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Fort Worth Star-Telegram from Fort Worth, Texas • 35

Location:
Fort Worth, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

yyvy If inny yrtf "rrprrrr FORT WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM Friday Morning June 21 1974 r) tfuit tcAamllml uil yam 1 Qihwashers KjtclienAid Unscramble these four Jumbles one letter to each square to form four ordinary words "Ihr il nothin uit good IGtchonAid" YOSUM Mi SI 1 Call Uf For a re Estfmata On Your Installation A HATLEY CO 534-1796 2701 LudUlU Street 800 to 5 00 Monday Through Friday Closod Sal Now arrange the circled letter to form the surprise answer as suggested by the above cartoon Print Hit SURPRISE AfGWlR here A (AiMKeri tomorrow) OPIATE Jumllr1 BRASS LYING IGUANA Yesterday LONGER LICENSE TERM Broadcast Exec Opposes Measure WASHINGTON (AP) A national broadcast executive told Congress Thursday there is little need to extend the term of broadcast licenses Extensionof the current three-year term to five years would be administrative Donald McGannon president of Westinghouse Broadcasting told the Senate com-mimicatnons sub-committee He said it is only to the real needs of the broadcast industry Continuation of a three-year term be agreeable to if Congress would pass legislation clarifying the standards by which radio and television stations are to be judged by license renewal time McGannon said BUT RICHARD STAKES executive vice president of The Washington Star Station Group said a five-year license term provide a needed breathing spell between periods of license renewal litigation" Stakes told the subcommittee that a 1969 petition to deny the renewal application of one of the Star stations in Washington DC had not been resolved until June 1972 less than a week before it was time to file another application for license renewal The House already has passed legislation that would extend the license term to five years That bill was denounced as by James McCuller chairman of the National Black Media Coalition five-year renewal period goes against everything which public policy in broadcasting ought to be McCull- cr told the committee we really need is a two-year license THE FIVE-YEAR term also was opposed by Ronald Brown director of the National Urban Washington office who said it woujd give stations longer period in which to perpetuate any nonresponsivencss to community On another subject Gullivan publisher of Salt Lake Tribune contested arguments made by the Justice Department in support of their effort to eliminate co-ownership of broadcasting and newspaper outlets in the same market Specifically Gallivan attacked the validity of evidence cited by the department to show that co-ownership tends to increase advertising rates Gallivan said his study of co-ownership markets showed that advertising rates were 8 to 12 per cent below the national average Anawert Jim the clothing merchant dealt With hi customer-SUITABLY TV Ratings Topped By 'Kojak' LOS ANGELES is at the top of the Nielsen television ratings for the second week in a row The CBS series which stars Telly Savalas as a New York police detective lopped perennial winner in the again for the week of June 10-16 in the placed third behind and second place COMPLETING the top five are in fourth place and in fifth All of the top five are CBS shows and every show in the top 10 except was a CBS show An interesting aspect of the ratings is that although the networks are planning to show fewer detective shows they still hold up well in the ratings Three were in the top five On the other hand the networks are going for more family series next year was No 4 but the second attempt to make this a trend placed 54th HERE ARE the top 20: 1 CBS 2 CBS 3 in the CBS 4 CBS 5 CBS 6 CBS 7 CBS 8 The Mary Tyler Moore CBS 9 Sunday Mystery 10 and Bob New-hart tied both CBS 12 of San ABC 13 and NBC 14 ABC 15 Sunday Branded 16 Dick Van Dyke CBS 17 CBS 18 ABC 19 ABC 20 ABC Crackdown Urged On Record Piracy at reduced prices often use sophisticated recording equipment so that the conusiner cannot always tell that he has purchased a bogus Cash said EVERYONE cut there is trying to be a star Some of us are just trying to make a Cash said Reps Richard Fulton D-Tenn and Dan Kuykendall R-Tenn said their proposed bill would eliminate much of the black market in tapes and records by imposing penalties so stiff that the practice would cease to be profitable Kuykendall said the exist ing federal penalties a maximum fine of $1000 and jail term of up to one year are not working He said the jail sentences are almost never imposed and the fines so low that the record pirates just put them into their oper ating expenses And they get off The Fulton-Kuykendall bill and a similar one by Reps Robert Kastenmeier D-Wis are awaiting action before House Judiciary subcommittee The Senate already has passed a tough antipiracy provision as part of a general copyright bill Jerry Coe is on vacation His column will be resumed upon his return WASHINGTON (A P) -Country music star Johnny Cash claiming are draining $200 million a year from the recording industry by peddling unauthorized records and tapes said Thursday the nation needs a tough federal law to protect copyrights is something I have seen and known about and lived with the last 20 Cash told a news conference has to be Cash appeared in support of a bill by two Tennessee congressmen that would impose fines of up to $50000 and jail terms of up to three years for record piracy concerned with the moral issue Cash said piracy is no better than counterfeiting $100 bills or rustling cattle THE DEEP-VOICED singer and composer said existing federal law protecting musical copyrights is too lax and seldom enforced and that state laws are inadequate Many states even have such laws he said a state starts clamping down on record pirates they just move their $10000 in equipment to the next Cash said made a record a few years ago Boy Named and we made a lot of money on it But the rip-off artists have been cashing in on it ever he said Recording pirates who make copies of commercial recordings and then sell the unauthorized tapes and records Publisher Says Right to Sue Should Go Beyond Malice OLD Oi The smoothest Kentucky Bourbon you'll ever know STRAIGHT E0UEEC11 WHISKEY 85 PROOF 1373 010 CHARIER 01ST CO LOUISVILLE XT coal oil ships Coal oil a fuel first used in the 1800s to keep oil lamps burning might be powering ships of the US Navy within three to four years USE CLASSIFIEDS 332-7722 7 UsTareyton smokers would ratherf fight than switch! H1TFRS you read in the or news broadcasts are The sad fact is there is a certain amount of truth to some of these charges Personally this disturbs and concerns me encourage more responsible he said think an individual who feels he has been wrongly or unfairly treated in a story in press radio or TV should be able to sue not just the media that printed or broadcast the story but also the individual who wrote or reported the he added if there is no Field later told a reporter that the view is his and not company policy AUXILIARY GARAGE SALE 4308 Inwood Rood Friday Saturday 8-8 Sptdll to th Washington Post CHICAGO Publisher Marshall Field told communications and advertising executives Thursday the government should toughen libel laws so reporters personally may be sued for their mistakes even if they are made without malice Field said many of the ills of journalism can be traced to reporters some of whom he said are involved emotionally and prejudiced The speech evoked a strong response from the Chicago Newspaper Guild whose president Harlan Dracgcr called speech unjustified slur against the men and women who produce his and dark day in the history of Chicago Field 33 publisher of the Chicago Daily News and the Sun-Times told his audience we are constantly hearing believe what 12 Careers for Woman' There's an exciting job waiting for you in one of 12 career fields where Today's Woman is need- ed and appreciated DECLARE YOUR INDE- mm iimri-inner Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health King Silt): 21 mg "iai 14 mg niiorinp mm: 21 mg "ur1 5 mg nicotine av per cigarette FIC Report March 74 kiifw CBS MBA I AB 5 MFAA ABC ft KIVT IM) 11 KIRA PBS 13 KMX in PENDENCE Call Toda 5 335-2381 Fort Wort School of Business New 5 Classes Now Forming MMMMMMi nmiwinvriMi :2" Look-Up: News ltunm Mouse I Bozo Little Hasi-ah I one Hanger Flipper Eddie's Father Lucy Show Aluv herrv FD What do you do when the food looking for is also looking for you? 70(1 Club ITT A New Day Hugs I tunny Little RaMais 1 ost in Spai Star Trek Utility IMt 5 Sesame Street 3:00 cw it ness News 3:30 C)5S News Movie (Continued) News I cave It to Beaver I Eoe luex Star Trek 'ontmuedi Corner IN le Inside Area 3 NBC Nightly News Area 3 Texas New 0:00 ewitness Nows News Diek Van Dke Hiflenmn "The Silent Knilt Av iation Weather Hogan's Heroes Newsroom Loral news news ann his Washington Andy Gritfith pieand Mike" TfiffTTuT) 6:30 Dec Haw luest-: 11 ink Snow 7:00 Diana Tm-K llollj wood Squares Marshall host Sanford ami Son TTnuIv Runt TWO RABBIS AND "HOLY HUBERT" on THE 700 CLUB Daniel Boone IVophet" The oue of a new lmly man ot the warring Shaw noe pi'edkts doom ot Hi mne-dio rough Mason "The Case the I kle (j4 in Hev iew Wall Street Wee I "Is Ymir Eutuie in Masterpieie "1 'pstau 1 ow list ail's" (ID TheatT TloLTIan mgt on lose Perez Haul Julia i i JEWFTTS Report How Much How Long" Won ie "Asylum lor a Spy le'L 11 Stn I I 't ii ii I i Woman' "ATTv I Yudin ed in oration with M- Mara iin 1 1 tei lai ring mood ot won- i Vtioi i i 'ID 1 TT ayngndh 1 Tint ter WoTTiT "Shuffling Ot 1 to Butt do" i Hi Toma i 1 he Big I H-ali i I 1 fi ml News 1 1 1 Mov ies "The Third Vn tor I Mature: Forever and a Day" i "Seventh favaliy" I ldmdoloh n't surgeon's eye wandeis I I'om one mesishhie temale to another when his pregnant wife U'gins to show a luikol interest in anything hut lie lul'V lit) tt 'Texas News Tonight Show Melanin Steven-on I gllQst List Midnight Spot iat Advoritalr Tunurorr HEWrTRewTl ness Yew ira-TJOTTinraT? iniMnwie I WtT rd pTeyAT-wT 1 TT' Mm ie Ci i i I Mm ie: rhT Newsroom Day at Night UP Sign Off apyd Boom I News Weather 1 Mov ie "Paratrooper 1 no Tawik-I 11:30 "Her Twelve Men 12:00 (deer Carson Tonight Man: Struggle for fust 2 million years were no picnic In fact man-eating animals were one ofliis lesser worries Yet man somehow survived Tonight we'll find out how A David LAVolpcr Production Endorsed by the National Education Association Sponsoicu by The Travelers Insurance Companies and your local Travelers agents and brokers Presented by ThcTravclcrsThcatrc of ManSpccial730PMAEC s' i 7 tn It 1 1 10! 1 101 7 104 5 Iftt 1 IU6 i FM ff iK FM WM? 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Pages Available:
9,058,770
Years Available:
1902-2024