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The Press-Tribune from Roseville, California • 9

Publication:
The Press-Tribunei
Location:
Roseville, California
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Wednesday, August 5, 1964 The Press-Tribune, Roseville, California At Tel eVSO7 mmm CALENDAR JFK's eroism Is Subject Of TV Sh ow Goldenland PANORAMA of Things To Do Things To See New Opera Opens At UC Davis Art Shows CROCKER ART GALLERY, open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Through Aug. 16, paintings and abstract by Eric Oback, John De Vincenzl and Ken Morrow will be shown. BARRIOS GALLERY, 1122 2nd open 1 to 10 p.m.

daily except Monday and 1 to 7 p.m. Sundays. Paintings and sculpture currently are on exhibit. SACRAMENTO CITY LIBRARY ART ROOM, open daily except Sunday with photographs and abstract drawings on exhibit. Stage Shows TONIGHT: "Stop The World I Want To Get plays at the Music Circus in Sacramento, 15th and streets, 8:30 p.m.

FRIDAY: "Auntie Mame" will be staged for the last time this leason at the JayRob Theatre, Friday and Saturday, 8:30 p.m. Fairs and Rodeos AUG. 7 AND 8, Stanislaus County Fair and Rodeo, Turlock; Tehama Totem Fair and Rodeo, Red Bluff; Napa Town and Country Fair and Rodeo, Napa. Public Meetings TOMORROW: Rocklin-Loomis Municipal Utilities District, 8 p.m. Calla Petetson Shasta Caverns Open To Public Richard Swift, associate professor of music at Davis and a member of the New Music Ensemble.

The libretto is by Dorothy Swift. Billie Alexander will be featured in the work, along with three UCD students, Carolyn Francis, Mary Offerman, and Phillip Symonds. David Freund, a dramatic art graduate student at UCD, is directing. The musical program also will Include Elliott Carter'! denly completed "Oh beautiful for was, in memory, suddenly completed "Oh beautifu for caverns deep We were entertained by" the dozen or so of bats that flitted about at the cavern ceiling, disturbed by the sudden turning on Of floodlights. Out again into the lunshine of the mountain side, we went down, on the outside, the full 600 steps, and were at the depot where our bus was ready to load.

Again there was the delightful boat ride, and then the climb up to our parked car. The entire tour, with boat and bus ride, Is priced at $2 for adults, $1.20 for children, and had taken some 2'2 hours. Not so far, and not so expensive, as a trip to Carlsbad, and located not in the desert, but in the delightful green and blue of Lake Shasta country. "Recitative and Improvisation" for four kettledrums, performed by Stanley Lunetta, and "Serenade" for soprano voice and alto saxophone. The latter was written by Jerome Rosen, professor of music at Davis, for Billie Alexander and Arthur Woodbury, who will perform it.

Other members of the Music Ensemble are Jon Gibson and Wayne Johnson. $55,000 Offered In Awards SACRAMENTO Californians with a green thumb now have a chance to add some green to their wallets what with the more than $55,000 being offered in floriculture premium money by the California State Fair, Sept. 2-13. Deadline for all classes, excepting counties and cut flower categories, is Augst 20 according to Francis P. Meagher, San Francisco, State Fair board of directors member in charge of floriculture.

Anyone interested in entering the floriculture competition should write for Information and entry blanks to Chief, Bureau of Exhibits, California State Fair, P. O. Bos 2036, Sacramento, Calif. i v. By ROBERT MUSEL NEW YORK (UPI) Robert Saudek has set himself the task of translating to the television screen President John F.

Kennedy's deeply felt belief that a moral action is often as courageous" as the most daring deed of physical danger. The late President was one of the few world figures who had a personal experience of both as a wartime torpedo boat commander and as a politician growing into a statesman under the fearful pressures of the White House. When he came to write his best-selling "Profiles In Courage" it was not the heroism of war that he extolled but the heroism of peace. For, said the President-" of his Pantheon of public figures, "there is, in addition to a courage by which men die, a courage by which men must live." So he chose illustrious men who at great personal sacrifice fought for an unpopular cause they believed to be right and who continued to follow the dictates, of conscience although some saw their careers destroyed and had their lives threatened. 'Saudek has a distinguished record of television awards for "Omnibus" for the Leonard Bernstein and New York Philharmonic series and other programs for the National Broad MR.

TWEEDY SALES ''Anyone who'll volunteer to few casting Company. But in his office over Fifth Avenue he said that in some respects "Profiles in Courage" is the most difficult and rewarding of his projects. It might have been easier if, for example, the President had chosen winners of the Congressional Medal of Honor, performing a direct, dramatically simple act of supreme physical heroism. "And yet," Saudek said, "in practice we are finding as we go through the series that from a dramatic standpoint the instances chosen President Kennedy give greater scope to the development of character both for the writer and the actor. Don't get the Idea that we are barring acts of physical courage.

But at the heart of these acts there Is always a moral action." PANAMA FILM NEW YORK (UPI) A new 22-minute color film entitled "Panama-Crossroads of the World" is available to business, fraternal and social organizations free on request from the Panama Government Tourist Bureau, Room 375, 630 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10020. The 16mm. sound film outlines sightseeing attractions, festivals, resort areas and activities for visitors in Panama and the Canal Zone. by Ned Riddle take a pay cut for the 'stand up." Sacramento (NBC) Sacramento (CBS) KVIE Channel 6 CROSSWORD PUZZLE Getting to the caverns Is, it-self, a delight.

The drive to Redding, for which we made an early morning start, takes one through the peach orchards of Sutter and Butte Counties, the interesting lumber and cattle Industries at Anderson, and through Redding to the lake. Highway 99 takes one across a long, sweeping bridge. A few miles beyond this one turns off at a sign, and goes down a graded road to the McCloud Arm. At this point we boarded a catamaran picnic pleasure boat, festive with its striped awning, for 15 minute ride across the lake on water of a picture postcard blue. From the water's edge (Lake Shasta is low at this season of the year) we climbed up to the "depot" and boarded a sturdy 30-passenger bus and rode, not climbed, up the steep mountain side to the building at the mouth of the cave.

The original opening to the caverns Is still hundreds of feet above this building, but the developers have blasted a tunnel, with level passageways and cement stairways, so that one climbs up through the cool in--terioc in comfort and safety. While making this tunnel the workers found, to their complete surprise, that they had opened another cavern, unknown before and completely sealed off, and this was the first chamber we visited. The formations here were described as "new and growing." Xk Our guide, tapping lightly with his flashlight on a series of limestone formations, played out, quite plainly, the first five tones of America the Beautiful "Oh beautiful, for He never finished the phrase, possibly because none of the formation was tuned to the next note needed, or possibly because the next words, "spacious skies," would not have been at all appropriate. For we were deep in the heart of a limestone mountain, with hundreds of feet of rock between us and the sky. These are the Lake Shasta Caverns, some 22, miles north of Redding, and only this year opened to the public.

And when one saw the tremendous amount of work that has gone into making them safe for the average tourist, even as you and one could only marvel at the hardy spelunkers who climbed about in them during the years before, who went up and down ledges by rope, crawled over rock choked floors, who even had Installed a spidery iron ladder, which, fortunately, we were not required, or even permitted, to Indeed, climbing the rugged mountain peak to the cavern's original entrance, had been a task for only the experienced mountain climber. In the caverns we were told by our guide that this is one of the very rare caves into which one enters and then climbs up, rather than down. KHSL-Channel 12 KOVR-Channel 13 Sacramento (Education) DAVIS A new opera will be premiered by the New Music Ensemble on Wednesday evening, Aug. 12, at the University of California, Davis. The concert of contemporary chamber music and opera will be performed at 8:15 p.m.

in the East Hall Studio Theatre. General admission will be 50 cents, students free. The opera, "The Trial of Tender O'Shea," was written by Water still drips from Its ceilinj we walked dry-shod on a plank sidewalk and the hundreds of formations are still adding to their size and shapes. Shasta Caverns are not, of course, so large as Carlsbad (at least those discovered so far aren't) but nature's handiwork It much the same. There are translucent columns (the guide held his flashlight behind them to show that the light cams through) some massive, some delicate that they have been named "soda straws" and break at a touch as macaroni does.

Along other blasted out tunnels we went, up more steps (more than 600 in all) into other caverns, past dark mysterious openings of caves not yet developed, with peeks into other openings no larger than hatbox-es but lighted with electric bulbs, and showing miniature caverns as lovely as the glittering interior of a g'eode that has been cut across. Wc were shown the bottom of a natural opening that has been named the "laundry chute," and after climbing up more of the cement steps, perhaps 100 of them, were shown the top of the chute, and allowed to peek down into the cavern we had left, far below. We passed the place where James A. Richardson, discoverer of the caverns, had used carbon black from his miner's lamp to write his name and the date, Nov. 3, 1S78.

It is still to be seen no rain or weather will ever deface it. Temperatures in the caverns remain at a constant 58 degrees. It was in this signature passageway that our guide played his five notes of music. There were formations like popcorn balls, hundreds of them, clinging to perpendicular walls, and other long white strips, narrow almost as ribbon but clinging yone edge to the rock faces, which have the un-picturesque names of bacon rinds. At one point our guide introduced us formally to a formation which, he said, had been imported from Java.

It was a doll like figure, slender -and graceful, scarcely 16 inches tall, which stood on a white ledge as though on a stage, waving one petite hand at us. It did, indeed, look like a miniature Javanese dancer. We came at last to the main cavern In the series, and stood as on the first balcony of a large theater, while before us immense draperies, many feet in height, heavy and ornate at the top, thinner and more graceful at the bottom, seemed to hold the promise that at any moment they would part, revealing a mammouth stage on which some great play would begin. They didn't, of course. Those curtains have been closed for estimated "hundreds of thousands of years, and will there, with only minor changes, until the end of time.

The five- 62 Heraldic bearing 63 The pintail 64 Reeking of malt brew 65 Sharp cry DOWV 1 The lale Mr. Hart 2 Mine tunnel 3 Ore deposit 4 Syrup 5 Shooter marble 6 Genus of herbs 7 Disgust 8 Prospect 9 Organ 10 Seine 11 Pontiff's vestment 12 Jap bombs: WWII 13 Pelts 18 Smack 22 "Fall of the House of 24 Field judge 25 Saunters ACROSS Brewing need 5 Sparing of words 10 Watch pockets 14 Redolence 15 Betel palm 16 Asiatic country 17 Dealer of glancing blow 19 South American monkey 20 Move furtively 21 Rifle 22 Tatar lancer 23 Negligence 2G Petty speculator! 29 Article 30 Undergo defeat 31 Adversary 32 Relate again 36 Isle 37 Place of refuge 38 Favoring 39 Sorrow 40 Dealer in foodstuffs' 42 Ailing 43 Climber 44 Mine product 45 Decorative stripi 47 Intimate harmony: 2 words 51 Predatory one 52 Biddy 53 Relaxes 57 Cleveland'i waterfront 53 London thoroughfare: 2 words 60 Pacific coast 61 Beginning Television Fuzzle of Tuesday, August 4, Snlved KCRAChannel 3 KXTV Channel 10 Tonight's Highlights 7 8 9 10 II 12 13 ii 26 Worthless matter 27 Coconut husk fiber 28 Concerning: 2 words 33 Name for colleen 34 Breathing organ 35 Sediment 37 Hard hat I Wallow 41 Vie 42 Huge 43 Provincial governor 4R Grime 47 43 Room in Muslim house 49 Originate 50 European1 river 54 Dried up 55 Inform 58 Walk 53 Masculine nickname 59 Place for porkeri MATE DIIL.PA FIIDA A LI 81 lleAseUENOS 1 1 mssUasp ar asu EHtE tB3 E'ft'I pEr A ntHstee'LCI wrrriA gor aid i A H. I I BAJV.p yBYA EBONBNU RS EhWcEP ou nuIe R'eBpr leak's tejR ijv a sPhXZti A fc NBP ET B-v A E.M SEP DAYSBf RATE 1 11 rA'REi' RE' W-'g RS By Jimmy Hatlo eoiNG' SCRUB NO TO ffli of war who makes his escape by disguising himself as a farm laborer. Fernandel, the French comic, stars. (Channel 3 for two hours) 9:00 p.m.

"THE BEVERLY HILLBILLIES" sees the Clam-petts having their evening meal prepared by caterers. But they think the firm's name Beverly Is a widow woman and this leads "to some complications. (Channels 10 and 12) 9:00 p.m. "BEN CASEY" Is a re-run about a hard-driving businessman who decides to enjoy life although it may be short. (Channel 13) 9:30 p.m.

"DICK VAN DYKE SHOW" finds gag writer Sally becoming a hit on a late-night television show. (Channels 10 and 12) 10:00 p.m. "RUDY VALLEE" has songstress Eartha Kitt as guest along with singer Adam Wade. (Channels 10 and 12) 10:30 p.m. "LYRICS AND LEGENDS" tours the U.S.-Mexico border region and Mexican folk singers are heard.

(Channel 6) 11:25 p.m. "THE CITADEL" is a 1938 movie starring Robert Donat, Rosalind Russell, Rex Harrison and Ralph Richardson about an idealistic doctor who lives in poverty while aiding the poor and the sick. (Channel 10) 11:30 p.m. "THE TONIGHT SHOW" finds Steve Lawrence and his wife, Eydie Gorme, welcoming the guests. (Channel 3 in color) 7:00 p.m.

"DEATH VALLEY DAYS" tells about a couple forced to elope when the girl's rejected suitor threatens her fiance and runs him out of town. (Channel 3) 7:00 p.m. "WHAT'S NEW" finds this children's show describing pictorially the rescuing of a disabled tugboat by the Vancouver Royal Canadian'Air Force unit. (Channel 6) 7:30 p.m. "THE VIRGINIAN" offers a re-run of the story In which an outlaw and his gang invade Shiloh in hopes of killing the Sioux chief who is coming there on a peace mission.

Darren McGavin and Hugh Marlowe are the guest stars. (Channel 3 in color for 90 minutes) 8:00 p.m. "RAGTIME ERA" explains how the cynicism of the 1920s altered song themes and lyrics. (Channel 6) 8:30 p.m. "SUSPENSE" tells about a policeman killed on the eve of an election and an ex-policeman and a city council candidate who believe gangsters planned the murder.

(Channels 10 and 12) 8:30 p.m. "THE FARMER'S DAUGHTER" finds Katy and Glenn's assistant feuding. (Channel 13) 9:00 p.m. "WEDNESDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES" presents "The Cow And a 1961 French film about a homesick prisoner IT iHipil Tome back were TO CLEAN THc WINDOWS TMF Fl OnCS-WE QE fxJ i .2 i 4 lb ft ir" i8 1-JL Vti 28 315 npfii 47 48 SO si qst 57 S8 69 61 (Jl 64 I I LJ I Jul- LU "29 I J2 33 34 35 I 5Ts7TTp" 59 H51 J6T 1 Chico (CBS) Sacramento (ABC) 12:23 PM 1 Newt 12:30 PM 3 Bachelor Father in, 13 As the World Turns 13-Ernis Ford 1 PM 3 Doctors in, 12 Password 13 Movie: Coor Woman 1:30 PM .1 Another World 10. 12 House Party 2 PM 1- -Ynii Dnn't Snv 10, 12 To Tell the Truth 2:25 PM 10, 12-News 2:30 PM -Movie: Roar of the Press in, Edse of Night 13 Dey in vourt 2:55 PM 13 News 1 PM 10, 12 Secret Storm 12- -Movie: Crash Landing -General Hospital 1:30 PM 13- 11-10- -Queen for a Day -December Bride 4 PM 3 Movie: A Slight Cue of Murder 10 Movie: Billy the Kid 13 -Trailmaster 3 PM -Mickey Mouse Club) -Don't Cartoon Club 12- Program Schedule rTheyll Do It Every Time Television logs are furnished to thl paper by each station.

The Prens.Tribune cannot arrept responsibility for errors or omissions. If you notice discrepancies, please notify the station instead of the newspaper. KEEP THIS PLACE SPOTLESS; WEDNESDAY NIGHT 6 PM 3 Niws: HnntlvBrinkley 6:30 PM Stock Markat Report in, News 13 Roaring- JO's 8:35 PM Muiical Portrait 7 PM 3 Death Valley Days fi WbaftNew 10 Newi 12 Riflemin 7:30 PM 5 Virginian 6 En Franca 10, 12 CBS Report 13 Oizn and Hirrift PM Rigtime Era 13 Petty Duke 1:30 PM 5 Indian Experiment If), IV-Suspense 13 Farmer's DauRhter I PM 3 Movie: The Cow and I 6 At Issue At the rentep SUMMER MOW HAD POP AMP ti IC 1lftC DlIT IM AIOT OF TMF IR TIME TIDVIM6 ANP Thewe BEEM ACK HOME A WEEK NOW AMD E.VERV-THlNG IS STILL WHERE THE1 PUMPED IT un Tip Tn in. Beverly Hillbillies 13 Ben Casey 1:30 PM All That Jaiz IS, 12 Dick Van Dk 10 PM Eastern Wisdom in. Rudy Vallee 1377 Sunset Strm 10:30 PM Lyrics and Lerenda 11 PM 3, 10, 12, 13 News PM 10 Movie: The Citude! Ill 30 PM 3 Tonight 13 Roaring 20'a 12 Movie: Moontide THURSDAY MORNING i AM 3 Rhyme inrt Renon 6:20 AM 10 Focus en Farming 13 Ranch and Garden AM 11 Meaning of Communism- 6:30 AM 10 Summer Smetr 1: 5 AM 13-Nw FuUv Guaranteed Roseville 5U 2-2861 7 AM Today 10 Diver Dan 13 Cartoonlind I AM 10, 12 Captain Kansaroe I AM 3 Make Room for Daddy 10 Diver Dan 12 News: Mike Wallace 13 Movie: Last of the Comanche 9:30 AM Word for Word 10, 121 Love Lucy 10 AM Concentration 10, 12 McCoys 10:10 AM in, 12 Pete and Gladys 3 Jeopardy Price It Right II AM 13 Get the Message 3 Say When 10, 12 Love of Life 11:23 AM 10, 12 Newt 11:30 AM 3 Truth er Consequences 10, 12 Search for Tomorrow' 13 Missing Links 11:45 AM 10, 12 Guiding Light 11:53 AM l-i-Newt AFTERNOON 12 Noen 11 Fethr Knows Pest Newt 12 Sea Hunt a IMS PM 10 Wi Tman't World 7-s WHTS-L I'M just im tigep to Lift A FINGER- ri3 Mandella's TV Service All Makes All Work 522 5:30 PM in Laramie 13 Captain V' 5:41 PM 1 Newt.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1918-2004