KRAB PROGRAM GUIDE NUMBER TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY FOUR

Published by the Jack Straw Memorial Foundation, a non-profit, ~ax-exempt, public organization solely designed to operate non-commercial, listener­ supported radio stations, of which KRAB is one, and KBOO (Portland) the other.

This program guide, containing program listings for the month of March, 1972, is not sold, it is Biven, free of charge, to the subscribers and supporters of KRAB. We emphasize the fact that those who subscribe aren't paying for the program guide, but paying for KRAB.

Subscription rates to KRAB are $25.00 average yearly, $15.00 minimum yearly, or $5.00 for four months. Your contribution or subscription is tax-deductible; checks and money orders should be made out to the Jack Straw Memorial Foundation.

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$40 full page $20 half page $10 quarter page $7.50 eighth page or $5 if camera ready There is an extra charge if processing of photographs is required. You don't have to be a subscriber to purchase an ad in the guide; if you'd like futther information please call us. If an ad in KRAB leads you to a particular mer­ chant or service, we'd appreciate it if you'd let them know how you came to be there. Thanx.

KRAB needs an accountant so if you're an accountant with spare time perhaps you'd care to volunteer to help us out occasionally. We can always use volun­ teers for engineering, announcing and numerous other things so if you'd like to help us out please give us a call. Another thing we need is old magazines (esp. the N.Y. Times Book Review ana art and music periodicals) that we can chop up to provide pictures for the program guide. STAFF LIST A STATEME NT BY GARY MARGA SON, NEW STATI ON MANAGER M.H. Bader Legal Relief Byron Coney Legal Relief Many subscribers have requested a statement Alis ter Conway Pub lic Affai rs Di rector from the board of trustees expl aining the Benjamin Dawson Engineering Director JSMF dismissal of Greg Palmer as manager of KRAB. Nila File Assistant Manager Greg has apparently circulated a letter saying Robert Friede Musi c Director he was dis charged because he "fai led ;;0 execute Laura Glauberman Special Projects Assistant my duties as station manager. " It is fair to Marcus Kuni an Special Projects Director say that the board has not come up with a state­ Linera Lucas Office Clerk ment which fully exp lains its action. However , Gary Margason Stat ion Manager relevant discus sion in t he minutes of the last Steve Menasian Chief Engineer meeting contains the phrase "I rreconci lab Ie con­ Dar yl Moegling Maintenance flict of personali ties" (between the board and Phil Munger Assistant Music Director Greg) • Pi a Pe rni ci aro Production Manager Until an official statement may be made, here is Jamie Smi th Office Clerk my own view: Gr eg 's statements, on the whole , Michael Wiater Program Director would not be seriously refuted by the board ex­ cept on two points. The first is the obvious discrepancy in the reasons for discharge . Next, VOLUNTEERS it should be explained that the "secret meeting" was not an official board meeting. Finally , in Norm Alquist, Bonnie Balboni , Captain Baltic, spi te of events, members of the board feel af­ Phil Bannon , Greg Br own , Steve Brown , John fection for Greg and gratitude for the dedica­ Burke, Cliff Butler, Barbara Castleman, Dan tl.on and effectiveness of his efforts in most Cook , John Daily, Mike Duffy, Jim Duncan, areas. Randy Francisco , Tiny Freeman, Robert Garfias , John Ge rke, Tom Gibbons , Bruce Gordon, George Green , Bob Gwynne, Ronald Hainline, Marilyn Hamlin, Bill Hammersla, Ralph Hammond , Herb Hannum, Steve Hunt , Judi Hunter, Dick Jameson, Raymond Jarvi , Robert Kauffman, Stan Keen , N ~ncy Keith , Frank Krasnowsky , Steve Lawson , Marty Lewis, Liza, Lindsay MacDonald, Randy McCarty , Ch ris McNerney , David Meltzer, Col ­ ette Menasian, Don Mills , Jim Mish'al ani, White Noise , Helen Norton , Byron O' Hashi, Simon Ot t enberg, Lim Chew- Pah , Dick Par ker , Wrn.T.Wiley Pia Perniciaro, John Prothero, Steve Putnam, Gordon Rain , Chuck Reinch, Roswell, Larry « Rouch , Roge r Sale , Ali San, Michael Scar­ borough , Raymond Serebrin , George Shangrow , Al She rlock , Dick Shurman, Earl Smith, Dean RObt · Arneson . Smokoff , Stoney, John Tillson , Bill Todd, Amy Tuss, David Utevsky, John Wasilavsky, Barry West, Joanne Wiater, Phil Williams , Tim Wire, Jan Woods, Brian Zerr, J oanne Harris The Manolides Gallery There ha~ been a change in the by- laws of the Jack Straw Memori al Foundation whi ch affects the way members of the boar d of dir ectors are 109 s.Main,Seattle selected. Copies will be made avai l able to anyone interested. MORNING MUSIC SCHEDULE - MARCH 197 2 Hosted by Phil Munger

Wed nesday. March 1 A survey of KRAB's Mar ch music calendar Thursday . March 2 7:00 Music from the Midd l e Ages 9 :00 Memorable recordings from the 1920 ' s Friday. March 3 Songs and legends of love and forgiveness Mo nday . Ma r ch 6 More Lieder from the 18th and 19th centuries Tuesday . March 7 A musical biography of the life and times of Henry Purcell Wednesday. March 8 Mexican and Central American stories and songs Th urs day. March 9 7: 00 Stories and songs of nature spi ri ts from the American Indians 9:00 Memorab l e recordings from the 1930 ' s Friday. Mar ch 10 Greeting songs and legends of visitors from around the world Monday . March 13 Classical and Romantic diversion Tuesday. March 14 7:00 Songs from Central Europe and the Balkans 9:00 Little-known wo r ks of Beethoven Wednesday . March 15 Music. poetry and wisdom of the Sufis Thursday. March 16 7: 00 ~lusi c from the Mi ddle Ages 9:00 Memorable recordings of the 1940 's Friday. March 17 A farewell to winter - music of the far north Mo nday. March 20 Spring begins at 7:22 a . m. today and that calls for a celebrat ion Tuesday. March 21 The celebration of Spring continues Wednesday . March 22 Japanese ballads and Samurai stories Thursday . March 23 7:00 Stories and songs of gods and demon s of the American Indians 9:00 Memorable recordings of the 1950 's Friday. March 24 Ethnic music requests Mon day. March 27 A musical biography of the l ife and times of Claudio ~lo nteverdi Tuesday. March 28 7:00 More songs from Cen t ral Europe and the Balkans 9 :00 Little- known works of J . S. Bach Wednesday . March 29 Bengali. Pakist·ani . and Indian Moslem poetry and musi c compared Thursday . March 30 7:00 Music from the Middle Ages 9:00 Memorable recordings from the 1960 ' s Friday . March 31 Fairy tale songs and l egends from around the world

• PlJ55 BOOKS ~2C6 lI"" I V E.R.. S ',Y WA'<

• B OO KS • REC.ORt>S • AR\\ FA C.'S • PR\ l-o\TS WE BU'{ USE\) R£COR\)S $e O EAC\-\ -'------, • MARCH MO RNI NG REPEAT SCHEDULE (for comp lete information about progra~ , . see the regular listings. Programs to be r epeated have an (R) after the lIstIng) Monday, March 13 Wednesday , March 1 11:00 Sunday ' s Commentary Thursday , March 23 11:00 Commentary 11:30 Friday' s Commentary 11:00 Commentary 11:30 Soviet Press 12:00 Sasquatch 11:30 Poetry of Women 12 : 00 The Supertankers 1: 00 Mediums against Themse l ves 12 : 30 Visit to Nambia 1:00 Boys are Boys 2:00 One Man' s Family 3: 00 Magic Mind Friday, March 24 Thursday , March 2 4:00 Homage to Gha1ib 11 : 00 Commen tary 11: 00 Commen tary 11:30 History of Seattle 11: 30 The Africa Program Tuesday , March 14 12 : 00 Book Review 12: 00 Poe try of Wome n 11 : 00 Commen t ary 12 : 15 Food Freak 11:30 From the Foul Line Friday, March 3 12 : 00 Jean Shepherd (new) Monday . March 27 11: 00 Co mmentary 12: 45 Letters and Things 11 :00 Sunday ' s Commentary 11:30 History of Seattle 1 :00 Letter from Eng land 11:30 Friday's Commentary 12:00 Left Press 1:15 Home Movi es 12:00 Magic Mind 1:00 Peking Special (live) 2:00 Gary Snyder 1:00 Fort Dix 2:00 Harvey Cox 1: 40 Glory in the Daytime 3:00 Book Review Wednesday , March 15 2:00 Obsession 11: 00 Co mmentary 2 : ~O Magic Circl e Monday , March 6 11:30 Soviet Press 3:!l5 Dial Tone 11: 00 Sunday's Commen tary 3:35 Domestic Repression 11:30 To othpi ck Th ursday, Ma rch 16 4:35 Jealousy of Emer 12:15 Friday' s Comme ntary 11: 00 Comme ntary 5: 05 Scientist s Agains t War 12:45 Melchor Mo r eno O'Campo 11: 30 The Africa Progr am 2: 15 The Dragon Lady ' s Revenge 12:0C Poetry of Women Tuesday . March 28 11 :00 Commentary Tuesday , Mar ch 7 Friday, Mar ch 17 11 : 30 From the Foul Line 11 :00 Commen t ary 11: 00 Commen tary 12:00 Jean Shepherd (new ) 11: 30 From the Foul Li ne 11:30 History of Seattle 12: 45 Letters and fhings 12: 00 Jean Shepherd (new) 12:00 Left Press 1:00 Letter f r om England 12:45 Letters and Things 12: 30 Book Review 1:15 Home Movies 1: 00 Letter from England 12: 45 A Story 2:00 Instant Insanity 1:15 ~1 ance Lipscomb 2:45 Steri l ization 2:30 Galway Kinne1 2 : 15 Home ~1ov i es 3:00 Henry Jackson Monday . March 20 Wednesday . March 29 11 :00 Sunday ' s Commen t ary 11:00 Commentary Wednes day , ~1arch 8 11 : 30 Friday' s Comme ntary 11:30 Soviet Press 11: 00 Commentary 12:00 John Holt 12:00 Owen De Long 11: 30 Soviet Press 12.:45 Rothenberg 12: 00 Jimmy Wi the rspoon 1: 45 Confederat e Gehera1 Thursday . March 30 2:15 Too thpi ck 11: 00 Comme ntary Thursday, March 9 11: 30 Th e Africa Progr am 11: 00 Commen t ary Tuesday. March 21 12: 00 Poe t ry 0 f Homen 11: 30 Poetry of Women 11: 00 Co mmentary 11 : 30 From the Foul Li ne Friday. ~1 arch 31 Friday , March 1(' 12: 00 J e an Shepherd (nel") 11: 00 Commen t ary 11:00 Commentary 12:45 Letters and Things 11:30 lIistory of Seattle 11:30 History of Seattle 1: 00 Letter from Eng land 12:00 Left Press 12:00 Book Review 1:15 Home Movi es 12:30 Book Review 2: 00 Universe

We dn esday. March 22 11: 00 Comme ntar y 11:30 Soviet Press 12: 00 Yoko Onl)

5

THURSDAY , MARCH 2 TUESDAY , MARCH 14

7:30 pm THE SKID ROAD SHOW 6 : 00 pm IS IT GENE DEBS OR BILL HAYWOOD OR .•• ? Pia and Chris speak wi th Dave Pe ter­ It's Frank Cedervall , stamped from sen. Glen Mazin, and Ke lly Ray of the the same mold , and still I.W.W. He ' s Skid Road Show. They discuss LITTLE speaking on t he history and organiza­ ORPHAN ABB IE , a p I ay written by Pe­ tional potential today of the old In­ tersen and based on the Chicago con­ ternational Workers of the World , in spiracy trial and pe r formed by the Se attle. Produced by Paula Silverman. Skid Road Sh ow p layers . LITTLE OR­ PHAN ABB IE will open March 3rd at THURSDAY , MARCH 16 the Second Story Gallery in Pioneer Square . 7: 30 pm PHILIP WHALEN, POET Whalen was born in Po rtland. Oregon in FRIDAY, MARCH 3 192 3 and educated at Ree d, where he roomed wi th Gary Snyder and Lew Welch. 7: 30 pm LI NCOLN DAY BANQUET This r eading was r ecorded September 14 , S.ponsored by the Young Hen's Repub ­ 1965 , and features: works from EVERY l~c an Club at the Olympic Hotel, DAY , VANI LLA, and the EDUCATION CON­ February 2. 1972 . This program TI NUES ALONG , as well as many other starts of f with a prayer. From then poems, most of wh ich are in his col­ on, it's an all Republican affair lected works ON BEAR'S HEAD . He calls including Governor Evans wh o in- ' his work a "continuous nerve movie;" troduces the main speaker, George these poems are mainly concerned with Romn ey. If you don't like Repub li­ his concerns , which are eating. drink­ cans , at least yo u can laugh a lot. ing, feeling, s eeing, listening, talk­ ing, and laughing (not to mention MONDAY, MARCH 6 thinking) . (The San Francisco Poetry CenLer) 8:00 pm WHITE LINE IN THE MIDDLE OF THE ROAD Henry M. Jackson.' s campaign for t he MO NDAY. MARCH 20 De mo cratic presidential nomination will ~eet ~ts first, and perhaps last. 5: 30 pm US - CHINA RELATIONS AND PROSPECTS FOR test ~n the Florida primary on March THE FUTURE 14th. His Washington constituents The speaker is Russell Johnson of the discuss his policies and tactics dur­ American Friends Service Committee . ing his years as an e lected official His presentation is the result of a of this state . four week tour of China taken last fall. The program was taped February WEDNE SDAY , MARCH 8 16, 1972.

5 :00 pm THE HONORABLE CHARLES EVE RS THURSDAY , MARCH 23 Charles Evers, mayor of Fayette , Mississippi , speaks on political 7: 30 pm NOT-SO-MELLOW- DRAMAS by Richard Drum­ manners , racism black and White , mond and what he has done as mayor of NOW WE'LL PLAY "EAST LYNN" - Casey Fayette. Re corded July 3, 1971 in Performed by the Bijou Ensemble Portland, Oregon. Lindsay MacDonald, Liza, Barbara Castleman, Stoney. Pia. and Mose~ 5: 35 HIGH IN THE SKY Members and supporters of B. L.O.S .­ 9 :00 MORE - NOT-SO-MELLOW- DRAMAS S. O. M. (Basic Liberation of Smoke rs FOILED AGAIN . OR SAVED BY FATE - and Sympathi zers of Marij uana) dis­ a furious melodrama cuss the current law and its effect s IN THE NICK OF TIME OR SOMETHING'S as well as the possibilites of le­ GONE WRONG AT THE CROSSROADC' - drama gali zation of the "weed . ,. in verse THE ELOPEMENT - melodrama avant garde FRIDAY , MARCH 24 The Bijou Ensemble

8: 10 pm CONVERSATION WITH NORTHERN IRISH KRAB DESPERATELY NEEDS AN ADnING MACHINE AND A GOOD STUDENTS John O'Hare interviews Lhree students RECORD PLAYER - IF YOU HAVE ONE OF EITHER THAT YOU from Queen's University in Belfast. Tw o of them are from Catholic fami ­ DON'T NEE D PLEASE LET US KNOW lies and are supporters of the Peo­ ple's De mo cracy ; the third is a Protestant and a Unionist . (Pacif- . ica) WE DNESDAY, MARCH 1 7 : 00 NO TES FOR THE NIGHT lI eard every night at this time: an 1: 30 pm RAGA IN THE AFTE RNOON updated program listing for lis t en­ Music from north India as performed e rs by: Ghula mhusain Khan, sitar and ~!unir 7 :05 CO~'IMENTARY (R) Khan, sarangi (Decca) Bhimsen Joshi, voice (Odeon) 7: 30 THE POLITICS OF HUMAN LIBERATION: Shi vkumar, santoor , and Brijbuhshan, DR . HARVEY COX gui tar (Odeon) Dr, Cox is Professor of Divinity a t Bismi11ah Khan , shehnai (Odeon) I[ arvard Un iversity and a well- knolm Himanshu Biswas, flute and Dulal theologian, author and scholar of Roy, jaltarang (Odeon ) Ame rican culture , best known for K. P . Arunachalam, nadaswaram (Odeon) his books n[E SEC ULAR CITY . ON NOT Imrat Khan , surbahar (Ode on) LEAVING IT TO T[[E SNA KE, TH E FEAST or FOO LS , and THE CHURCH ~lID REVO­ 6 :00 CONTEMPORARY POETRY AND MUS I C OF L1IT I ON. In this speech deli ve r ed WOMEN January 18th at th e Uni versi t y 'If Beginning a few programs, to be Washington he ana l yzes the cult :: , heard weekly a t this time, produced and churchmanship of the No r ~hl,, ('st , by Pia. This pro~ram will include focusing major attention on the contempor ary poets like Joanne.Kyger, areas of leisure and ecology . (R) Marge Piercy , Dian e Wakoski, and Dian e Di Prima, all reading some of 8 : 30 TI-IE AFRICA PROGRAM thei r ow n poetry . It wi 11 a l so in­ Dr. Simon Ottenberg (R) clude contemporary composers and musicians in e l ectronic music, , 9 :00 ETI[NIC ~IU S I C , and rock. (R) Dr. Rob e rt Ga rfias

11 : 00 Cor·lING DOWN FROM THE SEVENTH Dr . Spider

T[ [UR SlJAY , IvIARC [1 2

I: 30 11m PIBROCI I Tradi tiona l hagpLpe r.1 usic from Scot- l and . Lame nt for Viscoun t Dundee , p layed by .John Burgess . Lament for Padruig Og ; TIle Ba ttle of t he Pass of Crieff, and The Old Woman ' s Lu ll­ aby . a l l p l ayed by John MacLel l an . (Waverl y)

2 : ]5 ~ ! USIC fROe! ANYWlIERE Geor ge Shan grow presents Mo nteve r ­ di ' s L'ORFEO, with critical commen­ tary .

5 : 15 TilE BOO K REVIEW Joanne Wiater I,i th comments on r-lartha Ferguson i'-1cKeolm ' s TH EI l liAS TilE DAYS (A Bison Book - Un.i versity of Nebraska Press) (R) 8 5: 30 THE VAST WESTLAND SATURDAY, MARCH 4 Barry Wes t with jazz 9: 00 am JAZZ FOR A SATURDAY MORNI NG 7:05 COMMENTARY (R) Tim Wire

7 : 30 OPEN TIME 5 :00 pm MELCHOR MORENO O'CAMPO: TRAIN Train is a group dedicated to gett­ 8 : 30 WRITING A HISTORY OF SEATTLE ing the message out about communists Roger Sale (with part 13): wherein in American society. This talk, at he discusses, among many points, how Abraham Lincoln High School in San the weather and the wilderness would Jose, explicates the communist in­ affect the locals at the turn of the fluence on the migrant workers and century, as well as a look at the on Ces ar Chave z. As the meeting geogr aph y which was then outside the progresses, several Chicanoes in the city (b ut now ' isn't), like the Tide­ audience get upset and start s cream­ flat s , and the University disfrict. ing and, ultimately, end up on stage . (R) (KTAO) (R)

9:00 LEFT PRESS REVI EW 6 :30 MUSIC OF THE PRINCES OF DAHOMEY Frank Krasnowsky (R) !Festival of the Tohossou (Counter­ point) 9: 30 CLASS IC J AZZ Mi ke Duffy 7:05 JOUJOUKA - THE PIPES OF PAN Presented by the late Brian Jones 11:00 SOMETHI NG, BUT DON'T EXPECT ANYTHI NG (Atlantic) Whi t e No ise 8: 00 WILLIAM RUSHER: HAVE STUDENTS GONE CRAZY? A speech we couldn't find January 29th; but which we now present, exact ly as it was on NPR at the Ford Hall Forum. Mr. Rusher is the pub Usher of the National Review.

10:00 BLUEGRASS Tiny Freeman

FRIDAY , MARCH 3

5 :00 pm THE FILM REV IEW Dick J ameson (R)

5 : 30 KRUMHORNS AN D KI NGS SUNDAY, MARCH 5 Ran dy McCart y 10:00 am A CHILD'S GARDE N OF VEGETABLES 7:05 COMMENTARY (R) Dick Parker 7: 30 OPEN TIME 12:00 noon JEAN SHEPHERD \(WOR)

8:00 SEATT LE COMPOSERS 12:45 pm MUSIC OF OLIVIER MESSIAEN :hil M~ng e r and George Shangrow Seven Haikai l nt ervlew Seattle composers Gerald Performed by the Strassbourg Per­ Ke chley and Ken Benshoof. Selec­ cussion En s emble and members of t~ ons of music by each composer the Domaine Musicale Orchestra wlll be played, with comments by directed by Pierre Boulez ' t hem. Cinq Rechants for twelve voices Performed by the New Music Choral 11 :00 BUMBLI NG WITH BALTIC Ens emble, directed by Kenneth Ga­ J azz buro 9 Fete des Belles Eaux for ondes mar­ MONDAY , MARC H 6 tenot sextet Ne lly Caron, ~10nique Mat agne , Renee 5:00 pm FROM THE FO UL LI NE Recoussine, Kare l Trow, Henriette Basketba ll notes on the Seattle So­ Chanforan, and Jeanne Loriod - nics by Roger Sal e (R) ondes martenot. 5: 30 RADIO ITALY 2:00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON Organ Concert with Sandr o Balla Li- Bob Gwynne bera: Francesco Sponga , "Versett o" 5:00 MUSIC OF THE TWE NTIETH CENTURY Andrea Gabrieli (1 520 -1586): two Stan Keen pieces Baldassarro Galuppi, "Versett o" 6 : 30 OPEN TIME Cladio Morulo , "Toccat a" Giovanni Gabrieli ( 155 1-1612) , 7: 05 COMMENTARY " Canzon" Baldassare Ga l uppi (d. 1785), three 7 : 30 BUDDHIST MUSIC OF KOREA pieces Including the complete "Koryong­ Giovan Battista Pescetti (1704-1766) San," as well as several ot her "Second Sonata" performances. (Vogue) 6:00 8:15 TOOTHPICK, LISBON AND THE ORCAS Bob West and Chris St rachwit z talk ISLANDS wi th bluesman ~1ance Lipscomb at Contemporary poetry with Michael KRAR on this tape made last month. and Joanne Wiater: J by Robert (R) Durand (Christopher's); Jack Kerou­ ac's SCATTERED POEMS (City Lights) ; HIRED HIEROGLYPHS by Nanos Va laor­ 7: 05 COMME NTARY itis (Kayak); FIELD # 5; Bern Por­ ter's I'VE LEFT (Something Else) . 7: 30 LETTERS AND TH I NGS The station manager (R) (R) 7: 45 LETTER FROM ENGLAND 9: 00 TWO DUETS FOR SITAR AND SUR-BAHAR Michae l Scar borough (R) The sur-bahar is used primarily for outdoor performances in India. Its d:OO OPEN TIME deep, rich tone-color provides a warm base for the lighter sound of J EAN SHEPHERD (WOR) the sitar in these duets i n jugal­ 10:00 bandi. Performed by Ustad Vilayat 10 :45 HOME MOVIES Khan, sitar and Ustad Imrat Khan David Me ltzer fr om Bo linas (R) sur- bahar. ' Raga Yaman-Kalyan 11: 30 OK**WHAT NE XT Raga JhinJoti George Shangrow wi th "mo t ly musicolo­ (Odeon) gist" musical cur i osities until mid­ 9:4S THE .DRAGON LADY' S REVENGE: THE SAN night-and- a-half and then baroque FRANCISCO MIME TROUPE and pre-bar oque r equests . The radio version is written by Jason Harris and radio production by Stan Johnston and Gerard Van ~er Le un at KPFA in Berkeley. (R)

11 :00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS Ray Serebrin with , jazz and rock

1:00 am ROSWELL ' S RUT Jazz to TUESDAY, MARCH 7 4:20 MUSIC OF LA RAZA Los Pinguinos Del Norte, with topi­ 5:00 pm THE LEGACY OF THURSTON DART cal songs from the Rio Grande . CONCERT IX (Arhoolie) In this solo concert , Thurston Dart performs the six French Suites,of 5:00 OPEN TIME Johann Sebastian Bach . The instru­ ment is a clavichord made by Thomas 6:00 CONTEMPORARY POETRY AND MUSIC OF Goff. The reason for this is simple, WOMEN according to Dart: each of the Women around the world , with Pia. suites is headed on Bach's title (R) pages "Suite pour Ie Clavessin." (L ' Oiseau-Lyre) 7:05 COMMENTARY (R)

6 :00 THE MUSIC OF TURKEY 7:30 OPEN TIME Ali San 7:40 CONTEMPORARY AFRICAN URBAN MUSIC 7:05 COMMENT ARY (R) Especially from Rhodesia, I,here Professor Robert Kauffman made ex­ 7: 30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS tensive field re cordings last sum­ of Berkeley mer. (R) (Pacifica) (R) 9 :00 ETHNIC MUSIC Dr. Robert Garfias 8:00 THE PEOPLE'S ~1USIC OF CHINA Lim Chew- Pah 11 :00 COMI NG DOWN FROM THE SEVENTH Dr . Sp ider 9 : 40 I ' M JUST A DIRTY OLD BLUES SINGER Captain Baltic: and friends inter­ view Jimmy Witherspoon at KRAB , January 6, 1972. (R) THURSDAY, MARCH 9 11 :00 URBAN BLUES Di ck Sh urman 1: 30 pm ARABIC AND DRUSE MUSIC All sorts, on Fo lkways

2:15 MUSIC FROM ANYWHERE George Shangrow present s "little known composers then and now:" such people as Stolzel, Fasch, Berwald, Scriabin , and in our own city, Henry WEDNESDAY , MARCH 8 Leland Clarke.

1: 30 pm MUSIC OF INDONESIA Recorded by Phil and Florence Walk­ er, with examples from Sumatra, Am­ bon , Bali, Ce lebes, Java, and Sunda. (Folkways)

3 :00 CHANTS OF TI1E PEARL DIVERS OF THE EASTIAKE GALLERIES ~ PERSIAN GULF ,

J I 5:15 THE BOOK REVIEW 7:05 COMME NTARY (R) Michael Wiater comments on Ernest Hemingway's new hestseller ISLANDS 7:30 OPEN TH1E IN THE STREAM (San tam) . (R) 7:45 TWO ELECTRON I C/ INSTRUMENTAL WORKS OF ROGER REYNOLDS "Ping" - Inspired by a short story by Samuel Beckett , the work is per­ formed wi th the use of 160 fi 1m slides as light backgrow1do Per­ formed by Roger Reynolds , piano ; Karen Reynolds, flute; Paul Chihara, harmonium, bowed-cymbal and t am tam; Alan Johnson, electronics. "Traces" - The title of t his wo r k in nine movements refers, with a cer­ tain casualness, to cl assical formal patterns. Performed by Yuji Taka­ hashi, piano; Karen Reynolds , flute; Lin Barron, cello and Alan Johnson , electronics. (CRI)

9:00 OPEN TIME

9: 30 VINTAGE JAZZ Hal Sherlock

Geo~e Karver- 11 :00 SOMETHI NG, BUT DON'T EXPECT ANYTHING Hemingway (1944) : The writer as world champion White No ise

5: 30 BALTIC ' S BOP STOP Bi ll Harris , an innovator in the art of jazz trombone playing during the 40 ' s , is featured mostly wi th Jazz at the Philharmonic. Baltic wi ll not p lay any Woody Herman s ides wi th Bi 11 Harris, in cas e you are wonder­ ing.

8 : 30 WRITING A HISTORY OF SEATTLE This program, Roger Sale's fourteen­ th , begins his analysis of the turn f rom the city of the 90 's through the fi rs t decade when the ci ty be­ came what it now is: sophisticated, aware, but also lazy and willing to sell short rather than sell long. He discusses what he sees as the g' FRIDAY, MARCH 10 good, the dangerous and the crucial of the times and concludes that 5:00 THEATRE AND FILM REVIEW " • • . nothing has happened in Seattle Richard Jameson and James ~1ish 'alani since 1915." This is the thesis (R) for most of the rest of this series . This program deals mainly with the 5: 30 KRUMHORNS AN D KINGS parks of the city, beginning with Randy McCart y wi th baroque and pre- the major acquisitions of the pre­ baroque music twentieth century : what we now know as Volunteer and 7:05 COMMENTARY Woodl and parks. (R) Frank Krasnowsky (R) 12 7:30 ~IUSIC OF COlvELL, FOSS AND RI EGGER 10:00 MEDIUMS AGAINST THEMSELVES lIenry Cowell - Ancient Deser t Dr one A gathering of mediums in New York Performed by the Symp hony of Lo s produces an opportunity to hear Angeles , directed by Werne r J an­ those who work with forces and en­ ssen . ergies that most people do not con­ Lukas Foss - The Song of Songs sciously encounter. The mediums are Performed by Jennie Toure , me zzo­ heard giving r eadings; there are in­ soprano , with the New York Phil­ terviews as to how these people got harmonic, directed by Leonard into their line of work . (WBAI) Bernstein. \\I all ingford Riegger - Symphony No . 3 Performed by the Eas tman- Rochester Symphony Or chestr a , dir ect e d by lIoward Hans on . (Everest (1) , and (CRI) (2 & 3))

8: 30 SASQUATCII Grover Krantz of Washington St at e University ' s Anthropology department (he seems to be a physical ant hro­ pologist) speaks on the evidence he has gathered towards t he possible proof of the existence of the Sas­ quatch , that oft seen but never brought in, oversized , man- like , hairy creature of the moun t ains of the west coast . Recorded i n Se at­ tIe, January 1972 . (R)

11:00 ' ROUND MIDNIGHT Don Mills , jazz

SATURDAY, MARCH 11

9 :00 am JAZZ FOR A SATURDAY I-1OR NI NG Tim Wire

5 :00 pm ONE MAN ' S FAMILY Carlton E. Mo rse is a radio writer from 20 to 30 years ago , who was re­ sponsible for several radio myster­ ies and for "One Man ' S Family." Here he describes how he got started in writing radio drama, and he pl ays examples of his radio style. ( KTAO) (R) 9 : 25 GREEK FOLK MUSI C Featuring t hese instruments: Kan­ 6 : 00 AN HOMAGE TO GHALIB onaki, Lira, Outi , and viol in . TI1i s Ghalib, or Mi r za Asadullah Beg Khan , is one of the most unusual examp les was to the Urdu cuI ture 0 f the las t of He l lenic music availab l e ; certain-j century a stimulus comparab le to l y not what most people wo uld i den­ that of Tagore on the Ben gali cul­ tify as Greek . (Lyrichord) ture of our own centu ~y . You will

13 hear Begum Akh tar sing eigh t "Gha­ 2 :00 JAZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON zals" written by Ghalib . Phi 1 MlUl ­ Bob Gwynne ger will comment on the songs , on Gh alib's life and offer his own ver­ 5:00 ELECTRONIC MUS I C sions in English of six ghazals by Pe rformances and realizations of Ghalib. (Odeon) (R) e l ectronic music by vari ous com­ posers , written over the past Hi 7:05 MAGIC MIND year s : Hugh Le Caine - Dripsody (1955) , an etude for var iab l e speed recorder Ae>1l...1B Ae.R/IIo. My ron Schaeffer - Dance R4-3 (1961) Al!.RAc.. Arnold Walter, Harvey Olnick and ASRAeJ>.. ~~ ron Schaeffer - Summer Idyl INVOCATIO NS A~~~~ EVOCATIONS (1959 ) A B R~C.A.\)A.~ Robert Aitkin - Noesis (1962) Ae.RAC.ADA~ Va l Stephen - Firewor ks & 'The Orgas­ AE>R.Ac..At>Ae.R~ mi c Opus J . D. Robb - Co llage (1964) (R) Jean Eichelberger I vey - Pinball (1965) 8:00 ALI AKBAR KHAN Victor Grauer - Inferno Raaga-Medhavi (Ode on) John Pfeiffer - 9 Images for e l ec­ tronics wi th instruments (1967) 8: 25 MUSIC FROM THE TAUSUG OF SULU Ralph LlUldsten - Through a Landscape This recording is a relatively ex­ of Mirrors tensive anthology of music of the (Folkways (1-9), Victrola (music of Mos l em people of the sout hern Phil­ Pfeiffer) & Odeon (music of Lundsten) ippines . The recordings were made on several is l ands by Thomas M. 7:05 Cor-1MENTARY (R) Kiefer. (EthnosolUl d) 7: 30 ZEN, GOE I KA AND SHOMYO CHANTS 10:00 BLUEGRASS Actual Buddhist temple ser vices . Tiny Freeman (Lyrichord)

SUNDAY , MARCH 12

10:00 am A CHILD ' S GARDEN OF VEGE TABLE S Dick Parker

12: 00 noon JEAN SHEPHERD (WOR)

12:45 pm MESSIAEN: POEMES POU R MI Performed by Lise Arseguest , soprano and Olivier 1.1e ssiaen , piano. The songs: Action de Graces , Paysage, La Maison , Epouvante , L' Epouse , Ta Vo i x, Les deux Guerriers , Le Coll­ ier, Priere Exaucee . (Everes t)

1:15 CANCIONES PARA MI AMEIRCA - CANIE L VIGLIETTI Songs from Uruguay . (Le Chant du ~10n de) 5 : 30 RADIO ITALY Organ Concert with Ferdinando Tagli­ avini: Girolamo Cavassoni ( 1520-1560) - " Dall ' intavolatura" Cos tenzo Angegnati - "Due Ricer­ cari" Florenzio ~Iaschera - "Due Canzone" and "Versetti della Scuola Lom­ barda"

6:00 20TH CENTURY MUSIC BY hllERICAN WOMEN CONCERT I Emma Lou Diemer - Toccata for Flute Chorus, performed by the Armstrong rlute Ensemb l e Miriam Gi deon - "The Seasons of Time": Tanka Poetry from Ancient GARY SNYDER ' 72 8: 1 S Japan; performed by Eve l yn ~landac , Recorcled by Eye 5 in Tacoma , t his soprano; Fritz Jahoda, piano; Karl is a reading of new and published Kraber, flute; and Fortunato Arico , poems: "~lyths & Texts : Logging : , cello #6 , 7 f, 1--1; Buming: #15 & 17 ;" Claire Polin - " Summer Settings": a "Regarding Wave": "Song of the suite for harp performed by Phyllis Tas te," "I t Was 1\~len ," "Kai , Today , " Sch l omovitz "~Ieeting the ~Iountai ns," and "Long Pauline Oliveros - "Outline" (an im­ lIai r"; a poem br James Welch , a Ba provisational chart) performed by Blackfoot poet in ~1is ~:o ula, ~lont ana, Nancy Ture tsky, flute; Bertram titled "Riding the Earthboy 40"; Turetsky , bass ; and Donald George , from t . c new cycle called "Charms," percussion including " No ~ Iatter, Never Mind" The progr am is na rrated by Joanne and "The Ca ll 0 f the Wi Id"; he ends Harris . with some new , recent sections of (Gold Crest , CIU , Ars Nov a, a nd his series MOUNTAINS AND RIVERS WIR Nonesuch , respectively) lilTHOlff END . (R)

7:05 CO ~IENTARY (R) 9 : 30 KING BISCUIT TIME Cliff Butler and Bob West \"i th the 7: 30 LETTERS AND THI NGS Blues Station lIanager (R) TIlE ROBOTNOR HOURS 11:00 7:45 LETTER FROM ENGLAND Ray Serebrin Michael Scarborough (R)

1 : 00 am ROSWELL' S Rlff 8:00 THE OLD l'iAX \'iORKS Jazz ~ l emory songs of yesteryear wi th Earl Smi th

~""----.'0. WE SPARKLE- ~ ~ fEXTUREYour CEILING ~ CLEAN &FASf •

MARCH 13

pm FROM THE rOUL LINE Roger Sale with commen ts on the Seattle Sonics (R) 15 9:00 LIEDER WITH RAYMOND JARVI Th e King Shall Rejoice Bee thoven ; Irish , Scottish , and ~'1usic for Brass: Welsh folk songs (Edith Mat his , Anthony Holborne - The fruit of Julia Hamari, Alexander Young , Die­ . love trich Fischer-Dieskau) Alfonso Ferrabosco II - Pavan and I . 1. Music , love and wine Alman 2 . The high land watch Performing the Anthems of Handel are 3. Once more I hail thee The Choi r uf the King's COllege of 4. Bonny laddie , high l and laddie ,~ambridge and The English r.hamher 5 . Beho l d . my love Orchestra 6 . The pul se of an Irishman (L ' Oiseau- Lyre and Argo) 7. Constancy 8. The elfin fai ries 6 : 00 OPEN TIME II . 1 . Ye shepherds of this plea- sant val e 7:05 COMMENTARY (R) 2. Sunset 3 . He promised me at parting 7: 30 SOV I ET PRESS A'lD PERIODICALS 4. Enchantress , fare we l l William ~Iandel (Pacifica) (R) 5 . Put round the bright wine 6. Robin Adair 8:00 OLD THIE MUSIC 7. Oh sweet were the hours Phil Wi lliams and John BUrk ?

10 :00 ,JEAN SHEPHERD (WOR) 9:00 A STORY With sundry music as told by Tom 10: 45 IIOME MOVIES Ross . guitarist and In ::!; :I n (east) David Meltzer (R) music performer. ~Iusic \, ; 11 he bv Tom - sung and played - ~s we ll ~~ 11: 30 DRY SLOUGH ROAD by Jerry J ensen . (R) Nancy Keith 11 :00 URBAN BLUES Dick Shurman

TU ES DAY, MARCH 14

5 :00 pm THE LEGACY OF THURSTON DART CONCERT X A mixed concert: In the first and last sets heard , Thurs t on Dart dir­ e cts a small brass ensemble and in the middle set , Dart is heard at the continuo in a group of choris­ ters and instrument alists ied by David Wi llcocks: Music for Brass: Richard Dering - Fantasia Thomas Lupo - Almande Anthony Bassano - Pavan No. 16 Coronation An t hems of G.F . Handel: Zadok the Priest My Heart is Inditing Let Thy Hand be Strengthened ,6 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15 7:30 EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT VOLUNTARY STERILI 7ATION , BUT. .. CANTAORES FAMOSOS - FLAMENCO 1:30 pm Rescheduled from March 13th, an ex­ Performances by Nina de los Peines, amination of the various reasons why Roque Montoya "Jarri to," Tomas Pa­ 100,000 Americans a year undergo von, Manuel Vallejo, Tomas de Ante­ sterilization , with a broad view of quera, Manolo Car acol, Cojo de H~el­ the physical, psychological , moral, va, Jesus Perosanz, Almaden, Per~con de Cadiz and Angelillo. (Odeon) social, and legal implications in­ volved . Commentators include Dr. John ~1arlow , Columbia Hospital 3:25 FY Mh~N GYFEILLION, DEWCH YNGHYD for Women ; Courtland Hastings, "My gentle friends, come together": Field Director for the Associa- Traditional Welsh songs, sung by tion for Voluntary Sterilization; Meredydd Evans , with Phyllis Kinney, Rob Sauer and Dr . Paul Ehrlich of the Tryfan Octet, Maria Korchinska Zero Popul ation Growth; Senator (harp) , and conducted by Robert Robert Packwood of Oregon, and Docke r. (Tradi tion) several clergymen who are morally for or against voluntary sterili- 4:20 THE PAPER STAGE z ati on. In addi tion there are Some broadside ballad versions of interviews with individuals who plays by Elizabethan dramatists, have had one or another of the sung by Peggy Seeger and Ewan Mac ­ several types of sterilization ColI. Works: Titus Andronicus's operations. This documentary was Complaint; Gernutus, the Jew of produced and written by Fred Venice; The Spanish Tragedy; J Flaxman of Pacifica Affiliate Warning Piece to England Against WETA-FM. Narration is by Tony Pride and Wickedness. (Argo) Riggs; interviews by David AlIeno (Pacifica) (R) 5: 10 THE FEMALE FROLIC Three women members of the Critic's Group " ... felt that there was a need for a record to trace the Woman's constantly changing position in te terms of traditional folksong." They present sixteen songs from Ire­ land, America, Canada, Scotland, and England. Some of the songs are: The Doffin Mistress, My Husband's Got no Courage in Him , The Whore's Lament , Come Me Little Son, An Old Man Came Courting Me, Miner'S Wife, The Factory Girl, The Housewife's Lament. (Argo)

6:00 rONTEMPORARY POETRY AND MUSIC OF WOMEN Pia interviewing women in the arts in the Seattle area, as wel l as visiting women artists. (R)

7:05 COMMENTARY (R)

8:30 THE hrKICA PROGRAM Dr. Simon Ottenberg (R)

9:00 ETHNIC ~· IUSIC Dr. Robert Garfias

11: 00 COMING DOWN FROM THE SEVH'TII Dr . Spider

11 111 1111 I II IIC .1 .....1U J I""-- ~ JIll' • ... ~ ".~ ...... /J ~ ..... ' .. - ) :::::-- -;:: :,L I'! ME ,3180 111l:M - t1'9\\ ...... ~~\j ""~ -;...- SE, .TTU~ 1 r1 IIIIII I I I

11IURSDAY, MARCH 16

1::)0 p . m. FOLK ~ !U <;IC FROH WEST .JAVA (SU DA) (Ocora) 9 :00 LEFT PRESS REVI EW Frank Krasnowsky (R) 2: 15 ~ (U S IC FRm! ANYWHERE George Shangrow presents Gamba music of the baroque , featuring 9 : 30 CLASSIC JAZZ two recordings by Eva Heinitz . Mike Duffy

5: 15 THF. BOOK REVI EW 11 : 00 SOMETHING , BUT DON ' T EXPECT ANYTIlING .Toanne Wiater wi th some r emar ks White Noise concerning COARSE KOSHER SALT (R)

5 : 30 THE VAST WEST LAND Barry \'lest: jazz

7: 05 CO~1MENTARY (R)

7: 30 OPEN THIE

8:30 WR ITING A III STORY OF SEATTLE (# 15) : TilE CAREER OF R.II , TIlOMPSON Reginald H. Thompson (b . 1856), was the Ci ty En gineer from 1892 . Roger Sal e describes him as a " ••• combination of David with his s lingshot and the Little Red Hen . " He was a man who hated half-baked schemes and sloppy wo rk; who planned ""ell , was patient and was not seeking a fortune for himself. He was out to change the city from what he called a "pi til . To do this he fough t vested interests to make major contributions to the future of the city: he was key to t he Sl1ccess of the Chis) sewage plans. the ship-canal, Harbor Island, the dredging of the DUI"amish and the regrading of the downtown hills . (R) IS

/ FRIDAY, MARCH 17 SATURDAY, MARCH 18

5:00 p.m. ·THE FILM REVIEW 9:00 a.m. JAZZ FOR A SATIJRDA.Y MORNING Dick Jameson (R) Tim Wire

5: 30 KRUMHORNS AND KINGS Randy McCarty 5:00 p.m. THE CHIMICUM SCHOOL DISTRICT VS. 7:05 COMMENTARY (R) MISTER RICHARD WOJT: a documentary presentation of the 7: 30 THE HEMLOCK REVIEW opinions and act.i0ns of the citizens Randy Francisco interviews John of Chimicum, Washjngton, whic~ have Holt . Discussed are educational resulted in the suspension of one proprietprships , decent ralization of them as a school teacher. Richard of educational facilities , property Wojt , the man suspended, was a science limitations , social options, B. F. teacher in the high school. His Skinner, Jerome Bruner, and lots playing of the record SUNLIGHT more. (R) SHADOW by Rick Maston precipitated the situation, which seems to have 8: 15 NOMADS OF NIGER been developing for years . The Both the Touareg and the Bororo. opinions of all points of view are (Ocora) presented, including Mr. Wojt, his students, their parents, concerned 8:50 OPEN TIME citizens, the district attorney and the school board. Some of the issues 9:20 A SITAR RECITAL BY INDRANEEL raised include the generation gap, BHATTACHARYA the political relation, of the left Accompanied by tab list Zakir to the r i ght, sex education, the nature Hussain , Bhattacharya performs of obscenity, student's rights, here Raga Puriya- Dhanashri, Raga new st:yles of teaching , the un­ Bageshri, and Rage Bihag/Dhun ~mresponsive beauracracy , the Kamaj. (Odeon) communist menace, original sin, the protestant ethic and domanance­ 10: 00 JEROME l(OTHENBERG , POET: submission behavior. You will hear Born in 1931 , Jerome Rothenberg all of this sequentially; the material has worked as a translator (THE has been edited for relevance , but DEPUTY by Hochhuth), poet (most the relevances have not been edited recently, the selected poems 1960- to fit: an evening' s worth, where 1970, POEMS FOR THE GAME OF SILENCE) everybody has their say. Special and as editor (of the anthology thanks to Randy Francisco, Lindsey TECHNICIANS OF THE SACRED and the MacDonald and Barbara Stone who magazine ALCHERINGA, both devoted helped gather the material . Produced to what he calls "ethno-poeti cs ") • by Michael Wiater. This is a recent reading , presenting h:' , current interests at the San 10:00 BLUEGRASS Francisco State COllege Poetry Tiny Freeman Center. (R)

11:00 BUMBLING WITH BALTIC Jazz

19 SUNDAY, MARCH 19 9:00 ROSHN~ ARA BEGUM SINGS Two outs tanding performances : 10:00 a . m. A CHILD ' S GARDEN OF VEGETABLES Raag Shudh Kalyan Dick Parker Raag Shankra Sung by Roshan Ara Begum; accompanied by Ustad Hussain, sarangi and Ustad AlIa Ditta, 12:00 p.m. JEAN SHEPHE RD (WOR) tablist. (Odeon)

12: 45 ~1USIQUE MAURE OF MAURITANIA Non -professional music of the moorish peoples. (Ocora)

1:20 AFGHANISTAN - MUSIC OF THE UZBEKS (Anth 0 10 gy)

2:00 JAZZ fOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON Bob Gwynne

5: 00 ~lUS IC OF THE TiiE.'ITIETH. CENTURY Stan Keen

6:30 OPEN TIME

CON F EDE~\TE 7:05 CO~lMENTARY 10 : 00 GENER AL fROM BIG SUR An adaption of parts of the s tory 7: 30 MUSIC FROM DAHOMY by Richard Brautigan, presented by One of the most interesting the Bijou Ensemb l e : of all albums of African music. Jesse Greg Palmer (Ocora) Lee Mellon Dick Parker Elaine Lindsay ~1ac[)ona l d R:15 TOOTHPICK, LISBON AND THE ORCAS Elizabeth Barbara Castleman ISLANDS Alligator Stoney Contemporary poetry with Joanne and Produced by Barbara Castleman and Mi chae 1 Wiater. A woman's special: Pia Perniciaro. (R) A PRIMER FOR THE GRAD UAL UNDERSTANDING OF GERTRUDE STEIN (Black Sparrow); TO 10 : 30 STREET CORNER SYMPHONY STAY AL IV E by Denise Levertov (New Acapella Soul in this the Persuasions ' Directions); STEPP ING OUT by Carolyn l atest beautiful record, (Capito l) Stoloff (Unicorn); EARTHWORKS by Sandra Hochman (Viking); and, THE 11 :00 THE ROBOTNOR HOURS MIDNIGHT BRIDGE by Mary No rbert Ray Serebrin Korte (Oye z) . (R) 1:00 a.m. ROSWELL ' S RUT Jazz

GERTRUDE STEIN 20 MON DAY, MARCH 20 10:00 J EAN SHEPHERD (WOR)

10:45 HOME MOV I ES 5:00 p.m. FROM TH E FOU L LINE Davi d Me ltze r (R) Roger Sa l e 11: 30 OK ***WHAT NE XT 5: 30 OPE N TIME George Sh an grow , the "motly mus ico­ logist" again with early mus ic of 7:05 COMMENTARY (R) the classical tradition requests aft er half-past midnight. 7: 30 LETTERS AN D THI NGS the s t ation manage r (R)

7: 45 LETTER FROM ENGLAND Michael Scarborough (R)

8 :00 CONTEMPORARY CHAMBER MUSI C Gordon Crosse - Concerto da Camera Pe rfor med by the Melos Ensemble and di recte d by Lawrence Foster John Cor igliano, Jr. - Sonata for vi ol i n and piano Perfor med by John Corigliano, Sr. , TUESDAY, MARCH 2 ) viol in and Ra lph Vot apek , pi ano . Ge r al d Strang - Concer to for ' ce llo 5:00 p.m. THE L~ ACY OF THURSTON DART with woodwinds and piano CONCERT XI Perfo rm~d by Arch ie Wade , f lute ; This concert is devoted t o Nor man Benno , oboe ; John Neufe ld, music of J ohn Dowland. We hear cl arinet; Don Ch ris t lieb , bas soon the Philomusica of London pe rform and Gabor Rej t o, ' ce l lo sol oist. Dowland's "Lachrimae, or seven Directed by Ge r ald Str ang . Teares figured in seven passion­ (Ode on (1) &CR I (2 & 3) ate Pavans, with divers other Pavans, Galiards, and Almands, 9 : 00 UNIVERS E set forth for the Lute, Viols, A Dimension X, old r adio program, or Violons, in f i ve parts". with scr ipt by Robe rt Heinlein. (R) (L' Oiseau-Lyre)

9 : 30 CURLY SECK LER AN D THE SHENAN DO AH 6:00 TKE MUSI C OF TURKEY CUTU PS Ali San Bluegr ass music from the Appal­ achi ans . Since 1962 Curly Seck l er 7:05 COMMENTARY (R) hasn ' t been ve ry active , but t he Shenandoah Cu tups ar e going s trong. 7:30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS Curly couldn ' t s tay silent for l ong William Mandel of Berkeley and the Cut ups do him r i ght. The (Pacifica) (R) mus i c : Moonligh t on my cabin , Th inking ab out you , Some Old Day , 8:00 THE PEOPL E' S MUSIC OF CHI NA No Mother or Dad , You Took My Sun­ Lim Chew- Pah shine , Re memb e r t he Cross , Don't This Road Look Rough and Rock y, 9: 30 MUSIC OF THE CENTRAL AF RICAN That Old Book of Mine ) Worries on REP UBLI C my Mind, Old Salty Dog Blues , What' s Wi th these instruments: sanza, Th e Matter Now , and Sing, Sing, XY lophone , voice, whistle, nose Sing. Pe rforming are Curly Seck l e r, whis tle , rattles, horn, trumpet, guitar; Tater Tat e , fiddle ; Bi lly Z axe , metal bells , drums of Edwards , banj o ; He r she l Si zemor e , various kinds, harp-zither, and mandol i n and John Pal mer , bass . the talking drums (same drums, (County) di fferent use : aC1:ually a highly inf l ect e d language imitation). (O cor a) 2-1 10: 10 INTERVIEW WITH YOKO ONO 8:45 CONFESSIONS OF A FOOD FREAK Liza Cowan and Jan Albert of WBAI By Vic Stephan Sussman, read by talk about the evo lution of her art Harry Feld: " ... we smear ourselves in the early 1960 ' s , Among the with s oy sauce and dance naked around topi cs Ms . Lennon discusses are: a ses arne seed. " (R) concept art, match piece, acting out madness in order not to go mad, 9 :00 ETHNIC I

ll: 00 URBAN BLUES Di ck Sh urman

WEDNES DAY , MARCH 22

1: 30 pm ~IU S IC OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN THURSDAY, MARCH 23 War Dances and Honor Songs Soci al Songs and Fo lk Songs 1:30 pm THE BREEZ E FROM ERIN Ce remonial Songs and Chan ts Irish Fo l k tlusi c on Wind Ins trumen ts . TIl ese are the tribes represented: Willie Clancy , bagpipes and whistle; Ch eyenn e , Pon ca , Sioux, Arikara, Fes t y Conlan , whist l e; Eddie Corcor­ Omaha , Taos , Kiowa , Navajo , Crow, an, whistle ; Tim Lyons , accordian; Paw nee , Sh awnee , PI ains, Tewa , Apa Tony McMahon , accordion; Seamus Tan ­ Apache, Ute , Pima , Papago , Zuni, sey , flute, whistle and tambourine; Hopi, and Paiute . (Everest) wi th Reg Ha ll, piano. Slipjigs , jigs , reels and airs. Including: :> : 15 MU RDE R I N TilE CATHEDRA L - T. S, "The Choice Wife , " "The Bag of ELIOT Po tatos," "Boi I Breakfast Early" Th e Old Vic Company Production, by and "P addy Ryan's Dream." (Topic) Robe rl lie Ipmann . (Ange 1) 2: 15 MUSIC FROM ANYWHERE 5 : 00 PEGGY ALONE George Shangrow presents the dta­ Peggy Seeger sings, amllng other matic works of the English compos­ songs, "Handsome Mo lly, " "Old Man ers-- most notably Henry Purcell . and Woman , " "The Mermaid ," " ~lathie Grove ," "The Deaf Woman 's C0urt­ 5:15 TilE BOOK REV I Ell' ship" and "Little Ne llie." (Argo) Pat ricia Coburn commen ting on DIET FOR A SMALL PLANET by Frances 6 :00 CONTEMPORARY POE TR Y AND MUSIC OF Moore Lappe . (Friends of the Earth/ WOMEN Ba llentine) (R) With Pia (R)

7:05 COMM ENTARY (R) 5: 30 BALTIC ' S BOP STOP In be-bop trumpet p l aying , Roy El­ 7: 30 VISIT TO NAMIBIA dridge provides the direct link be­ Hilary Go ldstine, a young Berkeley tween swing and bop. Teacher (and \11 oman , describes her visi t to South­ in some ways , master) of Dizzy \IIest Afri ca, or Namibia. While in Gillespie , Mr . Eldridge is featured Tan zania she interviewed Andreas this evening with his unique styl e , Shipanga , the president in exile of And we may even play some of those the South West African Peop l e 's Or­ sides whe rein he sings with Anita gani zat.ion, and the program includes O'Day , if you behave yourselves this interview. (Pacifica) (R) today. 22 SUN DAY, MARCH 26

10 :00 am A CHILD' S GARDEN OF VEGETABLES Dick Parker

12:00 noon JEAN SHEPHE RD (WOR)

SATURDAY , MARCH 25 12:45 pm A SITAR RECITAL BY RA IS KHAN Accompanied by t abilst Us t ad Basheer 9 : 00 am JAZZ FOR A SAT~ RD AY MORNING Ahmed Khan , Rais Kh an performs Raags Tim Wi r e Jhinhoti, Todi, and Pr iya Dhun . (Odeon) 5: 00 pm POPULAR ME LODIES OF THE PHILI PPINES Filipi no musi c of then and now as 1: 30 THE ONLY JEALOUSY OF EMER collect ed and narrated by Ermie Gu WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS Gut i errez who h as recently come to This play , one of f i ve of the Cuchu­ the U.S . Th e music i s primaril y lain cycle, is described as: I~ from recordings of his and many Poetic Play f or Masked Dancers with friend s from t he Philippines . Original Music by Lou Harrison." Queen Emer - Paula Bauersmith 7 :05 MAGIC MIND Ghost of Cuchulain - Gerald E. ~1c- "In fo rmer days all animals could Gonagi 11 speak and so could the flowe r s , t he Bricriu of the Sidhe - John McLiam trees and the stones and all life­ Woman of t he Si dhe - Bonnie Bird l ess things wh o we re creat ed by the Eithne Inguba - Gl orence Peters same God who had created man." 1s t Musician - Colleen Dewhurst STORY Or SAN MICHELE by Axe l Munthe 2nd Musici an - Betty Ellis (R) 3rd Musician - Jacquelyn Cooper Th e mus i c i s performed by Samuel 8:00 MUSIC OF WERNER J OSTE N AN D GAIL Baron (flute) , Seymour Barab ('cel KUBIK (' cello) , Lou Harrison (Celesta) . Werner J osten : Mardecai Sheinkman (Pr epared Pi ano) . Jungl e and Jane Bat che l der (Bass) and was Canzona Seria written in 1949 . (Co un terpoint/ Performed by memb ers of the Am Esoteric) American Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Leopold Stokowski . 2:00 JA ZZ FOR A SUNDAY AFTERNOON Gai 1 Kubi k : Bob Gwy nne Symphony Concertante Perfor med by members of the 5 :00 SCI ENTI STS AGAINST THE WAR French Ra dio Orchestra, conduct­ An interview wi th Gar Allen and Dale ed by Gai l Kubik Harrison about t he new rol e for sci­ (CRI) entists against the war and t he re­ cent meeting of Scientis t s for Viet­ 9 :00 DOMESTIC RE PRESS ION nam held in Chicago . (KDNA) A pane l made up of Mark Seldon, who speaks firs t on heroin and its re la­ 5:15 THE IM PORTAN CE OF BE I NG EARNEST tion to i mperi ali sm. Mark is pro­ OSCAR WILDE fessor of History at Washington Uni­ The cast: ve r sity and co-edi tor of CONCERNED John Worthing - Sir John Gi elgud ASIAN SCHO LARS. Next to speak are Algernon Moncrie ff - Ro l an d Culver Clint Tay lor and Mi ke Joyce of the Lady Brackne ll -Dame Edi t h Evans Peop l e 's Law offi ce of Chicago and Hon. Gwendol en Fai rfax - Pame l a Br Carbondal e . They talk on Attica Brown (they just returned from a visi t Cecily Cardew - Ce lia Johnson there) and give a backgr ound on the Miss Prism - Jean Cade ll riots t here . (KDNA) (R) Rev . Canon Chas ub l e D. O. - Brew - ster Mas on 10:00 BLUEGRASS Lane - Peter Sallis Tiny Freeman Produced by Sir J ohn Gi e l ti ud. (Angel ) 23 7:05 CO~1MENTARY 8: 10 OPEN THIE

7:30 OPEN TIME 9 : 10 GLORY IN Til E DAYTUIE Dorothy Parker 7:45 MUSIC OF LOU HARRISON Little Mrs . Murdock meets a grande Symphony on G( 1948 -1964) dame of the stage, told as on ly Performed by the Royal Philharm­ Doro thy Parker co uld t e ll it. Per­ oni c Orchestra , directed by Ger­ formed as on l y the Bijou Ensemble hard Samue 1. (CRI) could do ito ~ I rs . Murdo ck - St oney 8 : 30 WRITING A HISTORY OF SEATTLE (#16) ~lr . ~ Iur dock - Lindsay ~ l acDo n a ld Roger Sale presents "George Cot­ lIa ll i e Noyes - Liza terill and Seattle's urban pop­ Li Iy lVyn ton - Barbara Cas tleman ulism." Cotterill's career is a :~arrator - Ni l a (R) kind of mirror of the various re­ form movements in Seattle during 9 : 30 OBSESS I ON its boom and crisis years-- he Starring Vincent Pr ice , thi s CIJ i sode was deeply involved in the crea­ or the o ld radio serial deals \,i th tion of municipal corporations the obsess i on to murder of an ohses - to operate the natural monopo­ sed pa ranoi d . (I~) lies, in prohibi tion, in fi gh t­ i ng 'the interests. ' ~Iat happens to Cotter ill is in a sense what happened to the whole city bet ween 1895 and 1930." (R)

9 : 00 OPEN TIME

9 : 30 VINTAGE JAZZ Hal Sherlock

11: 00 JUST JAZZ Herb Hannum

FRIDAY, MARCH 24

5: 00 pm FILM AND THEATRE Di ck Jameson and Jim Mish' alani (R) 10 : 00 TilE ~1AG IC CIRCLE THEATRE An inte rvi ew wi th t hree members of 5: 30 KRUMHOR NS AND KINGS the group : Guy Gi arrizzo (direct or) , Randy McCar ty, wi th early classical Rick Betts , and J . Go nza l ez . Th ey wes tern music describe t he kind of theatre that they intend t o do in Seattle - they 7: 05 COMMENTARY (R) are from the east coas t and did " Envi r onmental Theatre" there . TIley 7:30 FORT DIX : OR HOW I BECAME THE ULTI­ are new here but intend t o s t ay, MATE WEAPON IN EIGHT WEEKS Interviewed by Michael Wiater and A r eporter from WBAI vi si ted Fort Alis ter Conway . (ll.) Dix , the largest bas1c combat train­ ing base in the Northeast. He in­ 10: 30 DIAL TONE terviewed the men in training and A play by V. Terrell adapted for their officers to find out their radio by KDNA . It refers to a views on the experience of basic specific person who was jailed and combat training. They t alk about later convict ed of r ape . (R) things from haircut regulations to drugs. (Pacifi ca) (R) 11 :00 ' RO UND MIDNIGIIT Jazz wi t h Don Mills 2+ 7:05 COMME NTARY (R)

7:30 INSTANT I NSANITY Frank Armbruster is director ~f Product s of the Behavioral Sciences , Inc., and is the inventor of "In­ s t ant Insanity" (12 million puzzles noW sol d) and in this interview with L. Hilam and J. Smi th, he dis cusses how he got started in teaching games, what he thinks of contemporary edu­ cation, how he began with Skinnerian "Teaching machines" (which he now r ejects) and other subjects. (KTAO) (R)

8:00 ATAHUALPA YUPANQUI Gui tare des andes; special instru­ mental with these works: Ha l ambo , Vidala Dolorosa, El Bien Perdido , El Indio Y La Quena , Pastoral India, La Paloma Enamorada, Regresso del Pastor, Cacharpaya, Cancion del Carr et ero and La Amorosa . (Le Chant du Honde)

8:45 GALWAY KINNEL : POETRY , PERSONALITY , AND DEATH Th is essay by the American poet Ga l­ way Kinnel (author, most r ecently , of THE BOOK OF NI GHTHARES) appeared in FIELD #4 , Spring 1971. It is pre­ 5:30 OPEN TIHE faced by the poem "In the Hotel of Lost Light ," which appears both in 6:00 20TI1 CENTURY MUSIC BY AHERICAN the maga zine and in the book. All WOHEN - CONCERT II are read by ~1ichael Wiater. (R) Mary Howe - Stars Sand 9: 30 KING BISCUIT TIME Spring ?as toral The Bl ues wi th Cli ff Butler and Bob Louise Talma - Toccata for Orchestra Wes t Vivian Fine - Alcestis Julia Perry - A Short Piece for 11 :00 TI1E ROBOTNOR HOURS Orchestra Ray Se rebrin Habel /McDaniels - Deep Forest William Strickland directs the 1:00 ROSWELL ' S RUT Vienna Orchestra (Howe ' s Stars and Jazz Sand) and the Imperial Philharmonic of Tokyo. Narrated by Joanne Harris. (CRI)

7: 05 COHMENTARY (R)

7:30 LETTERS AND THINGS Station manager (R)

7 :45 LETTER FROM ENGLAND Michael Scarborough (R) MONDAY, HARCH 27 8 :00 THE OLD WAX WORKS 5 :00 pm FROM THE FOUL LINE Memory songs of yesteryear wi th Roger Sal e (R) Earl Smith 25 9: 00 LIEDER WITI-! RAYMOND JARV I 6:00 A CONCERT OF GUITAR MUS IC WIT I! f'[R_ An introduction to the Scandinavian CUSS ION art s ong A performance of diverse works from 1. Lindblad: En ung flickas mor­ the 16th century down to present gonbet r aktelse times of twenty-one short works. Manntro The performers are Siegfried Beh­ Aftonen rend, guitar; Siegfried Fink, per­ Am Aarensee cussion; and Claudia Brodzinska­ 2. Josephson: Serenad. Behrend, voice. (DGG) Tro ej gladjen Sj ung, sjung der underbara sang 7:05 COMMENTARY (R) 3. Grieg: Jeg elsker dig! Eros 7: 30 SOVIET PRESS AND PERIODICALS Milbom rosor William Mandel of Berkeley (Pacifi­ Der gynger en bad pa bolge ca) (R) Hytten 4. Sibelius: Flickan kom ifran sin 8:00 OLD TIMEY ~1USIC alsklings mote John Burke and Phil Williams with Svarta rosor traditional American music Sav, sav, susa Hostkvall 9:00 INTERVIEW - OWEN DE LONG Var det en drom? Owen belongs to Me l Lyman's Avatar Performed, respectively, by Elisa­ family, recently made famous in two beth Soderstrom (1 and 2), Kirsten articles published by Rol l ing Stone Flagstad, and Florence Mesler. magazine. He and a friend dropped by KRAB one afternoon in February 10:00 JEAN· SHEPHERD (WOR) and talked about all sorts of things, including Mel~s family's new book 10:45 HOME MOVIES and record, KPFK , the articles, com­ David Me ltzer (R) munes around the country, the won­ ders of Eugene and Portland (inclu­ 11: 30 DRY SLOUGH ROAD ding KBOO). Interviewed by Michael Nancy Keith Wiater, Phil Munger, Randy Francis­ co, and Greg Palmer. (R)

11 :00 URBAN BLUES Dick Shurman TUESDAY , MARCH 28

5 :00 pm THE LEGACY OF THURSTON DART CONCERT XII Music by Henry Purcell: Sonatas VII and VIII from "Sonatas in III Parts" performed by the Jaco­ bean Ensemble, directed by Thurston Dart. Seven songs of Purcell: WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29 Music for a whi le, On the Brow of Richmond Hill, From rosy bow'rs, 1: 30 pm MUSIC FROM AFGHANISTAN They t ell us, The fatal hour - Music of the Pashtoons, Heratis and Corinna, and two settings of If Kazakhs. Recorded by Mark Slob in music be the food of love. of the Uni versi t y of 1v!ichigan. Performed by Helen Watts, con­ (Anthology) tralto; Desmond Dupre, viola da gamba; and Thurston Dart, ·harpsi­ 2:20 JAVANESE COURT GAMELAN chord. From the Pura Paku Alaman, Jogya­ Sonatas IX and X from "Sonatas in karta, K.R.T. Wasitodipuro, direc­ III Parts" tor. Recorded by Robert E. Brown. (L'Oiseau-Lyre and Spoken Arts-Argo) (Nonesuch) 26 3: 10 QUILAPAYUN 7:05 COMMENTARY (R) "Les Flutes Chi liennes." (O deon) 7:30 VAL IHA: MADAGASCAR 3:45 MUSIC FROM THE CO URT OF CHAR LES V OF Various musics for the tube- zither. SPAIN (Ocora) Twenty- one performances of music from late 15th and earl y 16th cen­ 8:30 THE AFRICA PROGRAM tury Spain . The soprano soloist , Dr: Simon Ottenberg (R) Ana Maria ~1iranda , has a distinctive voice for the songs on this set - 9:00 ETHN IC MUSIC most ly Romances, vil l ancicos and Dr. Robert Garfias popular songs . She is accompanied by the Ancient Instrumental Group of 11:00 COMING DOIVN FROM THE SEVENTH Paris, directed by Roger Cott e . Dr. Spider (Arion- CBS)

4 : 20 PURCELL ' S DIDO AND AENEAS An opera in three acts with word ~ by N~1 um Tate . The cast : Dido - Janet Baker Belinda - Patricia Cl ark THUR SDAY , MARCH 30 Aeneas - Raimund Herincx 1: 30 pm ORCHESTRA L MUSI C OF DONALD ER B The roles of the second woman, the Symphony of Overtures : 1) Endgame , sorceress, wi t ches , spi ri ts, and 2) Th e Bl acks , 3) The t~aids 4) sailors are taken by members of the Rhinoceros ' St . Anthony Singers, with the Eng­ Th e Seventh Trumpet lish Chambe r Orchestra , directed by Concerto for Percussion and Orche- Anthony Lewis . Thurston Dart is stra the harpsichord cont inuo. Marvin Dah l gren, percussion soloist ; (L ' Oiseau- Ly r e) The Dallas Symphony Orchestra, dir­ ect ed by Donald Johanos . (Turnabout) 5: 20 I NSTRUMENTAL MUSIC OF THE SOU'lllERN APPALACHIANS 2 : 15 MUSIC FROM ANYWHERE The selections on this record we r e Geo rge Shang row presents the Seattle ma de during the summer of 1956 on a Chamber Si nge rs in a concert of folksong collecting trip to Vi rginia their own music. The concert was and North Carolina by Diane Hamilton. presented Feb ruary 22 , and featured lVith'the exception of Hobart Smi th , a ll sorts of works written by mem­ none of the arti s ts on the record bers of t he group . George Shangrow has been recorded befor e . dir ect s . The performers are : Hobart Smith, Ms . Etta Baker, Boone Reid, Mrs. Edd 5: 15 THE BOOK REVIEW Presnell, Richard Chase and Lacey Randy Francisco comments on EDUCA ­ Phillips . ' TION AND JOBS : THE GREAT TRAI NI NG The selections pl ayed are : Crippl e ROBBERY by I var Berg. (Beacon Creek , Pateroller Song, One Dime Press) (R) Blues , Sourwood~1ount ai n Goin ' down the r?ad feeling bad, Am~zing grace, 5:30 THE VAST WESTLAND The ?Irl I l eft behind me, Marching Barry Wes t wi th jazz Jayb~rd , J?hn Brown ' s body, Sally ~oodIn , RaIlroad Bill , Soldier' s 7:05 COMME NTARY (R) JOY , Molly Brooks , Prett y Po lly J?hnson boys , John Henry, Drunk~n 7:30 OPEN TIME HICCUPS , Shady Grove , Bully of the t?wn , and Skip to my lou. (Tr adi­ 8:30 WRITI NG A HISTORY OF SEATTLE (#17) tlon) "George Co tterill and the demise of urban populism between 1900 and 6 :00 CONTEMPORARY POETRY AND ~1US IC OF 1915." Says Roger Sal e , "as reform IVOMEN becomes respectable , it tecomes \Vi th Pia (R) 21 bourgeois, prohihitionist, staunch 13: 10 TI-lREE WORKS OF LUKAS FOSS for clean government , afraid of the Echoi, The Fra~men ts of Archilochos Skid Road, pOli tical reformers are and Non-Improvisation driven l e f t, and the near right is Pe rformed by the Crane Collegiate taken over by the flag waving Colo­ Singers; Jan Williams, percussion; nel Blethen of the TIMES. Blethen, Oswald Rantucci, mandolin; Edward Mayor Cotterill, and the Socialist Yadzinski, clarinet; Dou~las Davis, Hulet Wells all get wonderfully en­ cello; Jonathan ~~arcus, p:uitar; tangld in a 1912 battle. II (R) Lukas Foss, piano. (Heliodor­ Wergo) 9: 00 LEFT PRESS REVIEW Frank Krasnowsky (R) 9:00 THE ISRAELI OPPOSITION An interview with Amos Kenen , an 9 : 30 CLASSIC JAZZ Israeli journalist writing for one Mike Duffy of the t wo major dailies in Israel, who describes himself as part of 11 :00 SOMETHING , BUT DON'T EXPECT ANYTI-lING the left opposi ti.on in his country. White No ise (Pacifica) (R)

9 ::>0 AFGHANISTAN AND IRAN Their music (Vogue)

10: .30 WILLIAM DI~KEY: RIVERS OF THE PACI­ FIC NORTHWEST A poem cycle made available by Two­ windows Press. (R)

11 :00 BUMBLING WITH BALTIC Jazz

FRI DAY , MARCH 31

5:00 pm TI-lE FILl--! REVIEW Richard ,Tameson (R)

5: 30 KRIJMHORNS AND KINGS Randy McCarty

7:05 COHHENTARY (R)

7: 30 USTAD FAIYAZ KHAN SINGS Twe1 ve songs as follow: Tarpat Hun ,Taise in Lalit . Unsang Lagi Ankhia in RamkeJi Garwa Main Sang Lage in Todi Ari Mero Nahi in Deshi Dhamar Hori Baju Band Khu1 Khu1 Jaye in Thumree Bhairavi More Jobanoa Par Aai in Dadra .Jhan Jhan Jhan Jhan Paye1 Baje in Nat Behag Nay an Se Dekho Ek .Thalak in Sugrai Kheya1 in Darbari Man Mohan Brij Ko Rasia in Paraj Phoo1 Banki Gendan in ,Taunpurl Chalo Kahe Ko Jhuti in Bhairavi- Dadra (Odeon) 25

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