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The Daily Reporter from Dover, Ohio • Page 14

Location:
Dover, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Otto All TlHI Television Thursday Listings INK. Wanted: Dead Or Alto I Comedy Ctabiome Mlrtey Meme Oil CfeyenM P.M. Movie P.M. Adventare tUad 5:30 P.M. fates Of Wells Fargt HicUeberry Hmnd P.M.

Home Edition OO News, Sports, Weather Tom Field 8 Bill Jorgenson City Camera 6:15 P.M. IH Sports, Weather, News Dorothy FaMbelm 6:30 P.M. OO Hnntley-Brinkley Rifleman SRon Cocnran Walter Cronkite 6:45 P.M. Sports 7P.M. Jamboree Weather, Sports Yogi Bear Battle Line Walter Cronkite Movie 7:30 P.M.

OOO Daniel Boone Jonny Qnest Monsters 8 P.M. Donna Reed Perry Mason 8:30 P.M. I Dr. Kildare 9 TRTCV ofnW I P.M. Bewitched fiNP.ll.

Hatet (C) Peyton Place My Living Doll te P.M. Kraft Snspense Theatre 0 Jimmy Dean The Defenders II P.M. 8 11 O'clock Reports OOOO New? 11:10 P.M. Weather Sports Sports Tonight-Johnny Carson ll'M P.M. 8 Regis PhllMn Weather Movie P.M.

News Wrapnp 11:30 P.M. OO Tonight-Johnny Canon OO Religions Music 12:45 A.M. Movie 1 A.M. News THURSDAY'S MOVIES SMJS p.m. THE LAW VS.

BILLY THE KID (J) Western with Scott Brady. 7 p.m. THE INSPECTOR GENERAL, Comedy with Danny Walter Slezak and Elsa Lan- cheater. p.m. NO DOWN PAYMENT with Joanne Woodward and Tony Randall.

a.m. SHOW BUSINESS (S) Eddie 'On Broadway' Back Friday, ValleelsHC "On Broadway Tonight," variety show enthusiastically received when it was first presented last summer, returns to CBS Television Network Friday at 8:30 p.m. Rudy Vallee again will appear as host of the weekly hour series. The perennially popular Vallee, last seen on Broadway as star of the musical smash "How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying," will introduce and chat with the 6 acts to be seen on the show each Friday night. The acts will be selected from among the best young professional talent available.

For some, "On Broadway Tonight" will be their first exposure on television, but all the youthful performers must have worked professionally before to qualify for the program. Additionally, the series will offer a different top-name guest star each week. Friday Listings 6:30 A.M. Lab 31 Cl Farm Forecast 7A.M. OOO Today 7:15 A.M.

Farm Front 7:45 A.M. Rex Bombard King and Odle 8 A.M. OO Captain Kangaroo 9A.M. Woodrow Pan! Dixon Snow Cartoons QFatber Knows Best Franz The Toymaker Jack LaLanne 9:30 A.M. The A.M.

Show Ann Sothern Romper Room Get The Message 10A.M. Make Room for Daddy Paige Palmer As The World Turns Ernie Ford 10:30 A.M. What's This Song? Junior Clubhouse Cotton Bowl Parade 11 A.M. News, Weather, Snorts Ernie Ford Orange Bowl Parade 11:30 A.M. i Bowl Game Previews Price Is Right Rose Bowl Parade 11:45 A.M.

Rose Bowl Parade NOON Fuldheim, Jorgensen 12:15 P.M. Noon Show IP.to. Donna Reed 1:30 P.M. Quick As A Wink 1:45 P.M. OOO Sugar Bowl (Syracuse vs.

LSU) OO Cotton Bowl (Nebraska vs. Arkansas) 2 P.M. Flame In The Wind 2:30 P.M. Day In Court 3P.M. General Hospital 3:30 P.M.

Young Marrieds 4 P.M. Trailmasler 4:30 P.M. Bowl Preview CJ Lloyd Thaxton 4:45 P.M. Rose Bowl (Oregon State vs. Michigan) 5P.M.

Sugarfoot I Comedy Playhouse 5:15 P.M. Adventure Road 5:30 P.M. Magilla Gorilla It'll Tickle Your Innards Tom Harmon, CBS Television Sports commentator on Countdown to Kickoff," was one of the first name athletes to enter broadcasting. GREENE AND WHITE ON NBC. Flower-bedecked floats projecting the theme "Headlines in Flowers," will be among the features of the 76th annual Tournament of Roses parade in Pasadena, to be telecast by NBC-TV starting at 11:30 a.m.

Friday. The colorful spectacle, covered by NBC for the 14th straight year, will be described by Lome Greene and Betty White. 6P.M. OO News, Sports, Weather Tom Field 6:10 PJM. Bill Jorgensen City Camera 6:15 P.M.

Dorothy Fnldheim Sports, News, Weather 6:30 P.M. Walter Cronkite E) Conversations Ron Cochran 6:45 P.M. Sports 7 P.M. Huckleberry Hound Walter Cronkite Death Valley Days 7:15 P.M. O'clock Reports News, Weather, Sports Bowl Preview 7:30 P.M.

Fllntstones Rawhide 7:45 P.M. Orange Bowl (Alabama vs. Texas) 8 P.M. Farmer's Daughter 8:30 P4H. Password Lawman Addams Family 9P.M.

Movie Baileys of Balboa Gomer Pyle, USMC 10P.M. Jack Paar OO Slattery's People 10:30 P.M. OOO Bowl Wrapup 11 P.M. 11 O'Clock Reports 3OOO News 11:10 P.M. Weather Sports 11:15 P.M.

DO Sports Tonight-Johnny Carson Weather 11:20 P.M. Regis Philbin Weather Movie 11:25 P.M. 0 Movie News Wrapup 11:30 P.M. Tonight-Johnny Carson 12:50 A.M. Movie 1 A.M.

Conflict News Movie 2:30 A.M. 1 TV News, Weather FRIDAY'S MOVIES 9 p.m. THE TOAST OF NEW ORLEANS (5) Musical with Kathryn Grayson. 11:25 p.m. THE FOUR POSTER (9) Comedy with Rex Harrison and Liili Palmer.

12:45 a.m. THE CALL OF THE WILD (3) Adventure with Clark Gable. 1 a.m. JOURNEY INTO FEAR Adventure with Joseph Cotten, Orson Welles and Dolores Del Rio 1:20 a.m. CHEROKEE STRIP (8) WorUr Killed In Fall CLEVELAND (AP) WM am F.

Hunt, 41, of Parma, died in Southwest Community Hospi tal Tuesday about six hours aft er he was injured in a 40-foot fall while cutting down a tree in Berea. Police said his safety lift failed to work after it had been tied by mistake to a 1 Use used to hoist equipment iOTTON BOWL. Allen Ludde'rTo'nd Marilyn' Van Derbur will share the commentary assignment in the live broadcast of the "Cotton Bowl Festival Parade" from the Texas Fairgrounds at Dallas from 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. Friday. ROSE.

IS A more so for Dawn Baker, 18-year-old Paiade'na City College freshman who will reign on the Queen's float in the Tournament of Roses parade to be described on CBS- TV by Ronald Reagan, live and in color, at 11:30 floats projecting the them, "Headlines in Flowers," microphone with Reagan. Orange Parade Highlights Taped Highlights in the annual King Orange Jamboree Parade in Miami will be televised in color by NBC TV Friday from 11 to 11:30 a.m., with Dennis Weaver, star of NBC-TV's "Kentucky Jones" series, as host- commentator. The parade, one of the major features of the 21-day Orange Bowl Festival, moves through downtown Miami on Cotton Bowl Occupies Top CBS Position The annual Cotton Bowl football game, year bringing together undefeated Arkansas, ranked second among the na- New year's Eve, and the collegiate teams, and taped highlights will be pre-' Nebraska, Big Eight champion, sented to lead off more wm broadcast from Dallas, 12 straight hours of NBC-TV's holiday color programming. The procession will feature 28 marching bands and 52 brilliantly lighted and decorated floats. TV star Jackie Gleason will lead the parade as grand Texas.

Arkansas, Southwest Confer- ench champion, finished the season with 10 straight victories, shutting out its last 5 opponents. Nebraska, ranked sixth in the nation, won the Big Eight championship with-a 9-1 record. Orange Bowl Wraps Up NBC Gridiron Fare The 1965 Orange Bowl game in Miami Friday will have more than one historic distinc tion. Not the least is the fact that it will be the first such sports extravaganza to take place in what, in effect, has been transformed into a gigan tic color TV studio. The Orange Bowl clash between the nation's No.

1 college football team, Alabama, and the University of Texas powerhouse will be the nightcap of a day-long skein of football colorcasts on NBC-TV. Its air time is 7:45 p.m. The others will be the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans, with Syracuse opposing Louisiana State (1:45 p.m.) and the Rose Bowl at Pasadena, pitting Michigan against Oregon State (4:45 p.m.) The Miami classic will contain features that are uniquely its own. Not only will it be the first bowl game to be played at night, but it will mark the first time that a night outdoor event of any type, has been colorcast In preparation for the histo- tic sports telecast, the Orange Bowl this past Summer was outfitted with a new lighting system that practically duplicates the illumination in NBC TV's scientifically designed stu dios in New York City. The system utilizes more than 500 lighting fixtures, each with a lamp grouped not in the few clusters conventional to stadium lighting but at 52 locations around the rim of the bowl.

Like TV studio lights they are individually aimed to beam only on one small section of the playing turf, resulting in uniform, glare illumination of the gridiron and the stands. One important result of the new Orange Bowl lights will be natural color for NBC-TV viewers. But there is another effect that will gladden the hearts of the millions of true football fans who will be tuned in. "Coaches who have worked under other lighting conditions say the game can be playeti better in the Orange Bowl," asserts Svend Bruun, the New who worked on the project. "The system is better for players, as well as says Bruun, "because it helps to eliminate deep shadows anc reduces glare to a minimum It also means the football can be seen better against the dark night sky." With a promise of perfec.

conditions for football and TV color reception, 'Miamians are content to ignore another feature of the new lighting system as somewhat superfluous. It happens to be hinges on the mounting poles that permit the lights to be liad down for case of a hurricane. Pope Invited To World's Fair VATICAN CITY (AP) Pope Paul VI was formally invited today to New York next sum' mer to attend the World's Fair. The invitation was presented to the Roman Catholic pontiff by Thomas J. Deegan chairman of the fair executive committee, during a Vatican audience.

TV Previews THURSDAY PERRY MASON, f-l p.m. CM, "The Case of the Hulnotis Road." This Is a pretty good suspense story with good cast and it holds you, until it gets so shaggy dog at the end it begins to look like a Hitchcock reject. This one is about real estate, bribes, kickbacks, developments, old landmarks and new access roads, plus one apparently cut and dried murder, for which the motive evaporates. Mason is tricky, perhaps A touch too tricky to satisfy any but his diehard fans. The cast includes guests Bert Freed as the victim, Allen Case as the suspect, plus Les Tremayne, Barton MacLane, John Howard, Meg Wyllie, Grant Williams, Joan Blackman and Frankle Barrow.

DR. KILDARE. p.m. NBC. "Never is a Long Day." Strictly from Sudsville, but Walter Slezak makes any play he's in worth catching, He plays a teutonic doctor who has a sheltered wife.

When he learns he has an incurable disease, he is faced with the problem of making his helpless widow-to-be self-sufficient. Loads of heroic tears plus an ending that smacks of Walt Disney. It's all Slezak, with Hanna Landy playing the wife and brilliant young Miss Davey Davison wasted as a helpless interne. MY THREE SONS. p.m.

ABC. "Divorce-Bryant Park Style." Though there's a serious premise for this show, the part that works best involves youngsters Chip and Ernie and the way they view marriage, divorce and marriage counselors. That's kind of delightful. DEFENDERS. 11-11 p.m.

CBS. "King of the Hill." There are vague allusions to Civil Rights, but the focus of the story is more on sensationalism than morality and justice. Albert Dekker plays a former racketeer (at least he swears it's former) who's first accused of participating in narcotics traffic and then of murder. The Prestons, claiming that even a guy with his background is entitled to the best possible defense on a specific charge, represent him. Aline MacMahon plays his long-suffering wife and Kathryn Hays plays the daughter who grows aware of who and what her father is.

Dekker is convincing if the play is not. SUSPENSE THEATRE. 10-11 p.m. NBC. "The Wine-Dark Sea." (color) Until its rather pointless ending, this is an above- average suspense thriller involving a group of bizarre, well- played characters.

Roddy McDowall stars as an intellectual "wino" whose alcoholic stupor doesn't prevent him from realizing his drifter buddy, killed in a supposed robbery, was framed. But, who'll listen to another bum? How McDowall solves this predicament and the people he encounters help build the suspense. Other good characterizations come from John Larkin, Robert Ball and Myrna Fahey. JIMMY DEAN SHOW. 16-11 p.m.

ABC. A good melodic collection of guests are assembled for Jimmy's last show of 1964. Jimmy gets a chance to sing "White Silver Sands" and "Moments to He joins Kay Starr on "Side By Side" and "Nobody's Business." Kay does an excellent medley and a spirited version of "Frankie and Johnny." Country clowns Homer and Jethro corn up several traditional songs and Bluegrass banjo picker Roger Sprung adds a lot of rhythm. Yawns, as usual, are provided by Rowlf. FRIDAY This being a holiday, it is not a particularly good day or night for television.

If you like football and-or parades, you'll find plenty to keep you busy. Otherwise, the pickings are on the lean side. PARADES COTTON BOWL FESTIVAL PARADE. a.m. CBS.

CBS has assigned Allen Ludden and Marilyn Van Derbur to comment on the spectacle from Dallas. KING ORANGE JAMBOREE PARADE. a.m. NBC. (color) Dennis Weaver supplies the running account of the Miami parade which will have Jackie Gleason as grand marshal.

TOURNAMENT OF ROSES 11:30 a.m.-l:45 p.m. CBS, NBC. (color) Bess Myerson and Ronald Reagan are the CBS commentators on this huge show from Pasadena. NBC strikes back with Betty White and Lome Greene. MUMMERS PARADE.

p.m. ABC. Les Crane and Kathy Nolan describe Philadelphia's 78-year-old New Year's Day spectacle, the first time the event has been televised nationally. FOOTBALL Sugar Bowl. Syracuse vs.

LSU (NBC 1:45 pm) Cotton Bowl. Arkansas vs. Nebraska (CBS 1:45 pm) Rose Bowl. Michigan vs. Oregon State (NBC 4:45 pm) Orange Bowl.

Alabama vs. Texas (NBC 7:45 pm) THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER. p.m. ABC. "Another Country Heard From." Ron Randell plays an Ian Fleming type of author who comes to visit, takes at his word that Katy is just the governess and goes right to work on her.

The romance proceeds swimmingly, until Glen becomes painfully aware of what's been going on under his nose. The scenes between Randell and Inger Stevens are delightful. ON BROADWAY TONIGHT. p.m. CBS.

Rudy Vallee continues as host of this show retrieved from last summer's schedule. Fluffs will continue to be supplied by Vallee. COMER PYLE, USMC. p.m. CBS.

Morris Goff, the Abner of radio's old "Lum 'n' Abner" series, guests in the role of Comer's grandfather, a man of vast military experience. As if Sergeant Carter doesn't have enough problems contending with one Pyle, this week he has 2 to worry with, so he's even more of a Pyle-driver than ever. And this week, Gomer gets a chance to exhibit his leadership qualities. 12 O'CLOCK HIGH. p.m.

ABC. "Those Who Are About To Die." The scene is death row. Weather has locked in the bomber squadron on the eve of one of the worst possible missions with an estimated one-third fatalities. And as each day's reprieve passes, tempers grow shorter. The week's hard luck story belongs to the pilot, a hepatitis victim, who, thanks to the delay becomes eligible to fly this hazardous mission as his last before being rotated home.

The action at the end takes precedence over the personal story. Glen Corbett plays the unlucky airman with Sally Kellerman the nurse he's fallen in love with, Ill-Year-Olds Given Break? FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) Kentucky's 18-year-olds never had it so good or did they? Starting Jan. 1 the commonwealth will allow them to buy homes, open charge accounts and obtain loans under their own signatures. A legislative act makes 18 the legal age for both men an'd women, with a few exceptions.

The legal age still is 21 for the purchase of alcoholic beverages and for care and treatment of handicapped children. Kentucky is the first state to lower the legal age to 18, according to the Commerce Clearing House of Chicago. Several states have a legal age of 18 for women but 21 for men. PrepMenls say that if someone is old enough to vote and join the armed forces, he is enough to buy a car and other transactions. Opponents contend 18 is tender an age for venturing in' the business forest of notes, deeds and sundry legal documents.

"Just wait till the car dealers, the banks and the loan companies start collecting defaulted notes from these kids," one state official said. Hordes of visitors proved Thomas Jefferson's undoing. The steward at Monticello, his estate pear ChartottesvUle, Virginia, groaned: "1 often sent a of toy up the stabJiMd UN Mxt rooming there would not bt enough to make a bird's nest. I have killed fine beef and it would all be eaten in a day or two." After Jefferson's death, his daughter had to sell MooUcelio Ui KeyuiMiQtf In Universities Are Requested COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio's Board of Regents, ated last year to oversee lion of state tax-supported leges and universities, will be asked early next year to approve key changes in two rollment policies. John D.

Millett, former Miami University president who now is chancellor of the board, says he will ask for a ruling permitting colleges and universities to dictate whether stu- denjs enroll on the main campus or at a branch. Millett also will seek a change in regulations which say 'Ohio's institutions of higher learning must accept any high school graduate and not just those from Ohio. He said he was "astounded to learn that the present set-up calls for admission of any graduate from any state. The chancellor said he hopes the board will act on the proposed changes in time for them to be submitted to the 106th General Assembly which convenes Jan. 4.

He said the proposals involving admissions are keyed to envisioned expansion of branch campuses as well as municipal universities. Money for this will be available, he said, if voters approve a 9250 million capital improvements bond issue in next May's primary election. Millett also said it is conceivable that in the future, admission of students could be affected by high school rank (position in the graduating class), or by testing, or both. Ohio is reported to be one of only four states required by statute to accept all high school graduates, Millett said. Buzzard Aids In Scientist's Flight Studies SEAFORD, Del.

(AP) Flying by Happing your own wings is for the birds, but it may not be much longer. A practical-minded scientist named John S. Seney, 50, of Seaford, and a college junior, Stephen Moore, 19, of Fairfax, have set out to determine whether or not the age-old dream of man flying like a bird can be made a reality. Seney and Moore are hoping that electronic instruments, and a bird a buzzard named Leonardo will teach them how. Leonardo gets his name from the many-sided genius, Leonardo da Vinci, who tried, but failed, to solve the challenge of flight back in the early 18th century.

The odd thing, as Seney sees is that so little effort has seen made in modern times to follow up Da Vinci's idea. "Steve contacted the Langley Field people, the biggest flight development center in tho world, and consulted their IN irarian, and we just couldn't find anything on the actual dynamics of bird flight." That's where Leonardo the buzzard flies in. Seney, who heads the electromechanical research laboratory of the DuPont Company here, plans to start Leonardo flying while electronic instruments and high-speed cameras record how he does it and how hard he works at it. Then the experts, medical and mechanical, will be asked to analyze the anatomy of a healthy young man Moore and help figure out what he could do to convert his strength into effective wing-flapping. PUC Grants Toll-Free Calls To Phone Users AKRON, Ohio (AP) Toll- free service was granted today by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to 9,142 customers of Western Reserve Telephone Co.

living in northern Summit County communities. Nelson H. Case, Western Reserve president, said the PUCO order requires that two-way tended area service be started by Western Reserve and the Ohio Bell Telephone Co. within 12 months. Under the order, Reserve customers in Northfield, Macedonia and Sagamore Hills will be able to call Greater Cleveland by paying average KM a month more.

With 15 million televisioq seta in operation, Japan ranks second only to the United television ownership..

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About The Daily Reporter Archive

Pages Available:
194,329
Years Available:
1933-1977