Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 22

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
22
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ton cr Problems in day's ieievisioii 1 uHI dliib 13 coin hiiannei ea Cll)G 1 Delay i Vi'HTAS-TV 11 WAVE-TV 3 WLKY-TV 32 By FRED BALES Courier-Journal Times Staff Writer Don't bother to check the television listings yet for programs on Channel 41. They won't appear today, tomorrow or even next month, although there is a chance that they might be scheduled sometime next year. Channel 41 is a proposed UHF television station that would reach viewers in the Falls Cities area. The studios would be situated in Louisville and the transmitting tower in the Knobs section of Floyd County, north of New Albany. It's the tower that has brought about the uncertainties.

Because of a mix-up in preparing maps of the tower site for two Floyd County planning groups, officials of Consolidated Broadcasting, the parent company. of Channel 41, are seeking new longitude and latitude co-ordinates from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). If the broadcasting company rides out the wave of red tape, it will appear before the Floyd County Board of Zoning Appeals and seek final approval of its proposed tower location. No word has come yet from the FCC, and owing to lead time needed for legal advertising there is no chance of getting the matter before the January meeting of the appeals board. The company will be "lucky" to have FCC approval in time for February's meeting, according to Jacob Rudy, local attorney for the broadcaster.

Although Rudy said he couldn't foresee major difficulties with the federal agency, j.t 1 JlM. i he added: "If we don't furnish the appeals board with the new coordinates sometime, then the petition will die a natural death." Reached by telephone at his office in Chillicothe, the president of Consolidated Broadcasting, Arlie Howard, said he was loath to discuss the program format of the station until after a final decision about the tower. Howard said, however, that he had a contract for equipment to operate the television facility and that he has looked over "two or three tentative locations" for studios in Louisville. One of his next steps will be to hire a station manager, a move he had hoped to make as early as last September, Howard said. Consolidated first sought FCC approval of a station in Louisville in 1965, and then two years ago received approval for raising its tower height and transmitting power to put it on a par with existing commercial stations in the city.

6:30 Sunrise Semester Today on Firm 7:00 CBS Vorninn Newj JO Rocky'i Friend! 7- Today 8:00 Capt. Kangaroo 8:30 Romper Room 9Mornini Show T-Bar-V Romper Room 9:20 Fashions Sewing The Edge of Night The Real McCoys JMrerun) inlt Takei Two The Lucy Show (rerun) Ben Casey (rerun) I II Takes Two; .0:15 News I Concentration Beverly Hillbillies (rerun) 14 sale of the Century Andv Griffith Show Talk of the Town I (rerun) 11:20 News Hollywood Squares Love of Life Galloping Gourmet (rerun) 4 0 Jeopardy Where the Heart Is Bewitched (rerun) I Where Heart; 12:25 News Who, What, Where Search for Tomorrow That Gin (rerun) Geme; 12:35 News IMike Douglas Show Focus: 1 P.M. Dream House It II As The World Turns Let's Make a Deal a a 2' Days of Our Lives Love Is a Many The Newlywed Game Splendored Thins The Doctors The Guiding Light The Dating Game II 3 Another World The Secret Storm General Hospital a a a Bright Promise My Favorite Martian One Life to Live (rerun) 4 Channel 3 Movies Gomer Pyle USMC Dark Shadows "(rerun) Perry Mason (rerun) Batman (rerun) a i' Channel Movies Perry Mason (rerun) Gilligan's Island (rerun) The Flint' mas Channel News Hour Eyewitness News (rerun) Weather. News Channel 11 News Hour Six O'clock Movie News; Sports NBC News CBSNews 7" WAVE Monday Movie Wilburn Brothers Six0'Clock Movie Wings of Fire jj Gunsmoke TheMusic Scene WAVE Monday Movie Gunsmoke The Music Scene The New People Here's Lucy (i 9 NBC Monday Movie Mayberry RFD The Survivors The stooge Doris Day Show NBC Monday Movie a roTi urnetf how Love, American Style I II II nWAVE News Report Focus: 11 P.M. Eyewitness News The tonight Show Merv Griffin Show Film Festival Sign Off 1 A.M.

Sign Off 1 A.M. Young Scientists Charge Elders With 'Selling Out' Grand "Amarito'lToitiaU" have been attending scientific sessions to challenge scientists on the direction of their research. There have been some interruptions of speeches and small, quiet demonstrations. Salami lere'sThe fiat swings Lucie Arnaz and Lucille Ball Babysitting vnth a chimp, CBS-11 at 8:30 p.m. 8:00 CBS-11: Captain Kangaroo Rebroadcast of the simulated moon mission of Apollo 12.

12:30 NBC-3: The Who, What or Where Game Art James is host of a new daytime quiz show. 1:00 Channel 3: The Mike Douglas Show Ozzie and Harriet are cohosts to Paul Anka and Buddy Greco. 7:30 CBS-11: Gunsmoke Jack Elam plays the father of two motherless children who pretends to have a change of heart when three nuns confront him in "The Sisters." 7:30 ABC-32: Music Scene The Los Angeles cast of "Hair" in a medley of the show's songs and Herbie Mann, Tommy Roe, The Zager and Evans group. 8:15 ABC-32: The New People Black separatists imprison Wash as a white spy. 8:30 CBS-11: Here's Lucy Kim (Lucie Arnaz) takes a job as baby sitter for a pet shop to earn extra money to pay for her own telephone.

9:00 NET-15 and KET: Black Journal Charles Hamilton comments on the political implications of the black power movement in the past decade. 9:00 ABC-32: The Survivors Baylor's widow makes a surprise appearance at the reading of his will. 10:00 CBS-11: The Carol Burnett Show Donald O'Connor and Nancy Wilson join Carol and the cast in a music-and-comedy salute to MGM movies. 10:00 NET-15: American Association for Advancement of Science Naturalist and artist Roger Tory Peterson shows films of the Galapagos Islands and features on the voyage of the ice- breaker Manhattan through the Northwest Passage and the national concern for hunger and malnutrition. 10:00 ABC-32: Love, American Style Vivian Vance plays a medium who falls in love with one of her clients in "Love and the Medium." 11:30 NBC-3: The Tonight Show Mayor John V.

Lindsay and Alan King with Johnny Carson. With Flavor KaHns 11:30 CBS-11: The Merv Griffin Show Elke Sommer, Phil Silvers, Charlton Heston and The Carnival. COTTO SALAMI At Your Food Store TODAY'S MOVIES ON TV 4:00 Channel 3: Jack Lemmon, Glenn Ford and Brian Donlevy in "Cowboy," 1958, color A hotel clerk and a cattleman learn a lesson about life when they become partners on a difficult cattle drive to Mexico. 6:00 Channel 32: Randolph Scott, Joan Leslie and Ellen Drew in "Man in the Saddle," 1951, color A wealthy rancher is killed by his own trap set for the man his wife loves. 7:00 Channel 3: Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis and Polly Bergen in "The Stooge" 1952 A Broadway song-and-dance man adds a song plugger to act as a stooge in his act.

11:30 Channel 32: Bette Davis, Claude Rains and Paul Henreid in "Deception," 1946 Love and jealousy in a web of decep- tion when a girl marries her old love without telling him of an affair. BOSTON (AP) The "built in obsolescence" of women's stockings is typical of what is wrong with science today, a student scientist told his elders yester. day. The student, Allen S. Weinrub, said women's stockings are manufactured to run after the first wearing when they could be made to last longer.

Weinrub, a graduate student in engineering and physics at Harvard University, said scientists and technologists lend themselves to such practices when they should be "more responsive to peoples' needs." "Technology is not out of control but out of control of the people," said Weinrub, 26. He said technology is controlled by "corporate interests and the government which serves them." His comments came at a student-run symposium oh "The Sorry State of Science." Weinrub organized the symposium at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and students were invited to present papers on their objections to science and society. Weinrub attacked "public expenditures for private gain" and said military and space programs provide a guaranteed subsidy for industry. The concentration of military and space contracts has tended to monopolize technology further, he declared. Quiet Demonstrations Reported It is the people who have to pay for cleaning up the atmosphere and environment polluted by industry and who are made sick by it, he said.

Dr. Larry Beeferman, 25, a postdoctoral fellow in physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said he may have been a "foolish or ignorant youth" in selecting physics as a career and that it may be necessary for him to leave the field. He criticized General Electric scientists and engineers who remain on the job while GE workers are on strike, saying the interests of the scientists are the same as those of the workers. In an unrelated news conference, Dr. Jean Mayer, professor of nutrition at Harvard, asserted that the association's meeting has been "seized upon by a large group of the young and some elders who ought to know better as a general occasion of national self -hatred." Students and some other young people phone 969-3289 5400 PRESTON HIGHWAY OPEN 9 A.M.

TO 7 P.M. DAILY 55D7 VALLEY STATION RD. phone 937-8784 4102 CANE RUN RD. 448-2514 448-2780 WE ARE WILLING TO BET WERE ARE NO LOWR PRICES IHKMUCKIAUA! Educational Television FIRST CUT KET WKPC-TV 15 SIRLOIN or ROUND STEAK 4:30 Misterogers' Neighborhood 5:00 Sesame Street 4:00 The Sea Otter 4:20 Book Look 4:25 Agriculture Kentucky 4:30 What's New 7:00 The Advocates 1:00 World Press 9:00 Black Journal Today 5:30 Sesame Street 4:30 Misterogers' Neighborhood 5:00 Friendly Giant 5:15 What's New Tonight 7:00 Young Musical Artists 8:00 World Press 9:00 Black Journal 10:00 American Association for Advancement of Scier THE FINEST CHUCK ROAST OLD FASHION BOLOGNA N0.1 ALL MEAT WIENERS 3 LBS. FOR HICKORY SMOKIO PICNIC HAMS IWfNTdAnfTl HMO SLICED FRtE! lUXABIf HTQWi 4 (JS UXfNGTON MAOtSONVJUC CKhzy New Yim CHUCK STEAK 39 Jr lit I Cwni Only CKink Ptltli Fee.

Stations on KET Network RfSEftVflTIONS T-BONE STEAK RIB-EYE STEAK 8 OUNCES EACH KLAREN VALENTINE makes her movie debut in "Gidget Grows Up" on the ABC network tomorrow. Football pre-emptions will prevent the bride of ex-Louisville actor Mac McLaughlin from being seen locally. With her is Edward Mulhare of "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir." Ik DlTKIi-J cat WUH' isio vw mm LB. 1 '4 QUANTITY IIOHTS RfSHVID 1 4 Ufa?" FRESH GROUND BEEF Low1 CENTER SLICED BREAKFAST BACON LBS.

FOR OUR OWN COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE "UKl GRANDPA USED 10 MAKE" 3 LBS. FOR ST139 $m9 LBS. FOR TV Star Karen Valentine Meets Louisville Jinx FOR RENT 3 $69 jg.r"""!tiy IE-' Models omown MEAT LOAF TYPEWRITERS ADDING MACHINES of the ABC coverage of the Sugar Bowl FEATURING THE FINEST BEEF MONEY CAN BUY CLEARANCE SALE Hundreds of nsw and used typewriter! and adding machine! for (ale at BARGAIN PRICES. Radio mMT 620 WSM .650 NBC News "nltou'r Nashville WLW 700 NBC News on Hour "sw Cincinnati 8 p.m. Royals-Pistons WAKY 790 HT, whas 840 7:30 p.m.

Miami of Ohio-Kentucky wfia 900 970 NBCN.w,.nu I p.m. Southern Method is t-U of WKLO 1O80 WINN 1240 "ta "wrey 1290 New Albany WLOU 1350 tuSS WXVW 1 450 ABC News on "iou? Jeffersonville MBS News at 4:40 p.m. Scottsburs-Warsaw 8:30 p.m. Floyd Central-Jeffersonvllls whel 1570 WFPL-FM 89.3 fnfZ WFPK-FM 91.9 t2 WHAS-FM 97.5 News 8:55, 11 a.m., 1 :55,4,4:55, 11 p.m. WKLO-FM 99.7 'gJTS.

WMPI-FM 1O0.9 MBSNewsonW-M 6cottsburg 7 p.m. Scottsbure-Warsaw Floyd Centrai-Jeffersonville WLRS-FM WSTM-FM 103.1 Sfo Steieo Music WSAC-FM 105.5 a.m. I2 midnight VVJMS.rivi i NiwsonMour Fort Knox WQXE-FM 106.3 i t.m.-U midnight News at 7:45 a.m., Bltiabethtown 12 noon, 5 p.m. and :55 Stereo Music WKRX-FAA 106.9 100 SATISFACTION GUARANTEED JUST SAY "CHARGE IT" NO MONEY DOWN UP TO 12 MONTHS TO PAY KENTUOnmPEWRlfl VILLI, KY. CI South 3rd' Wi i ill 3-9805 By JAMES DOUSSARD Courier-Journal Staff Writer This is going to be quite a week for perky little Karen Valentine.

Consider: Tomorrow, she makes her feature film debut in the title role of "Gidget Grows Up," a made-for-TV movie to le shown on ABC at 8:30 p.m. (EST). On Wednesday, she will be seen as student teacher Alice Johnson on "Room 222," probably the best freshman TV series of the season. This one, also via ABC, comes at 8:30 p.m. tAlso on Wednesday, Karen, who is the bride of ex-Louisville actor Mac McLaughlin, will be in town for the first time since the couple's Nov.

8 wedding. Mac's parents are Mr. and Mrs. C. Hunter Green.

Thursday, Karen will be co-hostess ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR WE FILLED HIS FREEZER SELECTED K21 fWy. I lean Mm iwlyJr i I GIVE the FAMILY LOW COST Gas Heating for that oxtra Room, Brim-Way or gorogn NEEDS NO CHIMNEY DUCT WORK OR EXPENSIVE INSTALLATION parade in New Orleans. She'll work the pre-game festivities with sportscaster Chris Schenkel. That's a lot of good news for a young lady who not long ago still had to pose for those cornpone gag-cheesecake publicity pictures the networks revel in. Perhaps some bad news won't be too hard for her to take.

There's Bad News, Too That Louisville jinx against young talent with local ties has popped up again in Karen's case. You might recall that ex-Louisvillian Jim Driskill, who had been fighting for roles for a long time, finally landed a fairly big role in an episode of NBC's "The Bold Ones." It was not shown locally because of a political broadcast the Sunday night before the Nov. 4 elections. Then on Dec. 7, two Louisville starlets aged 92 Mattie Clark and Virginia Plock had silent roles in an episode of "Bonanza" only to be preempted by Billy Graham.

Which brings us to Karen, and bad news, to wit: WLKY, Channel 32, Louisville's ABC affiliate, will not carry ABC's "Gidget Grows Up" tomorrow night. The station obtained rights to telecast the Peach Bowl football game at Atlanta between South Carolina (6-3) and West Virginia (8-1) instead. Channel 32 also will pre-empt "Room 222" Wednesday night to carry the Bluebonnet Bowl from the Astrodome between Houston (6-2) and Auburn (7-2). BEEF HALF SELECTED LEAN BEEF HIND mSLr LrT SPECIAL fRYERS LIMIT 15 LBS. WITH BEEF HALF LIMIT 10 LBS.

WITH BEEF HIND S-LB. S-LI. S-LB. 5.11. S-LB.

5-LB. S-LB. S-LB. 5-LB. 5-11.

S-LB. S-LB. 5-11. 5-LB. 5-LB.

S-LB. ORTERHOUSI CLUB STEAK CHUCK STEAK PORK CHOPS FRYERS BOLOGNA GROUND BEEF SHORT RIBS MEAT LOAF CHUCK ROAST COUNTRY RIBS SMOKED HAM WIENERS SAUSAGE PORK ROAST GROUND BIIP PATTIES THE PORTERHOUSE T-BONE and SIRLOIN STEAKS I Man Is Arrested In $140,481 Holdup A 37-year-old man was arrested yesterday afternoon by Louisville detectives in connection with the Nov. 12 armed robbery of an Indianapolis branch bank in which $140,481 was reported taken. The man identified as George Elmer Black is being held by the FBI on federal charges of bank robbery and escaping from San Quentin Prison in California last August, according to Capt. John Hampton, assistant chief of the City Detective Bureau.

Hampton said he and Lt. Boyce Leslie and Detective John Aubrey arrested Black about 1:30 at his residence in the 2000 block of Goldsmith Lane. That robbery was one of six bank robberies in the Indianapolis area during a 13-day period in November. JHRfCT vimj nesting unit Louisville Man Charged In Shooting of Woman Frank Jackson, 59, of the 600 block of East Madison, was arrested yesterday by Louisville police and charged with malicious shooting and wounding. Police said Jackson was charged in connection with the shooting of Mrs.

Daisy Mae Johnson, 32, in the 600 block of E. Madison about 5 a.m. yesterday. Mrs. Johnson, reportedly shot in the left hand and leg, was in satisfactory condition last night at General Hospital.

WHOLE TRIMMED STEAK LOIN IX FREE! BLAST FREEZING WHERE SATISFACTION IS ALWAY GUARANTEED AIR CONDITIONING HEATING HRY 1LVD. POWELL AVE. 36S-584S But keep faith, Karen. Both the movie and the episode of "Room 222" are virtually certain to be back as reruns very soon. YOUR ORDER WILL Bt CUT TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS, DOUBLE-WRAPPED AND LABELED AT AN ADDITIONAL fe LB..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Courier-Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Courier-Journal Archive

Pages Available:
3,667,886
Years Available:
1830-2024