,e says 'people, ' )r the incredible, t errifyinr: 'They.' Always T};,ey : gr ey shadow s , half-faces. shadO\vless p: i ant5 " t he g-reat electronic ~-' --, -- ~ s hoarde , risinR. up in e ch oin8 courtrooms to jeer, l ? (TO PAGE l l) ~ ~~"~~~"~1~ " ~~~"~~~%~ 'N.,;)~~"~';'~,,~~~ ,,~~ krab program guide page3 MONDAY AUGUST 28 5:30 THE PROGRAM FOR CHILDREN: readings for the restless ones, by Barbara McAusland. 6:00 PUCC INI: Suor Angel ica Soloists Victoria de Los Angeles and Fedora Barbieri, conducted by Tull io Se rafin. 7:00 NEW BOOKS: selections minced by P.J. Doyle 7: 15 A LETTER FROM ENGLAND: correspondence on t ape from G.B. (R) 7:30 COMMENTARY: MARTIN LARREY. (R) 8:00 6TH FESTIVAL OF CONTEMPORARY MUISC, TOKYO. Essay for 6 brasses (Shibata); Piece for 'prepared piano' and strings (Mat- sum i) ; Cal l igraphy for 10 strings no. 2 (Sato); String Trio (Takemitsu); Zeichen (Matsushita). 9:00 POETRY. Henrique Huaco, Peruvian poet now I iving in Berkeley, talks with Robert Sund and reads his own poetry. (R) 10: 15 LUTOSLAWSKI AN D SZABELSKI (re-schedu led) NHK 3 poems by Henri Micha ux for choir and or­ chestra and Preludes for chamber orchestra. i 10:45 THE SEATTLE CITY COUNC IL: excerpts from re­ cent, publ ic counci I meetings.

TUE SDAY AUGUST 29 5:30 PIPPI LONGSTOCKING IN THE SOUTH SEAS, harrow­ ing tales read by Barbara McAusland. 6:00 DA PALESTRINA Song of Songs, 2 1 motets for 5 voices, texts from the Song of Solomon (Prague Madrigal Choi r, dir. by M. Venhoda); Sicut Cervu:; Desideratj Soave fia i I morir; o Ceata et gloriosa Innitas; (netherlands Chamber Choir). 7: 10 4 SPEECHES FROM HENRY V: Laurence 01 ivier re­ cites parts of some minor, often overlooked characters from the historical drama. 7:30 COMMENTARY: DOUG HANSON. (R) . ~ 8 : 00 SONGS AND DANCES FROM GREEC E (;) $ recorded in Athens. i

~W~~"~l~"~l~"~l~"~J.~~J.~"~l~I'~l~~i'~l~,,~J; J page 4 krab program guide TUESDAY AUGUS T 29 (continued) 8:45 IRE VILLAGE OF BEN sOC: History. Bi I Newman beg i ns the report on as. Viet Namese v i I Iage by Jon Schell in NEW YORKER, July 15, 1967 (R) 9: 15 THE CLASSICAL INDI AN FLUTE, played by the late Panna Lal Ghosh Rag Yaman and Rag Shri. 10:00 CUISINE BOURGEOISE. Penci Is ready! Herbs,bowls and a few fromages by your side. The inter­ national KRAB Cookathon boi ts up the airwaves. Sasha Shor, who li ved 50 years in France,cook­ ing and eating al I the way, begins a series of bi-weekly programs on the art of simple, tasty french cooking. KPFK (R) 10:30 IT'S YOUR WORLD AND YOU CAN JUST HAVE IT. Lightning lampooning from a huge production crew at WBAI: 6 weekly episodes in Th e life and Times of Lyndon and the Hefers. (R) I I :00 CASSATION AND DIVERTIMENTO Ear Iy Moza rt (K. 63 and K. I 13) performed by the Camerata Academia of the Salzburg Mo­ zarteum.

WEDNESDAY AUGUST 30 5:30 PIPPI LONGSTOCKING, continued by Barbara McAusland. 6:00 JAZZ NOW with Rocking Lowe I I Richards. 7: 15 GARY SNYDER reads "Six Years" his poems about I iving in Japan, at the Berkeley Rhymers Club. KPFA (R) 7:30 COMMENTARY: GENE JOHNSTON. (R) 8:00 COMPOSIT IONS FROM NEW ZEA LAND (NZBC) Franchi: 4 Pioneer Portraits; Farquhar: Partita for Piano; Lockwoo d: 3 Medieva l Latin Lyri cs. 8:30 BOOKER WHITE, Mississippi dobro blues guitar player talks with Bob West, Mike Duffy and John Ullman, blues freaks, and plays out his I ife in word and song. "It was I ike in­ terviewing Ivlother Earth," said Duffy. (R) ~ I ~ ~.- } ~~II~~q~II~;~IIN...~tq~II~F~IIN..?;~I~-t~JI~~q~ll~jq~II~~~ krab program guide pageS WEDNESDAY AUGUST 30 (continued) 9:45 JEAN SHEPHERD, Pied Pipier of the I ittle man eve rywhere. WOR (R) 10:30 BLUEGRASS: Dave Wertz plays old and new timey country mu s ic.

THURSDAY AUGUST 31 5:30 PIPPI LONGSTOCKING, a story by Astrid Lind­ gren, read by Barbara McAusland for KIDS. 6:00 PHOEBUS AND PAN A musica l drama, Cantata BWV 201 by J.S. Bach. 7: 15 SOVIET PRESS & PERIODICALS, tra~slafed arid.re­ viewed a~d occaston~t~y G read : ~loud by Wi I I iam Mandel, weekly from KPFA (R) 7:30 COMMENTARY: JOHN STENHOUSE. (R) 8:00 18TH CENTURY SYMPHONIC MUSIC OF PORTUGAL recorded by Radio Portugal. 8:30 THE VILLAGE OF BEN SUC. Bi I I Newman continues Jonath an Schel I 's July 15 New Yorker a rticle ~ about Viet Nam. This reading de a ls with ~ "Attack, January 17, 1967. (R) 9:00 HARP CONCERTI Petrini: No.4 in E flat major; J.C. Bach: Concerto in D major. 9:30 THE POETRY AN D LITERATURE OF IREL AND . Prof. Rodger Mc Hugh is inte rvi ewed by Robert Sund on his schol ar ly special ity, Yeats, and some less known Irish poets. 10:30 SCOP E OF JAZZ: The Career of Chari ie Parker Part 5 viewed by Martin Wi II iams. (R)

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER I 5:30 THE CHI LDRENS PRGRA M. And now back to school al I you I ittl e summer drop outs. 6:00 HOWARD HANSON Serenade for flute, harp and strings; No.3 (conducted by the compos e r); Piano Concerto (Alfred Mouledous, pianist, , ). ~ 7:00 THE THEATE R, :he book by S t ar~ You ng, read by ~_ . ~ Bi I I Newma n, If he has any vOice left. Z

.~W~~I'~l~"~l~"~l~"~l~~l~"~l~I'~l~~"~J.~"~$i ~ page6 krab program guide FRIDAY SEPTE MBER I 7:30 CO MMENT ARY : FRANK KRASNOWSKY. (R) 8:00 MA JOR BARBARA . G. B. Shaw 's p-I ay about 'the lady from the Sa lvat ion Army is directea Dy Howa rd Sackl e r, with Maggi e Smith and Ro be rt Mo rl ey in the leading ro les. 10:30 NI GHT INTO DAY: Bob Fass stra ins t he lat e night greml ins of WBA I through a weekly roundup . (R)

SATURD AY SEPTEMBER 2 6 :00 THE SK IN, by Cu rzio Ma lapa rte , in cont i nu ed read i ng by Lorenzo ~~ i I am. 6:30 qU ARTET S Dittersdorf: Qua rtet No. in E maj or; Haydn: Qua rtet opus 54 No. 3 in E maj or; Schoe nbe rg : St r in g Quartet No .2 in F# min or. 7:30 CmN~ ENT A RY 8 :00 CL ASS IC JAZZ with Ma j. Mi ke Duffy (ret.) (R) 9: 15 KENN ETH ANG ER AN D SUSAN SONT AG , t a lk about the und e rground f i Im scene with Jonathan Cott of WBAI. Ange r is t he make r of "Scorpi o Ri­ sing'; "I na ugurati on of the P leasure Dome" and ! othe r unde rgroun d fami Iy favo rites. WBAI 10 : <10 17 TH AND 18TH CENTURY GERMAN ORGAN MUSIC J G. Bo hm: Wa r nur den Li eben Gott lasst Wa l- t en; Prae ludium und Fug a a mo l I; J. Wa lthe r: Jesu ma in e Fre ud e ; V. Lu beck: Prae lu d ium und Fuge in E dur; D. Bu xteh ud e : Auf me inen I ieven Gott; Can- zonetta in C duro I I :30 J US T US FOLKS : Vernon Chi and St eve Richmo nd mess around with homemade music SU NDAY SE PTE MB ER 3 6 :00 LE S NATI ONS Th e J acobean Ens emble, directed by Thurst on Da rt, pe rforms Fran co is Co up e rin's comp o­ siti on publ is hed in 17 26 7: 00 ALL SYSTE MS FAI L! .... "Se rgeant Pepp e r b I a res f l-em 10 mi II ion ph onographs, they 're feeding the bea rs in Ye ll owstone Pa rk, and the odor of ba r be cue wafting ove r the suburbs is suddenl y ~ mi xed with the frag rance of pot." L. Mi lam re= i ~ ads fI.ndrew Kopk i nd in the August 4 NE W STATE S- l: ~ MAN , on Th e Ame rican Sickness . ~ ~~~"~l~"~t~"~t~"~t~"~t~'~..i.~J'~t~"~l~"~~ · krab program guide page 7 SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 3 (continued) 7:30 COMMENTARY 8:00 DELETED AND FOREIGN RECORDS introduced by Dr. Jon Gallant who materia l izes out of an old de­ leted cata logue once a month at this time . (R) 9:00 THE PLACES WE LI VE IN, Part 2 of a series thought up and produced by Ken Rupart, on the possibi I iti es of pe rfecting our e nvi ornment. (F 9:30 SEVILLA: Cuna De l Cante Flemen co Fandangos, Vi I I anc i cos and Cantas played by Paco Agui'lera y Moraito Chico and othe rs. 10:00 NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND, on crumpled, an cient pape r, deciphered by Rory Funke.

MONDAY SEPTEMBER 4 5:30 A CHILD'S GORY HISTORY OF ENGLAND, by Ch. Dick­ ens, read by Bob Po l I. 6:00 CONTEMPORY JAPANESE SYMPHONY MUSIC Yashiro: Music of Tree; Irino : Sinfonia: Mayuzumi: Symphonic poe m "S ams ara." 7:30 COMMENTARY 8:00 MUSIC FROM 19th CENTURY AMERICA John Knowles Pa in e : Symph ony No.2 in A, opus 34 8:45 THE VILLAGE BENSUC. Bi I I Newman continues the July 15 "New Yorker" a rticl e by Jonathan Schell. (R) 9: 15 A LULL ABY FOR H. RAP BROWN Sun Ra: Th e Cosmos; Gord on Longfel low: Notes on the History of the Worl d, Part 3; Monks of the Nyingmapa Sect: Tibetan Bud­ dh ist music for shawms and pe rcussi on . 9:45 NEW BOOKS: P.J. Doy le reads from recent I it- erary re Iea ses !O:OO DIXILAND MUS IC WITH HA L SHERLOCK and his o ld slipped discs. (R) 10:30 FEINSTEIN MEETS THE TOPLESS DANC ER. , Prof . Herb e rt F. talks with Yvonne D'Anger, from ~ Iran, who describes her act in an S.F. night- S c I u b • KP FA (R ) .f t j ~~~II~l~II~..l~II~..l~I I ~..l~ '~..l~II~..l~II~..l~II~..l~II~~ pageS krab program guide

MONDAY SEPTEMBER 4 (continued ) I I :00 DANCE OF THE SEVEN VEILS by Richard S~~auss arid M. EI-Bakaar: modern Alexandrian danc8 music. TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 5 5:30 THE CHiLDRENS PROGRAM: Bob Pol I continues Dickens' on the history of England. 6:00 JUBILATE DEO Regensburg Boys Choir sings works by de Las­ so, Palestrina, Scarlatti, Allegri and Aichin· ger. 6:40 THE COOL TOTALITARIAN: Co nsiderations After Marshall McLuhan. Ch ris Koch talks about the McLuhan cult and the background of McLuhan's theories about the mind and communications t o the Bennington Co l lege Counci I. WBAI (R) 7:30 COMMENTARY: ALBERT MANN. (R) 8: 00 SYMPHON I ES ' '. Cannabich: Sinfonia no. 5 in B flat; Richter: Sinfonia in G major; Hl avacek: in F major; in G maj or and C maj or; C.P.E. Bach: Symphony no. 3 in c. 9:00 THE VILLAGE OF BEN SUC: Bi I I Newman continues the "New Yorker" read i ng as The Vi I I agers become refugees . By Jonathan Sc he I I. (R) 9:30 KOTO AND FLUT~ AND VOICE Shinichi Yuize, Yasuko Yuize and Toshio Tak­ ahashi play. 10:00 CUISEINE BOURGEOISE, the cooking series from KPFK, with Sasha Shor. (R) 10:30 IT'S YOUR WORLD AND YOU CAN EAT IT - satire from greml ins at WBAI. (R) I I :00 PIANO CONCERTI BY MOZART No. i in F major, K. 37 ; No.2 in B flat major, K. 39. (Li I i Kraus, piano).

WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 6 5:30 THE KIDS PROGRAM : Bob Pol I reads Dickens. ~ 6:00 JAZZ NOW: Lowe I I Richards pokes the avant's t = giJrde. _ ~ . ~ ~~"~l~"~l~"~l~"~l~"~l~'~l.~J'~l~"~l.~'r~~ krab program guide page 9

WEDNESDAY SEPTEMBER 6 (continued) 7:15 LETTERS & THINGS: rece ived and rea d by Lorenzo Milam. (R) 7:30 COMMENTARY 8:00 BEN SUC: Reflections of US Army Officers, from the New Yorker article by Jon Schell, read in a series by Bi II Newman. (R) 8:30 INSTRUMENTS AND MUSIC OF BOLIVIAN 9: 15 THE AFRICA PROG RAM presented by Prof. Simon Ottenberg. (R) 9:45 JEAN SHEPHERD , carliri~ ho~~ the gaddering swine , home t o the Big Apple. WOR (R) 10:30 RH YTHM & BLUE S, softly, with Bob West. (R) THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 7 5:30 THE CHILDRENS PROGRAM by Bob Pa l I. 6:00 MOTETS, HYMNS AND CHANTS Lu I I y: Dies i vae I . for 2 ch o irs; Dufay: Kyn e paschale "Lux et origo;" Gloria ad mochum tubae; Sa nctus pap­ ale; Audi Benigne; Salve Regina; Lui Iy: Psalm 50: Miserere Deus. 7: 15 SOVIET PRESS & PERIODICALS. KPFA (R) 7:30 COMMENT ARY: WILLIAM HANSON. (R) 8:00 B!TS & ORCHESTRAL PIECES Stravinsky: Movements for piano and arch; Rousseau: Symph ony for large orchestra; Trimble: 5 Episodes; Francaix: Concertina for pi ano and arch. 9:00 WH AT'S HAPPENING IN THE CITIES (or) IS EVERYTHING FALLING APART. A I ive panel discussi on with KRAB commentators Kim Knierim, Gene Johnston, He rb Hannum, and any others wh o have a mind t o come up. Listener-visitors we lcome . (R) 10:30 THE SCOPE OF JAZZ: THE Career of Chari ie Parke r, purt 6, chronicled by Martin Wi II iams.

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 8 5:30 A CHILDS HISTORY OF ENGLAND: Bob Po l I reads ~- Charles Dickens. i ~ \ = ~~"~i"""~~"~F""'''~i~~i~''~;'~''~i~''~i~''...;.;I~~ page 10 krab program guide FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 8 (continued) 6:00 MODERN CHORAL COMPOSITIONS A. Goehr: Two choruses, opus 14; M. Wi I I iams on: Symphony for voices; Ives: Psalms 90 and 150; 3 Harvest Home chor

SAT URDAY SEPTEMBER 9 6:00 THE SK!N: L. Mi lam reads from C. Malaparte. 6:30 TAFELMUSIK BY TELEMANN Overture in B flat major for 2 oboes, strings and continuo; Quartet in E minor for flute, viol in, cello and continuo; Concerto in E flat major for 2 horns, strings and contin­ uo; Trio in D maj or for 2 flutes and contin­ uo; Solo Sonata in G major for oboe and continuo. ~ 7: 30 COMMENTARY: GERARD RUT AN i i .j ~~II~J.~II~J.~II~~~ I~l~II~J.~I~J.~II~j.~II~~~ II~ krab program guide pagell SATURDAY SEPTEMB ER 9 8:00 HONEGGER Symphony No. 5 Pastoral dlete. 8:30 BEN 5~C: The Destruction. Bi I I Newman con­ cludes hi s reading from the July 15 "­ e r," by Jonathan Sche ll on the I ife and times of a Viet Namese Vi Ilage. (R) 9:00 ALI AKBAR KHAN Raga Basant Mookhari. 9:30 LADY DAY, a. n~rrative - and musical ch~ o nicle of the I ife of the late jazz singer Bi II ie Holiday produced by Gene and Fabs Di Alessi with reminiscences of her friends, readings from her autobiography and early and recent recordings. KPFA (R) I I :30 JUST PLAIN FOLK: Richmond and Chi loosed on an unsuspecting twelve-string.

SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 10 6:00 REVIEW OF NEW RE CORDS. 7:30 COMMENTARY 8:00 THE PROGRAM WITH A HOLE IN IT.C R) 9:00 JONATHAN SWIFT, DSPD. Prof. Roger McHugh of University Co l., Dub! in, talks about the great essayest at the U. of W. (R) 10:00 NOTES FROM THE UNDERWHERE with Baron R. Fun ke . feet pounding down the alleYJ -chaSing unknown vi llans (for unknown reasons), the crowd at the scene of the accident, on tip-toes t o see the thrashing b ody, the wailing crowd. Wh o are these guys? "What I need," I think, "is an unlisted telephon e number. And a year in Spain." There me, ye s : me there, the sun ripe ~ and red and young , un l i ke the country, wi th i t.s dwarf chi Idren , 'domen whi zen as prunes at age t h i rty , men famished wi th overwork and fear. Me f eeding amon g the children, e ames in the trash-heaps, and gentle wave s chucking the shore , t urnir..g the ancient country e ternal. Me and my bottle of Ani s del Mono , f r ozen instants ~ on t he red ti les , and every\-:here hanging gardens... '}_- ~ f or Capek tells us, the herit age of Spain is Mo or- ~

&~"~~"-"'''~P''''~l''-'''''~l''-'''~l<1.Y'''~4-<1.Y'''~';'<.".'''''~.iP''''''''~h U. S. Postage PAID Seattle, 9029 Washington Rooseveltway Permit 9566 Northeast Non-profit Organization seattle98115

£~dated program ~return requested ~ .

ish, the Moorish heritage is desert, and f or any­ one with the soul of a desert, nothing is more nec­ essary than a portable garden, a tiny wooden box, swinging by chains; the true nomadic culture where greenery can be picked up and carried away, over the sands that wheel away to infinity J brown and yellow and orange, but never spotted with green. Am I there? Why not? The grey monsoons are soon to descend, the fogs wi 11 turn me bones tu water, my joints to misery, my nights to the pounding s ounds that leak away my seconds, soo t and dirt and b lack­ ness fritterine down past my bearings, past all bearing in the clock turning mud and stone be­ low us all. "Why Jon't you get out of town?" Sweetness and light, love: why not? COVER BY J. W. CURTIS