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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 20

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

-or 1 2 THE C0UR1ER.J0UKNAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 9. 1967 Bill Ladd's TV Almanac Channel Chuckles Today's Television Programs WAVE-TV 3 WLKY-TV 32 WHAS-TV 11 Close Look at Ceiling By Michelangelo Slated Howdy, Neighbors 7:05 Sunrise Semester 7:35 CBS Morning News 1:00 Captain Kangaroo 1:30 Jack LaLpnno (color) Morv Griffin Show T-Bir-V Ranch il Today en Firm 7-9 Today (color) 9 Morning Show (color) Dialing for Dollars Now (color) Morv Griffin Show One In Million And Mayberry (rerun) Dick Van Dyke (rerun) 10 Pal Boon (color) Hollywood Squares (color) Everybody's Talking Donna Reed (rerun) 11 Jeopardy (color) it Eyo Guess (color) Eyo Ouess; 12:35 Nows Love of Life (cooler) Love Life News Search Tomorrow (color) Guiding Light (color) Candid Camera (rerun) As the World Turns (color) The Fugitive (rerun) 10:00 NBC-3; Fat Boone, color Lawrence Welk plays the accordion for a community sing. 3:30 ABC-32: Dateline: Hollywood Newlyweds Ryan O'Neal and Leigh Taylor-Young of Peyton Place and actress Anne Francis. 4:00 Channel 32: The Mike Douglas Show, color Van Johnson, Chad and Jeremy and Mrs.

Mattie Rice Coney, Indiana's "Woman of the Year." 6:30 CBS-11: Daktari, color Paula Tracy (Cheryl Miller) has a perilous journey taking the injured Dr. Tracy to safety through the jungle. 6:30 ABC-32: color James Stacey plays a newcomer to the squad who proves to be a welcher and a shirker in "The 4 Dr. Kildare (rerun) 1 Dlaljng lor Dollars Newiywtd Oamo (color) Dream Olrl (color) Pacysi 1 P.M. House Party (color) Dayi of Our Uvea (color) Tho Doctors (color) 2:51 Women's News General Hospital Dark Shadows To Tell the Truth (color) Truth) News The Edge of Night Another World (color) You Don't Say (color) mm A 1 Dating Gamo (color) Dateline; Hollywood 3 Watch Gamo (color) Match Oamo; Nows Concentration (color) The Secret Storm Beverly Hillbillies (rerun) Child's Doctor Mike Douglas Show Maverick (rerun) Channol 1 Movie tceiorj 4 "We were watching a show in color from NBC when there was this loud cackling noise and suddenly the room was full of peacock feathers." Pooeye Cartoon Circus (color) CBS News (color) Channol Movies I Yoil Bear (color) Mlko Douglas Show (color) Metro News; Weather Sports; Business Nows work shows it on Channel 13, Indianapolis, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday at 1 a.m.; on Saturday at 12:30 a.m.

and Sunday at 11:30 p.m.; Channel 9, Cincinnati, Monday through Friday at 11:30 p.m.; Channel 3, Memphis, Monday through Friday at midnight; Channel 5, Nashville, Monday at 11:45 p.m.; Tuesday and Thursday at 12:15 a.m.; Wednesday at 11:30 and Sunday at 10:30. The show, critics say, consists mostly of acts playing Vegas spots, introduced by Dana. It is now live anywhere. Commercials Under Study The National Association of Broadcasters is pointing to a Roper poll which indicates that the public would prefer four commercials In one interruption in a half hour television program rather than four interruptions. Many programs now interrupt twice with two commercials back-to-back.

So far the Roper people have not polled the advertiser. His problem is. simple. If the interruptions are short the viewer doesn't have time to leave the, room before they get back to the pro- gram. Lump four together and the viewer might have time to run to the grocery.

The NAB Code Authority has asked for suggestions about new time limits for commercials. The authority lists an. increase in the number allowable as one suggestion. The Station Representatives Association, composed of those acting as agents for individual stations, suggests a lower number. The NAB code board meets in mid-month and a decision may be reached on new time standards then.

Michelangelo has become a hot television property with the disclosure that his ceiling of the Sistine Chapel will be featured in a special now being prepared. It will give a closer look at the gigantic painting than anyone has had since Michelangelo himself. An earlier television special, "Michelangelo: The Last Giant," is being re-shown on NBC. The first segment was seen for the second time Sunday night. The second installment will be seen on June 4.

A story in Variety last week said that Milton Fruchtman and his company have spent six weeks filming the Sistine Chapel painting from a point only a few feet below the ceiling with a new camera. The camera, Fruchtman claims, is a story in itself, rivaling, he feels, -the invention of Cinerama or the Disney animation technique. Called 'Eye Motion' He calls the process "eye motion." The camera is finger-tip controlled, and Fruchtman claims for it the ability to "compound flexibility, sweep and angles." He says the new process will turn static fresco figures into moving figures and will contribute space elements which will express millions of light years in that section of the painting depicting Creation. Or so Variety quotes him. The crew has been filming at night.

They used an aluminum-tubed camera platform 64 feet high. The chapel was illuminated with 200,000 kilowatts of cold This, Fruchtman told Variety, will not be a documentary, but a dramatic story with dialogue. It is intended for fall showing on one of the networks. Pocusi Today's Nows Weather; Sportroits Daktari (color-rerun) ABC Nows (color). Weather; News News; sports (color) NBC Nows (color) Cembetl (color-rerun) The Invaders (color) Daktari (color-rerun) Red skelton Hour ''(color) Wells Pargo (rerun) Occasional Wife (color-rerun) 7:30 NBC-3: Occasional Wife, color Peter and Greta have a tough time trying to prevent Peter's mother from discov Meredith MacRae, Lori Saunders and Linda Kaye Petticoat Junction, 8:30 p.m.

Tho invaders (color) At The Movies (color) Living It Up Red Skelton Hour (color) Petticoat Junction (color) Peyton Place (color) ering the truth of their "marriage. The Puiitive At The Movies (color) 7:30 CBS-11 The Red Skelton Hour, rnlnr CBS News Special (color) The Old College Try icoior-reruni Rawhide (rerun) Cheyenne (rerun) The Wild Wild West (color-rerun) 10 Metro Report News Weather; Sports News weather; Sports The isle Show 11 News (color) Weather; Sports Tonijht Show (color) Sign Off I A.M. Joey Bishop Show I coior; J. LJJCiSlJAl Ul la (A-Adult A Young Adults Ch-Children) 7:13 Modern Math 8 00 What's Now (Ch) 1:30 Spectrum (A-YA) 9:00 The French Chef (A-YA) robroadcast 9:30 Conversation with Arnold Toynbeo (A) robroadcast IN COLOR Broadcasters Schedule Trip To Washington The board of directors of the Kentucky Broadcasters Association (KBA) yesterday voted to sponsor a trip to Washington to enable Kentucky radio and television men to meet with the Kentucky congressional delegation. The trip will probably take place in June.

KBA will pay all expenses except transportation. The board also voted to sponsor a meeting after the November election with the newly elected Kentucky legislature. The meeting will be held at Elizabeth town. Lee Fondren, general manager of Denver's KLZ, will speak at a luncheon today on the topic of "Advertising 1980" after a morning business session which will open the spring convention of KBA at Stouffer's Louisville Inn. The broadcasters will spend the afternoon in panel sessions.

Lew Birchfield of the Radio Advertising Bureau of New York will head a panel on sales techniques and Wilbur Hudson, chief engineer of WAVE, will discuss engineering. John M. Couric, vice president for public relations for the National Association of Broadcasters, will speak at a banquet tonight. Nipsey Russell plays a dancing policeman in a comedv sketch and Lana Cantrell sings "I'm All Smiles" and "Let Yourself Go. 7:30 ABC-32: The Invaders, color Ralph Bellamy plays an industrialist supposedly dead but actually in hiding after stealing an alien file.

8:30 CBS-11: Petticoat Junction, color Betty Jo, Bobbie Jo and Billie Jo (Linda Kaye, Lori Saunders and Meredith MacRae) help Kate turn the Shady Rest Hotel into a health farm for reducing. 8:30 Channel 15: Spectrum Red Chinese Medicine a comprehensive look at medicine as it is practiced in Red China today including a report that their medical researchers have finally succeeded in synthesizing insulin. 9:00 CBS-11: CBS News Special, color CBS News cameras follow five high school seniors as they go about getting into a college and talk about the hopes and concerns of their generation in "The Old College Try," a news special written and directed by Douglas Leiterman. 9:00 ABC-32: The Fugitive, color Kimble saves the life of Maggie Tippet (Barbara Baxley), the one-armed man's girl friend. 10:00 CBS-11: The Wild Wild West, color John vanDreelen plays a madman planning to create an underwater kingdom to rule the world.

11:30 ABC-32: The Joey Bishop Show, color Tammy Grimes and Nick Adams on the panel. Dana Not Seen in Louisville For two or three who wonder where they can see the recently started Las Vegas late night show featuring Bill Dana on the United Network: It is not seen in Louisville. The latest list I have from United Net TODAY'S MOVIES ON TV 4:00 Channel 3: Glenn Ford, Van Heflin and Felicia Farr in "3:10 to Yuma," 1957 A witness to a holdup succeeds against all odds in holding an outlaw leader prisoner for the train to Yuma. 9:00 NBC-3: Dean Martin, Jerry Lewis, Janet Leigh, Edward Arnold, Fred Clark and Sheree North in "Living It Up," 1954 A country doctor and a railroad worker from New Mexico go on an all-expense-paid trip to New York. (Color) 11:30 Channel 11: Maureen O'Hara, Melvyn Douglas and Gloria Grahame in "A Woman's Secret," 1949 Police investigate the reason why a singer is shot by the woman instrumental in her success.

typewriter and adding machine Radio RENTAL CallJU 5-5862 far Prompt free Delivery, Monthly Rental or Lang-Term AH Kinds 'or All Uiei. Hundreds of famous brand now and used portable and standards at bar gain prices. LOUISVILLE TYPEWRITER CO. 137 S. 4th (on 4th near Market) Free Parking at 4th Main MIKE DOUGLAS 4:00 P.M.

620 News on Half Hour WTMT CD lo Test Sirens Today The Louisville and Jefferson County civil defense office will test its emergency sirens at noon today at stations throughout the county. Country music 5 a.m. to 7i4J p.m. Sports Review 5:15 P.m. 1.496 Diplomas 100th Graduating Class Gets Degrees at UK 790 WAKY Top ao" music 24 hours Nows at tiS and 840 WH AS ABC Maws at TUESDAY A.M.

r.m. on has 4:50 Ch. Downs Raca 5:05 News 5:20 Sports; Business 5:35 P.M. on HAS 5:00 HAS Frone 5:15 Changing Tlmas 5:35 HAS Frolic 0:00 RFD; Market Digest 0:15 Farm News 0:35 A.M. on HAS Nows 7:15 A.M.

on HAS 7:25 Earl Nightingale 7:50 AM Ofl HAS 7:45 News A.M. on HAS Breakfest Club 11:00 Tuesday on HAS P.M. 12:00 News; Farm Mkts. 12:15 Tuesday on HAS 12:25 Farm News 1:00 Tuesday on HAS Special to The Courier-Journal LEXINGTON, Ky. A Campbellsville agriculture major and a Somerset education student won the University of Kentucky's top student awards as the 100th graduating class received its diplomas yesterday at Memorial Coliseum.

The Algernon Sydney Sullivan Medallions went to Miss Johnnie Keilene Cross, Somerset, and Clyde Lewis Kirt-ley, Campbellsville. The awards are given to the man and woman students and to a non-student who best exemplify 5:25 Sports; Business 5:40 P.M. on HAS 0:30 Dreier; Hermon 0:50 Bob Considine 0:30 Dreier; Harmon 0:50 Bob Considine 7:00 Moral Side News 7:30 Randy Atcher 1:30 JU 5-2385 10:00 News 10:15 Sports; ABC Reports 10:35 Music for Tonight 10:55 News; Sports 11:10 Music for Tonight 11:55 News; Sports 12:05 Sign Off cited for bringing "beauty and inspiration into the lives of countless Kentuckians of all for "his fine leadership of the School of Music in the University of Louisville," and "his redoubtable advocacy of contemporary music." Dr. Francis M. Massie, Lexington physician and UK professor of surgery, was cited for his efforts which culminated in the establishment of the university's Medical Center.

Dr. Morris Scherago, retiring chairman of the Department of Microbiology, was cited for his "achievement in research and participation in the national affairs of biology; his work is among the memorable endeavors within the first century of our university." If you're buying a car, make sure you make the most of your MoneyScope. Stop into any Citizens Fidelity Office get the most favorable rates and fast service up to 36 months to pay, with life insurance at no additional cost. Citizens Fidelity wants to help you drive a better car, too. 900 WFIA Religious programs i a.m.

to 7:45 p.m News on Half Hour 70 Fred's driving a better car and, at the same time, increasing his MoneyScope. kl AWE NBC News WAVE on Hour Helicopter Traffic Reports: 7:15 to a.m. 4:35 to 5:35 P.m. TUESDAY A.M. 1:05 Joe Fletcher 3:00 Pet Murphy 5:00 News 5:10 Pet Murphy 5:30 Stock Markets 5:35 Pet Murphy 7:05 Nishtbeat 8:05 NBC News 8:15 Nightbeat 10:00 News 10:10 Nightbeat 11:30 Town Hall 12:00 Sign Off 5:00 Gallo-Crowner 0:00 Jack Gailo 7:00 News 7:15 Jack Gelto 7:30 World Roundup 7:45 Jack Gallo :05 Jim Lucas 11:00 Joe Fletcher 12:00 News; Markets 12:10 Jee Fletcher 12:50 Louise Welller TTlTIZENsl FIDELITY I BANK AND TRUST COMPANY I 10 80 WKLO News et :25 and :55 Race Results 0 p.m.

Pop music 24 hours 1240 WINN CBS News on Hour Music 24 Hours 7 p.m. Reds-Mels 12 9 0 WREY N.w..t:25 Good music 5:30 a.m. to 7:45 P.m. "such characteristics of heart and conduct as evince a spirit of love for and helpfulness to others." Thomas R. Bryant, Lexington, who was associate director of the UK Agricultural Extension Service until his retirement in 1955, was the non-student recipient.

Of the 1.496 degrees awarded, 281 were for graduate studies and 197 were for professional studies. Honorary degrees were conferred on six men two journalists, a business executive, a musician, a doctor and a scientist. Robert Whitney Honored William B. Arthur, editor of Look magazine, was cited as "one of the architects of modern human communication; many social and educational movements have been strengthened by his efforts." Donald C. Cook, president of the American Electric Power was cited for his "dedication to public and private endeavors and his contribution to the scholarly and professional literature in the fields of law and finance." Allan Trout, columnist and Frankfort correspondent for The Courier-Journal, was cited for the nearly 40 years "he has informed Kentuckians about themselves; his intergity and fairness are undoubted; his analysis of Kentucky government and politics has rarely failed to enlighten." Robert Whitney, for 30 years the conductor of the Louisville Orchestra, was 1350 WLOU News at :55 Music a.m.

to 7:45 p.m. wxvw Louisville UK Graduates Win Special Aivards The University of Kentucky presented the following special awards to students from Louisville and vicinity at its 100th commencement yesterday at Lexington: College of Medicine: Alpha Orrwgs Alpoa award, Frank Stephens Wood, Louisville; Department of Medicine award. James B. Greenwell, Cox's Creek. College of Dentlstryi American Association of Endodontists award and International College of Dentists award, John Frlck, Louisville; American Association of Orthodontists award, Meredith Johnson, Louisville.

School of Architecture: Robert M. Gulnn, Louisville, Hamilton Watch award. College of Law: Ordr of tfte Coif, Fred Karem, Louisville. Outstanding senior class orallst, John D. Hubbard, Bards-town.

Hubbard also won the Richardson trial procedure award. College of Arts and Sciences: Graduated with distinction, Barbara Leo Wappes, Louisville. Graduated with commencement honors. Fred G. ChristPnsen, Vonnell Clara Dovle, Elizabeth Crews Hobson, Susan P.

Mlllikin and Constance Ann Mullins, all of Louisville. Ire John Wesitermen, Muldrau9h; James P. Poore Pleasure Ridge, and Carole Lee Guernsey, Clarksville, Ind. College of Pharmacy: Kentucky Council of Pharmaceutical Education award and Oscar C. Dillv award, James P.

Poore Pleasure Ridge. College of Nursing; Outstanding senior award. Mary Croft. Louisville. 14 5 0 MBS News on Half Hour Music 24 Hours P.m.

White Sox-Orioles 4:55 WHEL News on Hour Hall Hour 15 7 0 to 7:45 p.m. Town and country music 0 a.m. ,1 88 WNAS FM 1:45 a.m.-l p.m. Information 1-1 p.m Classes, 5-t p.m. Sounds 30 7 a.m.

-2 p.m. Music 2-10 p.m. Lectures 89.1 ill 1 WFPK FM 8:45 p.m. 1 p.m. Classes 2-11 p.m.

Music A News I a.m., 11 p.m. 7 1 Stereo classical music 7 a.m. to 12 midnight I p.m. Cleveland Orchestra 9 9.7 WKLO 55 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

popular music 5 p.m. to 12 midnight Duplicate WKLO 102.1 WLRS FM Multiplex Stereo 24 hours los.i Television Rev iew WSTM-FM Stereo Adult music a.m. to 12 midnight i os. a WSAC-FM News on Hour Stereo music a to 12 midnight NBC Morality Inquiry A Peep Shoiv in Disguise WSAC-FM CBS "Young Sound" Stereo odull music 24 hours Current rate ji XT" GUARANTEED jAfl SAVINGS CERTIFICATES JV'U Vfc, 'tOV fj ones Utile es U't i ii''. SfeSw fj one hundrt doll, 1 'Vlf Poet to Read Works at of Mona Van Duyn, an award-winning poet, will give a public reading of her works at 2 p.m.

Friday in the Library Lecture Lounge at the University of Louisville. Miss Van Duyn, a former of faculty member who now teat-he's at Washington University in St. Louis, received the Unis Tietjens Memorial Award from Poetry magazine and the Helen Bullis Award from Poetry Northwest She has published two collections of to the Wide World" in 1959 and "A Time of Bees" in 1063. lence of pornography and the swing scene in London. In all too brief interviews with satirist Jonathan Miller in London; Hugh Hefner, publisher of Playboy; Dr.

Harvey Cox of the Harvard Divinity School and columnist William F. Buckley there were pretenses to some serious discussion of the consequences of the pursuit of gratification to the exclusion of other values. But their talk was so underdeveloped that the hour never rose above a pedestrian level to become a valid social inquiry. NBC news has too hirh standards to indulge in a peep show already amply reported on. The effects of the changing morality are known; the causes deserve more attention than they received latt night.

By JACK GOULD New York Times News Service NEW YORK A fast rewrite of the obvious manifestations of the new freedom in sexuality and individual morality was put on the home screen last night by the National Broadcasting Co. under the title of "The Pursuit of Pleasure." The hour was far richer in familiar sensationalism than evocative substance, a quickie ground out largely for an instant rating effect. The production by Stewart Schulberg, for which Sander Vanocur was reporter and narrator, reviewed for the umpteenth time on television the motorcycle gangs, the topless waitress fad, the popularity of LSD on some campuses, the preva 'sjj I Member adinl fleiervt System and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation etch account insured to $15,000. i as, axjet.k. eeyje at s-.

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Pages Available:
3,668,359
Years Available:
1830-2024