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The Boston Globe from Boston, Massachusetts • 38

Publication:
The Boston Globei
Location:
Boston, Massachusetts
Issue Date:
Page:
38
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

JJS Boston Evening Globe Friday, January 16, 1370 RADIO HIGHLIGHTS NIGHT WATCH TELEVISION RADIO and Instruments. WGBH-FM. I SO JEAN SHEPHERD, humorous story teller. WGBH-FM. 11 ABCs Smith doesn't pull punches even when remarks cost him a joh lStfi'MSJst .1 1 BOS TO STMFHOSY Orchestra, stereo, from Symphony Hall.

Rudolf Firkusny. pianist ift orai'i Piano Concerto in minor; Bruckner Symphony No. I in A. WGBH-FM. 2 THE TOSCAMXI YEARS.

Rare recordings by Arturo ToscanlnL WGBH-FM. 4 FBO BASKETBALL. Celtic vs. Los Angeles. WBZ, EVENING SYMPHONY.

D'Indy's Symphony on a French Mountain Air: Haydn's Symphony No. S3 in D. WCRB. 1:05 MIMC ORGY. Review of Renaissance.

Baroque and Classic periods for students of music and the arts. WHRB-FM. 05 BASKETBALL. Necdham vs. Welles-ley.

WKOX-FM, CHAMBER Ml SIC from the Library of Congress, stereo. Deller Consort performs Renaissance and Baroque chamber music for voices TV HIGHLIGHTS TODAY DAVID FROST SHOW. Joan Crawford, actress: Rod Steiger, actor; Robert Gist, TV director: The Mission, singing seminarians. 4:30 (4) THALASSA CRUSO discusses Dutch bulbs "and why not bring the most popular of the outdoor bulbs into vour house?" 8 (2) NET PLAYHOUSE. a complete performance by actors of the National Theater of Ghana.

8:30 (2) THE NAME OF THE GAME. "Island of Gold and Precious Stones," Lee Men- wether. Hazel Court, Yvonne DeCar- lo, Michael Walker. 8:30 (4) CRACKERBARREL. George Gloss, of Brattle Book Shop, and Edward Rowe Snow, guests.

9 (38) JIMMY DURANTE and the Lennon Sisters Hour. Ed Ames, singer; David Frye, impressionist; Ferrante and Teicher. pianists. 10 (7) TONIGHT SHOW. Joan Rivers, hostess.

Al Hirt, trumpeter; Marty Allen, comedian; Mr. Kenneth, hair stylist. 11:30 (4) v- A W.i prV For financial reasons, Lowell's new television station, WXPO-TV (Ch. 50), has cut back daily programming sharply from 12 hours to 6 hours and has instituted a thorough revamp of its schedule. Because taped shows too expensive in terms of delivery charges and other costs, the independent outlet dropped a number of them from its slate, as well as some local programs, effective this week.

Among the shows to be seen no longer are "Info-50," "Romper Room," "Woody Woodbury," "Dennis Wholey Show," "Steve Allen Show," Week-ends it is shedding Pat Boone's "Week-End in Hollywood" and "Here Come the Stars." :00 Use your Master Charge Card for Flags of All Kinds at New England Decorating Co. 16 Lincoln St. Boston Since 1892 9:30 Eaaiiiiiian 10:00 mm BigT Movie (tonight 'LulMtfn New England Banlcard Association EVENING 4 00 2-4 Irrterrece: "L.quld CryrfeV 44.7.10-12 Nwi. weerlw (c) 4 Sw Tr.k (c) 1 ABC (c) II took Beet 38 Flippy (c) SO Bonut 611190 (cj 54 Sermen (c) 4:30 i-M Senior Ctiteiu' Voice (c) 4- 10 Huntley-lrinkley Report c) 5- 12 Welter Cronkito, new. (c) 7-ABC Ne- (c) Nt, wttr 1 1 Antiques 17 Movie.

The Privete lift e( Henry VIII," Chariot Leughton, lin-nie Eernee 3t-Mtn From U.N.C.LE. (c) 50 Nwi( woether, butineti reporH So Gilliqtfi't ItUnd (c) 7:60 2 lou'it lyont 4 Eyewitneu Nemdey (c) 5 Wheft My Lint? (c) 4 Mothen-in-lew (c) 7 Dick Vtn DyU Show Ztflt Grey Theeter 10 To Ttll the Truth c) 11 Twin Circle Httdlint 12 Truth or Consequences (c) 44 Mtjor Americen Boots 50 Mil DougUt Show (c) 561 love Lacy (c) 7:30 2 Meggie and tha Beautiful Machine 4- 10 High Chaparral (c) 5- 12 Gat Smart -7-f-Ltt'i Make a Deal II Nighttime in Miittrogtrt Neigh- borhood (c) 31 Of Lands and Stai 44 World Hiitory 51 Beet the Clock (c) 1:00 2 Making Things Grow "Dutch Bulb" (c) S-12 The Good Guy e-7- The Brady Bunch (c) 44 Invitation to Art 54 Movie. "She Wore a Yellow Ribbon," John Wayne, John Agar Ml N.E.T. Playhouse: "Hamile" 4- 10 The Name of the Game (c) 5- 12 Hogan't Heron (c) 4-7- Mr. Dttd't Goti to Town (c) 27 Etc, Bill Moll 38 Divorce Court (c) 44 Casals Master Class 50 -Cinema 50 5 Movie.

"Murder, Inc." Stuart Whitman, May Britt, Henry Morgan 4-7-9 Here Come the Brides 12 Movie. "Robin and tha Seven Hoods," Dean Martin, Frank Sinatra 38 Crackerbarrel (c) 44 Living for the Sixties 2 Maggie and the Beautiful Machine 27 Country and Wast.rn Hour (c) 44 Nighttrein 2-11 Newsfront 4-10 Bracken's World 4-7-9 Durante and tha L.nnons 27 News 38 Movie. "The Hard Way." Ida Lupino, Joan L.tlie, Dtnnit Morgan 44 Forsyte Saga 54 Arch Macdonald, ntws (c) 50 News So The Honeymoon. News 27 Movie. "Belle Starr's Daughter," George Montgomery, Ruth Roman So One Step Beyond Ntws 12 Ntws, weather (e 4-10 Tonight Show (c) 4.7.9 Dick Cavetto Show (c) 12 Movie.

"The Wild Seed," Michael Parks, Celia Kayo 38 Tales of Wells Fargo 54 Movie. "Street with No Name," Mark Stevens, Richard Widmark Movie. "Fire Down Below," Robert Mitchum, Jack Lemmon, Rita Hayworth 4 Movie. "David and Lisa," Keir Dullee, Janet Margolin A Movie. "Miss Robin Hood." Mar.

garet Rutherford, Richard Hearne 7 Nighttrain 56 At Your Service (e) 7 News (c) 5 Secret Agent MORNING GLOBE reviews in brief: "Bob Hope Christmas Special (Ch. 4 Each year it's the same; each year it's different. A worthy edition of this annual feature. "Night of the Squid" Ch. 7) Some of the most spectacular underwater mating sequences ever filmed.

10:30 11:00 By Percy Shain Globe Staff Howard K. Smith is one newsman who welcomes controversy over the news shows even the kind engendered by Vice President Agnew's recent blast. "I'm in favor of criticism," the ABC commentator said on a visit to Boston-this week, "and that includes criticism of everyone, including ourselves. We criticize, and we should be criticized. "I think the industry over-reacted to Agnew's remarks and to the furore that followed.

Personally, I didn't feel intimidated by what happened. Smith is well aware of network sensitivity in this area. It cost him his job at CBS a few years ago. "Even then I thought we should comment on the day's events. But CBS cracked down and told me there was no room for 'editorializing' in the news.

They said the FCC wouldn't like it; that the agency was-pposed to our taking sides in controversies. "I went to the FCC myself and learned that, far from wanting us to keep out of such areas, they welcomed controversial comment. When I went back and told CBS, they fired me." BLUXTNESS Smith, who does four commentaries a week sometimes five on the ABC news show, seen at 6:30 here on Ch. 7, carries the same bluntness of his essays into his interviews. He answers all questions forthrightly and unequivocally.

He termed Stokely Car-michael a "nut, with perhaps 20 followers and 200 newsmen to give his ideas circulation." He looked stance as LBJ's "revelations" concerning his feelings about the Presidency. "Despite what he says, he wanted that job," Smith felt. "But I agree that as a southerner he had honest doubts about his ability to unite the country." The newsman characterized the Washington news establishment, of which he is a part, "terribly incestuous." "Two writers over cocktails can mistake their conversation for public opinion," he said. "It is this attitude that impels me to get away from the capital as often as 11:10 11:20 11:30 HOWARD K. SMITH welcomes controversy.

I can. I visit 12 campuses a year. I get to New York quite often. But after a few days away I am drawn back, because that is where I get my flow of ideas and I have so many experts at my fingertips to help me in any areas in which I need information. My sizable re-research, files are also there." He agrees with much of what Agnew said, "particularly the need of periodic self-examination.

It can be very salutary." He attributes Agnew's transformation from laughing stock of the country to one of its most admired men to the fact that "he struck a responsive chord" with his attacks on the news media. AGNEW HIT HOME "He is not an attractive or eloquent man," Smith pointed out, "but what he said hit home. People just got tired of the continuous flow of bad news about our country which they didn't feel was that bad. "For another example, take the case of George Wallace. Neither is he at all attractive or eloquent.

But people responded to what he said. And he received the largest vote of any third-party candidate in the history of our country." Smith feels our country is too negative-oriented in its news judgment "We're interested in the odd things that go wrong," he pointed out, "not the substantial accomplishments. You will notice that all the Pulitzer prizes go to exposes. "We should pay more attention to the strides we have made in some areas. As a southerner, I would never have predicted 10 years ago that the country was ready for a black in the Supreme Court, a black in the President's cabinet, a black in the Senate, blacks in sensitive federal posts, blacks as mayors." 11:40 :00 1:30 12:30 1:00 1:30 2:00 W)t CljctSt at ur Boor Behold, I Hand at the door, and knock; if any man hear my roiee, and open the door, I trill come in to him, and uill sun with him, and he with me.

Rev. 3 :20 Before me as I write is a reproduction of Hofmann's painting, Christ Knocking at the Door, an inspired work in its evangelical challenge and spiritual appeal. It graphically symbolizes those recurrent moments in the lives of all of us when we are called upon to make a choice between active response to the appeal of Divine Love or surrender to lethargy. Christ is depicted standing at our door the door of our heart knocking for admittance. Lacking a latch, it cannot be opened from without.

It can be opened only from within. When we hear His fateful knocking at our door, what will be our decision? His coming will be in many ways and under many guises. If we do not recognize His knock and answer its summons to open, He will go away. With divine patience He will come again and again though repeatedly rebuffed. If, however, we remain obdurate in our failure to admit Him, inevitably there will come a time when our occupancy of our house will have ended.

Will we deny any man the full measure of justice for which he appeals and to which he is entitled? Will we turn indifferently away from those who are weary with life's endless labors and heavy ladened with life's intolerable burdens of frustrations and failures? Will we remain unmoved and aloof in the presence of sorrow and suffering, and pass by on the other side? Will we respect the admonition to love our enemies, bless them who curse us, do good unto those who hate us, and pray for them who despitefully use us and persecute us? In all these situations Christ comes to our door with his saving grace and knocks. Will we let Him go away an unheeded caller? He will come also to plead for justice and compassion toward God's lesser creatures. Will we forget that they as well as we have been endowed by a common Father with the divine gift of life and will we think of them only as soulless creatures who as such possess no rights which we are bound to respect? If so, the unwelcomed Christ will turn away from our unopened door. Do we find and seek in the remorseless hunting down of the wild creatures of field and wood and the wanton killing of the fowls of the air a sport to be cultivated and enjoyed? If this is true, we let Christ knock unheeded at our door. Are we numbered among that rapidly increasing number of both men and women who without scruples or pity experiment on pathetically helpless and innocent animals in their vivisection laboratories, or are we among that host of people even including those whose lives have been dedicated to preaching the gospel of love and compassion who either encourage and support the evil practice or indifferently remain aloof? If this can be said of us, we have turned a deaf ear to the knocking and Christ will depart in sorrow from our door.

Returning to a scrutiny of the picture, it seems apparent that the artist has shown Christ knocking at a door which has remained closed for a long time. The creeping and encroaching ivy tells the sad story. Alas, how true this is of the inhospitality toward Christ of so many of us! How few of us have listened intently for that knocking which gives us a fate-Iadened option between heaven and earth and in responding have, chosen the better part! To put the same thought, differently expressed in the words of St. Paul, how few of us in spirit and in truth have let that mind be in us which was also in Christ Jesus. Those of us, however, who come to realize, albeit belatedly, the imperishable treasures which have been brought to our door by Him who seeks admittance will quickly respond to His knocking and receive Him with joy and reverence.

Such of us will then know what it means in abiding peace and happiness when "God shines in our hearts in the face of Jesus Christ." Saturday TV until 6 p.m. 4:00 4 World of Animali (c) 4:20 7 Agriculture, U.S.A. 4:30 4 toemtown (c) Sunrise Semester (c) 4 Farmer't Corner (c) 7 Newt (c) 7:00 Boio't Big Top (c) Jeff's Collie 7 Major Mudd (c) 7:30 4 Felix the Cat (c) 1:00 5-12-Th. J.tsons (c) 4-7 Gulliver end Jackie (c) 1.30 S-12 Bugs Bunny (c) 4 Fun on Wheels (c) 7 Smokty the Bter (cj Ring-a-Ding the Clown 00 4-10 Here Comes the Grump (c) 4- 7-a Cattanooga Cats (c) 3t Alvin Show (c) :30 4-1 0-Th Pink Panther (c) 5- 12 Dastardly and Muttlty (c) 38 Tht Thunderbirds (c) 55 54-At Your Service (c) 10:00 4-IO-H. Pufnstuf (c) 5-12 Perils of Penelope Pitstop (c) 4- 7-9 Hot Wheels (c) 31 Marine Boy (c) 54 Roller Derby (c) 10:30 4-10 Banana Split Hour (c) 5- 12 Scooby-Ooo (c) 4-7-9 Tha Hardy Boys (c) Cartoons (c) 11:00 5-Th.

Monktet 4-7-9 Sky Hawks (c) 12 Archie, comedy hour (c) Scarlet (c) 54 Wrestling Matches (c) 1 1 JO 4 The Flintstones (cj 5 News, weather (e) 4-7-9 George of the Jung'. 10 The Flintstones 38 Three Stooges 12:00 4-10 B.itttbtli: Temple vs. N.vy at Annapolis (c) 5 Cendiepin Bowling (c) 4-9 Gat ft Together (c) 7 Time TynneJ (c) 12 The Monkees (c) 27 Across the Fence U) 56- Men: "Gung Di, Grant, Douglas Fairbanks Joan Fontaine 4-9 American Bandstand (c) 12-38 Wacky Races 27 Social Security 5 Winning Pins (c) 7 Movie: "I Was a Communist for the FBI," Frank Lovtjoy, Dorothy Hart, Philip Carty 12-38 Superman (c) 27 Soy Scouts 4 Long John Silver (c) 9 Movie: "Always Ltave Them Laughing," Milton B.rle, Virginia Mayo, Ruth Roman 12 Movie: "Cavalry Command," John Agar, Richard Arltn 27 Ratherdo! 38 Johnny Quest (c) 4-10 Football: A.F.L. All-Star Game (c) 5 Movie: "Blood Alley," John W.yne, Lauren 8ac.ll 4 Roller Derby (c) 38 Archie Comedy Hour (c) 54 Bowery Boys 4 See Hunt 12 Run for Your Life 3t Wrestling Match.s (c) 56 The Outer Limits 4-7-9 Pro Bowlers Tour (c) 38 Movie: "Floating Dutchman," Dermott Walsh 2 Sesame Street (c) 5 CBS Golf Clessic c) 12 Joe a math Show (c) 56 Combat (c) 12 Movie: "Against All Flags." Er- rol Flynn, Maureen 27 Upbeat 2 Misterogers' Neighborhood (c) 4 Joe Namath Show (cj 5 Lassie (c) 4.7.9 Wide World of Sports (cl 10 Wonderful World of Golf (c) 38 Racing, Mialeah 50 Adventures in Paradise (c) 56 Speed Racer 2 The Course of Our Times 4 Confrontation (c) 5 To Rome with Love (c) 27 Newshour (cj 33 Password 56 The Flintstones (e) 3:00 3:30 4:00 4:30 5:00 5:30 On Your Dial 'Floating typhoid bomb' ordered to stay in port AM STATIONS Kc. Kc.

WEEI 690 WEZE 1260 WRKO 680 WJDA 1300 WCAS 740 WCRB 1330 WHDH 850'WLYN 1360 WRYT 90 WPLM 1390 WBZ 1030 WHIL 1430 WILD 1090 WMEX 1510 WCOP 1150 WNTN 1550 WKOX 1190 WUXR 1600 FM STATIONS Mess. Megs. WHTL 107.9 WROR 98.5 WBZ 106.7 WJ13 96 9 WKOX 105.7WHRB 95.3 WBCN 104.1 WHDH 5 WEEI 103.3 WBOS 92.9 WCRB 102.5 WBUR 90 9 WLYN 101.7 WGBH WCOP 100 7 WEP.S 38 9 WPLM 99.1 WTBS 83.1 I tftoAi Boneless I I RrV-htcn- Wateftown I (Hertttfcngs) I li IN to quanta I 1 test 1 -4 Th foregoing article reproduced from Reverence For Life Magazine published by the New England Antt-Viylsecion Society. It was written by Hon. George R.

Farnum, the Society's President. Boston lawyer and Former Assistant Attorney General of the United States. It is offered to readers, of this newspaper as a few thoughts for serious consideration. With the number of known and suspected cases of the disease, now 34, George Turner, president of Lines. North America said the ship will be kept here for four or five days.

"If they decide to leave," said Dr. Mott, "then we will not permit them to take on the 300 passengers who were to embark here. I think PLO will cooperate." Meanwhile. Federal health officials continued a series of tests among the 1500 passengers and crew to find the possible carrier Associated Press VANCOUVER, B.C. The deputy city medical health officer said yesterday that any decision to sail the luxury liner Oron-say out of Vancouver before medical tests are completed could turn it into "a floating typhoid bomb." Dr.

George Mott, the officer, said the typhoid situation aboard the liner is under control as long as the ship remains in port. "But if it leaves port before the source is identified and without medical care for the patients, there is a problem," he said. Th Society appeals for recruits to help spread its Goseel of Compassion for ll of Gods creatures AND NOT FOR CONTRIBUTIONS. Associate Membership 1.00 and Active Membership $5.00, both including free subscription to our humane magazine "Reverence For Life." SED FOR FREE LITERATI RE New England Anti-Vivisection Society Dipt. 700IH, 9 Park Street, Boston, Massichesetfj 02103 of the disease, which causes intestinal irritation, high fever and diarrhea-.

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