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~, /au r / q The Real Alrernar(ve for Record and 1 f/UYJ"J' 10AM-JPM. Ln, 10-0. Tape Collectors sundi:Js~ 12-:5 PM ALL SPECIA'l OR DERS FILLED PROMPTLY WITHOUT CHARGE 8:00 WOMEN AND RELIGION: AFFAIRS OF THE SPIRIT Featurin!] gospel and other religious music made by women, and readings from Elizabeth Cady Stanton's The Woman's Bible, as well as other works concerning women and their spiritual expression. Produced by Judith Hadley. 8:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC Jazz, with Jeff Follette. 8:30 INTERNATIONAL NEWS SUMMARY Analysis of the news of the world from international jour­ 12:00 EARTH MUSIC nals. Sources include the Christian Science Monitor, the Jim Paradis. Wall Street Journal the New York Times, the Manchester Guardian Le Monde \e Monde Diplomatique, International 2:30 BABY BISCUIT BLUES Bulletin' and Lati~ America. Produced by Jim Lobe. Wi th Kar 1 .Kotas. 9:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS 4:00 WITH THESE HANDS: The Working Class Voice on Cur­ Rock, R & B, dazz, an d s pon taneo us utte ran ces wi th Raymond rent Issues. Boeing, the University of Washington, Todd, Serebrin. Lockheed, Bethlehem Steel, City Light, Bell, Washington Na­ tural Gas --- these are the major employers in Seattle. 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY This program will seek to air many"'· of the viewpoints and Roswell. with jazz until late. concerns of worki ng people from these and other indus tri es. Guests this week are Al Pepard and Craig Angus, currently on strike from the Western Steel Casting Company. Also featured wi 11 be interviews at the unemployment offi ceo With Tamara Swift. 5:00 TWO QUARTETS JEAN SIBELIUS: STRING QUARTET IN 0 MINOR OP. 56 ("INTIMATE VOICES"). The composer's only published pig~e of charlt>er music. The Claremont ,Quartet. ANTONIN DVOOAK: PIANO QUAR­ TET IN E FLAT, OPe 87. Artur Rubinstein, piano; Arnold Steinhardt. violin; Michael Tree. ; David Soyer • . cello. 6:00 FILMS Dick Jameson and Kathleen Murphy. 6:30 THE SONGS OF COSTAS MOUNDAKIS A collection of songs inspired by the natural beauty of Moundakis' native island of Crete. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC 7:00 WHOLEPERSON: A CAREER-CHANGE FORUM Stu Witmer. Discussions of the economic. emotional and social factors involved in changing careers. 10:00 FIDDLER KRAB 7:30 ARABIC MUSIC With Frank Ferrel. With Khreis Hussein. 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS. Here begins the first 8:30 MOULDY FYGGE: MA RAINEY in a sixty-five part radio mYstery serial. You work swing First of a series of programs featuring this famed blues shift? Can't get into Mary Hartman? This is the show for you, the adventures of Jack Flanders wi thi n the Fourth singer. Produced by Val Golding. Tower. Wi 11 be run on KRAB Monday through Fri day at 11 :45 AM. before Program Notes. Produced by ZBS Medi a. in ups tate 9 :00 KRABGRASS New York. With Dennis Flannigan. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 DEATHWATCH 12:00 OPTIONS TWO HUNDRED YEARS: NATIVE AMERICAN PERSPECTIVES. During this hour (produced by Rose Ann Kimmel) the history of the United States during the past two hundred years is consid­ ered from the vantage point of Native Americans. (NPR) 1:00 GEORGE SHEARING IN LONDON . Trio recordings made during the Second World War ; before he began his nCA'l-familiar quintet sound. 9:00 SUNNY SIDE UP 1: 30 THE GOON SHOW Stories told by parents and children with a side order of The antics of those lively 1imey loonies from the BBC (NPR). sonqs and comments. Zoe. David. Don and libby invite your children and you to brunch with them. Produced by Don Fin­ 2:00 SEATTLE CITY COUNCIL .MEETING kel and libby Sinclair. Live. from the Council Charlt>ers. 9:30 MEMORY LANE 4:00 TO BE ANNOUNCED Oldi es with Frank Olin. 4: 30 GLENDA JACKSON READS FRANCES HODGSON BURNETT'S "THE 11:55 KRAZY KAT SECRET GARDEN" George Herriman's krazy komi c stri p, recreated for radi 0 A ten-year old g1 rl comes to Victorian England from India by Val Golding. to live at her uncle's lonely estate on the Yorkshire moors. Here she discovers and brings to life the secret garden. 12:00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON In eight half-hour episodes which will be aired at 4:30 Bob Gwynne. PM each Monday. 4:00 CHUTZPAH 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK With Ken Heller. Gregg WhitcorOO takes us all back to the fifties. where we perhaps belong. 4:30 MUSIC FROM MARLBORO II MOZART: QUINTET FOR CLARINET AND STRINGS IN A MAJOR, K. 6:00 JEAN SHEPHERD 581. Harold Wright. clarinet; Alexander Schneider and Is­ idore Cohen. violins; Samuel Rhodes. viola; and Leslie 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES Parnas. cello. MENDELSSOHN: OCTET IN E FLAT MAJOR. OP. 20. Jaime Laredo, Alexander Schneider, Arnold Steinhardt, 7:00 WHAT'S GOIN' DOWN and John Dalley, violins; Michael Tree and Samuel Rhodes, COlTl11unity issues, discussed by Flo Ware and guests. ; Leslie Parnas and David Soyer, cellos. 7: 30 COMMENTARY 5: 30 THE LAND TRUST: A NON-GOVERNMEtHAL APPROACH TO LAND­ Tonight, Ralph Setterman. USE PLANNING An interview wi th Tom Bahr and Henry Booth, of the Evergreen 8:00 OLD TIME MUSIC Land Trust. The program of the Evergreen Trust is outlined, With Jerry Mitchell. together with the- basics for organizing a land trust. 9:00 CHINESE RADIO 6:30 SONGS FROM THE BRITISH WEST INDIES , Produced in Cantonese by the Chinese Media CQITI11ittee. Sung by the "Caribbean Chorus, a group of West Indian stu­ dents at McGill College and Sir George Williams College in 10:00 TINIG NG PILIPINO 1956. . In Tagalog, by and for the Filipino cOlTl11unity. 7:00 SURVIVING IN THE PATRIARCHY 11:00 SPAGHETTINI "CAN A SOCIALIST BE A FEMINIST?" An analysis of the con­ Leila Gorbman, music and words. tradictions between leftist theory and feminist theory. Produced by Amazon Medi a. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC 6:30 EARLY MUSIC With Stu Witrrer. With Stu Witmer, includin~, .at 8:45, FROM NEW BOOKS with C.H. Reinsch (today's books, The Wichita Poems by Michael 10:00 EARTH MUSIC Van Walleghen [U. of Illinois], and jaguar skies by Michael With Mo Herman. McClure [New Directions]).

11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS 10:00 EARTH MUSIC Serial radio mYstery-drama, from ZBS Media in New York. !-li th Bri an Hode 1. 12:00 OPTIONS VOLUNTARY DEATH. Daniel McGuire, from the Department of 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS Theology at McGill University, talks about the ethics of Serial radio mYstery-drama, from ZBS r~edia in New York. sustaining life with machines. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 1:00 KOREAN COURT MUSIC . 12:00 BBC SCIENCE MAGAZINE (NPR) The 9rchestra of Nati ?n~ 1 Mus i c Ins ti tute, conducted by Ki­ ou Klm, performs tradltlona1 Korean and Chinese pieces. 12:30 DUTCH COMPOSERS OF THE 20TH CENTURY Produced by the Korean Broadcasting System. MARIUS FLOTHUIS: PER SONARE ED ASCOLTARE. Hubert Barwah­ ser. flute; Amsterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra. conducted 1: 30 THE. RETICENT by Bernard Haitink. JOS KUNST: TRAJECTOIRE. Hi 1versum Rachel-Diane Norton. Radio Charrber Choi r and Orchestra. conducted by Ernest Bour. 3:00 THE UNBAROQUEN CIRCLE TCHAIKOVSKY OPERA RARETIES. Galen Johnson presents excerpts 1:00 THE SEATTLE-KING COUNTY PUBLIC DEFENDER: WHO NEEDS from "Undine," "Mazeppa," "The Maid of Orlean." and "The IT? Oprichnick. " Ray Trzynka hosts a discussion of the Mental-Commitment and Juvenile Units of the Defender Office. Guests include J.D. 5:00 ORIGINAL PIANO PIECES COMPOSED AND PERFORMED BY CRAIG Dourty of the latter, and Jerome Dour~hty of the former. KNAPP . The first in a series featurin~ Northwest musicians. Pro­ 1:35 MOZART: DIVERTIMENTO IN E FLAT MAJOR FOR STRING TRIO. duced by Tim McKamey. K. 563 Isaac Stern. violin; Pinchas Zukerman. viola; Leonard Rose, cello. MOZART: PIANO SONATA NO. 17 IN D, K. 576. Walter Gieseking, piano. 2:40 TOTAL HARMONIUS A voice-play for radio by Barry Garelick. produced at KPFA in Berkeley •. The cast includes Garelick. as the caller.; Debby Krant. as the girl in the room; Robert Klinkner. as the supervisor; and Betsy Shanefelt as the operator. Weird. 3:00 MUSIC SINCE 1950 "Organized Sound" by Tod Dockstader. Including QUATERMASS (1964) for balloon, ~ong, adhesive tape. filters. etc. This piece was named for Prof. Bernard Quatermass. hero of such films as "The Creeping Unknown" and "Five Million Years to Earth. " 5:00 OPEN TIME

5:30 ON THE FOUL ~ LINE Basketball. like you never heard it before. With Roger Sale and Norman Arkans. 6:00 SCANDINAVIAN MUSIC Carla Wulfsberg. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 7:00 THE FAR EAST A live discussion on current power relationships in the Far East, focussin~ primari lyon the U.S •• Japan, China. the Soviet Union. and the two Koreas. Produced and moder­ ated by Jim Lobe. 8:00 ISTVAN ANHALT: FOCI (1969) 6:00 KOMPOST KORNER G1imp,ses of contemporary life and past situations set in In ~ new pro~ram, Jef Jai sun, gues ts, and you focus on or­ the 'tabula rasa" mind frame pro~ressing through states of gamc gardenlng -- fertilizers, soils, seeds, tools of the higher and lower tensions toward a conclusion of silence trade. etc. Ka11 in with your kwestions and komments at and darkness. Istvan Anhalt directing the Instrumental 325-5110. This evenin~: seeds. planting and soil prepar­ Ensemble of Montreal. ation will be discussed. 8:30 ROBERT GARFIAS 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 10:00 MAN: A NEW PERSPECTIVE FROM KENYA 7:00 NORTHWEST INDIAN NEWS An address delivered by Dr. Richard Leakey at the Seattle Presented by Indians Into Communication. Masonic Temple on 22 March 1976, under the auspices of Sea­ ttle Central Community College. Dr. Leakey. son of anthro­ 7:30 IN MEMORIA: KENT STATE, JACKSON COLLEGE, "HAIR," pologi s ts Mary and Loui s Leakey, speaks on hi s seven years MY LAI. CAMBODIA. DEAD OR FADING PRESIDENTS. THE NATIONAL of research near Lake Rudolf, Kenya. He is introduced by GUARD AND STUDENTS a colleague, from North Seattle Community Colle~e, Dr. Ben A few of the experiences that brought us to May. 1970. and Abe. Produced by Robert Weppner. left America with a lingering numbness. 11:00 LEFT HERE 8:35 "MIXED WATER" With Joe Kurland. A moral fable from the life and times of Bukka White. 9!OO PHILHARMONIC SAM · Live . h1~s with Alex Bradbu~, harp and vocals; Jack Brad­ bury. gUltar; Jon Piff, ~uitar and vocals; Bob Geballe drums and vocals; Scott Runa, bass. ' 10:00 YES, ME! "I talk for II\)Ise1f and strangers." With Don Finkel.

11:00 ~VID'S FANTASY Classical.guftarist Farrell Born performs solo works by Tar­ rega, Turlna, Ponce and Vi11a-Lobos, LIVE in the KRAB Music Studio. Ms. Born will also join flauti.st Heidi Ehle and soprano Marlene Russ in duets by Ibert, Fricker and Villa­ Lobos. LIVE,LIVE.LIVE. David Bennett hosts. 9:00 SPECTRUM: IRRATIONAL LOVE Carlos Hagen and Dr. Carl Fa~er in a pro~ram abo~t the . emotional discovery of love 1n contemporary Amer1can soc1ety and the many sad and destructive ways people have of falling in love.

6:30 EARLY t~USIC 10:00 MUSICA LATINA "lith Stu Hitmer. Sones in Veracruz and Michoacan. with Bill Noll. 10:00 EARn.f t.fUSIC 11:00 THE BISCUIT Robert Garfias. from last ni~ht. Tom Eckels and Bob Heppner, blues et alia. 11 :45 THE FOURTH reMER OF INVERNESS Serial radio mYstery-drama. Trom ZRS Media in New York. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 HE: 140MEN EVERYWHERE Feminist news and commentary, produced by the Lesbian Fem­ inist Media Collective. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC 1: 00 HEALTH, SAFETY, HffiK AND THE ECONOMY With Stu Witmer. Call 325-5110 with your E.M.R. (Early A talk by Ann Brown of the Coalition for Protective Leg­ Mus i c Requests). is 1ati on. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC 1 : 40 BLUES JAM A recordin(j with MudctY Waters, Sonny Boy Williamson, Willie 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS Dixon. Lonnie Johnson. Otis Spann, Big Joe Hilliams, Mat Serial radio mYstery-drama. from ZBS Media in New York. "Guitar" Murphy, Memphis Slim, Bill Stepney and Victoria Spi vey. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES

2:30 FOLK FESTIVAL U.S.A.: GRAND OLE OPRY -- HIGHLIGHTS 12:00 AMERICA AND 140RLD ORDER OF THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION Dr. Saul Mendlovitz, President of the Institute for World Performers include Ernest Tubbs, Bill Carlisle, Jim and Order and Professor of Law at Rutgers; Dr. Roy Prosterman, Jessie, Roy Acuff, Minnie Pearl, Bill Anderson, the Willis Professor of Law at the U.H. and land-reform specialist; Brothers and a cast of thousands. (NPR) and Dr. Donald Hellman of the Department of Political Sci­ ence at the U.W.; all speakinq April 1, 1976. Followed by an interview with Dr. Mend10vitz. 2:30 THE ORIGINAL HISSING SUMMER LAI./NS OF BYZANTIUM HALTER CARLOS: SUMMER (obviously), and ALDEN ASHFORTH: BYZANTIA, TIJO JOURNEYS AFTER YEARS. A proqram of basically minimal music and/or sounds liqht as yeast with the appro­ pri ate readinqs from Yeats. (Ash forth record courtesy of Orpheus Records). 3:30 HOUSE OF DUST: A Play-Poem by Alison Knowles, Produced at KRAB in May, 1974; readers include Clare Con­ rad, Patchman, AnctY Garrison, Leila Gorbman and Pamela Jennings. 4: 00 TRUEGRASS Much more bluegrass, with Thane Mitchell and Bill Scott. 6:00 FLAMENCO Y SUS ESTILLOS Y SUS FLAMENCOS W1 th Allen Yonge.

6:55 PROGRAt~ NOTES

7:00 AN INTERVIE~J I'/ITH GREGORY BATESON From the "Open Secret" radio series produced by the Naropa Institute in Boulder,Colorado. Dr. Bateson discusses prob­ lems of ecoloqy, usin~ some examples of environmental ex­ periments in New York, inc1 udinq the projects of Robert Moses. The problem of fore~eein~ symptoms of "disease" r - ­ and planning for them accordinq1y is that we pave the way as THE FLYING ACE for disease: e.g., building more hiqhways to accomodate Keeps his Purple Heart, but loses his own' qrowth in automobile production. "It is the habit of eco- 10qica1 problems to become irreversible." Dr. Bateson des­ crlbes the live-in module he is teachin~ at Naropa in which he and students are working with two raddoons. three fish tanks, and a prairie-doq colony. He also talks about Cam­ 4:30 VAN JOHNSON hridqe and New Guinea. The interviewer is Duncan Campbell. In a long career, Van Johnson has been in quite a few tur­ keys but also quite a few fi ne films, .i us t 1i ke many other 7:55 MUSIC Fffi RENAISSANCE LUTE successful actors of the 40's and 50's. In almost every Featuring compositions from Poland and Hun(Jary by Diomedes film he was the boy next door; sometimes confused, always Cato, Valentia Bakfark and others. Performed by Konrad eager. sometimes a jerk, always engaginq. He's in town to Ragossniq. appear at the Cirque Dinner Theater, -and is interviewed by Greg Palmer and Kathy Cain. 8:40 BURGLARY AS CONCEPTUAL ART FORM Correspondent Ruth Patella interviews an anonymous police­ 5:15 OPEN TIME man and provides some startlinq insights into this new arena of the arts, 5:30 THE ENVIRONMENTAL NEHS With Phil Andrus. 8:45 THE SIPAN-KOMITAS CHORALE OF ARMENIA Performinq folk songs, love sonqS, songs of call and response 6:00 ROY SMECK PLAYS THE HAWAIIAN GUITAR, BANJO. UKELELE between men and women, dances, sonqs of exile. Instruments AND GUITAR featured include the "zourna" (a kind of oboe), the "serink" ­ Smeck's original orientation on the guitar was Hawaiian­ (similar to shepherd's pipes) and the "tar" (a sort of lute). flavored, and it was not until he met Eddie Lanq in the "Will you not marry me?" "My mother won't let me; I am too la1t1920's that he ventured into the realm of fancy sinole­ young; I'm not yet forty." Directed by Garbis Aprikian. string fl atpi cki nq. These recordi nqs, pri marily from the late 20's and 30's, reflect an entertaining virtuosity 9:35 A POETRV READING BY DARYL HINE reminiscent of another of Smeck's inspirations, banjoist Daryl Hine is the author of eiqht volumes of poetry (in­ Harry Reser. cluding Resident Aliens, Minutes and The Wooden Horse). He is also editor of "Poetry" magaz1ne out of the Dnlversity 6:30 KIDS' POETRY of Chicago. A Burnaby. B.C. native, he studied at McGill Younq poets read their own. Produced by Susan Landgraf University and the University of Chicago. Recorded March and friends. 11 at the University of Hashin(jton by Robert ~Jeppner. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 10:35 HOT VS. COOL A strange session recorded at Birdland in the early 1950's. 7:00 HOW TO AVOID THAT SCREHED F.EELING The premise: a be-bop band consistin(j of Dizzy Gillespie, Test~drivinq autos and recording the results, with Sern Buddy DeFranco, Don Elliott, Ray Abrams, Ronnie Ball, A1 Watt, Clint Chapin and Ron Campbell. McKibbon and Max Roach "challenqe" a classic jazz band of Jimmv McPartland, Edmond Hall. Vic Dickenson. Dick Cary, 7:30 CO~ENTARv Jack Lesberg and Georqe J~ettl i ng to a "Battle oT the Bands," Tonioht, Barbara Peterson. with some pecu1iar results.

8:00 CLASSIC JAZZ 11 :00 Bur~BLING IHTH RAL TIC Mike Duffy. Jazz and other eccentricities. 8:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC 6:30 EARLY MUSIC Jazz with Jeff Follette. Stu Witmer. 12:00 EARTH MUSIC 10:00 FIDDLER KRAB With Jim Paradis. Frank Ferrel. 2:30 BABY BISCUIT BLUES 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS With Karl Kotas. Serial radio mYstery-drama, from ZBS Media in New York. 4:00 WITH THESE HANDS: The Workina Class Voice on Cur­ 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES rent Issues. Boeinq. the University· of Washinaton, Todd, Lockheed. Bethlehem Steel, City Light~ Bell, Washington 12:00 THE MORALITY OF NUCLEAR POWER Natural Gas --- these are the major employers in Seattle. A panel discussion recorded at the University Christian This pro!Wam wi 11 seek to ai r many of the concerns and Church. Included in the panel are a minister, an en~ineer. viewpoints of working people from these and other indus­ a planner and several people in the audience. tries. With Tarrera SWift. 1:00 SESSION 14ITH ALBERT 5:00 KARL-MICHAEL KOMMA.: CONCERTO FOR PI-ANO AND (RCH­ With Dennis Budimir, guitar; Gary Foster, tenor; Albert ESTRA (1957). Dimitri Agrafiotis conductin9 the Schwabian Stinson, bass; and Jim Keltner, drums. A superb study of Symphony Orchestra with the composer at the piano. BARBARA West Coast improvisation recorded in Los Angeles in 1964. PENTLAND~ TRIO FOR VIOLIN. CELLO AND PIANO (1963). Barbara Pentland, piano; Arthur Polson, vi olin; James Hunter. 1:30 THE GOON SHOW cello. LUDWIG VAN BEETHOVEN: SONATA NO.4 IN C. OPt 102 Laughs from Whitechapel to Dover, from the BBC. (NPR) NO.1. Pierre Fournier. cello; Arthur Schnabel. piano. 2:00 CITY COUNCIL MEETING 6:00 FILMS Live, from the council chambers in the Municipal Building. Dick Jameson and Kathleen Murphy. 4:00 TO BE DENOUNCED 6:30 BEETHOVEN: QUARTET NO. 12 IN E FLAT MAJOR. The 4:30 THE SECRET GARDEN (Part II) Budapest Strin9 Quartet. Glenda Jackson reading Frances Hodqson Burnett's short story. 7:00 WHOLEPERSON: A CAREER CHANGE FORUM Discussions of the problems and process of career change, 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK with Earl Jennings and guests. Greqq Whitcomb spins the oldies. 7:30 ARABIC MUSIC 6:00 JEAN SHEPHERD Wi th Khrei s Hussei n. The celebrated monologuist speaks, from WOR in NYC. 8:30 MOULDY FYGGE . 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES KANSAS CITY FRANK MELROSE. Rare recordinqs by this early 7:00 WHAT'S GOIN' DOWN barrelhouse pianist are presented by Val Golding. Community problems, and some solutions, with Flo Ware. 9 :00 KRABGRASS With Dennis Flanniqan. 12:00 DEATHWATCH

9:00 SUNNY SIDE UP Zoe. David, their dad, friend Libby, and other children aet together before breakfast for stories and sonas. Set the ra~io dial the niqht before, hide the TV and sleep late whlle your kids listen -- or join them over your eqqs: start the day sunny side up! Produced by Oon Finkel and Libby Sinclair. 9:30 MEMORY LANE Hith Frank Olin, spinning the old 78's. 11:55 KRAZY KAT Life in Coconino County accordinq to'Georqe Herriman. Re­ created for radio by Val Goldinq. 12:00 LEFT HEAR RIGHT HERE Eariness. Mus i c wi th Jay Sti ckl er. 4:00 MUSIC OF INDIA I.,.; th Shan tha Bene9a 1. SIGN ME UP AS A 6:00 MOTHER AND HER CHILDREN Music and readin9s about children and their mathers, by a SUPPORTER OF daughter and her sis ters. Produced by Judi th Hadley. ALTERNATIVE RADIO 7:00 WE: WOMEN EVERYWHERE Local, national and international feminist news and commen­ tary. Produced by the Lesbian Feminist Media Collective. 8:00 LIVE CHAMBER CONCERT A proqram of 17th century Enqlish and Italian vocal music is presented by the Cornish Chamber Singers from the Cornish $25/year. Regular ($28 fn Canada) School of Allied Arts. Featured soloists include David $15/year. Student. Retfred. mflftary. Prfs­ Erickson, baritone. and Jim Skewes, guitar. Directed by oner. or Poor ($18 fn Canada) Jim Savage. $100 A11 at once makes you a PATRON and a lffer.

8:30 INTERNATIONAL NEWS SUMMARY AA~.~. ______Analysis of world events from the varying perspectives of ~ national and international journals. Produced by Jim Lobe. ADORESS, ______CITY ______--'STATE __ ZIP __ - 9:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS Raymond Serebrin. KR.AJI-r"I1406 "~rY~rrfISe~ttle. "n. 98122 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY Roswell, with jazz until late. 7: 30 COMMENTARY _ 1:30 THE RETICENT PARTITA REGISTER COMMiES AND QUEERS. Sam Dederick speaks on the Rachel-Diane Norton. suppression of theiqay movement durin~ the McCarthy era. 3:00 THE PROMISCUOUS LISTENER 8:00 DOUBLE BISCUIT BLUES: "DON'T TAMPA WIlll THE BLUES" Mr. Paul Stanbery, local writer and musicologist, is a push­ Music by Tampa Red and associates. With Jack Cook. over for the Bicentennial fetish. He begins a cycle of pro­ o grams devoted to symphonies by Americans with George Roch­ 9:00 CHINESE RADIO berg's first two s~mphonies and William (not Roberto) Schu­ Produced in Cantonese by the Chinese Media Committee. man's Third. In Stanbery's usual erotic anatomical analysi,s we see ""lfoCtiberg progress from his enerqeti c but con venti ona 1 10:00 PERCUSSION first symphony to the 12-tone frenetic violence of his sec­ AncIY Schloss presents an hour of percussive works from the ond -- perhaps the greatest of all 12-tone symphonies. Then, corners and e1b~s of the world, from Edgar Varese to Mil­ spiced with salacious biographical data, we regress to the ford Gra ves • epic scope and panoramic grandeur of Schuman's 'Third, the earliest symphony he currently lets people perform, and his 11:00 SPAGHETTINI most popular. Mixed music, psychotic breaks. With Leila. 5: 00 SWEET AND LOWDOWN Music from the 20's and 30's with Jan Cole and Pat Tennant. 6:00 TURKISH MUSIC With ~01 Bi1kur. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 7:00 NORTHWEST INDIAN NEWS Produced by Indians Into Communication. 7: 30 KENYA FOLK SONGS David Nzoma sings songs in Swahili and Kamba, along with instrumental recordings. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC 8:00 BALTIC'S BOP STOP Wi th Stu Wi tmer. THE POST-BOP ALTO, Part III. Huey "Sonny" Simmons, born in Louisiana in 1933, began playing saxophone in 1950 and 10:00 EARlll MUSIC made his first recording in 1962. "There was a feeling inside of me that drove me to express music." 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS Serial radio ITtYstery-drama, from ZBS Media in New York. 9:30 PLEASANT JOURNEYS 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES A program of ITtYths, legends and folktales for your ill8g­ ination's entertainment. with Seattle's resident Master 12:00 SAVING THE ORCA. • .SAVING THE NATIVE AMERICANS Storyteller, Pleasant deSpain. A talk by Mary Hillaire, recorded at the First International Orca SYlT4>osium, held in March at the Evergreen State College. 10:00 YES.ME! Ms. Hil1aire asks the audience to extend its concern for If they were not pigeons on the grass alas •••what were wildlife to a concern for Native American peoples. Both they? With Don Finkel. have suffered at the hands of the white conquerors. 11:00 VARIATIONS FOR A DOOR AND A SIGH Tonight, live music with Seattle blues qroup "Little Rain." With Jeff Follette.

6: 30 EARLY MUSIC Hith Stu Witmer; , including, c. 8:45, FROM NEW BOOKS, with C.H. Reinsch. Today's book, Bracero, by Eugene Nelson (Peace Press). 10:00 EARTH MUSIC I~ith Bri an Hode 1. 11:45 THE FOURlll TOWER OF INVERNESS Serial radio mysterY-drama, from ZBS Media in New York. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 BBC SCIENCE MAGAZINE (NPR) 12:30 DUTCH COMPOSERS OF THE 20TH CENTURY WILLEM FREDERIK BON: SYMPHONY NO.2, "LES PREDICTIONS." The Hague Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by the composer. 1:00 DANCE FOR WHOM? ? ? Does the dance available in Seattle serve you? This program wi 11 report on various dance facilities and acti vities in the Seattle area. Our first proqram wi 11 focus on Madrona Dance Center, with information on classes, instructors and Quest artists. What are their Qoa1s and aspirations for dance in Seattle? (Part II in two weeks.) 1 :45 MANDINKA AND BAULE MUSIC FROM \-JEST AFRICA The Mandinka pieces are examples of court music, played FTNGAL' ~ CAVE IN C;COTUUIn by "griots," professjona1 musicians of high repute throuqh­ o~t Guinea, and also peasant music recorded in a village that (as of 1952) had remained cut off from the outside 12:45 HEATHER AND GLEN world. A collection of folk songs and folk music from Aberdeenshire and the Hebrides, collected by Alan Lomax. Ca1um tkLean 2:20 STRATEGIES AND NEEDS FOR LAND REDISTRIBUTION IN THE and Hamish. Most of the songs were recorded in 195', in UNITED STATES t~e Northeast, where the native folklore of Scotland has A panel discussion on rural land use -- h~ to oet people been enriched over the centuries with ballads and tunes of back on the land. Participants: JIM DRAPER (Executive Di­ nearby Scandinavia, and also in the rocky islands west of rector of the Rural Studies Institute); TOM BAHR (Director, Scotland, where Gaelic cu1 ture found a refuge after the Evergreen Land Trust); and CLAYTON DENMAN (President of breaking up of the clans and the interdiction of the Gap.lic the Small T~ns Institute). Recorded at the Northwest Con­ language in the 18th century. ference on Alternative Agriculture in November, 1974. 3:00 MUSIC SINCE 1950: HANS WERNER HENZE 7:00 LEFT PRESS REVIEW Featuring the SECOND PIANO CONCERTO. performed by Christoph Frank Krasnatlsky reads from peri odi ca ls of the Left. Eschenbach and the London Philharmonic Orchestra, directed by the compOser. 7:30 COMMENTARY Tonight. the Seattle Black Panther Party. 5 :00 OPEN TIME 8:00 VINTAGE JAZZ With Hal Sherlock. 5:30 ON THE FOUL LINE Basketball -- but probably not the Sonics -- with Roger 9:00 SPECTRUM: LONELINESS. Part I Sale and Norman Arkans. A poignant social commentary on the problems of loneliness and alienation that affect millions of Americans, especially 6:00 KOMPOST KORNER those in urban centers. Produced by Carlos Hagen. Jef Jaisun. guests and you focus on organi c gardening --­ fertilizers. soils. seeds, tools of the trade. etc. Kall 10:00 CON SALSA in your kwestions and komments at 325-5110. Latin music with Sonny Masso. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 11:00 USA FOR BEGINNERS With David Johnson; R &B. jazz. etc. 7:00 SOUTH AFRICA A discussion of events in, and prospects for, Southern Af­ rica. Namibia and Rhodesia. 8:30 ROBERT GARFIAS. ETHNOMUSICOLOGIST 10:00 THE POLITICAL ABUSE OF GRAND JURIES Joe Kurland interviews Walter Palmer and Larry Bacon lawyers involved in the current grand jury probe of the Tukwila bank robbery case. They claim that the grand jury is being used in this case not to secure indictments. but to harass and intimidate people of the community. 11:00 LEFT HERE Music and talk with Joe Kurland. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC Request morning with David Bennett. Call 325-5110.

10:00 EARTH MUSIC 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS Serial radio mYstery-drama. from ZBS Media in New York. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 GLOBAL HUMAN RIGHTS . Jerome Shestack, Chairman of the International League for the Rights of Man. speaking March 11 in Seattle. Dr. Usha Mahajani of Central Washington State College responds. To be follatled by an interview of Shes tack conducted by Jim Lobe.

1:45 ROBERTO GEHARD: DANCES FROM DON Q~IXOTE _ • The BBC Symphony Orchestra. conducted by Antal Doratl. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC EDGARD VARESE: NOCTURNAL. This work. completed by Chou Wen-chung, contains words and phrases extracted from "House Dav; d Bennett. of Incest" by Ana'fs Nin. Ariel Bybee, soprano; Bass Ensem- ble of the University-Civic Chorale. Salt Lake City. GIL­ " 10:00 EARTH MUSIC Robert Garfias. from last night. BERT AMY: CYCLE. "The title means primarily that this is a 'non-directional' work -- the circle being the symbol of 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS perpetual recommencement. that is. of perpetual variation" Serial radio mYstery-drama. from ZBS t-1edia in New York. (Gilbert Amy). The Percussions of Strasbourg perform. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 2:30 LISZT: TRANSCENDENTAL ETUDES FOR PIANO Written when the composer was fifteen years old. Lazar 12:00 SURVIVING IN THE PATRIARCHY Berman. piano. "WHAT'S SO FINE ABOUT ART?" The role of the artist in the lesbian struggle. Produced by Amazon Media. 1 :00 ELLINGTONIANS ON "VACATION" Recordings featuring members of the Duke Ellington Orchestra are heard, proving that outside the context of the Orchestra. the players sti 11 swung. Featured is Earl Hines' "Once Upon A Ti me" LP. with Paul Gonsa'l ves. Harold Ashby. Ray Nance. Johnny Hodges and more Ellingtonians joined by Hines. Elvin Jones, Peewee Russell and Richard Davis. Also heard are pieces from two 1944 sessions led by Rex Stewart and Billy Taylor featuring Hodges, Harry Carney and Lawrence Brown. 2:00 THE RESPONSIBILITY OF CORPORATIONS TO THE PUBLIC: AN- INTERVIEW WITH STOCKHOLDER KEN MACDONALD Ken MacDonald is a full-time attorney and a part-time stock­ holder with holdings in, among others. the Boeing Company. MacDonald was forcibly ejected from one Boeinq stockholders' meeting when he tried to express dissatisfaction with cer­ tain company policies. 2:30 FOLK FESTIVAL USA: THE CHIEFTAINS Ireland's popular folk band. recorded live at Boston's Or­ pheum Theatre during their winter tour of the U.S. The mu­ sicians play dances and airs on tin whistle. bones, fiddles. bodhran. oboe. and the Irish "ui lleann" pipes. (NPR) ~KEEzn THE !.!HITE covrm: (PORTLAND, 1930) 4:30 THE WORLD OF CHASSIDUS 3: 30 JAMES KOLLER: "THE DOGS AND OTHER MRK WOODS." Music and stories of the Chassidic Jews, with Rabbi Yoseph This work was written in 1966 by the then 30-year-old poet Samuels. Whose first book, "Two Hands." was published in Seattle. Koller's major influences have been American Indian traditions 5:00 REPORT TO THE LISTENER and a strong identification with certain animals, especially Staff members report on station operations and programming the coyote. plans. You are invited to call in at 325-5110. 4:00 THE FOLK SHOW: LIVE 5:30 THE ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS MIKE DUMOVICH, with his collection of oriqinal and tradition­ With Phil Andrus. al rural blues and ballads. 6 :00 JELLY ROLL MORTON AT THE LIRRARY OF CONGRESS, Pa rtVII 6:00 FLAMENCO Y SUS FLAMENCOS Y SUS ESTILLOS Original Jelly Roll blues and Ruddy Bolden's legend. With Allen Yonge. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 5:00 SIX FREUDIAN CITIES ARNOLD SCHOENBERG: ERWARTUNG (EXPECTATION), OP. 17. This piece, perh~ps the first Freudian music drama, was written in l} days. On a poem by Marie Pappenheim. Helga Pilarczyk, soprano; the Orchestra of the Opera Society of Washington, conducted by Robert Craft. ROMAN-HAUBENSTOCK-RAMATI: JEUX 6. SiKty-six ways of interpreting a score for six groups of percussion instruments. each with six different points of departure. The Percussions of Strasbourg perform. JO­ SEPH JARMAN: NON-COGNITIVE ASPECTS OF THE CITY. " ••. gen­ tle men forced to defend their rights." Joseph Jarman, voice and alto; Christopher Gaddy, piano, marimba; Charles Clark, bass; Thurman Barker, drums. 6:00 FILMS With Dick Jameson. 6:30 JEAN-BAPTISTE LOEILLET'S TRIO SONATAS IN G MINOR AND C MINOR These works are performed by Joseph Ponticelli and Patrice Fontanarosa, violins, and Jean-Louis Petit, clavichord. 7:00 WHOLEPERSON: A CAREER CHANGE FORUM Earl Jennings and guests discuss the traumas of career change, and how to ~void them. 7:30 ARABIC MUSIC With Khreis Hussein. 8:30 "MOULDY GRASS" or, "THE KRABBY FYGGE" (TAKE YOUR PICK) Val GoldinQ, KRAB's Head FYQge, known best for his moul~y oldies. stays on a bit late. while Dennis Flannigan, the station's KRABgrass-head, comes on early and strong. The . two of them team up to discuss the melding points of blue­ grass and jazz. 9: 30 KRABGRASS With Dennis Flannigan. 12:00 DEArHWATCH

GINSRURG

7:00 LIFE IS DEATH: AN INTERVml IHTH ALLEN GINSBERG Another of the "Open Secret" series of radio programs pro­ duced by the Naropa Institute in Boulder, Colorado. Gins­ berg discusses (with Duncan Campbell) his early investiga­ tions with Neal Cassady and Jack Kerouac into th~ nature of "present mind." He traces the impact, over the years, of poets well-versed in traditional Buddhist literature -­ such as Gary Snyder and Philip 14halen -- on his "home-rrade I?oetics, and exp1.i·ns how this led to ~nvolvement wi th med­ ltation practice and meeting his present teacher.

8:00 GUATEMALA, TWO MONTHS LATER A discussion with Henry Booth, Michele Winstead and Scott Calloway, three people who assisted in relief efforts fol­ lowing this February'S earthquake in Guatemala. 8:45 SEX AND THE SINGLE BISCUIT Bob West and Clare Conrad get together to share an eveninq of thei r favorite records with anyone who loves the blues : old jazz, and whatever else tickles their fancy (-ies?) 11:00 STRAIGHT, NO CHASER Jazz until late, with Randall Victor.

9:00 SUNNY SIDE UP It's 9:00 AM -- do you know where your children are?! Are they hooked on the hard stuff TV pushes? You can sleep easy knowing they are irraginatively listening to stories and songs with the healthy crew on Sunny Side Up. Produced with children for children bv children at heart -- Don Fin- kel and Libby Sinclair. . 9:30 MEM OR Y LANE With Frank Olin . 11: 55 KRAZY KAT George Herriman's comic strip, recreated for radio by Val Golding. 12:00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON Bob Gwynne. 4:00 CHUTZPAH 8:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC ThinQs Jewish, with Ken Heller. Jazz, with Jeff Follette. 4: 30 MUSIC FR0/1 f1ARLBORO, Pt. III 12:00 EARTH MUSIC BRAHMS: SEXTET IN G MAJOR, OP. 36. Pina Carmirelli and With Jim Paradis. John Toth, violins; Phi lip Naegele and Caroline Levine, violas; and Fortunato Arico and Dorothy Reichenberger, 2:)0 BABY BISCUIT BLUES cellos. With Karl Koltas. 5:15 THE FUTURE OF THE GREEN RIVER VALLEY: FARMS OR 4:00 WITH THESE HANDS: The Horking Class Voice on CUY':- FACTORIES? rent Issues A discussi on with LeRoy Jones of the Kino County Planninq Boein

5:00 THE STONE EYE OF MEDUSA 6:30 EARLY MUSIC With Kimon Friar. translator of Nikos Kazantzakis' The Odys­ Call 325-5110 with your Early Request. David Bennett will sey: A Modern Segue1. and publisher of "Greek Herita~eli answer. magazine. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC 6:00 SCANDINAVIAN MUSIC I~ith -Carla Wu1fsberg. 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS Serial radio mYstery-drama. from ZBS Media in New Yo~. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 7:00 LATIN AMERICA Toni ght' s 1i ve di scuss i on treats Lati n Ameri ca; events 12:00 ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY in Chile, Argentina and Brazfl. Dr Harlan Cleveland. Director of the Aspen Institute Pro­ gr~m on Internati ona 1 Affai rs. former Assfs tant Secretary 8:00 LONNIE JOHNSON IN COPENHAGEN of State. and U.S. Ambassador to NATO, speaking March 18th Recorded in 1963 with Chicago blues pianist Otis Spann. and in an interview with Jim Lobe. Johnson sin~s such traditional blues as "See See Rider," his own doub 1e-en ten dre compos iti on "Je lly, Je lly ." an d a 1 : 15 TRADITIONAL DANCES OF JAPAN splendid instrumental, "Swingin' with Lonme." A selection -of local and court dances, inclvding "Magiya­ Bushi Odori," a plaintive piece about the fall of the Heike 8:30 ROBERT GARFIAS, ETHNOMUSICOLOGIST clan. "vie feel lonely 1 istening to the sound of the stream/ And the lJoice of the deer./ Let us bring our looms to the 10:00 HUMAN SEXUALITY: FACT. FICTION AND FANTASY riverside. bid the waves weave,/ And dress up the rocks with Jenni fer James (Assi stant Professor of Psychi atry and Be­ havioral Sciences at the UW) speaks in the f"i rst of a series the cloth." of lectures in a symposium entitled "Contemporary Issues 2: 00 ROBERT SIJND READS FRO'·, THE MOMENT OF WONDER in Human Sexuality," sponsored by the Seattle University A collection of Chinese and Japanese poetry. edited by Associ ated Women Students. She draws from her own remem­ bel"E!d experiences as a student, and from the expe..-iences Ri cha rd Lewi s. of younger women whom she has counseled. She recommends 2:30 THAILAND: THE MUSIC OF CHIENG MAl her C1tln particular sort of "humanism" (as opposed to conven­ The ancient city of Chieng I"ai has remained an edifi ce com­ tional "feminism") to those troubled by questions dealing bining the Burmese, Laotian. Thai and Khmer styles of har­ with morals and their own sexuality. mony and composition in a manner typical of this area and nowhere else. This recordinq presents three di fferent in­ 11:00 LEFT HERE strumental groups which reveaLthe various influences that l~ith Joe Kurland. have shaped the history of Thai music. 3:10 SACRED OBJECTS: THE POETRY OF LOU!S SmpSON The poet defines poetry as "truth and pleasure." He dis­ cusses his poems and the stories behind them. and reads many. including "The Redwoods," "Summer I·loming." "Birch," "The Inner Part," "Indolence," "On the Lawn at the Villa," and "Th':! Bi rd." 4:00 TRUE GRASS Bluegrass and nothing but, with Thane r·1itchell and Bill Scott. 6:30 EARLY MUSIC Davi d Bennett hos ts. 6:00 FLAMENCO Y SUS ESTILLOS Y SUS FL~~ENCOS Allen Yonge. 10:00 EARTH t1USIC Robert Garfias, from last niqht. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES

11: 45 THE FOURTH T~IER OF INVERNESS 7:00 THE ART OF POETRY: A PANEL DISCUSSION ~/ITH ALLEN Serial radio mYstery-drama. from ZBS 11edia in New York. GINSBERG. JOHN GIORNO, CHOGYAM TRUNGPA. RINPOCHE. ANNE \-IALor-1AN AND DIANE DIPRIMA 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES Recorded at the Naropa Institute in Boulder. Colorado in the summer of 1974. The panelists address such questions 12:00 SURVIVING IN THE PATRIARCHY as: "hat is the value of beinq a poet? HC1tl does writin!1 "ADVENTURES IN At-1AZONIA." Fantasies of the maps. charts affect everyday exp~rience? I~hat is a pr'Ofessional? Po­ and timetables of hC1tl to get there and what to see when you etry as a way of recla-iminq one's consciousness. From arri ve. Produced by Amazon Media. Naropa's "Open Secret" radio series , 1:00 GOVERNMENT INSPECTED: COMPARING NOTES 8:20 LOS DEL SUR A repeat of the panel discussion from Tuesday evenin9. A program of La~in AMerican music, primarily from Bolivia. performed by three foreign students residing in Seattle: 2:30 FOLK MUSIC AND BERNSTEIN: BILL MONROE AND "SONS" Chama1i. from Bolivia; Jorqe Salinas. from NicaraCjua; and Bill Monroe, frequently regarded as the father of bluegrass Robert Cortese from Italy. Fo11o.... ing the concert. Brian music, has many "sons" musically, but this proqram is de­ Hodel interviews the musicians. (Recorded at KRAB in April.) voted to Monroe and those who have per-formed in his oroup. Maury's guest is bluegrass collector Charlie Hoffman. 3:40 COSMICOMICS: THE nrSTANCE OF THE ~OON A reading of one of !talo Calvino's speculative adult fairy­ 4: 30 OPEN TIME tales about the beqinninqs of being. The narrator. Qfwfq, tells of foraqing for moon-milk; the antics of his cousin. 5: 30 ENV IRONMENTAL NEt'IS the Deaf One; and his ill-fated love "or ~rs. Vhd Vhd. With Phil Andrus. 10:15 THE COOTIE WILLIArftS SEXTET ANC ORCHESTRA: 1944 6:00 JELLY ROLL MORTON AT THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, Part RECORDINGS VIII Featurino Bud Powell, Eidie "Cleanhead" Vinson. Eddie "Lock­ In this final proqram. Jelly Roll tells the story of Story­ jaw" Davi s and Pearl Bailey. ville. 11 :00 BUMRLING IHTH BALTIC 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES Jazz, other eccentr-icities. 8:30 INTERNATIONAL NHJS SUM!\1ARY Analysis of world events from the varying perspectives of national and international journals. Produced by Jim Lobe.

8:00 .. SATUI{UMI' ;·;v,.;.~ll(. :~USIC 9 :00 THE ROBOTNCR HOURS Jazz, with Jeff Follette. Raymon d Se reb ri n •

12:00 EARTH MUSIC 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY With Jim Sailors. 2:30 BABY BISCUIT BLUES !~ith Karl Kotas. 4:00 WITH THESE HANDS: The Working Class Voice on Cur- . rent Issues Boeing, the University of Washin~ton. Todd Shipyard, Lock­ heed, Bethlehem Steel, City Light. Be'll, ~!ashinQton Natural Gas --- these are the major employers in Seattle. This program will seek to air many of the concerns and viewpoints of working people from these and other industries. With Tamara Swi ft.

5 :00 WHO ARE THE PEOPLE IN FRONT OF THE POST OFFI CE OO~/N­ TOWN ~IITH THE LOUDSPEAKERS? A discussion on the origin and activities of the NCLC (Na­ tional Caucus of Labor Committees). Moderated by Jim Lobe.

6:00 FILMS Dick Jameson and Kathleen ~urphy. 6:30 EARLY MLiSIC 6:30 THREE STRING TRIOS BY CHARLES HENRY WILTON With David Bennett. Virtually nothing is known about Wilton except that he was a vi 0 1a vi rtuoso of some renown in the 1ast qua rter of the 10:00 FIDDLER KRAB eighteenth century, and wrote most of his small legacy in Frank Ferrel. London; included among it are a half-dozen trio so~atas of which the first. third and sixth are heard on thlS re­ 11 :45 THE FOURTH TOl4ER OF INVERNESS cording. The performers are Jean Pougnet, violin; Freder­ Serial radio mYsterY-drama, from ZBS Media in New York. ick R1dd1e, viola; and Anthony Pini. cello. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 7:00 ImOLEPERSON: A CAREER CHANGE FORUM 12 :00 OPTIONS Earl Jennings and gues ts di scuss the prob 1ems and processes I: THE REITH LECTURES, PART VI. This lecture is delivered of career change. by the Librarian of Congress, Professor Daniel Boorstin, and is called "The Future of Exploration." 7:30 ARABIC ~1USIC II: THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION AS A RELIGIOUS MOVEMENT. This ilith Khreis Hussein. talk which considers rel ig'ion as an issue in the American Revoiution. is delivered by Alan Heimert, Chairman of the 8:30 MOULDY FYGGE: THE BLUE FOUR Department of English at Harvard. (NPR) Toetapping jazz from the twenties by the famous gui tar-vi o­ lin team of Eddie Lang and Joe Venuti. Produced by Val 1:00 LOUIS RUSSELL AND HIS LOUISIANA SWING ORCHESTRA Golding. (Reschedu1ed- from last month.) Russell came to Harlem in 1927 and bolO years later was lead­ ing the hottest and most competitive big band in Harlem. 9: 00 KRABGRASS Similarities existed between Russell's band and that of With Dennis Flannigan. Count Basie's of a decade later. They both had b:i11ian~ rhythm secti ons. sections that worked as a man. Wl th a Pl- 12 : 00 DEA TH\~A TCH an; s t who fed chords and worked up sol; d backQround for a team of brilliant soloists, which in Russell's case included such players as Henry "Red" Allen, J.C. Higginbotham, Albert Nicholas. Louis Metcalfe and Rex Ste\~art. 1:30 THE GOON SHOW Commedia dementia from the BBC. (NPR) 2:00 .. TIlE CITY COUNCIL MEETING LIVE, from the Municipal Building. 3:00 THE IRISH-AMERICJI.N STRING BAND Recorded live at a wild and wooly KRAB benefit at the Town Tavern in Port Townsend on March 27, 1976. Foot-stomping, whistles and Irish rebel yells, and the band: FRAUK FERREL 9:00 SUNNY SIDE UP (fiddle. bodhran and voca1s); ~·lARK GRl',HAM (vocals, bodhran Instead of just telling your k~ds how supel'ior radio can and harmonica); and ~IKE SAUNDERS (guitar and vocals). Hot. be to te levi si on -- here is an opportuni ty for them to ex­ perience ~,eekend morning radio for children. Let them open 4:30 THE SECRET GARDEN, Part IV their ears and wake up to stories and songs by the Sunny Glenda Jackson reads from Frances Hodgson Burnett's short Side Up coterie: Libby, Don, Zpe, David and their friends. Produced by Don Finkel and Libby Sinclair. story. 9: 30 11EMORY LANE 5:00 VINTAGE ROCK Hith Frank 011n. Gregg Hhitconb spins the oldies. 11 :55 KRAZY KAT 6:00 JEAN SHEPHERD From WOR in NYC. George Herriman's comic strip recreated for radio by Val Golding. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 LEFT EAR What's an ear? Musing ~,ith Jay Stickler. 7:00 WHAT'S GOIN' DOWN Discussions of community issues, with Flo ~/are and guests. 4:00 MUSIC OF INDIA Shantha Benega1. 7:30 COMMENTARY Tonight, "A r~inority of One": an Anarchis: commentary on the news, with Stan Iverson. 6:00 BEATING A RUG, BEATING A HORSE, ~EATING A CHILD An interview with Jolly K., a former Chl1d abuser and foun­ 8:00 DOUBLE BISCUIT BLUES der of a nati ona 1 organi zati on called "Pa rents Anonymous" "TAKE YOUR TmE AND PLAY IT RIGHT." Selections of lONd()~n for parents who abuse their children --,physi~~11y ~nd/or dirty blues by lONdown dirty Jack Cook. psychically -- and who want help. The lntervlewer 1S Robert Weppner. 9:00 CHINESE RADIO Produced in Cantonese by the Chinese Media Committee. 6:30 ZOUNDS The resurrection of "Zounds" --- poetry and miscellaneous 10:00 THE END OF THE 1975 LEGISLATURE wi th Irene Drennan. A documentary high1i qhting the second extraordinary session of the 44th regular session of the Washington State Legis­ 7:00 WE: WOMEN EVERYIIHERE Local nationa1 and international feminist news and commen­ lature. Major issues include: ouster of House Speaker; school funds and accountability; transportation and energy; tary.' Produced by the Lesbian Feminist Media Collective. pension reform; and a view to the next session. Produced by Laura Raun. 8:00 MOUNTAIN WOMEN 01d-timey and mountain music by women with readings on wo­ 11:00 SPAGHETTINI men in the Appalachian mountains, their lives and struqQ1es. Music and talk, with Leila Gorbman. Produced by Judith Hadley. 10:00 EARTH MUSIC With Brian Hodel. 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS Serial radio mYstery-drama, from ZBS Media in New York. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 6:30 EARLY MUSIC Da vi d Bennett hos ts. 12:00 BBC SCIENCE MAGAZINE (NPR) 10:00 EARTH MUSIC 12:30 DUTCH COMPOSERS OF THE 20TH CENTURY DANIEL RUYNEMAN: HIEROGLYPHS. The Hague Philharmonic Or­ 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS chestra, conducted by Hiroyuki Iwaki. HENK BADINGS: CON­ Serial radio mYstery-drama, from ZBS Media in New York. CERTO FOR HARP AND ORCHESTRA. Vera Badings, harp; the Am­ sterdam Concertgebouw Orchestra, conducted by David Zinman. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 1:00 DANCE FOR WHOM??? 12:00 TO:4ARDS A LAND ETHIC Does the dance available in Seattle fill your needs? This Readings from the writings of Aldo Leopold and Wendell Ber­ prognam will report on various dance facilities and acti­ ry. In A Continuous Harmon,' ~Jendell Berry writes: "So vities in the Seattle area. With Tamara Swift. far as I know, there are on y two philosophies of land use. One holds that the earth ••• belongs to those yet to be 1:45 AMERINDIAN CEREMONIAL MUSIC FROM CHILE born as well as those now living. The model of this sort This recordinq is a characteristic example of the indigenous of use is a good farm -- a farm that ••• preserves the land pre-Col urrbi an musi c of Chile, whi ch is s till qui te al i ve. in production without diminishing its ability to produce. Generally this music has a magical and religious ceremonial The other philosophy is that of exploitation, which holdS function wnich preserves many of the elements of the Amer­ that the interest of the present owner is the only interest indian culture. to be considered. The standard, according to this vieloJ, is profit and it is assumed that vJhatever is profitable 2:30 DECEMBER 2005: THE SILENT TOWNS is good." Rory Funke reads from Ray Bradbury's Martian -Chronicles. 1:30 THE RETICENT PARTITA 3:00 MUSIC SINCE 1950 Rachel-Diane Norton. IANNIS XENAKIS. Born 1n Bulgaria of Greek parents, Xenakis beaan his musical career writinq church music and Greek 3:00 THE PROMISCUOUS LISTENER folk songs. He is also an accomplished architect and pro­ Fans of tang05, flamenco, and other S/M diversions will ponent of.composing via mathematical formulae. certainly get off on this, t'~e ultimate macho fi 1m score. _ Paul Stanbery, local writer and musicoloqist (and not an 6:00 KOMPOST KORNER S/t1 fan) has asserrbled a running over an hourTrom Jef Jaisun, guests and you focus on organic qardening -­ AHred "lewman's gorgeous Hollywood Bizet and de Falla pas­ fertilizers, soils, seeds, tools of the trade, etc. Kall tiche, "Captain F.rorn Castile," from souridtrack and symphonic in your kWestions and komments at 325-5110. suite recordings, including Robert Farnon's expansions of Newman's jazzy Aztec motifs and modern high fidelity sub­ 6 :55 PROGRAM NOTES stituti ons -- of the famous "Conques til march and "Catana' s Love Theme." Your swash will also be sensuously unbuckled 7:00 EAST EUROPE by a review of the composer's conducting and compositional A li ve discussion on current events, tonight focussing on skills, illustrated by selections from "A Royal Scandal," Eastern Europe, the evolving relationships with the Soviet "David and Bathsheba," and "All About Eve." Union, Western Europe, Western European Communist parties, and the infamous Sonnen fe 1dt Doctri ne. 5:00 SWEET AND LOWDOWN Music from the 20's and 30's with Jan Cole and Pat Tennant. 8:00 OLD POSSUM'S BOOK OF PRACTICAL CATS Six poems by T.S. Eliot with a musical setting by Alan Raws­ 6:00 " TURKISH MUSIC thorne. The text is spoken by Robert Donat. 14ith Onol Bilkur. 8:30 ROBERT GARFIAS, ETHNOMUSICOLOGIST 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES

7:00 NORTH\~EST INDIAN NE\JS Produced by Indians Into Communication. 7:30 BLACK ACE: R.K. TURNER AND HIS STEEL GUITAR "I am the Bl ack Ace I'm the boss card in your hand, I am the Black Ace, I'm the boss card in your hand, But I'll pla.y for you mama, If you please let me be your "'an." These were the words that listeners to the regular blues pt'ogNms relayed from station KFJZ out of Fort Horth "in the late 30's would hear as the program was introduced. After dropping i nto obscurity during the Second Wor1 d Har, Black Ace \~as recorded in Fort Worth in 1961 by Chris Strachwitz. 8:00 BALTIC'S BOP STOP THE POST-BOP ALTO, Part IV. Ornette Coleman is featured. "I can't talk about technique because it is ever-changing. That's why for me the only method for playing any instrument is the range in loJhich it is built. Learned technique is a law method. Natural technique is nature's method. And this is what makes music so beautiful to me. It has both, thank God."

9:30 PLEASANT JOURNEYS A program of mYths, legends and folktales for your imagin­ ati nn' s ente rtai nment, wi th Seattle's res i dent Mas ter Story­ teller, Pleasant deSpair..

10:00 YES, ~E! A private life is the long thick tree and the pY'ivate life is the li Fe for me. With Don Finkel.

11:00 VARtATIONS FOR A DOOR AND A SIGH

TEOOORO MORCA

10:00 TEODORO AND ISABEL MORCA IN CONCERT. Recorded live April 3 in San Jose, Californ1a, by Allen Vonge, this concert presents a kaleidoscope of Spanish dance -- exactinq 5,OOO-year-old Basque rituals, stately 6:30 EARLY MUSIC 18th century and 19th century court dances, .iotas and lofith David Bennett, includin!l. at about 8:45, FROM NEW BOOKS flamenco. wi.th C.H. Reinsch. Today's book will be The Necessary Blank­ ness: Women in -Major American Fiction of~e Sixties, by 11:00 LEFT HERE ~ary Allen (0. of 1'11noi5 Press). ~rith Joe Kurl and. 2:30 AT SWIM lWO BIRDS Boil s, musi c, death and other everydaY conversati on from this underground novel of the sixties, read by the Irish author Flann O'Brien. 3:00 BLUES FROM THE WINDY CITY Steve Patterson presents blues recorded live in Chicago by Little Willie Anderson, George Beasley, ~ankchan, Prez 6:30 EARLY MUSIC Kenneth and Byther Smith. David Bennett. 4:00 THE FOLK SHOW Music and words of seafaring people. Lower your sails, 10:00 EARTH MUSIC Robert Garfias, from last night. drop an anchor, and turn on your radios, mates. 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS 6:00 FLAMENCO Y SUS ESTILLOS Y SUS FLAMENCOS Serial radio mYster,y-drama, from ZBS Media in New York. Allen Yonge. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 SURVIVING IN THE PATRIARCHY "IS THIS A~L THERE IS?" A woman's music show, produced by Amazon Medl a. 1:00 BEETHOVEN: GROSSE FUGE IN B FLAT MAJOR, OP. 133. LIVE FOLK LIFE FESTIVAL The Hungarian Quartet. KAZIMIERZ SEROCKI: MUSICA CONCER­ TANTE. The Polish Symphony Orchestra, directed by Jan Krenz. BELA BARTOK: CONCERTO FOR ORCHESTRA. Boston Syq:>hony Or­ chestra, Rafael Kube1ik, director. 11:00 STRAIGHT, NO CHASER Jazz, with Randall Victor. 2: 15 THE PEDLAR OF PALLAHADAREEN A children's story told by Ruth Sawyer. - 2:30 FOLK FESTIVAL USA: KERRVILLE FOLK FESTIVAL Texas-style music with bluesman Weldon "Juke Boy" Bonner, along with Townes Van Zandt, Bill and Bonnie Hearne, Mike Seeqer and ragtime pianist Terry Waldo. (NPR) 4:30 THE WORLD OF CHASSIDUS Music and stories of the Chassidic Jews, with Rabbi Yoseph Samuels. 5:00 REPORT TO THE LISTENER 8:00 SATURDAY MORNING MUSIC Station infortTBtion and recipes. If-you have a puzzlement Jazzzz, with Jeff Follette. about KRAB, call us on the show, at 325-5110. Especially FOLKLIFE FESTIVAL 1-J.2pm if you want to errbarass us before countless thousands -­ millions? -- of listeners. 5:30 THE ENVIRONMENTAL NEWS Hith Phil Andrus. 12:00 DEATHWATCH 6:00 LIVE CONCERT: SCANDINAVIAN MUSIC FOR FLUTE ALONE. F1autis~rry Decker performs works RY Danish coq:>oser Kuhlau, Swedish composer Sven-Erick Back, and Finn Mortenson. 6:55 PROGRAM NOTES 7:00 LEFT PRESS REVIEW Frank Krasnowsky. 7:30 COMMENTARY 9:00 SUNNY SIDE UP Tonight, Shirley Siegel and Mike Kearney of the Bicentennial It's 9:00 AM -- do you know where ,9ur children are? We Reality Party. hope that they're listening to qua lty radio prograrmring 8:00 VINTAGE JAZZ for kidz, with the SlJ'Iny Side Up ganq and Don Finkel and Ha 1 Sherlock. Libby Sinclair. 9:00 SPECTRUM 9 : 30' MEMORY LANE Produced by Carlos Haoen. 78's, with Frank Olin. 10:00 CON SALSA Latin-rooted music with Sonny Masso. FOLKLIFE FESTIVAL l-llpm 11:00 USA FOR BEGINNERS With David Johnson: R & B, jazz. 11:00 SYNCOPATED ECSTASY Roswell plaYing the jazz until early '~onday.

6:30 EARLY MUSIC 10:00 FIDDLER KRAB Frank Ferrel. 11:45 THE FOURTH TOWER OF INVERNESS 6:30 EARLY MUSIC Serial radio mYster,y-drama, from ZBS Media in New York. TodaY it's your turn. Call David Bennett at 325-5110 with your reques t. 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 10·:00 EARTH MUSIC 12:00 OPTIONS MEXICAN POLITICS. Alejandro Carrillo Marcor, Governor of 11 :45 THE FOURTH To\>/ER OF INVERNESS the Province of Sonora, Mexico, is interviewed by Mucio D. Seri a 1 radi 0 mYs ter,y-drama, from ZBS Medi a in New York. Caro1n of r.adio station KUAT. (NPR) 11:55 PROGRAM NOTES 12:00 SPECTRUM A repeat of last niqht's proqram, produced by Carlos Hagen. 1:00 BIRD ON THE AIR FOLKLIFE FESTIVAL l-llpm Li ve air broadcasts from 1945-51, recorded at Birdland and elsewhere, with Charlie Parker in various groups with Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Powell, Willie Smith, Benny Carter, Buddy 11:00 SPAGHETTINI Rich, the King Cole Trio, Allen Eager, Lennie Tristano and Leila and words and Leila and music and Leila. the (fortunately) inimitable voice of "Symphony Sid" Torin. MAY PROGRAM NOTES·

. "1-Ic1hrilY hoori\v, the "i rs t 0" 1111'/ -- outs i rte sCl"ewi nn beni ns tOrlilY." -- Anon .

And here we are at the month of May. First, an oversiaht in last month's Pr09ram Notes has be.en brouaht to my attention. to wit. that only scant mention M'ISic was made of Leila Gorbman's departure as Proaram Director. Leila was on the paid sta-ff -- well, paid sometimes -- for over a year and a half, workina hard and doina tneoest Alon9 with the usual earlies (Dave Bennett taking over for she could to develop KRAB's proarammina with the resources a whlle late in the month), earths, bop-stops, ears, fygges. she found to be available. Horking at KRAB -- or any place biscuits and such-like, there will several musical events like KRAB. if such exist -- is a tryinq experience for any in May. Chief among these, of course, will be the third individual, especially one lone woman staf-f member in a annual live KRAB broadcast of the NORTHHEST REGIONAL FOLK­ milieu of men. Thank you, Leila, for your devotion over LIFE FESTIVAL from the Seattle Center (5/29-5/31 -- see the months -- and I and KRAB's listeners hope that your description elsewhere in this issue). We are blessed with plansi for the "uture incl ude continuina as a volunteer at a couple of NPR music pl"0grams of.unusual merit this month, the station. one dealing with BILL MONROE AND SONS (5/20. 2:30 PM) and Now, on to the programming. Besides the return of many/most one GOIN' STRONG: A VISIT WITH 82-YEAR-OLD BLUESMAN FURRY of the regulars, and the addition of a var;'ety of new series LEJ.fIS (5/17, 12:30 PM); Bob l{est and Clare Conrad will and one-time-only features. I'll try to give you an idea be back with a special of their favorites at 8:45 the 14th of some of the highlights amona the newcomers. with SEX AND THE SINGLE BISCUIT; and on the 29th at 3 PM Steve Patterson will present in-concert recordings of Chi­ cago blues bands on BLUES FROM THE ~fINDY CITY, There will also be a program of music by THE IRISH-AMERICAN STRING BAND recorded live at the KRAB benefit at the Town Tavern in Port TC1n'l1send in March (5/24, 3 PM), and a flamenco con­ cert recorded live by Allen Yonqe (in San Jose) of TEODORO AND ISABEL MORCA (5/26. 10:00 PM). From time to time there will also be live music, directly carried from our studios to your living-room (or wherever you keep your radio). The concerts we know about at press-time are SCANDINAVIAN MU­ SIC FOR FLUTE ALONE (with Larry Decker, 5/27 at 6 PM), Public Affairs & the like the CORNISH CHAMBER SINGERS directed by Jim Savage (5/9 at 8 PM), and a blues show by PHILHARMONIC SAI~. a local group (5/4. 9 PM). Others as we find them ••• KRAB is the only There are three new series or semi-series worthy of mention. radio station hereabouts that carries real live music as On Saturdays at 4 Pt~, staff member Tamara Swift wi 11 host a matter of course, and is worth supporting on that basis HITH THF.5E HANDS, an hour designed to air the views of blue­ alone. Certainly worth listening to. collar workers in the Seattle area. Un l4ednesday niQhts at 7 Pt1. thp.re will be four live -discussion groups focusina on situations and events in (in order) the Far East, South Afr1 ca, Latin Amer1 ca and Eas tern Europe. !~ IffiAB is

a noncommercial educational radio station approaching zero licensed to the Jack Straw Memorial Foundation, a non-profit corporation. The station broadcasts at an effective radiated power of 45,000 watts, on a frequency of 107.7 MHz, FM. Offices and studios " One may never f ear having to confront t he opti on are located at 1406 Harvard, Seattle, Wa 98122. "e i t her/or", in fac t on e has .Q.£ choice . In movin g f orward, o r r e trogressing, the action i s o f itself Listeners who contribute $25 or more each year abs olute, indiffe rent, and the consequ ence o f our, become subscribers, and are entitled to receive each, immuta ble pas s ivity." the monthly proqram quide. of which this is one. There i s a corne r in the heart of Ann a Cr olius Checks should be made out to KRAB. and all that has never felt the flint throw branchin g donations are tax-deductible. spa rks to her finger tips, taut nippl es or hal f closed eyes. Nor has it felt the co ld thrus t of an Early in the fonnation Of KRAB it was arqued that icicle, freezing, then shattering the f antastic for a radio station to be truely responsive to thE constructions of hope. And so, this unc alloused needs of that part of "the cOlll11unity" not favored pulsing thing of blood and flesh deep in the c or e with access to. orproqramminq produced by, com­ of Ann a Crolius is both far and conceal ed from t he mercial media, that station must. amonq other daily despairs and inspirations o f mun dane realit y, thinqs. be operated by a small, dedicated. low and yet rem ains the foundation ' to Ann a ' s ex i s t ence . paid staff whose qoal is to encouraqe and support Sometime s Anna goes out, on those despe r at e Friday the acti viti es of vol un tee rs in produci nq the nights, to the Tumorous Tavern, whe r e creatures actual proqramminq. This continues to be the way looking much like Anna, and yet seeming s o diffe r­ of KRAB. There are many thinqs for volunteers to e nt, circulate in schools, chasing each other in do at KRAB, ranqinq from the vital supeort activ­ mating packs , and hardly noticing the f ro zen eye ities of addressinq, envelope stuffinq and clean­ among s t them. It is at times like these , dreams uP. to the also vital areas of proqralll11inq: of "be longing", running with th e r est, t en mi llion recording, board operation, and production. If buffalo moving as one, that Ann a ' s secret cor ner you are interested. please call or come by the of heart rises through her veins . Wh en Ann a sees station. a s mile, when some arm encircles anothe r' s body , or s omeon e l eaves alone, that chunk o f f lesh grows And. KRAB exists as a forum for arts and ideas. and Ann a , hard like warm steel, s miles on t he both entertaininq and educational, normally not Fat es of her s i s ters and brothe r s , so unlike her . heard on the radio. Anyone with opinions in dis­ aqreement with those expressed on any proqram Oh Ann a won't dance ; s he'll s mi l e , but qui z­ broadcast on KRAB is invited to contact the stat­ zic a ly, and s he, too, will leave alone , and when ion for time to express their views. home will not cry, but s t a r e into the f ac e o f her mi r ror, as guil ty memories of unknown happi ness Oh yes, our phone number is 325-5110 . flicke r from her eyes . Ann a won't c ry whe n the milk sours , the s ky clouds , when the ma i l box is empty, t he ne i gh bor s have a baby, or whe n s he wakes Saturday morning dr eamily r eachin g t o t ouch an i mag ina ri f riend.

KRAB STAFF K'RAB GOE~ TO 0.(1

PHIL ANDRUS - Environmental Education Coordinator THOMAS ECKELS - Chief Ennineer About the Public Radio Con-l'erence: In mid-March Ben Dawson, JEFF FOLLETTE - Music Director Ken He11er and I attended the National Public Radio Con-l'er­ GREG PALMER - Resident Humanist ence in 14ashinqton, D.C.. The conference is ostensibly to CHUCK REINSCH - Station Manaqer draw toqether mana (lers, official representatives, and (this CAM ROBINSON - Production Assistant year) volunteer representatives from "public" (read NPR/CPR) TAMARA SI~IFT - Production Assistant radio stations around the country, receive input into the ROBERT HEPPNER - Assistant Manaqer national system, lobby Conqress, and participate in deca­ STU WITMER - Earlv Music. Proqram Guide, etc. dent festivals of consumption. Most of the 140 stations represented are very different from KRAB. Some 70% are licensed to state supported institutions. schools or univer­ sities, and draw their principle financial support from the institution. Proqramminq on most of these stations tends to concentrate on classical music and substantial quantit­ ies of NPR productions such as All Thinqs Considered. You are, I hope, already famili ar with KRAB's proqralll11inq. A KRAB VOLUNTEERS few of the stations at the conference are more like KRAB. They were lumped into the "altemati ve" and "communi ty" station catanories, thouqh no label will do .iustice to the CHARYL ANGLE RICH MINOR diversity Of this sort of station. They have budqets NORM AHLOUIST LIZ MONG ranqinq from less than fifty thousand to several hundreds ELLEN AOUINO LEILA GORBMAN GLENN MUNGER of thousands of dollars. All depend on volunteer partic­ GARY ALiNDER TONY GOLDENBERG KATHLEEN MURPHY ipation to run the stations. What they probably have most ANDY DE LOS ANGELES BOB GHYNNE BILL NOLL in cOlll11On is a desi re to produce proCjralll11inq that is truely CAPTAIN RAL TIC JUDITH HADLEY RACHEL-DIANE NORTON relevant to their respective communities and challenqinq in PHIL BANNON CARLOS HAGEN FRANK OLIN content, and presented in an honest human format, unclouded DAVID BENNETI JERI HAMLEY . SHAN OTIEY FLO HARE by industry qimmicks or stylistics. KAREN RERGE KEN HELLER JIM PARADIS SERN HATI Most stations have relatively small budqets. The inability JANINE BERTRAt1 MAURY HERMAN VIC PINETA BOB 1ossible,for these stations to qualify for federal BRYCE BUTLER MARGARET HOLLENBACH JIM SAILORS PHIL IHLLIAMS CPR -I'undinq or NPR services, both established by Conqress RON CAMPBELL DAVE INGE~RIGHT RABR I SAf.1UELS CARLA I4ULFSBERG to diversify and improve public broadcastinq. At present LARRY CANTIL JEF JAISUN BILL ScaTI DENI YAflAUCHI CPR is re-evaluatinq their qualification criteria. Unfort­ JANINE CARPENTER DICK JAMESON RAY SERERRIN ALLEN YONGE unately they are beinq lobbied to, and seem more than will­ JAN COLE DAVID JOHNSON RRUCE SHAPIRO ELLEN ZIEGLER i nq to, adopt even more stri nQent cri teri a that over the CLARE CONRAD GALEN JOHNSON ANDY SCHLOSS years would result in increasinq minimum non-federal JOSH DARSA LLOYD KAUTZ HAL SHERLOCK budqets and encouraainq both community and institutional REN DAHSON HUSSEIN KHREIS LIBBY SINCLAIR (al ready tax supported) stations to compete for fundina PEGGY DE LEERS MELODYE KINANE MARK SISON from private sources and listeners. f-1any people at tne MIKE DUFFY KARL KOTAS JODY STECKER smaller stations perceive this as a threat to the life of LUCY DUNSMOOR FRANK KRASNO'ISKY STACEY. thei r stations and fear a squeeze out that would result in FRANK FERREL SUSAN LANDGRAF PAUL STANBERY their beino nothinq but larqe. institutional type stations. LISA FERREL DANAE LAURAN GENE SULLIVAN It is important that a real diversity in broadcastino be DAVIIl FINKEL MARl LA~fLESS JAY STICKLER preserved. Many years and much effort has been invested DON FINKEL SONNY MASSO AL Sl·IENSON in the formation of these community stations. You can help ZOE FINKEL MOLLY METILER TERRY TAFOYA by communicatina your belief in the importance of thei r DENNIS FLANNIGAN BRUCE MILLER PAT TENNANT acti viti es to YOIJr reP-resent~ ves and to CPB. RORERT GARFIAS LOIS THETFORD Chuck Re-insch . ,i..... h~._\:. '-. ~ ~ .... !

krob fm 1077 1406 Harvard, Seattle W n 98122 Ea5-5111 . Ea5-5110 01 Memorial Day weekend. Krab's Stay-at-Home No-Travel Ser­ vice will brinq to you four days of live traditional music. broadcast from the fifth Annual Northwest Regional Folklife Festival. Our schedule looks something ~ike this: --Friday. ':30 til 11 a spec1al Krab concert. from the Seattle Center Playhouse --Sa turday. 1 til 8 from Krab's two stages. one in­ side aad one outside tbe.Alki Room 8 t1l 11 Old Time Fiddlers' Concert. from the Playhouse --Sl.I\day. 1 til 11 from the Krab stages --Mnnc!a.v. 1 t1l 8 from the Krab stages 8 til 11 Contemporary Folk Music Concert. from the Pl ayhouse The Nortmfest Regional Folk11fe Fest1val 1s an annual gather­ inq of trad1t1onal mus1c1ans. dancers and craftspeople. held at the Seattle Center. Amon!t the musicians perform1ng are many whom you've heard on Krab Oyer the years: The South fork Rlue~rass Band. the Balalaika Trio. Joe Pancerzewski. the Tennesseans. Judith and Michael. the Trop1cal Rainstorm Steel Band. the Fred McFalls Family. the ~psy ~ppo String Band. and many more. Most of our live broadcast is. at this time. I.I\scheduled. H(1otIever. we can tell you who you'll hear on Fri day n1 dlt. The concert will beq1n with Mark O'Conner and Custer's Grass Band. Foll(1otlin~ Mark w111 be Robert Rohde. the Irish-Ameri­ can Strinq Band. Duncan and Bohanon (two blues musicians from Pasco). Linda Waterfall. and Dum1sani Abraham Mara1re and the Minanzi Marimba Ensamble.

We invite you to hear our effort to bring the Folklife Fest­ LORt f1v~WI & FRIEtl1) AT LAST YEARS FESTIVAL ival into your homes. And. if you feel like soakin~ up some sun • .101n us outside .the Alki Ro~-Be a part of our very live. non-studio audience.

NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION U.S • . POSTAGE krab fm PAID 1406 Harvard, SEATTLE, WA PERMIT 9566 Seattle Wn 98122

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