-- --;: - -;. -- -- KRAB f .m. 107.7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES 9029 Roosevelt Way N. E. $20 for a full twelve months Seattle, 98115 $12 for a minimum of twelve months ¢6 for complete nine months lA 2-5111

A PROFESSORIAL REVIEW OF, AND LONG QUOTES FRCM, LESLIE FIEDLER'S GETTING BUSTED: ESPECIALLY ON THE SUBJECT OF TIMOTHY LFARY, REX:ENTLY OF THIS WOBlJ) ElIT PRESFlITLY ENSCONCED IN A YACA VILLE MENTAL HOSPITAL FOR OBSERVATION AS PART OF THE JAIL ROUTINE HE N~ CALLS HCI1E ••• - "The name of ' Tiillothy ' Leary has, in fact;' continued to give me trouble. Merely to mention it is to stir uneasiness at least. often downright hostility, not only in newspapers and the hea-rts of Faculty Wives, but among almost all the editors I have recently been encountering. Looking back over the galley proofs of my New York Review of Books article, for instance, I see in the margin beside my second use of Leary' 5 name the query: "Author: add something else?" And I rEl'llfllllber having been urged. when I called a responsible editor to ask, "Add what? Add why?" to expand my reter­ ences to him. lest I sefllll to stand by him too uncritically--or even to confuse my own case with his.

I added nothing. however. considering it churlish and cowardly on such an occasion to dissociate myself fram a fellOil professor (well. ex-professor. perforce) who was enduring indignities and legal persecution which made my own seem pretty mild • •••••••• Out of the four or five pieces of real rmt mail which have came to me since my own arrest, for instance, two cambine the attack on me with insults to Leary. The first reads, "Hi ya goof ball-Your hero lSF cult Leary is being held-are you going to help him, goof?"; and the second, "For all of your kind really need 'Help,' you and your family; the O'Leary's (sic) and the whole dis.eased nest. Bathing facilities should be donated ••• your homes should be fumigated ••• "

Under the circumstances, it has been hard tor me to say so, but I have had troubles of my own in coming to terms with Leary because. though I am no snob about vict~. I am about the founders of religions and messianic pretenders. And this may, indeed. disqualify me tram subscribing to any cult not ancient enough for its first spokes­ man to be utterly pure, which is to say, a pure myth ••• •••••••• The New Religions we;'" also interested in eon·"ersion' and states of grace. Actually, their aVOlied end••• is not eventual salvation, but extasis now: the same sort of exaltation or "high" which Leary sensed had came to sefllll. expeeially to the young. more attractive than bliss beyond the grave. and which he promised they could attain by the proper use of "acid".

The notion of salvation appeals primarily to the wretched, the excluded, the poor in spirit; exaltation provides an equivalent satisfaction for the a.ffiuent, the cam.for- ,1table, the bored. Not that life is at present more boring, much less more wretched, than in the past. As a matter o.f fact, a good deal of tedium has been eliminated for most of us with the reduction of working hours and the transfer to machines of much intolerable routine labor; and a good deal of misery has disappeared with the conquest of certain diseases and-for a considerable and increasing minority-the amelbration of poverty and the disappearance of starvation. 2 By the same token. however. leisure has encouraged the spread of education (both. in the schools and through the III&SS media). which in tum has helped to create an acute. even painful awareness of the ennui and pain that still rema1n-much of it forever unconquerable because essential to our human condition. And to deal with this, we must turn 1.nwa.rd: learn to control our consciousness as we have at least begun to control our envirorlllent.

'lhis traditicmal. fUnction of religion. Lea~psell1do-scientist like his fellows. a trained psychologist to begin with in fac~hoped to per.tOl'lB with the aid ot psycho­ chemistry in a setti:rlg of ritual and wonder. And his wonder drug turned out to be, predictahly' emaugh. a ccapollDd synthesized in the antiseptic laboratories ot SN'lt.serland: ISD.

For better or ~or TiIOrse. then-.nd on .ost days. I an ine1ined to think it tor bet:ter--Ieu:,r vas tha tNe 1Jr1t1.ator of a religious revolution which has alread;y begun to 1 ..". hill behind; for eYem Wilhela Reich, who came in on the scene JIIlch earli_. aDd _osa aadness and trwJt in aagic s ... not disshd.lar. proved ~ too Freudi.an. 1IId.ch is to sq. too &lropean and Jewish. to lead the way into the 1'otnre. .bd ~ wy CMl 1apetiemee with the perhaps necessary charlatanisll ot the who1.e crw or new garms-their Jd.ra.e1.-.ongering. ascetie1sa. and. sheer goyishness­ ret'1ects what is .,.t deepl;y Jewish in Ile rather than what is aerel.y f'inick;y. In any case, Jq .a.u.Uon for UIary is qualified by a profolDld distrwJt precisely because I take ser.lou:q his pioneer et'f'ort to provide the nw religion with a new church.

"Whether they bel1.__ it or not. II I said to the teachers, ",your students are living on tlte -edge or me of the greatest religious revivals ••• and a JIIan who begins to define it in his 0iDl vedrd ~ he is about as weird as Mary Slker Edd;y or Joseph Slllith or arsy of those other AIIlerican tolUlders of hCllllemade religions-is TiIlothy Leary. II ...... I spoke of the ironies ot our current 8ituation in which a broad range of political dissent is to1erated :1'ra!l teachers, but in which no sbdlar latitude is grated th_ - in express1Dg opbdona about changing standards in respect to sex and drugs. I invoked. I th1Dk. the names of Leo Koch (fired out of the University ot IllinoiS) and Tiaot.by Lee.r.v (dropped :1'ra!l the tacu1ty at Harvard. I reminded my ladies) and ended by 1naisti:rlg that the pr1m.ar,y responsibility ot the teacher is to be tree, to provide a 1IOde1 or 1'reedaa tor the young. (pp...... -15~ and 130. Leslie Fiedler, GETl'ING BUSTED, stein and Day, 1069) TIM LEARY, -BOSPl.TAL PO Box )000 Vacaville. Callrornia Michael Wiater

3 THURSDAY, APRIL 16 7:00am THE MORNING SHOW - with the fizz of Phil Hunger, most likely, though with things being as they are it could be, up to, and including , here with you'all so yawning early in the morning--and might I point out that a good many of the morning shows in this guide are lifted from Allen I s TV BA.BY POEMS, one line at a time. 11 :00 Commentary (R) 11:30 Letter from England (R) 11:45 New Books (R) 12:00 African Times (R) 12:30 Concert Review (R) 12:45 Indictment of American Indian Education (R) 1:15 Mamooks Kumtux (R) . »»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»») 3:30pm DIE KLUGE by Carl Orff - perhaps his nicest work. This recording features Elizabeth Schwarzkopf with Wolfgang Sawallisch conducting. 4:50 NEW ORLEANS BOUNCE - Volume 2 of Imperial's Urban Blues series focuses on the Crescent City in the early and mid-1950 ' s. Fats Domino, Smiley Lewis, Smilin' Joe Pleasant, Archibald, Little Sonny, Fats Mathews, Joe Turner, James Wayne, and Amos Milburn. 5:30 CAPTAIN BALTIC'S BOP STOP - Early Lee Morgan: while still in its teens, the trumpet of Lee Morgan grew from the bowels of the great Diz bands and erupted into a new and powerful solo voice, with echoes of Fats Navarro and Clifford Brown. 7:00 COMMENTARY 7:30 UNDERGROUND SEX - OR HCM TO LIVE IN A BG1B SHELTER - featuring the under­ ground sex press, Al Goldstein, SCREW, Steve Heller, NEW YORK REVIEW OF SEX, and Marv Grafton, PLEASURE. Produced and moderated for WEAl by Btll Schechner. Is it Art, politics, or filth? With the forces of clean 11 t. Yeah. 8:30 THE LETTERS - Reading of letters to and from John F. Koenig, northwest born artist, now living .. in Paris, whose works are currently on display at the Seattle Art Museum. 9:00 SUNDAY - The Roachdale Radio Network flagrantly attacks raindrops on roses, whiskers on kittens, brown copper kettles, warm woolen mittens, and George Wallace. 9:30 ClASSIC JAZZ - with Mike Duffy--just what it says it is. 10:45 open 11:00 FUNDAMENTAL EXERCISES OF THE PITUITARY - with Robert Jaangard, and classical oriental mu~ic.

FRIDAY, APRIL 17 7 :OOam IT IS HERE, THE LONG AWAITED BLFAP-BlAST LIGHT THAT SPEAKS ONE RED TONGUE LIKE POLITICIAN, BUT HAPPY ITS OWN GOVT. 11:00 Commentary (R) 11:30 Sunday (R) 12:00 Underground Sex (R) 1:00 ' The Letters (R) »»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»») 3:30pm JAPANESE BUDDHIST RITlJAL - bells, prayers, chants, gongs and drums. 4:45 PHAROAH SANDERS: JEWELS OF THOUGHT - Free jazz from New York, with Pharoah Sanders, Lonnie !:hith, Leon Thomas, Richard Davis, Cecil McBee, Idris Muhammad, and Roy Haynes. New and beautiful on Impulse. + 5:30 URBAN BIDES - with Dick Shunnan 7: 00 COMMENTARY 7:30 MUS IC CCMPOSED BY YUJIRO FUKUSHIMA - perfonned by Japan's "Four Players" group. Instruments: 1 shakuhachi, 3 kotos. 8:00 NOSTALGIC SYRUP - over the airwaves this evening, a stroll down memory lane, a trip back through the dusty manuscripts of the long forgotten greats--with more beer and less foam. 9:00 MUSIC OF TIBEl'AN EUDDHISM - the Sakyapa sect. 9:45 MEDIEVAL MUSIC - The New York Pro Musica and the Studio der Fruhen Music (Munich) perfonn short works from about 1500. 11:00 LISTEN HERE - with Mark Oakford, who plays jazz au Hannum.

SATURDAY, APRIL 18 10:00am EITHER WE BLOW OURSELVES UP NOW AND DIE, LIKE THE OLD TRIBE OF MAN, ARGUING AMONG NEUTRONS, SPIT ON INDIA, STICK UP AMERICA, CLOBBER MOSCCM, DIE BALTIC , HAVE YOUR TUBERCULOSIS IN ARABIA, WI NK NOT IN ENKIW' S REVERI&--- 12:30 Commentary (R) ))))))))))) )) ))))))))))) ))))))))))))) ))))))))))))))))))))))))) ))))))))))))))))))))) )) 6: OO~ EVENING RAAG - Mohana Rama - music from S. India : The Laiguidi Jayannan Trio (violin, venu or flute, and veena). 6:30 TOOTHPICK, LISOON AND THE ORCAS ISLANDS - Contemporary poetry with Michael and Joanne Wiater, reading from the Maximus Poems IV, V, VI by Charles Olson (Cape/Goliard Press, Londaon)--for the man he died some months ago. 7:00 COMMENTARY 7;30 LAPPISH JOIl{ - songs from northern Norway. The Lapps are a tundrp-dweUinp people of non-European stock, showing, in their way of liv1ng, an evident relation to northern Asiatic races and to the American Indians. These Joik melodies are predominatly built on the petatonic scale. Each melody describes a person or an animal. 8:00 SCIENCE, LIBERTY AND PEACE - Adlous Huxley's post:war work concerning the roles of science and technology in the modern world, and what can be done to improve the situation. Readings by Ken Lund. 8:30 MISSISSI PPI FRED MC DOWELL IN LONDON - Recorded by Mike Raven for the Na tional Blues Federati on. Selections are: "Some Sweet Day", "Mo jo Hand", "Amazing Grace", "My Second Mind", "I Wish I was in Heaven Sitting Down", 'My Babe", "Take Your Picture, Darling", "Diving Duck Blues", "I Don't Need No Heater", 9:15 FLOWERS OF EVIL - poems by Charles Baudelaire with electronic settings by Ruth White. 10:00 THE DINOSAUR ROMP - TOM HAYDEN AT THE UW - what Tom Hayden said at the SLF--gathering at the WU, Friday, April 3. Taped by Mike ltliater. 11:00 DOCTOR SPIDER - jazz without jive.

SUNIYlY! APRIL 19

10:00am IT'S ALL A LoNG TRAIN OF ASSOCIATIONS STOPPED FOR GAS IN THE DESERT & LOOKING FOR A DRINK OF OLD-TIME H2O- -wi th Country Dave MacDonald. 12:00 Commentary (R) 5 12:30 JAZZ FOR A SU~Y AFTERNOON - put together by steve Brown, and featuring the latest and best (not necessarily in that order) in contemporary jazz. 3:30 BLUEGRASS - Tiny Freeman with food-stomping, lip-smacking good, Kentucky fried music. 6:30 MOULDY FYGGE - Castle Jazz Band, doing the "Kansas City Stomps", Farewell Blues" , "Kansas City Torch", ''When the Saints", "Green River", "Royal Garden Blues" and "story Room Ball". With Val Golding. 7:00 COMMENTARY 7:30 ALDOUS HUXLEY - At Santa Barbara, 1959 - the first of five addresses on the Human Situation (given at the U. of Cal.) concerning the integration of education and the need for closer contact between the disciplines. 8:30 HAND&. - a sel.ec't.l.on 01 concer'Ll. oy same. !'·or uooe, Organ ana LTrosso. 9:30 ~ARD GILBERT BLUES SH(lol - with more of the howard gilbert blues. 11:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS - yes, Bizzarro himself, replete with trusty lance, forked tongue, and soft stick (a trinity indeed, for lip-splitting Ray < Serebrin) and, dig, music, rock-and-roll-music, moving into jazz to mingle with ••• 1 1:30 ROSWELL'S RUT - late night, most-likely all night, jazz. I ; I

MO~Y APRIL 20

7 :OOam I PROPHESY: CHANGO WILL SPEAK ON THE NATIONAL BROADCASTING SYSTEM 11:00 Commentary (R) 11:30 Mouldy F,ygge (R) 12:00 Tan Hayden (Repeated from Saturday) 1:00 Science, Liberty, and Peace (Repea:ted from Saturday) »»»»)))))))))))))))))))))))»»»»»»»»»»»»»»») 5 : 30pn MUSIC OF ETHiOPIA - Tapes fran the KRAB archives. 7:00 COMMENTARY 7:30 WINE APPRECIATION - Emmett /Watson, stamping out the grapes. 8:00 LEFT PRESS REVIEW - Frank Krasnowsky reads from and comments on the nation's radical press. 8:30 MORE MAHLER - His Symphony No.3. Maurice Abravanel conducts the Utah Symphony, Christina Krooskos, alto solo. 10:00 JEAN SHEPHERD - raconteur, which is a story-teller, in this case, to himself, mostly. 11:00 JON GALLANT - recently heard as the ·interviewer on the Michael Lerner tape, with classical music.

TUESDAY, APRIL 21

7 : OOam I PROPHESY, WE WILL ALL PROPHESY TO EACH OTHER & I GIVE THEE HAPPY TIDINGS ROBERT L&ELL AND JEANETTE MACDONALD 11:00 Commentary (R) 11:30 Wine Appreciation (R) 12:00 Jean Shepherd (R) 12:45 Left Press Review (R) 1:15 Aldous Huxley at Santa Barbara (Repeated from Sunday) »»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»») 6 5:00pm EVENING HAAG - Raga BAHAR - in teental. A spring raga performed by Bismillah Kahn, shenai, and V. G. Jog, violin. 5:30 MUSIC OF IRAN - played on the santur by Nasser Rastegar-Nejad. 6 :00 THE WORLD OF SOUND - Another presentation by the Independent Radio Co­ op. Hosted by Mel Lillie. 7:00 COMMENTARY 7:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS - from KPFA in Berkeley, Professor William Mandel discusses recent events in the Soviet Union. 7:45 THFATRE REVI~v - with Robert Horsley 8:00 COUNTERPOINT (II) CBC - Handel: Sonata in E for violin and piano. Mahler: Three Songs. Jones: Five Limericks. Weinzweig: Concerto for piano and orchestra. 9:00 BABA RAM DAS AT VANCOUVER - Richard Alpert in the flesh, or on the tongue or , taped last summer in B.C. The first of three (maybe more) tapes on where he's been and where he's going, including on this one a description of making it all the way at Harvard and up from there. 1l:00 COMPLETELY HUNG - with Kid Levine with rock, rocking.

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22 7:00am SUDDEN MOONLIGHT, STARBFAM RIDING ITS cMN FLUTE, SOUL REVFALED IN THE SCRIBBLE, AN OUNCE OF LOOKS, AN INVISIBLE SEEING, HOPE: THE VANISHER BETOKENI NG ETERNITY 11:00 Commentary (R) 11:30 Soviet Press and Periodicals (R) 11:45 Theatre Review (R) 12 :00 Richard Alpert (R) »»» »»»»» »» »»»»»»»»»»»»»» » »» »»»»»»»»» »»)~»»») ) 5:3~ AlAN FREED'S MEMORY lANE - Fourteen original hit recordings by the Dells, Jerry Butler, The Flamingos, The Crests, Sonny Til and the Orioles, The , Jacks, The Five Satins, The Moonglows, The Teen , The Rays , Little j Anthony and the Imperials, Robert & Johnny, The Mellow Kings and the late great Jesse Belvin. A new reissue on Roulette. 6:15 THAT'S THE WAY IT IS - Milt Jackson, Teddy Edwards, Monty Alexander, Ray Brown, and Di ck Berk, recorded live at Shelly's Manne-Hole last August. New on Impulse. 7:00 COMMENTARY 7:30 NEW BOOKS - with P. J . Doyle, radio and television coordinator for the Seattle Public Library. 7:45 open 8:00 THE AFRICA PROGRAM - Dr. Simon Ottenberg, Anthro. professor at the U. W. 8:30 MUSIC OF THE BlACK CARIBS OF HONDURAS - a hybrid people originally from South America. Around 1661 Negroes from two shi pwrecked African slavers joined the Caribs on Honduras, the result being the people now know as the Black Caribs. 9:20 OPEN HOUR - for when we find something special that can 't wait. 10:25 BUJES FROM THE DEEP SOUTH - Volume 4 in Kent's reissue series contains material recorded in the early 1950's by Kent and Modern Records , which released only half of them at the time. Pinetop Slim, the Dixie Blues Boys, Leroy Simpson, Big Bill Dotson, Johnny Harris, and Arkansas Johnny Todd. 11:00 ETHERFAL FIZZ - Classical music-perhaps all night-with Nils Von Veh. 7 mJRSI)AY, APRIL 23

7:00am ONE FINGER RAISED WARNING ABOVE HIS GOLD EYEnlASSES-AND MOZART PlAYING GIDDY-NOTE AN HOUR ON THE MARXIST GRAMOPHONEr- 11:00 Commentary (R) 11:30 New Books (R) 11 :45 The Africa Program (R) »»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»») 3:30pm JENUFA - by Leos Janacek. This was the first work of the composer to become famous outside Czeckoslovakia. and it is still considered one of his masterpieces. Bohumil Gregor conducts the Prague National Theatre Chorus and Orchestra. 5:30 CAPTAIN BALTIC'S BOP STOP - Duke Ellington, with reverance-The Master. 7:00 COl11ENTARY 7:30 FIlM REVIEW - with Nancy Keith 7:45 ALLEN GINS BERT AT THE UW - the first half of the complete tape Allen made at the reading he gave' March 20. 1970. It w~s a f**k up that he was announced to be on campus at 8:30 that night and it just goes to show you some more wonderful UW organizing. cause over a thousand showed up to see him-more :than made it in the afternoon. 9:00 TOPAZ - The Mind's ~e Theatre. The Word Players in. a work written ~ially for them by Kenneth Lillquist. A diary of a love affair. set in splintered images for several voices. specifically those of light-­ Gil Jardine. Sherry Pocke11. Frlgar Walker. and of darkness-David Haight. and Ann Rivers. Technical production by Barry Singer. Produced and directed by Baird Searles. from KPFA and WBAI. New York. 9:30 VINTAGE JAZZ - Hal Sherlock presents old jazz and blues masters. 11:00 FUNDAHENTAL EXERCISES OF THE PITUITARY - with Robert Jaangard. and classical oriental music.

FRIDAY, APRIL 24

7 :OOam ALL BEr--LET THE KABALLAH STAR BE FOmiED OF PERFref CIRCLES IN A ROQi OF 1950 UNHAPPINESS WHERE MYRNA LOY GETS LOST 11:00 Commentary (R) 11:30 Film Review (R) 11:45 Topaz (R) 12:15 Allen Ginsberg (R) »»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»))))))»»»»»»»»»»»»»»») 3:30pm CIASSICAL CONCERT FOR MID-AFTERNOON 5:30 URBAN BIDES - with Dick Shuman 7:00 COMMENTARY 7:30 MUSIC OF PERU 8: 00 SMITTY'S OLD REX:ORDS - more songs of the good old days 9:00 DJ!MANTIUS AND BYRD - The st. John Passion and 'nle Prophecy of the Suffer­ ing and Death of Jesus Christ by Demantius. Music for voice and viols by Byrd. 10:20 MANCE LIPS~B - Vol. 5 - the 75 year old country blues guitariS.1;. in a new Arhoolie release playing "Black Gal". "Texas Blues". "Oh Baby You Don't Have To Go". "Blues in the Bottle". "Angel Child". ''Mance's Blues". ''Whiskey Blues". "Long Way from Tipperari". "Haunted House Blues". "I'm Looking for My JeS"8.s" and ''Mother Had a Sick Child~'. 11: 00... JUST JAZZ - with Herb Hannum 8 pATORDAY, APRIL 25

10:00am THE BARDO THODOL EXTENDS IN THE MILLIONS OF BIACK JEl..LO FOR EVERY DYING MECHANIC - WE HILL MAKE COLOSSAL MOVIES - 12:30 Commentary (R) ))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))) 6:00pm EVENING RAAG - Raga Kaushi Bhairavi - played on the sarod by Ali Akbar Kahn, tablist is Pandit Kishan Maharaj. 6:30 RIVERMOTH RADIO - with Al Benditt reading. 7:00 COMMENTARY 7:30 MUSIC OF THAIIAND 8:00 SCIENCE, LIBERTY AND PEACE - Ken Lund reading from Aldous Huxley. 8:30 PANDIT YESHWANTRAI PUROHIT - a great singer, perfonning Raga Malkauns (two expositions of this raga) and a Thumree in Raga Sohini. 9:15 "WHERE HAVE ALL THE LIBERALS GONE? - A search for the liberals in the current scene of political action leads Harry S. Ashmore, President of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, to find that liberal have been in the rearguard of politics indulging in reason rather that confrontation; functioning as critics; maintaining a code of conduct and a balance between individual ltberty and social justice. PartiCipating in the discussion are Donald McDonald, Stanley Sheinbaum, John Cogley, Harvey Wheeler and Judy Saltzman. From CSDI. 9:45 HONEnGER LE ROI DAVID - Symphonic Psalm in three acts. Maurice Abravanel conducts the Utah Symphony and University of Utah Chorus. Netania Davrati soprano; Martial Singher, narrator. 11:00 DOCTOR SPIDER - Science, Liberty, and Peace.

SUNDAY, APRIL 26

10:00am WE WILL BE A GREAT TANTRIC MOGUL & STARIFY A N&l HOLLYWOOD "vITTH OUR UNIMAGINABLE FLOP--GREAT PARANOIA!---with Dave MacDonald. 12:00 Canmentary (R) 12:30 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON - if you've never been Brown'ed, listen to Steve. Steve Brown with contemporary jazz. 3:3DIm BLUIDRASS - Tiny Freeman again, swollowing and hollering, from the dark and dingy cubicles at KRAB. 6:30 MOULDY FYGGE - Hot Club of Belgium doing ''When the Saints", "Bayou Blues" "Piano Rag Nik" , "The Onions", "Coal Cart Blues", "That Da-Da Strain", and "Some Day You'll Say OK", hosted by Val Golding. 7:00 CCIDiENTARY 7:30 ALDOUS HUXLEY - at Santa Barbara, 1959-the second of five addresses", given at the U C, on the Human Situation dealing with man's disruptive effects of the natural environment. 8:30 CONCERTOS - Vivaldi, for viola d'amore and mandolin: Soler, for organs. 9:30 THE HaNARD GILBERT BIDES SHaN - with blues r. all kinds. 1l:00 THE ROBOT NOR HOURS - now some people thin}( that classy Ray Serebrin is getting more than his fair share of attention from allover but especiall from the media what with his picture here there and every whichwhere, and his twisted tongue on late Sunday night with hours, multiple-hours yet, of hard-driving, hunched-over rock-and-roll music, and have gone so far as to claim that he is one of the most listened-to voices in Seattle radio, but don't you believe it. Ray Serebrin is simple, down-to-earth Ray--noth1ng really but Bizzarro added like Tabasco sauce, to the shy, and reserved, child-of-his-father personality we all (us KRABies) ~ow 9 • and love. And. besides. he can hardly canpete with the big DJ's --- half Seattle can't get KRAB. as everyone knows. so Ray is just Controversial Ray. really. a drop in your bucket o£ an ear. 1:30 ROS',olELL"S RUT - jazz into the early moming.

MONDA.Y, APRIL 2:1

7:00am THE FAMILY PRESENTS, YOUR CORPSE HOUR-ATTENDED BY MYRIAIB FLIES--WITH HYPEWlCTlVE CCI1MFlITATORS FREED AT THEIR MOST BESTIAL-SNEmIHG. CRITICAL. LITERARY-PERHAPS A CAPTIVE & LONE SQUARE. 11:00 Commentary (R) 11:30 Mouldy Fygge (R) 12: 00 Aldous Huxley (Repeated fraa Sunday) 1:00 Where Have All the Liberals Gone? (Repeated £raa Saturday) 1:30 Scifl'lce. Liberty and Peace (Repeated £l'CIIl Saturday) »»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»») 5: 30Jn SONGS AND Dl\NCES OF AlmU.USIA - '!he most subtle. the most developed and the most expressive popular art £01'& in Western !brope. 6:00 ProLENG- Trio £or Oboe, Bassoon and Piano, Sonata £or Clarinet and lassoon; and IllUsic fraD France for the Saxophone, a tape haa Hell Zealand. 6:45 TV REVIEW - with Greg Palaer 7:00 CCMMmrARY 7:30 WINE APPREX:IATION - .a.ett Watson with the Purple Avengers. 8:00 MASS FOR TOIlt\Y and THE GREEN QUEmi - an electronic rock ballet and an electronic b&ilet, respectively, both caaposed and realiztld by Pierre Henry. 8:30 DRUGS - Seattle Policeman A1 Wilding speaks to a gathering o£ business­ women about dangerous drugs, such &8 JU:rijuana and heroin. 9:30 SONGS AND Ilt\NCES OF SYRIA - Nahern SiIlon, tenor; 'l\d'ek Byad, ud soloist. 10:00 JFAN SHEPHERD - talking.

TUESIlt\Y, APRIL 28

7:00am I MYSELF SAW THE SUNFLCWER-MONKEIS OF THE M()()~BUT THEI SPEN'l' THEIR DFAR PLA.Y-MONEY ELEX:l'RICITY IN A HCJmW>E tAP~R1OOORD MDlJTE OF CARTOONY HIGH SOOND- 11:00 Commentary (R) 11:30 Wine Appreciation (R) 12:00 Jean Shepherd (R) 12 :45 Television Rrrl._ (R) 1:00 A1 Wilding (R) »»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»») 5:00pn E.VENlllZ RAAG - Raga Hemant, per£01'lled by IWch1l. Banerjee, sitarist. A Night raga-"Listen always with dhl lights, or pre£erably evfl'l in dark­ ness, and great expanses o£ verdant hills will Opfl'l be£ore your lII1nd's frYe. II 5: 30 TRADITIONAL FOLK Ilt\HCES OF JAPAN 6:15 THE WILD BJLL - an electronic c~ition inspired, in part, by an ancient SUmerian po_. av Morton Subotn1lc, and realized by h1a on a a,.chla Synthesizer. 7:00 ~ CCI1MENtARY "•i 7:30 THFATRE REVIEW ~ with Robert HorslfrY to 7 :45 SOVrE:r PRESS AND PERIOmCAlS - with Berkeley professor, William Mandel, from KPFA. 8 :00 COONTERPOINT (III) CBC - Beethoven: Quintet in E flat, Op. 4. Saners: Evocations. 9 : 00 EAEA RAM Ilf\S AT VANcoovm - Richard Alpert in the second tape fran B. C. last summet--more about his spiritual journey. 11:00 HANGll«1 OUT INFESTED WITBKRAB'S -with Kid Levine and his heavy scene of rock music.

7:00am mE MORNING SHew - with Phil Munger. Yea. it always was the morning shaw _e::ry single morning. and all those lines frca Television Was A Baby crawling Toward That Death Chamber by Allen Ginsberg. were just lines of poetry. solllething to feast your eyes on, old friend. 11:00 Caamentary (R) 11:)0 Tb.eatre Review (R) 11:45 Sovr.iet. Press and Periodicals (R) 12 : 00 Ri.chard Alpert (R) »}»» »»»»» »»»»»»»»»»))))))))))»»»»»»»»»»»»»»») 5:)Opn. OLD ROCK - Rich Cummings with songs we went to high-school with, so many g,ood things yoo. can't believe it. 6:)0 LEFTm FRCM EXiIAND with Michael Scarborough. 6:45 NIiH rooKS - with P. J. Doyle 7:00 C~Y 7:15 CONcmT REVIEW - with Dave Rowland 7:)0 LSrT'ERS AND THll«1S - KRAB has sane things to say 8:00 AFRI:CAN TIMES - hosted by Simon M'Pondo, a native of the Cameroon and llriean Literature instructor at the UW. 8:)0 OPEN HOOR 9:)0 ALLmI GINSBERG AT THE UW PART TWO .- the second hall of the all after­ noon song session with one of the best people we know. 11:00 EmEREAL FIZZ - late night classical music with Nils Von Vah.

I I KRAB FM U. s. Postage 9029 PAID Roosevelt N.E. Seattle, Way Washington Seattle, Wash. 98115 Permit 9566 Non-profit Organization