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Star Tribune du lieu suivant : Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 15

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Lieu:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Date de parution:
Page:
15
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

iteaifil reviews HAS THE BEST OF CHINESEAMERICAN FOOD 0MI.I0..FQNCS Specialist Chinese Foods Cantonese Style Dine with Chopsticks in an Oriental Atmos-v phere Man Sized Tender Steak or Broiled BLOOMINGTON 9329 Lyndole Av. S. 35W Exit at 94th St. 888-9294 Director of independent TV news company, Roger Ailes, resigns Associated Press New York, N.Y. Roger E.

Ailes said Friday he is resigning as executive vice president and news director of Television News, (TVN), an independent news company founded two years ago. Ailes, 35, a former television producer, said he was leaving because of what he called "administrative disagreements" with TVN management. But Ailes, President Nixon's television adviser during the last three months of Nixon's 1968 presidential campaign, said the disagreements had no relations to "news policy or anything like that." TVN was founded by Joseph Coors, executive vice president of the Adolph Coors Brewing to offer television stations an alternative to news coverage provided by the three television networks. Ailes, who said he had agree to stay with the company for up to 60 days while it looks for someone to replace him, said TVN currently serves 45 American and 25 Canadian television stations. Minneapolis Tribune 1 5 A Sept.

20, 1975 Herbst criticizes CBS for 'Guns of Autumn' Associated Press The Minnesota commissioner of natural resources, Robert Herbst, has written to the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), criticizing a recent network program on hunting. Herbst said in St. Paul Friday that the program, "Guns of Autumn," was nothing but "biased, blatant propaganda rigged to dehumanize the hunter." He said the network's description of the program as a documentary is "a mockery and perversion of the word." In a letter to CBS Vice President Bill Leonard, Herbst criticized the program for "omitting any reference to great convervationists who also were hunters, such as John James Audubon, Theodore Roosevelt, Gifford Pinchot and Aldo Leopold." Patient electrocuted Marcellino Baratta, 20, was electrocuted Friday while undergoing an appendectomy in a hospital in Avig-liana, Italy, doctors said. Authorities began an investigation to determine the cause of the accident. Prize-winning Picture magazine.

Every Sunday HEWSEASK1! THE YZU( SlIQVf 6:00 PH KftlSP TV and radio highlights today Kay Charles Michael Anthony My curiosity was high, though, as to what his show would be like. I'm told Charles's records don't sell like they used And, with black music and musicians dominating the music business these days, would Charles seem old-fashioned or would he seem more up-to-date than ever? Well, the fact of the matter is that Charles has lost none of his impact onstage. He's an extraordinarily compelling performer about whom nothing seems to have aged; his 1 looks, voice and music. Charles was, after all, the performer for whom the traditional categories and barriers didn't exist. His recording of "I Can't Stop Loving You" made it on the soul, pop and country charts simultaneously.

He proved the compatibility of standard gospel and blues formats with the requirements of pop. He continues to surprise. He'll surprise by doing a tune like "Marie" once a Tommy Dorsey standard and Charles's opener Thursday night and sing it in a way you've never heard before. Or, another surprise, "You Made Me Love You," a big, rocking version with a wry, warm vocal. He's best, I think, in those sad laments, like "Born To Lose" and "I Can't Stop Loving You." His vocal quality is still the rich, heart-tugging gospel sound and his range, from bass rumble to stratospheric falsetto, seems effortless.

What Jie does he does without ostentation. It seems clever and exactly right at the same time. What seemed the final note of "Born To Lose," for example, wasn't, for he suddenly as if he'd just thought of it made a glissando up an octave and a half, then settled back to the ninth note of the key, which musically is a very hip thing to do and requires a terrific ear. Also, he does great, monologues, p'aying an occasional chord underneath. They're right out of urban blues and they lead into Charles standards, like "Crying Time" and "I Can't Stop Loving You." In addition, he did a powerful, wry version of "Georgia On My Mind" (how many times has he sung that?) plus "Country Roads" and a chorus of his standard finish, "Let's Go Get Stoned." There was even a brief, bluesy chorus of Beethoven's "Fur Elise." The excellent backing was offered by a 17-piece band and the always tasteful Raylettes.

TWO WORLD'S Exotic Cocktails Piano Lounge Sing-Along Foods to Take Out Banquet Room up to 150 Sundays 4 p.m.-mid-night jjijj I in the Mrawapoet Tribune HOOVER rn "The Genius of Ray Charles" seemed no by tie time Charies and Company finished their evening at Orchestra Hall before about 2,200 peopie 'ihursday. After 28 years in show business, Charles has dm a legend. Though he'll be just 45 next week, it seems he has always been around, that his familiar figure, the dark glasses, and the huge grin revealing at least 98 teeth, has always been sitting at the piano weaving in wide arcs back and forth and singing in that soulful, gritty voice. .0 IN TRADE sesBSBsmsssm son and Martin Balsam. Ch.

5. 10:00 P.M. "Sands of the Kalahari" (1965). Plana crash survivors fight for survival in the desert. Stuart Whitman and Susannah York.

Ch. 11. 10:30 P.M. "Peyton Place" (1957). A complex revelation of the secret life of a small New England community.

Lana Turner, Lloyd Nolan and Hope Lange. Ch. 9. 10:50 P.M. "Pride of the Yankees" (1942).

The life of Lou Gehrig. Gary Cooper, Teresa Wright and Walter Brennan. Ch. 4. MIDNIGHT "The Strange Door" (1952).

A tyrant vows to revenge his dead sweetheart by keeping her husband, his brother, prisoner in a dungeon. Charles Laugh-ton and Boris Karloff. Ch. 5. 1:30 A.M.

"Night Key" (1937). An inventor, robbed of his invention, is kidnapped and forced to plan robberies. Boris Karloff. Ch. 5.

Radio 1:30 P.M. Football: Minnesota Gophers vs. Western Michigan. WCCO and WLOL. 2:00 P.M.

Special: "CIA: Lethal Toxins." Portions of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence Hearings investigating activities of the CIA. William Colby, director of the CIA, and Richard Helms, former CIA director. KUOM. 5:30 P.M. John and Marcia Pan-kake on "A Prairie Home Companion." KSJN-FM.

9:25 P.M. Baseball: Minnesota Twins vs. a 1 i i a Angels. WCCO. I 'SSft- fti wttwmiPPi 1 Television 2:30 P.M.

NCAA Football: Missouri vs. Illinois. Ch. 9. (ABC).

7:00 i Howard Cosell is host for a variety program each week from the Ed Sullivan Theater, New York, on "Saturday Night Live With Howard Cosell." Ch. 9. (ABC). 9:00 P.M. Premiere: An attractive young woman hires Matt Helrn (Tony Franciosa) to find her father, an airline owner who disappears after escaping a bomb explosion, on "Matt Helm." Ch.

9. (ABC). 10:30 P.M. "African Sanctus," the story of a young English composer's search for native African themes to work into his setting of parts of the Latin mass; an examination of an outfit called The Red Baron Flying Club in Germany and its current battle with the family of Manfred Baron von Richthofen, the German aviator known as The Red Baron; and a spotlight on Vietnamese refugees who were in show business in Vietnam and are now trying to get into the business in the United States, on "Weekend." Ch. 5.

(NBC). Television movies 4-00 P.M. "The Prince and the Showgirl" (1957). An American phowjirl appearing in London is ir.viteri to a nrivate supper by a prince and falls in love. Marilyn Monroe and Sir Laurence Olivier.

Ch. 11. 8:00 P.M. "The Stone Killer" (1973). A policeman tries to unravel a chain of clues that lead to a plot to use Vietnam veterans to stage a massacre.

Charles Bron- New Show. It's got the kinds of surprises that can only happen on live television! Tonight's guests: John Denver, Jimmy Connors (he Paul Anka'The Bay City Rollers" live via satellite from England, the cast of the Broadway hit "The singing sensation Shirley Bassey and those Incredible Illusionists Siegfried and Roy. SATURDAY MIGHT LIVE WITH HOWARD C0SELL Premiere 'I uvizaalljji uuy WORLD'S MOST POWERFUL HOME VACUUM YOUR OLD CLEAHER 1 WORTH imiUD SUPPLY reg. M29.95 l-elpt-v 1 NOW WITH TRADi ONLY 'iTM APPLIANCE CENTER ft LAKE ST. AT CEDAR AVE.

722-9571 9:00 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Read THURSDAY, levery Thursday i Playhouse SLEUTH ft 14: MA Hit DON STOLZ PRESENTS "BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE" I p.m.

7 p.m. Sun. J1.0O $4.00 Sal. Compl.l. dinnw play $12.50 radlsson Inn playhouse Hw 494 55 553-1155 1030PM WORLD AT WAR The story of WWII as it's never been told before.

Brings to the screen the experiences of the men and women who lived and fought through it. News" Station, jfe news oiauun. "Ny iDon'l miss .1 i Call todayl WTmnri itniMilnliT lililliliwi iimnwinin I 1 M- -WgWMM I Today's TV logs Published as a service to readers, at no charge to broadcasters, The Minneapolis Tribune is not responsible for program changes by stations. WCCO-4 KSTP-5 KMSP-9 WTCN-11 KTCA-2 CBS NBC ABC SATURDAY MORNING 7:00 Pebbles Emergency Phooey Zone :30 Bugs Bunny Sigmund Tom-Jerry Farm Forum Bugs Bunny Waldo KiHy Grape Ape Probe Sesame Street :30 Scooby Doo Pink Panther Lost Saucer Story Time Sesame Street Land-Lost Gilligan Madagimo Electric Co. Run, Joe, Run Uncle Croc Random Access Carrascolendas 1 fl Nuts Beyond-Apes Uncle Croc Blue Marble Sesame Street IU Bust.

Westwind Odd Ball Jeannie Sesame Street 11 Josle Speed Buggy That Girl Misterogers' I Albert American Gomer Pyle Villa Alegre SATURDAY AFTERNOON 10 Today Ignorant Bandstand Animal World Sesame Street :30 Farm Report Fun Time Circus Andy Griffith Sesame Street 1 :00 HobbyServe Baseball Wide Father-Best Electric Co. I Baseball World of StarTnlt Carrascolendas jsicScene Bjseball Sports Star Trek Music Scene Baseball Football Virginian Baseball Football Virginian Spec. Baseball Football Virginian Spec. Friends-Man Football Movie :30 Sports Spec. Rovers Football "Prince Hogan's Heroes Football and the Wash'gton Wk.

:30 Rather News Nashville Football Showgirl" Wall St. Week (ADV.) MARLIN PERKINS "Mutual of Omaha's WILD KINGDOM" 6:00 Scene at Six Eyewitness News L. Walk Wrestling Firing Line Kingdom Bowling-Dollars L. Welk Wrestling Firing Line (ADV.) SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE WITH HOWARD COSELL (ADV.) HEE HAW '76 BICENTENNIAL R'OT Emergency Howard Wrestling Folkfestival Emergency Cosell Hee Haw Folkfestival (ADV.) COP KILLER IN REVENGE SLAYING 8:00 Marv f. Moore Movie S.W.A.T.

Hee Haw Charles Ives Bob Newhart "The S.W.A.T. P. Mason Charles Ives (ADV.) Tonight on ABC MATT HELM Tony Franciosa Stars Burnett Stone Matt Helm P. Mason Charles Ives Burnett Killers" Matt Helm News Arbors Ifl :00 Scene Tonight EyewitnessNewt Newsnine Movie World-Week lU :30 Movie (10:50) Weekend Movie "Sands of David Susskind 1 "Pride Weekend "Peyton Kalahari" David Susskind I :30 of the Weekend Place" S. Whitman David Susskind 10 :00 Yankees" Horror Inc.

L. Turner Rock Concert :30 G. Cooper "The L. Nolan Rock Concert T. Wright Strange H.

Lange Rock Concert Place Door" News Rock Concert "Night Key" McCLOUD Dennis Weaver goes underground to uncover music-business pirates! With Jessica Walter, Raymond St. Jacques, Barbi Benton and Lorna Luft. THEFAiW HOLVflK heart-lifting show Glenn Ford as of father kid should have. week features Golonka and LeClair. EYEWITNESS HEWS Stay up for "Eyewitness News." Fast-moving news and commentary.

The latest in weather and sports. Join Ron Magers, Dr. Walt Lyons and Tom Ryther. fa 4 OPEN DAILY DISNEY Conclusion of "The Boy Who Talked to Badgers." Ben's lost and in danger until the badger his dad's been hunting adopts him and tries to teach him survival. v.

1 YUUHt UUININM uwc 1 1 iif-ir- Mlkl A I llr IT A I A starring the kind every This Arlene Michael LU Your "Eyewitness juur cyewuiivzs I.

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