KRAB PROGRAM GUIDE

SUPER 200th ISSUE GOOD NEWS FROM GOOD OLD J ACK STRAW MEMORIAL FOUNDATION!!

FLASH !! UNION BLESSED WITH ISSUE! !

Program Director Michael Wiater and Mrs. Wiater proudly announce the arrival of a new regular program, Ezra Maximus Wiater. Raymond Serebrin tells us the tad is a Leo, with Libra rising (at 2, 4, and 5 a.m.)

FLASH !! M'PONDO GOING FOR BROKE!!

One of the entries i n t he upcoming Ohio State Awards; (for educa­ tional programming) will be · African Times, hosted by Simon M'Pondo and heard on KRAB Wednesday nights at 9:30.

FLASH!! MAN GOIN ' ROUND TAKIN ' NAMES !!

KRAB will be one of t he benefitees of the NORTHWEST SPECTAC­ ULAR ( sponsored by the Rainier Brewing Company and the Jazz Society) to be held October 3 & 4 in the Seattle Center Arena. Al­ ready s igned to appear are t he sextets of HILES DAVIS . CANNONBALL ADDERLEY and HERBIE HANCOCK and TIfE ROBERrA FLACK TRIO. Ticket i n­ formation and additions to the program will be forthcoming.

FLASH! ! KBOO MOVES UP IN WORLD!!

The Jack Straw Memorial Foundation's KBOO in Portland has recently increased its power, £rom 10 to 1000 watts. After years of strife and struggle, the station is finally being heard all over Portland and as much as 75 miles away!!

FLASH! ! KRAB TO AGAIN PRESENT CANDIDATES!!

As i n years past. KRAB will again present candidates in some of t he primary races, for which the election date is September 15. Candidates for the positions of U.S. Senator, U.S. House of Rep­ resentatives (Districts One and Seven only) and State house and senate positions in .Districts 32a and 32 b will be heard in the commentary time, 7:00 p.m. Sunday through Friday.

KRAB f.m. 107.7 Subscription rates are: 9029 ROOSEVELT WAY N.E. $25 per year, average SEATTLE, WASHINGTON 99115!! $15 per year', IlIidmum L~

NOTE: Apparently many tapes were made when played at the Penthouse in September 1965. Would anyone having any (or knowing someone who has) please contact Bob Friede ~t KRAB or EA9-4718

2 .'

I n 1962 t he Pacifica stations were putting out monthly progl'alT, gui des . so I figured He'd have t::J have one too. Gary made me buy one of those dwful Mul tilith machines for S400 which wou ld never work. "Once I get used to i t---take it apart a couple of times ," Margason said : "Once I do that there won't be any problem at all. " I had a vision of him coming to me in six months with a few stumps for fingers and saying " it just takes some gett ing used to ... " Lew Hi ll when he started KPFA in 1949 called his program gui~e " The Folio" which I thought was a Iittle presumptious - - - wi th all the images of Shakespearean plays in yellowed vellum , lettered by yel­ lowed monks in black and sooty monastaries . So we thought about a ti tIe for awhile , and finally I said "How about ' The KRAB Program Guide?' " I've only seen a copy of that first guide---it's in the long red ugly book up in the bookcase of KRAB . That aw ful guy from Bellev',e kept coming in and wanting something to do and the only way I <' ou 1 d get rid of him was to hand him all t he program guides to date (this was in 1964) and say "Find a binder . " He did . An d the only reason I saved all those guides was because I thought i n those f irst t ottery d~ys where KR AB had two listeners , four volunteers , and 12 subscribpys- - - I thought that for sure the station would be gone next week or npxt ro~ month or next year . And you know ' cause I keep tellin~ you so tha~ radio and the transmission of sound and all those wonderful- aHfu l words a nd musics: it ' s all the will- o- the- wi sp , just tomorrow a ssoky haze in the memory bank and little else . So there has to be sometlling concrete and saved on paper so that we have something t o show for al l that sweat and drudge of putt ing things out i n the aet her . I can ' t even remember what the first program guide looks l i ke . I ' m too far away from KRAB and i t and the me then to l ook at it- --being something like 2000 miles aw ay (in body) and 6 mi l lion miles away (in mi nd) . But I seem to remember I slugged i t out on that damn Remington that I paid S:1O for and that ultimately di ed a dishonorable death by by having a bri ck that Andy Ha ley sent me from the White House (he said) which was up on top of some tapes that I meant to audition up on the top shelf over the window , and that crazy Charlie ,Tackson who used to go up to the station every ni ght a f t er sign off to tape record at 15 / 16 ips all our Bulgarian and rhinese and Noh and gagaku and pl ay h is f l ute run around 'barefoot f or chrissakes : anyw ay , Charl i e Has doing h is flut e an~ e x e r ~isin g his toes and (~e told me this later and T don' t helieve him anymore than I belie'!e when he told me he got t ht' complete station collecti on of music Gn 15 sever, inch tapes) he sel i ,] :-' ,at the damn Wh i te House brick wit:o "the :.,e t al n:aq'le on it f e ll n' f 1 he top s helf and bonked t'".e carri age ~n '(-,Eo Fe:::ington so that a ' 1. "1 ~ - Il

Anyway , I thi nk the first prop-'am ':;',"i de was put out ()'1 ' ,J " " ,' : i"'l,,,r , and all the letters ran together like love lettey '~; in the r'.l~n , smudged ; and at the end there Has a little par agraph that ';,' ~ d that th i s was the s t art of a hopefully long series of progr am gui des s o that peo­ pl ~ could catch the wande r i ng Have and tell t he Ch ' in & Pi'pa Musi c

i " ,I I , P 1 i..." Wi l lie f ee lie , and both from the comm entaries of ,Jon

3",fO r " l (~ ", '.: :' ' . "", .cc.I , l ,"W Hi,l h:;rj wr i t t en e s s ays f or the VPtA Fo li" t o try to explain his CG(,,~Ppt of what radi o should be all about. I remember one night a bout 12 years ago r ooting t hrough s ome bl ack Lack cl os et at KPFA 's studi o on Sha tt~c~ in B pr ~ e l ey , reading the wo rds ci the man who started the wh ole l is tener- s upport thing i n this country .

3 I must have stayed there until four or five in the morning (my records had long run out, and I had put the station off the air) . I thought to myself that having essays in the guide was a great improvement over a simple dull listing of programs , and I thought to myself that if I ever started my own radio station (this was in 1958, min d you) that I wou ld goddam well put in some words and i deas, just to keep me alive and make us feel that there was some brain behind the grind-'em-up called KRAB - - -and not some secretary pumping programs into time slots because they fit. Of course I coul dn't for the life of me understand all them big words that Lew Hill used to explain the ... unh •.. the meaning of hi s ex­ periment . Even after he was long gone with the hosepipe pulled in at the little slit at the top of his driver' s window in his Ford, with all that stink pouring in- --not even then could any of us understand the long words and longer concepts he was trying to wind in our minds.

Loren zo

July 31 , 1970

You 're reading the 200th program guide published by KRAB . It ' s not exactly an historic document; IBM (or whoever it is that does that sort of thing) isn't beating our door down to get a copy for the time capsule . It isn ' t the most beautiful printing job in the world; chances are a page or two is upside down , or har d to read , or missing . And it doesn ' t contain a hybrid listing of the greatest programs of the last 2000 years of civilization ; it ' s the same s tuff as usual , essentially. 11aybe this guide is i mportant only i f you ' ve seem Program Guide Number One , J anuary 7 to January 13 , 1963 .• The s tation still oozes the romantic vision of Lorenzo sitting at the post office surplus desk , t apping away at his legendary Remington , bravely telling the twelve subscribers that "We now have twelve subscribers" like it doesn ' t reall y matter but it would be nice if four or five thousand more ap­ peared soon. The virgi nity ~'.< of that first guide sti l l ex- ists , even as it lies old [, :;, i . :~~pent in the l ong red ugly book up in the bookcase of KRJAti~~"7) Every now and then , somebody ,r -r-=~" , wanders in to make us feel lousy . Us ually all they ~ ~ /, \ have to do is say they haven ' t been getting their t / ,~ ' ~ guide , or that the engineer the night before played a 't(!4f 14, , Bobby She rman record when he should have been playing ~ 'I f,.,'/ 1k Concerto for Spoons and Tim- pani on Themes of Charles ': I ~" , , f the Ritz by Omar P.P. Dingus (brilliant young 0- ! r hio composer) or that the fire inspectors are coming up the s treet. But occasionally they say " Boy , you guys sure have come a long way. You had eglnnlngs , and now , well, you ' re est ablished." "Jeeper s ! " says the subscription Lady . "Established?" we say . "What the hell do you mean , Established?" But by that time the harm is done . We begin to feel l i ke the atomic scientists did wh en the Army t ook t heir experiments away and dropped t hem on the Japane se. So we hang around in the 'bat hroom for a while , soaki ng i n the atmosphere (and Go d knows what e l se ) and t hen we schedule a program guide that glows with our current humb l e mi ddles . An d , hopeful ly , in fifty years, everyone will s till be pr edict ing our i mmediate demise. We'll let you know all about it i n Pr ogr am Guide Number 1500 .

4 STAPH - KRAB

JACK STRAW MEMORIAL FOUNDATION BOA RD OF TRUSTE ES

Jon Gallant, President Dave Rowland, Vice President Bob Friede, Treasurer By ron Coney , Secretary Dave Calhoun (manager , KBOO) Mike Duffy Nancy Ke ith Gary Ma rgason Helen Norton John Prot hero

KRAB ST ATION MANA GER Greg Palmer PROGRAM DIRECTOR Michael Wi ater PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR Fern C3.d"s CHIEF £NGINEER II; ~ Steve Me nasian MUSIC DIRECTOR '. /'")­ Bob Friede SU NRISE SUPERVISOR Ph i l Munger EZRA SUPERVI SOR J oanne Wiater EZRA Ezra MCl Xim\ls Wiater f'P IN TIN;; Gary l~ar gason PRINTF.R ' S DEVILS Seth Siega l Bill Seymour Lorna Dawson ANN OU NCER ENGINEERS Steve Putnam , Mike Henryson , Steve Hunt, Kevin Brechner , J im Conrad , Bill Seymour , others GUI DE OVERSEER Bi 11 Seymour GUIDE LAYOUT Lorna Daws on BOOKEEPING- SUBSCRIPTION LADY C. Ralph Palmer ENGINEERING CONSULTANT Ben DaHson, Jamie DaHson CUDGELS , GUNNE LS & FLAN NELS Tiny Freeman LO BBY DISPLAY Ray 'POOPOODINGUS ' Serebrin LEGAL RELIE F Haley , Bader ; and Potts PERSONNEL Ben F. Waple ALL OF THE BE LOW: wat.s onj one sSlII i "[h ~lla :1chu': hur 1" h",r l'::lckgarf ias j angaardHel't zshurmanhannum sa leba I ti edoy les cdr bo r'ollghbrowngoldingTIlacdonaldparkerrosHe ll.st Lcklel' s pringm' pondohallson j aJT.e sonhogueharr.linber.d.i tt:H~ ' Stg i.lbe:ctr,lendozakrasn-­ o'Ns kygo()dma;:-,di lgardho;3n'2rkrcmho ,o; ncrJ"o·,,·leypoHleygammon and spi nach . NOTE : All of t he r egular programs on the fiT!a l day of this g t;. ide (Wedne sday, Sep tember 2) ha v,s been t"mporarily suspe"ded. Instead , t he cay ,,,ill be de'Joted t o replaying SGme of t he progrdms frOT.1 tl:e f irst guide published by KRt\B , ,J anuary 7 to 13 , 1 96:, . At 11 p. m, , ol d and nev1 st:3.tion felk will gather in s t ud io L to answer cal l ed­ in ques tions and generally talk about KRAB , their favorite s ubj ect . Programmi ng of Wednesday, Sev~e mber 2 , was r esearched 20d scheduled by Fern '2ades , Hho ',las ten y ea~n s old wh2n "'::he progr ams ','ere f iro: t ai!'ec . And that, folks , i s one of the thi.ngs I-]e like to SE,e a(t)ound her,,, •

THURSDAY ,_ AUGUST 2 0

7 : 00 am THE MORNIN G SH OW - "lith Phil Munger or equiv. 11 : 00 Commentary (R) 11 : 30 Letter From England (R) 11 : 45 The Captive Child ( R)

3 : 30 pm THE ETHI CS OF MEDICINE - A panel dis cussion among me di cal doct ors, and CSDI staff members . This i s the f i rst in :3. series of three programs on The Revolution in Biology f rom the Center for the Study of Democratic Ins titutions . 4 :15 PE RGO LESI: STABAT MATER - Lorin Maazel conducting Evelyn Lear and Christa Ludwig . (Philips) 5 : 00 ON REVOLUTION - The late Scott Buchanan, one time dean of St . John ' s College , feels thaL we may well be at a period in our history "hen jailgoing as practiced in India and South AlBel'ica becomes a necessary way of a f firming one ' s faith in our democratic institutions . (CSD1) 6 : 0 0 THE EVENING RAAG - Nazakat Ali and Salamat Ali , s inging , Ustad Allah Dutta, tabla, and s arangi by Ustad Zahoori Khan . Raag Dabari and Raag Kalavati . Followed by Bismillah Khan and V. G. Jog with Raag Chandrakauns . COdeon) 1 : 00 COMMENTARY 7: 30 ROBERT BURCH - Clari net and Saxophone Quartets . (NZBC) 8 : 00 THE BEGATTING Of THE PRESIDENT - A sati rical look at the rise of the New Nixon ( over the Old Johnson and the Nude Humphel'Y) narr·ated by Orson Welle:; . 8 : 30 WR I TI NG A HISTORY Of SEATTLE - Professor Roger Sale with notes and details on where this old Queen Ci ty came from . 9 : 00 LE FT PRE SS REVIEW - with frank Krasnowsky 9 : 30 CLASS IC JAZZ - Classic Mike tell ing it like it was . He reve dls why he us ed an uncouth expletive in reference to a religious leader some weekb past . 10 :45 OPEN TIME - for calling in of better uncouth expletives 11 :00 FUNDAMEN TAL EXERCISES Of THE PI TUI TA RY - Robert Jangaard , with music for your glands--getting i t together from t he third world.

f RIDAY, AUGUST 21

7 : 00 am THE MORNING SHOW

6 11:00 Commentary (R) 11 :30 History of Seattle (R) 12:00 Left Press (R) '

3:30 pm LIFE, IlY ZENO - A story of prison life read by P. J. Doyle. 4:00 THOMAS TOMKINS - MADRIGALS 4:30 USEFUL BOOKS - Joanne Wiater, back after the birth of the Wiater son , Ezra Maximus, to read from "Education and the Significance of Life" by Krishnamurti. 5:00 FRIDAY AFTERNOON MUSIC - with Ro bert Garfias 7 :00 COMMENTARY Luis lC,amDoa 7:30 fROM THE COURT OF LOUIS XiV - works by F. Couperin, S. de­ Brossard, Naudot, and LeClair . (DGG Archive) 8: 15 NATIONAL ORGANI ZATION FOR WOt1EN - Karen i'1adsen and Joy Conrad talking about the August 26th program for "Woman's Day" • 8:50 FREEDOM OF CHOICE: A WO MAN'S WORLD - Marriage Revisited. Dr. Gail Futney Fullerton, author and professor of sociology at San Jose State College, delivered this talk to an audience at the Uni versi ty of California Medical Center in San Fran­ cis co. Dr. Fullerton has written four books: "The Normal Neurosis", "The Adjusted American", " Never l'iarry for Love", and "Marriage and the Mass Societies". (Pacifica) 10:00 JOHN KNOWLES READING - from, "A Separate Peace" WILLIAM STYRON READING - from "Lie Down in Darkness" ( CHS ) 11:00 BUMBLING HITH BALTIC - Also, stumbling , mumbling, and occa­ sionally grumbling with Baltic. Audio wizardry by Steve Putnam.

SATURDAf, AUGUST 22

10:00 am THE SATURDAY MORNING SHOW - Sperry Goodman plays classical. 11:45 Fu-Manchu #15 (R) 12:30 Commentary (R)

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4:00 pm LIVE BLUEGRASS - A monthly frolic behind the barn with Tiny Freeman and his guests. 6:00 THE EVENING RAAG - A concert of various presentations, by D. R. Parvatikar and singers Nandor Prasad, Bala Sarasvati, Jayammal Gdneshan, P. R. Balasubrahinanyam. (Unesco collect) 6:30 TOOTHPICK, LISBON AND THE ORCAS ISLANDS - Contemporary poetry wi th Michael Wiater. Featuring "When the Sun Tries to Go On" by Kenneth Koch (Black Span'ow); "AniIlJde" by W. S. t·lerwin (Kayak); and "Guillevic" translated by Teu Savor'y in the Unicorn French Series. 7:00 MUSIC FOR MAXIMILLIAN - sounds of the Renaissance. (Angel) 8: 00 MUS IQ UE KABRE 8:30 OPEN HOUR 3:30 URBAN BLUES - Tonight: the Swinetone Sound. 11:00 BLUE GRASS - Tiny Freeman picking his favorite things.

7 SUNDAY , AUGUST 23

10:00 am A CHILD ' S GARDEN OF VEGETABLES - Dick Parker discusses whether turnips and spinach are either possible or necessary or both. 11:45 Fu-Manchu #16 (R) 12:00 AVANT GARDE TROMBONE STUDIO CONCERT - featuring Stuart Dempter on the trombone and works by Larry Austin, John Cage , Robert Erickson, Luciano lJerio, Pauline Oliveros , Elizabeth Harris , and Barney Childs . 2 : 00 pm JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTlORNOON - The deer -travels with the coyote for fear of the snake . 5:00 ALBION DOO - WAH - with Cat Mother and the all- night newsboys. 5 : 40 WILDERNESS AS A WAY OF LIFE - Karl Schwenke and Lou Hartman talk with Fred and Elaine Meader about the seven years they spent in the Alaskan wilderness 50 miles from all other human beings. (Pacifica) 6 :30 THE MOULDY FYGGE--Bunk Johnson III - Just a Little While/You Tell Me Your Dream/Arkansas Blues/when I Move to the Sky/ God ' s Amazing Grace/Jada/Moose March/Closer Wk 7:00 COMMENTARY 7:30 SHINTO MUSIC - the music of Japan (Unesco V) 8:15 THE TIGER CAGiS OF CON SON - A comprehensive report on con­ ditions at Con Son Prison, South Vietnam, including an in-­ terview with Don Luce of the National Council of Churches . Recorded in Saigon in July , 1970, by Pacifica correspondant Judy Coburn. 9:30 THE COUNTRY BLUES - every which way with John West. 11:00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS - starring Helmut Dantine , Lionel Atwill , Percy Helton, Farley Granger's kid brother (Fay Wray) and Raymond Bizarro in "The Pride of the Sonics! " 1: 30 am ROSWELL ' S RUT - Jazz before sunrise with Mr. Popsickle.

MONDAY, AUGUST 24

7:00 am THE MORNING SHOW 11:00 Commentary (R) 11:30 Tiger Cages uf Con Son (R)

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5:30 pm TENANT VERSUS LANDLORD - A documentar-y produced and narrated by KPFA ' s Don Porshe. It includes members of the Berkeley Tenants' Union , a widow who was evicted from her apartment, the owner of a real estate management firm and quotations from a book called "How to Get Rich in Real Estate".

8 6 : 35 THOMAS WEELKES - MADRIGALS . 7: 00 COMMENTARY 7 : 30 WINE APPRECIATION - with Emmett Watson, as smooth as his subject, at 12%. 8:00 NOSTALGIC SYRUP - Davey Jones knows how to pay back those fans of his and the old time music of swing. 9:00 DANIEL DEfOE' S MOLL FLANDEkS - read by Siobhan 11(:1<",ooa. (Caecimon) 9:45 THE SHADOW OF FU- MANCHU - based on the ~to ri cs by Sax Rohmer . ChdPter 17. 10 ; 00 JI:AN SHEPHERD - from WOR , in Ne;! York Ci ty , doing his thing, like he does sometimes in PlayLoy , but always , every Monday night on KRAB. 10 : 45 OPEN TIME; 11 : 00 JON GALLANT - Late night classical music .

TUESD AY, AUGUST 25

7:00 am THE MORNING SHOW 11 :00 Commentary ( R) 11 : 30 Wine Appreciation ( R) 12 : 00 J ean Shepherd (R) [J [J[J[ J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[J[ J[J[J[J[J

5 : 30 pm THE RADIO LETTERS - Lorenzo Milam reads from letters sent to WEAF (New York) and other Bell Telephone stations wnen they were conducting experiments in "the transmission of music and talk ••• 1920 - 1923 . Accompanied by music from Folkways Phono Cylinders Volland 2 . From "The WEAF Experiment"by BannIn-g-:- From KTAO. 6 :00 THE EVENING RAAG - Music from South India . The Nagasvaram , similar to the Shenai , played by Karukurichi . (Odeon) And Bismillah Khan with Raga Kedara , with V. G. Tog . 7: 00 COMMENTARY Toni Ha:;.ker 7:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIOD ICALS - with Professor William Man del from Berkeley. (Pacifica) 7:45 OPEN TIME 8:00 RADIO - NEDERLAND CONCERT - Hans Henkemans : Concerto for violin and orchestra. 8: 30 JOHN OGDON - ME SS IAEN : "Vingt Regards sur L' enfant Jesus ." ( Argo ) 10 : 00 MARGE PIERCY: POEMS - Six poems by Marge Piercy . A collection of her work , Breaking Camp, was published in 1968 by Wesleyan . Among~~themes-running through these poems are the irrationality and inhumanity of American institutions, and the urgent need to destroy and rebuild-­ to create a society based on human needs and human values : " •• • where people work/To make and do things necessary and good/Where work is real as bread and babies and trees and parks/And you would blossom slowly/And ripen into sound fruit . " The poems are: " The Peaceable Kingdom ' Half Past Horne' Community", "The Death of the Small Commune", "The Mor ning Half- Life Blues", and "The Curse of the Earth Magician on a Metal Land". From Radio Free People .

9 10:20 JOHN JACKSON IN EUROPE - recorded in Stuttgart in 1969 , the Virginia blues/folk guitarist plays and sings like back in Fairfax, which i s very well. 11 :00 GET YOUR HEART RIGH T - Freedom Jazz with Jay Stickler.

WED NESDAY , AUGUST 26

7 :00 am THE MORNING SH OW 11 :00 Commentary (R) 11 : 30 So viet Press (R) %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%% %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%

5 : 35 pm THE BEST OF RONNI E HAWKIN S - before THE BAN D met up with Bob Dylan , they spent years playing with Ronnie Hawkins . 6 :00 GRE ASY KID STUFF - Terry Spring with golden oldie blasts from the past ( his) . 7 :00 C0t1MENTA RY 7:30 NEW BOOKS - with P. J . Doyle. 7: 45 ANTHOLOGIE DE LA MUSIQUE DU TCHAD ( Ocora). Note: This evening will feature three s eparate selections from the various corners of the Chad domain in Africa. 8 :00 THE AFRICA PROGRAM - with Simon M' Pondo, presenting the point of view of Africa. 8: 30 CHAD--II . 9 : 30 THE SHADOW OF FU - MANC HU - based on the stories by Sax Rohmer. Chapter 18. 10 :00 CHAD --III. 10 :30 FROM THE GARDEN OF PARADISE - Max Hartstein and the 25 th Century Ensemble bring massage from the positive universe located just outside Lo s Gatos California where, on KTAO , they do a weekly thing of which this program is one wavicle, 11 : 00 WODENSNAHTS - Bunt and run with David 11acDonald.

7 : 00 am THE MORNING SHOW 11 :00 Commentary (R) 11 : 30 The Africa Program (R)

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3 : 30 pm ' S GROO VIEST 17 ORIGINAL HITS! - Oti s Red­ ding ' s home-town idol in classic renditions of such titles as "Hey ! Hey ! Hey! Hey !", "Heeby- Jeebies", and " Boo Hoo Hoo Hoo ". ( Specialty :>113 ) 4:10 THERE USED TO BE NEGROES - Milton Mayer, writer, lecturer , and teacher , evaluates " the long overdue revolution now in the hands of young America". From CSD I.

10 4: 55 DESSAU - "In Memori am Bertol t Brecht" and " Bach Variat i ons" (Phi lips ) 5 :30 CAPTAIN BALTIC ' S BOP STOP - bop jazz , which was pre- free . 7 : 00 COMMENTARY 7 : 30 fILM REVIEW - with Peter Ho gue, back from Europe . 7:45 KONZERTE f OR 3 CEMB ALI - J . S. Bach . (Telefunken) 8 : 35 LIBERMANISM AND SOC IALI SM - Pavel Eisler talks about recent developments in the system of planning and management in Czechoslovakia , his native country . From CSDI . 9 : 30 VINTA GE JAZZ - with Hal Sherl o ck . 11 : 00 fUNDAMENTAL EXERCISES Of THE PITUITARY - Rob ert Jangaard wi t h music for you and your gland . 1-1 andala :

FRIDAY , AUGUST 28

7 : 00 am THE MORN I NG SHOW 11 :00 Commentary (R) 11 : 30 f ilm Review (R)

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3 : 30 LIFE , BY ZENO - read by P. J . Doyle . 4 :00 FRED McDOW ELL AND HIS BLUES BOYS - Mississippi fred meets Mike Russo ( 2nd guitar), John Kahn (bass) , and Bob J ones (drums ) in Berkeley in his latest record. 4:40 WOMEN IN THE UNIVERSITIES - Marijean Suelzle , a graduate student in Sociology at UCB and Vice President of the Women ' s Sociology Caucus there, speaking at the t each- in . Some statistics are included concerning how it is in t he academic world for women. ( Pacifica) 5 :00 fRIDAY AfTERNOON MUSIC - with Ro bert Garfias . 7 :00 COMMENTARY t'rank Kr asnowsky 7 :30 MUSIC OF PERU ( Oc ora) 8 :20 DON JU AN .•• THE SO RCERER - Theodore Roszak talks wi til Carlos Casteneda , author of " The Teachings of Den Juan", a book dealing with the author ' s experiene to a Yaqui indian sorcerer. Mr . Casteneda discusses his experience with hallucinogenic substances which he used under the guidance of his teacher , Don Juan . From the KRA B Archives . 9 : 00 OL IVE R MESSIAEN : ORGELWERKE ( AMS) 10: 30 DISSENT IN ACTION - Ramsey Clark , former Attorney- General of the USA. ( CSDI) 11 :00 JUST JAZZ - Architectural wonders with Herb Hannum .

II SATU",DAY, AUGUST 29

10 : 00 am THE SATURDAY MORNING SHOW - with Sperry Goodman 11 : 45 Fu - Manchu #17 ( R) 12:30 Commentary ( R)

@@@@@@G@@@@@@@@ @@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ b : OO pm THE EVENING RAAG - vina ragas : Nata , Goula, Ar abhi , Vara li , Sri - South Indian. ( Explorer ) 6:30 "IVERMOTH RADIO - with Al Benditt 7 : 00 LUTOSLAHSKI - Co ncert o for Orches tra , Funeral Mus ic, Veneti an Games . ( Ph i lips ) 8 : 00 MUS IQUE FALl 8 : 30 OPEN HOUR 9 : 30 URBAN BLUES - with the incr edible Dick Shurman. 11 : 00 BLUE GRASS - Tiny Freeman ' s solution to the loneliest night o f= tl-}e week.

SUNDAY , AUGUST 30

10 : 00 am A CHILD ' S GARDEN OF VE GETABLE S - wi th Dick Parker mulching away untiL .. 11 :45 Fu- Manchu #1 8 (R) 12 : 00 THOMAS MORLEY - MADRIGALS 12 : 30 JAPANESE KOTO ORCHESTRA - Five Kotos, Ho tek i , Shamisen, and Shakuhachi, with the Koto En semble of t he Ikuta school. Played by the masters of Meian - ryu, Kimpu - ryu , Tozan- ryu , and Kikusui-ryu, at Darumaden of Nanzenj i and t1eianj i. (L'Irichord) 1 : 1 5 JOHN HILBYE - MADRIGALS 2 : 00 JA'l,Z FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON - Transparent as glass, but a lot tougher . 5 : 00 MUSIC OF PERU (Folkways ) 5 : 4 5 FOLK TALES AND LE GEN DS OF ETHI OPIA - told by Christine Price . (CMS) 6 : 30 THE MOULDY FYGGE - THE GOOFUS FIVE - Farewell Bl/Sister Kate/Wang Wang Bl/G rand & Glorius Feeling/Clementine/Nothing Does It Like It/I Left My Sugar Standing In Rain 7 : 00 COMMENTARY 7 : 30 MUSIQUE TRADITIONNELLE DU JAPAN - Shakuhachi , Koto , Kokyukoto. (Disques Vogue ) 8 : 30 ARTS AND ARTISTS IN THE CAMEROON - with Paul Gebauer , recorded at the Henry Gallery by Nancy Lipsett, March 6 , 1970 . 9 : 30 KING BI SCU I T TIME - Country blues with bashful Robert West No . 2 , a member of the Magnolia Bluff Blues Band . 11 : 00 THE ROB OT NOR HOURS - with Raymond Serebrin carrying on effervescently until he stumbles into . • • 1:15am RO SWELL ' S RUT - featuring the flowers, leaves , stems , and seeds of jazz .

12 MONDAY, AUGUST 31

7:00 am THE MORNING SHOW 11:00 Commentary (R) 11 :30 Don Juan (Repeated from Friday) 12:10 Arts and Artists in the Cameroon (R)

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5:30 pm EXPEDITION LOTUS - to Cachemire. (Disques BAM) 6:00 RELIGIOUS SONGS G DRUMS IN THE BAHAMAS (Folkways) 6:35 THOMAS BATESON - 11ADRIGALS - The Randolph Singers. 7:00 C011MENTARY 7:30 WINE APPRECIATION - Emmett Watson, blushing at the mouth. 8:00 SMITTY'S OLD RECORDS - just like it says. 9:00 MADE OF ONE PIECE - with David Mendoza. A look at the art scene from one piont of view. 9: 30 OPEN TIME 9:45 THE SHADOW OF FU- MANCHU - based on the stories by Sax Rohmer. Chapter 19. (NOTE: This listing for Fu-t1anchu is entirely fictitious. Michael Wiater is losing his grip.) A chink in our armour. While endevering to decipher a cryptic message from Nayland Smith to Dr. Petrie, concern­ ing the mysterious disappearance of Inspector Weymouth, Fu­ Manchu discovers the apparent aimlessness of their search. Chuckling inwardly, he imagines them cowering in a corner holding each other's hands, and shivering violently, as he approaches their helpless forms holding a CHINESE CLEAVER. His reverie is snapped by ... 10 : 00 JEAN SHEPHERD 10:45 CAO NGOC PHUONG - a South Vietnam Buddhist, speaking at the University Unitarian Church, 3/1/70.

TUESDAY 2 SEPTEMBER 1

7:00 am THE MORNING SHOW 11 :00 Commentary (R) 11 :30 Wine Appreciation (R) 12:00 Jean Shepherd (R) 12:45 Made of One Piece ( R)

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5:30 pm LETTERS AND THINGS - we reSpond 6:00 THE EVEN ING RAN; - Vilayet Khan with Ragas J hinjhoti, suha Sugrai, Thu,mr'ee Piloo. 7:00 CO~jMENTARY Mary :::lleD McCaffree 7:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PEoRIODICALS - with Professor William i~andel. (Pacifica) 7:45 OPE N THiE 8:00 RA DIO-NEDERLAND CONCERT: Marius Flothuis: Far.tasy for Harp and Orchestra; Guillaume Landr'e: Variazioni sensa tema.

13 8 : 30 ALIENATION AND FREEDOM - Richard Lichtman, philos opher, pres ents an inter pretation of Marx diff erent f r om thos e usually held. From CSDI. 9 : 35 LES CORPS GLORIEUX - Oliver Me ssia en Poevvre d ' orgue i n ter p rete par l ' auteur au grand orgue de l ' egl i s e de l a Tr inite . ( Ducr etet- Thomson ) 11 : 00 GET YOUR HE ART RIGHT - with J a z zy Jay , Ornette Co leman's n umber one f an in Seattle .

WEWE~:DA Y , SEPTEr'lE ER 2

3 : 00 am v;U SIC FOR OPE N AIR : Fo ,-,r Me xi ca;] Ha r iachi ; Bartok , Out of Do ors ; Blac her , Thir te cc n Ways .. ,f LCl o~ in g a t a Bl ack:Ji r d ; Bdli , Le go ng 11us lc . 10 : 1 5 CHAMBER HUS I C OF fC AYDN . 10 : 40 MUSI C OF THE RUS SIAN M ID D~ E EAST : ~o lkway s re ~o r d in g . 11 : 15 Sh i ::ley Jackso n r e a ds f Y'om h e r well - known t a :Le " ThE' ',ottery" 11 : LiO MU SIC OF THE SC ARL ATTI S : works of Ales s andro and Dominico . 1 : 05 pm MU SIC OF STRAVIN SK Y. 1 : 35 Carl Sandbur", co ings Flatrock Bal lads . 2 : 2 5 'lO X HUH ANA: ':' r adj.ti cna l ar.d CJ. ass ical i1usi c of I nc ~ a ; Wolf , Spanis::hes Li ede rbllch ; Dowlan d , Ayres f o r fO Ul ' Vo i ces ; Tw o songs of W e~ t J ava . 4 : 2:: SLUE S : Li ttle By'o ther '1 ontgome ry. 5 :1 0 MliS'IC FOR STRINGS : Tar Tini , Sinfoni a Pas t orale ff' ;. .l .. : r. and Stri nt;s ; Telemann , Co n certo i n G for v iol a ; Lobos , Bachianas Br asile i r",oO No 7 f or Strings ; .V1: :,11.' ,::1 Ev," n ing Ra ga . 6 : 35 '!us::' c o f tr.e Bayanih c. n Ph .i l lipir,e Dance CO ;;l par:} . 7 : 10 FOETRY: Ge orge S": '.3.rbuck ( Yale Younger' Poe1.) . ; : 35 C6N'TEMP ORARY MUSIC : We bern , Concert o f or n i ne i] .nenb ; Hindemi th , Clarinet Con c erto ; Schoe nbe rg , Be glei : '.';;gs ­ musik ; Varese, Poeme Ele c r ron iq·.le . 8:30 fOLK SONGS OF SUSSEX , s ung by Tony ~} a le s . 9 : L 5 i1 US IC FOR 'WIN DS: Taffane 2. , Wo odw i. nd Quinte t ; I n d i o; : Sh ana i s olo by Bis :nilla Khan Mispa thll rnuri. 10 : :.0 !1USI C OF ;)EATH - Mar, l er, Ki nde l'toter.lieder ; Fco, s , Parabl" o f Death. 11:10 '.'AL KI"G AB OUT KRAB

14 THE SECOND COMING or SOPH IA L. FAHS

We moved on July fourth . Out of the high risk, no insurence, doorbell- ringing- at-four a.m. Central Area, out to the District, ,.. h ere everybody loves everybody else. Except the merchcm1:s.. 1'bey hate the street people, and the street people hate the police cm.~ the police hat:e everybody and everybody h ates t he Kin~1:on 'Frio and litter. We I!ilOved out next: to a cathedral, a big, Catholic .. colored spot:lights on the spire type of place. A red bride:, I!Inligb1ty bulwark f eaturing the twel ve stations of the cross in lifelike plaster of paris, where small candles are ten cents and Jlarge c811ldles are a dollar and! everything else is TAKE ONE, THEY ' P.E !'"REE .. including God. "They gyp you OD the candles," one of the prayerful CCIIdinlIed JlIlID!r­ murs . "'Jl'hey dol!lSe them out iLf1::er you leave anc: then sell fiem again." "What: can we as individuals do?" we answer, like we abirlays. do. "Pray," says t:he con£irmed, looking as skyward as an oIld IIIBaD. on his knees C811l db without cracking his neck. "You new 1:0 the parish?" he asks, returning to Earth. "WElll , we're not: really Catholics," we reply. "We're jl'lS1t :tcooki.Dig around." We co11l>Sider telling him about Liberal Re ligious liJi!IIi1tCl!Fian Youth, a nd J esus the Carpenter's Son, and learninp; about Imddha .im! Second Grade Stmday school (learning just enough, in fact.. "liD 51tH' memories in us of paste and crepe paper whenever Eastern ReJLig:i())iIJ is mentioned)!, we consider t e lling him, but we don 't. becaws:e lite doesn't l ook like the type who would appreciate the hight ~ of a Liberal Religious Youth . " This i=a b e autiful cathedral." he says, his voice bo~ o ff the beaurt:iful walls . " Largest one this s i de of the freeway . Y'see that: stained g lass window? It's 13 feet wide. Donated by some r:iclit lady in 19 and 28." "We've seen Chartres," we reply, attempting our own skyward l.fM),k. "Wlherezat?" he asks . "Across town," we reply. He smil es knowingly, and dismisses us WJitr JiJJ a nod o f his head, a nod he never pulls out of. So we moved in and set up a badminton court in the back yard CI1itd lost four shuttlecocks in twenty minutes and after two days we dian ' t even not:ice the largest cathedral this side of the freeway rightr lilex1t door. And that: bothered us. Does t he french peasant who lives lilext door 1rO Chartres know' it's there anymore? - Grep; PaJ!mer'

IS KRAB FM u. S. P0stage PAID 9029 Roosevelt Way NE Seattle, Washington Seattle, Wash . 98115 Permi t 9566 Non-profit Organization

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