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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 28

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
28
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE COURIER JOURNAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. THURSDAY MORNING, AUGUST 17, 1967 2 Channel Chuckles Today's Television Programs Bill Ladd's TV Almanac Louisville Schedules To Change on Sept. 4 r' AS On Sept. 4 we can throw the television listings out the window and start over because Channels 11 and 32 will then start showing their night-time TV programs an hour later than they do now. The stations have arranged for a delayed feed, in order to carry their night-time programs at network time just as if we had gone on daylight saving time with most of the rest of the nation.

This will not be true of daytime programs, those before 7 p.m., which will remain as they are now until Oct. 28, when time becomes standard again. Neither is this true of Channel 3. Some of its programs are seen at the WAVE-TV WHASTV WLKYTV 3 11 32 4:43 Today en Firm Howdy, Neighbors Today (color) 7:05 Summer Semester 7:35 CBS Mornlnt News 1:00 Coptoin Kangaroo 9Mornln Show (color) T-Bar-V Ranch Marv CrMfin than, Dulini for Dollars II St :53 News (color) 1 11 '(cilirt Andjr.Mavb.rry (rerun) M.rv OrlffirTThow I Hollywood Squires Dyk. (rerun) JooPirdy (color) toEleTKlwV Every bodVt Talkln.

Evi Guass (color) Search Tomorrow (color) ronn Bmm -mn Ouess; 11:55 News Guiding Lioht (color) Donne Reeo iroruni 4 A Dr.Kild.ro Candid Camera (rerun) The Fueltlv. (rerun) I As the World Turns Plilins) for Dollars (color) (color)1'" Focusi 1 PM. Newlywed Oime (color) The Doctors (color) House Party Dream Girl (color) (color) ISSJWomajiii i News 2 Another World (color) To Toll the Truth (color) General Hospital Truth; News You(Dont Say (color) Thejdse of Nliht Dark Shadows 3" Mitch Game (color) Theecret Storm Dating Garni (color) Pcolor) B.varly Hillbillies Dateline: Hollywood (rerun) 3:55 Child's Doctor 4Chinnal 3 Movies (color) Maverick (rerun) Mike Dousiai Show (color) If 5Chinnl 3 Movies (color) Cartoon Circus Mike Deuelis Show (color) Woody Woodpecker CBS Nows (color) Metro News; Weither (color-rerun) Sports; Business News 6Weilher; News Pocusi News ABC News (color) News; Sports (color) Weather; Sportt Aowwowntomn Nichews (color) LucMtJComedy Batman (eolor-rorun) 7 flSaSrSS, Tryep (color-rerun) I Bvinlg T.Meworf Bewitched (color-rerun) Evtnlne at Tinslewood HSHSil eolor That Girl (eolor-rorun) "(color) Bareboat )(icoion Lov. On a Rooftop, (color-rerun) Evtnlng at Tinslewood Thursday Movia (color) summer Pocus (color) (color) Who in Dninet (color-rerun) an Mirlln summer, how ThiSdayalcoToTT- R.whido (rerun) III tcoior) a 1 a Perry Mason (rerun) News (color) Parry Mason (rerun) Metro Report News Weither; Sports Tonltht Show (color) 11:45 Nows; Weather $por jo.v Bishop (color) Slsn OH 1 A.M. 12:15 Late Show Sign OH 1 A.M.

NBC is making an effort to keep its news specials up to date, and filming has just begun on this one. Daniel P. Moynihan, director of the MIT-Harvard Joint Center for Urban Studies will be the consultant and appear on camera as well. Frank McGee, Bill Matney and others also will take part. Much of the program is being filmed in Detroit which Moynihan says is a city with almost everything a liberal, well-intentioned and hard-working government can provide.

Yet it has not enough. In some of the places where the most is being done, Moynihan contends, the worst trouble erupts. This program will attempt to discover why. Moynihan is author of a controversial "Moynihan Report" on Negro family life. WFIA Plans Fair News WFIA will intersperse its religious programs with news from the Kentucky State Fair throughout the fair run.

The station has a booth inside the East Wing of the Exposition Center and will interview guests and report results of various judging contests at the fair. The station plans to do about 175 later hour already. Some are seen early. But all program times at that station will remain unchanged until Oct. 28.

Channel 3 will change a lot of programs on the week of Sept. 4 and again on the week of Sept. 11. But the starting times well, you finish it, I give up. NBC Plant Detroit Special Television's continuing look into the "Frankly, we find all the people we need for the commercials in laundromats, at coffee counters, in the quarter hour shows from the fair.

Shows will be broadcast every day except Sunday. WAVE Maps Football Plans WAVE radio will cover University of Louisville and Notre Dame football games this fall. First games will be Sept. 16 with Louisville at Drake. 1 In cases where the Louisville game and the Notre Dame games conflict, Notre Dame will be delayed.

WAVE radio will do University of Louisville basketball again this winter. recent urban disturbances, their causes and effects continues with NBC taking a long gander at Detroit as its first news special of its fall season. The program is due on Sept. 15 and hasn't yet been titled. Erich Leinsdorf 4n Evening at Tanglewood on NBC-3 at 7:30 p.m.

9:00 Channel 32: The Merv Griffin Show Selma Diamond, Anthony Perkins, John Bubbles and Abe Burrows. 6:30 CBS-11: The Lucy-Desi Comedy Hour Ida Lupino and Howard Duff book the same cabin as the Ricardos for a fishing trip in the north woods. 7:00 Channel 3: Death Valley Days, color A mountain man comes to realize his love for his Indian wife. 7:00 ABC-32: Troop, color Sgt O'Rourke and Cpl. Agarn hire a marriage broker to supply brides for the troopers.

7:30 NBC-3: An Evening at Tanglewood, color Erich Leinsdorf conducts the Boston Symphony Orchestra summer concert In Mozart's Overture to "The Abduction from the Seraglio," Dvorak's Symphony No. 9, Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso by Saint-Saens performed by violinist Itzhak Perlman, and Tchaikovsky's 1812 Overture. Edwin Newman serves as the host and narrator. 7:30 CBS-11: My Three Sons, color Joan Caulfield appears as an old girlfriend of Steve Douglas. 7:30 ABC-32: Bewitched, color Joanna Moore plays a former campus queen who tries to belittle Samantha (Elizabeth Montgomery).

8:00 ABC-32: That Girl, color Ann and Don accompany an eloping couple to Connecticut. 9:00 ABC-32: Summer Focus: Who In color ABC News political editor William H. Lawrence examines i the strategies and maneuvers of the leading Republican can- didates for the 1968 Presidential nomination and explores the divisions within the Democratic Party. Governors Ronald Reagan and George Romney, Senator Charles Percy, Richard Nixon, Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, and former Presidential aides Bill Moyers and Ted Sorenson are interviewed.

Idleness in '66 Work Stoppages Kentucky's Highest in 6 Years THURSDAY ON CHANNEL 15 (A Adult YA Young Adults Ch-Children) Whot's Now (Ch) 8:30 The French Chaf (A-YA) rerun 9:00 Spectrum (A-YA) rerun 9:30 The Creative Parson (A-YA) rerun fine quality furs 5 August Fur Sale iv oir IS PROGRESS Eight work stoppages in Paducah involved 4,530 worrkers and caused 22,300 idle man-days. The Lexington area recorded 6 stoppages with 1,310 workers idle for 5,210 man-days, the report said. Nationally, there were 4,405 work stoppages involving 1,960,000 workers in 1966, compared with 3,963 stoppages and 1,550,000 workers in 1965. Work stoppages in Kentucky last year caused the highest number of man-days of idleness in the past six years, according to a report released yesterday by the regional office of the U.S. Department of Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics in Nashville.

The 855,000 man-days of idleness in 1966 were caused by 124 work stoppages involving 91,800 workers and amounting furriers 709 S. Fourth St. Heyburn Bldg. 585-5562 I TODAY'S MOVIES ON TV 4:00 Channel 3: Jeannie Craln, Michael Rennie and Mary Anderson in "Dangerous Crossing," 1953 A couple boards a ship for a honeymoon. When the groom disappears, everyone tries to convince the girl she came aboard alone and she almost loses her life before the truth is discovered.

8:00 CBS-11: Anthony Quinn, Silvana Mangano, Arthur Kennedy, Katy Jurado and Harry Andrews in "Barabbas," 1962 Film version of Par Lagerkvist's novel about the notorious killer and thief Barabbas whose life was spared when Christ was condemned to take his place on the cross. (Color) 12:15 Channel 11: Clifton Webb, Gloria Grahame and Stephen Boyd in "The Man Who Never Was," 1956 British Naval Intelligence officers devise a scheme to throw the Germans off guard making the invasion of Sicily easier for the Allies. 9:30 NBC-3: Dragnet, color Sgt. Friday and Officer Gannon break up an LSD party and track down a suspect who has been selling the drug to teenagers. 10:00 NBC-3: The Dean Martin Summer Show, color Don Cherry, comedian Flip Wilson and the comedy team of Clair and McMahon share the spotlight.

11:30 NBC-3: The Tonight Show, color Comedienne Kaye Stevens and author Sam Blum. to 51 per cent of the estimated total working time of the nonagricultural work force, the report said. The Louisville metropolitan area, which includes Jefferson County in Kentucky and Floyd and Clark counties in Indiana, reported 42 work stoppages affecting 36,200 workers with 521,000 man-days of idleness. This is the highest number of man-days of idleness since 1958, when 388,000 man-days were lost due to 24 work stoppages, according to the report. In the last 15 years, the lowest number of man-days lost was 42,800 in 1963.

Radio '500 2nd and 3rd Mortgages on REAL ESTATE CONSOLIDATE ALL BILLS INTO ONE SMALL MONTHLY PAYMENT 1. Cut Payments 2. Receive Addi- 3. Lowest Legal In Half tionalCash Interest Rates Home Owned and Managed 1 Over 48 Years 1 'Treatment in Kind Elizabethtown Squabble Gould Hold Up ETV More Security With FALSE TEETH At Any Time Don't live In fear of false teeth loosening, wobbling or dropping Just at the wrong time. For more security and more comfort, just sprinkle a little PASTEETH on your plates.

FASTEETH holds false teeth firmer. Makes eating easier. No pasty, gooey taste. Helps check "denture Dentures that fit are essential to health. See your dentist regularly.

Get FASTEETH at all drug counters. contract) is just a little treatment in kind." The mayor said if the school board you Note Easy Monthly Payment Plan GET 12 Mos. 18 Mos. 24 Mot. 30 Mot.

36 Mot. $500 I $45.29 I $31.21 I $24.17 I $20.08 $17.36 750 67.94 48.62 36.34 30.12 26.05 1000 90.58 62.42 48.44 40.04 34.72 500 135.88 93.63 72.68 60.24 52.08 2000 180.81 124.50 96.52 79.95 68.39 2500 224.67 1 54.63 119.67 99.00 85.40 3000 268.53 184.56 142.82 118.05 101.07 4000 356.24 244.62 189.11 156.15 134.42 5000 440.45 302.28 233.56 192.72 162.50 would change the contract on the land it sold the city, the city would agree to the change demanded by the state in the transmitter land contract. "It just seems like the ETV people have gotten caught in the middle of this local thing," Bean said, and added that "I imagine it will all be resolved." The Elizabethtown transmitter is to cover a radius of 45-50 miles, including the populous Louisville area and the area between the two cities. "In Covington," Press said, "the first arose when we optioned a Payments include Principal and Interejf, Inturance Available We lell InvMtnwnr CirtHlcotu KING INVESTMENT CO. Vnhr fare Btnkkg Suptnislon Mmber American Industrial Banktrs Assoation 300 W.

MAIN ST. 4th FLOOR COR. 3RD MAIN STS. WTMT 620 WSM 650 NBC Nw'onHour Nashville WLW 700 NBC News on HouM Cincinnati WAKY 790 N.w.aty.SS WHAS; 840 p.m. Louisvill.

Downs Race WFIA 900 News nTn 5 a.m.-12 midnisht WAVE 970 NIC News on Hour, :30 WKIO 1080 N.w. iffiSi WINN 1240 CBS NtwsonHHoir wrey 1290 Now Albany WLOU 1350 WXVW 1450 MBS Jefforsonvlllo WHEL 1570 NotrrnHouVr:) Now Albany WNAS-FM 88.1 New Albany WFPL-FM 89.3 iVp" WFPK-FM 91.9 WHAS-FM 97.5 News I a.m.. 1, 11 P.m. WKLO-FM 99.7 'WfJSi WLRS-FM 102.3 'iVSC WSTM-FM 103.1 WSAC-FM 105.5 4 'TSWS? Port Kno WKRX-FM 106.9 See OBERMEIER'S First For Low August Clearance Prices On Air Conditioners by FEDDERS it's the New "QUIET TYPE" site at near Covington, and the citizens protested. The city then offered and found us a site, but the FAA had decided to install some instrument landing equipment.

The transmitter would have been in the way." 584-4810 After 6:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. Call 583-5545 LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) A muncipal squabble at Elizabethtown and protesting citizens near Covington could blank those two areas, plus Louisville, from Kentucky's Educational Television Network when it goes on the air in September, 1968. In both cities the Kentucky Educational Television Authority, headed by Leonard 0.

Press, has encountered problems in acquiring sites for transmitting stations, two of the network's 12 stations. The situation at Elizabethtown, according to Mayor Leonard Bean, involves a dispute between the city and the city school board, plus the wording of a contract between the city and the state. State Rejects Words Press said Elizabethtown agreed to deed the authority a transmitter site, but the state disapproved of the contract's wording, which said the land would revert to the city should the land be used for anything but educational television. The state wanted the land deeded to the state instead of the authority and have the land usage clause changed to "educational or related purposes." The city refused on the second count "We agreed to donate the land," Mayor Bean said, "but all this stems from back when the city bought some land (currently in the proposed right of way for a U.S. 31-W by-pass) from the city school board.

"That contract said if the city ever sold the land, it would split the profits with the school board. This (the KETV Gulf Oil Executive Found Dead in Motel A 61-year-old Gulf Oil Corp. executive apparently died while shaving about 6:30 a.m. yesterday in his room at the Standi-ford Motel, according to Deputy Coroner Charles Proctor. Charles H.

Marlow of Atlanta, was fuel oil sales coordinator for Gulf and traveled throughout the Eastern United States. His body was discovered shortly before 9 a.m. when Marlow failed to keep an appointment with company officials, who then checked his room. Housekeeper Restrained Sleuths Trace Typhoid Outbreak 5,000 to 33,000 BTU'S FEDDERS World's largest selling air conditioners Yes, we have it! the all-new, all-exciting Fedders "quiet type," a revolutionary portable air conditioner. It's got a Sound Barrier design that makes operating sounds almost disappear.

It's only 20" wide fits regular and narrow windows. And you get: two speeds, including fast cooling, zinc-armored steel cabinet. It's the We've opened 2000 new branch offices of Avery Building Association. And they're right around the comer from you! Our red, white and blue branch offices are open 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Sure makes it easy to save at Avery.

Pick out your favorite "branch" and start earning 4 right now on insured savings. Or, try a different branch each time. We have a slightly larger office at 515 West Market. FRANKFORT (AP) "I just don't believe it," an indignant woman said when state health investigators informed her she was the carrier who caused an outbreak of typhoid fever in Henderson County. Although health officials have cited positive evidence after an intensive three-week investigation, the 59-year-old housekeeper and baby sitter remains unconvinced she had anything to do with the disease.

She Is Reacting Normally Epidemiologists said she is reacting normally that most people mistakenly believe they must be ill to be a carrier. But state Health Department files list her as No. 42 of the known typhoid carriers in Kentucky. The law allows officials to restrict her severely to combat communicable disease. Actually, the only limits ordered by the state are that she must not handle food for consumption by anyone outside her family and that she cannot care for the children of others.

If she moves, she is supposed to notify health authorities. It was the woman's move into the Henderson area from a neighboring county that touched off the typhoid outbreak, the state says. Detailed detective work and cooperation from local health people led to her detection as a carrier. Dr. J.

W. Skaggs, medical epidemiologist, said yesterday the successful search should assure Kentuckians that health authorities, "when given the tools," can track down a carrier in reasonable time. He said the recent outbreak of 10 cases is the only sizable instance traced to a carrier. Most are single cases. The original victims were teen-age sisters living with their parents on a small farm near Henderson.

State investigators, talking to the family, found no clue until they learned the sisters often visited an older sister. The older sister told them she had been treated for "scarlet fever" and described symptoms identical with typhoid fever. The cistern outside the house was found to be contaminated, and at least one member in every affected family had visited the older sister and drank water from the cistern. Finally, the search led to the woman, who had been babysitting for the older sister. The woman acknowledged having had typhoid fever as a child, at a time the disease was far more prevalent than today.

Skaggs said health authorities never feared an uncontrolled outbreak in the Henderson area. "The incidence of typhoid fever and the number of carriers does not merit widespread use of vaccines," he said. "The shots should be limited to high risk groups." Only One Way Out The 10 victims and everyone the woman came in touch with have been vaccinated. For the woman, there is only one possible way out of the mild restriction currently imposed removal of her gall bladder. But Skaggs said the state Health Department is rt recommending surgery in view of her age and the fact surgery often proves useless in ridding a carrier pf typhoid germs.

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Pages Available:
3,668,702
Years Available:
1830-2024