New York State Digital Library - Fultonhistory.com 11/North... · a single substitution—not one...
Transcript of New York State Digital Library - Fultonhistory.com 11/North... · a single substitution—not one...
Fuesday, October 18, 1966 Tonawanda NEWS Page 7 • ' • • —
1 I'. ••
Try and Stop Me By BINNITT CBHF
IN THE DAYS when Khrushchev was Mr. Big in the Soviet Union, he often admitted that Stalin treated him occa
sionally like a court jester or clown and ordered him, "Dance the G o p a k . " "And," Khrushchev would add, MI danced." Somebody in the crowd would always cry out, "Why did you let him make a fool of you?" and Khrushchev would demand sternly, "Who asked that question?" Inevitably, nobody answered, and after the appropriate p a u s e , Mr. K. would conclude, *That, c o m r a d e s , is why I danced."
* • • '
A few baseball oddities recorded by the late Frank Graham: Connie Mack's Athletics played through the five games of the 1910 World Series without a single substitution—not one pinch hitter, runner, or relief pitcher! . . . Charley McCoy of Fort Worth, Texas, made 31 errors in one game in 1932 . . . In one game in 1906, only one baseball was used in a complete 9-inning game between Chicago and Cincinnati . . . Bobo Newsom, pitching both ends of a double-header, walked the first four batters in game one, then started the nightcap by striking out the same four.
• • •
An elephant who had been a steady customer at a neighborhood bar for months suddenly dropped out of sight, then just as suddenly lumbered back to the eight bar stools he waa wont to occupy. "Where you been, Big Boy?** demanded the bartender. The elephant answered, "I've been on the circus wagon."
WISHING W E L L ^ Registered V. S. Patent Office.
7 « 2 3 5 S 2 7 3 4 2 f t R T Y W J A O I O T U O S 6 2 3 ' 8 ft 7. 2 3 6 8 4 2 7
U G B V V O 'X Y 8 R O V H S S 6 7 S 6 2 7 8 6 S 4 2 B L B E F P A S B O U P N 6 4 2 3 7 5 2 8 6 5 2 3 4
W B D C A L G I E H E O R 7 6 4 2 5 7 5 8 4 2 3 6 7
R R A T M E E N" V M E W I 6 7 6 5 4 2 3 2 5 6 8 7 8 I N 8 A E U P C L B C Y O 6 5 8 7 4 3 2 3 4 1 7 8 6 L T M O A A H Y Y E U H Y
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HERE is a pleasant little game that will give you a message every day. It is a numerical puzzle designed to spell out
your fortune. Count the letters in your first name. If the number of letters is • or more, subtract 4. If the number is less than 5, add 3. The result is your key number. Start at the upper left-hand corner of the rectangle and check every one of your key numbers, left to right. Then read the message the totters under the checked figures give you.
WNED-TV — Ch. 17
Educational Looking in Tonight 6:39 pan. History of Latin
America. College Credit 7 pan. Tales ef Poindexter. 7:13 sun. Friendly Giant 7:39 p.m. what's N e w :
''Shrimp Beat." The techniques of shrimping and an introduction to the men who make their living from netting the delicacies of the gulf-stream are presented.
3 p jn. History of Lathi America II. College credit
3:39 p.m. Opinion to the Capital. Candid interviews w i t h Washington political insiders are presented by newsman Mark Evan.
9 p.m. French Chef. Julia Child has a glint of adventure in her eye as she tackles a turkey carcass and a bowl of leftover vegetables.
9:39 pjn. Japan — A New Dawa Over Asia. A victory in the Russo-Japanese War is the start of expansionist adventure. The Rising Sun shines on Man-
Chaplin Back at Work His foot in a cast and on crutches, veteran actor-director Charlie Chaplin, 77, returns to work on his latest film, "The Countess of Hong Kong," at Pinewood Studios in London yesterday. Chaplin, once famous for his walking stick routine, has to use crutches because of a broken ankle sustained in a fall on the movie set a week ago. (UPI)
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I I churia and 400,000 square miles of China. Her "moment of truth": Hiroshima. Actual films of the events as they happened are shown.
16:39 p.m. U.S.A. — Arts and the University. Work of students in the Design Department is used to illustrate and explain graphic design and the tools of graphic designer.
Tomorrow 8:15 am. Eye on the Universe.
College Credit 8:45 a.m. English. Teachers
Education. 9:29 a.m. Children ef Other
Lands. Grades 4-6. 9:45 ajn. American Literature.
Grades 11-12.
ilHIIIIIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHlC ger complaints by announcing their retirement and leaving the Hooterville Cannonball immobilized.
FACTORY AUTHORIZED
COLOR TV SERVICE
AT
L&M TELEVISION We guarantee the parts w e • a t in y e a r set fee ONR r u t x YEAR a e t tost n days
L&M TV 73 WEBSTER ST. PHONE NX 2-5328
19:16 ajn. Parlous. Grade 4. 19:39 a.m. Mr. Whatnot. Kin
dergarten - Grade X 11:95 ajn. Parlous. Grade 5. 11:23 ant. Exploring Oar Lan
guage. Grades 4-6. 1:95 pan. Art Grade 6. 1:39 pan. Mr. Whatnot. Kin
dergarten-Grade 3. 2:95 p.m. Tell Me a Story.
Grades 1-3. 2:25 pan. Humanities. Grades
11-12. 3 pan. English. Teachers Ed
ucation. 3:35 pan. English. Teachers
Education .
EILEEN HECKART HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - E i
leen Heckart, an Oscar nominee for "The Bad Seed." will play a schoolteacher in "Up the Down Staircase."
RIVIERA V
ENDS TONIGHT "SRNOUT"
T H E SINGING NUN"
!
- STARTS TOMORROW — Basad on tff ///» of M/chs/ange/o
(mm m HESTON• HARRISON
wHw^toi'ft? SBt,
avrasv *•*"•» COLOR BY DELUXE
LANE CI LENTO aaa—H*
AND SOPHIA LOREN, PETER SELLERS
THE MILLIONAIRESS' pip40H& STARTS
WEDNESDAY
ROSSHUNTBTS THE PAD \M> mm •M II
BRIAN BEDFORD-JULIE SOMMARS-JAMES FARENTINO P U S ! JAMES STEWART In Technicolor
"THE RARE BREED"
Looking In Tonight 4:36 pan. .Ch. 4. The 4:36
Show. Peter Sellers and Jean Se-berg star in "The Mouse That Roared."
6 pan. Ch. 7. Twilight Theater. A father tries to raise his sons in his image in "Gunman's Walk," with Van Heflin and Tab Hunter.
7 pan. Ch. 4. The Honeymoon-ers. Finding a suitcase crammed with SlOO-bills, bus driver Kram-den goes on a huge spending spree that continue until he runs into a gang of counterfeiters to whom the suitcase belongs.
7:30 pan. Ch. 2. The Girl From UNCLE. April Dancer travels to a bull ranch in Mexico to search for three rocket scientists and winds up as the intended victim in a bullfight.
7:36 pan. Ch. 4. Daktari. Mike uses Clarence, the cross - eyed lion, to bolster the courage of a young tribesman accused of cowardice.
7:36 pan. Ch. 7. Combat. A group of teenage Germans defend a strategic farmhouse that Sgt Saunders and his men must capture.
8:36 pan. Ch. 2. Occasional Wife. Peter Christopher jeopardizes his raise and promotion by diverting his attention to the pursuit of a blonde other than his "occasional wife."
8:36 pan. Ch. 4. Red Skelton Hour. Robert Vaughn, Joyce Jameson, Jay and the Americans are guests.
8:38 pan. Ch. 7. The Rounders. Howdy Lewis makes himself a pocket piece that proves so lucky that Jim Ed tries to buy it.
9 Pan. Ch. 2. Tuesday Might Movie. Jackie Gleason stars in "Papa's Delicate Condition," a comedy about the problems generated by a warm-hearted, flamboyant family man with co-stars Glynis Johns and Charles Rug-gles.
9 pan. Ch. 7. The ProiUs of Southampton. The government is going to board up the Pruitt estate as unsaleable, so the Pru-itts hire an actor to pose as a prospective buyer.
9:38 pan. Ch. 4. Petticoat June, tion. Railroaders Charley Pratt and Floyd Smoot answer passen-
ENDS TONIGHT—"THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD'
SHERIDAN Drive In
LAST TIME TONIGHT Elvis Pres ley and Diane McBain
"SPINOUT" A n d Lloyd Bridges end
David McCallum In
"AROUND THE WORLD UNDER THE SEA" STARTS TOMORROW
Oar Man Fl int (James Coburn)
"DEAD HEAT ON A MERRY-GO-ROUND"
ELECTRIC HEATERS
9:38 Pan. Ch. 7. Love on a Rooftop. David comes face-to-face with Julie's heritage when they accept her father's invita-tation to weekend in Los An* geles.
16 pan. Ch. 4. CBS News Report An investigation of the criminal — from the first offender to the vicious, hardened repeater T- what effect prison has on him and what the penal system is doing to equip him to reenter society, is featured.
19 p.m. Ch. 7. The Fugitive. Richard Kimble jeopardizes his own freedom to treat a critically ill infant.
11:28 p.m. Ch. 4. The 11:28 Show. A big - time gambler, deported to his native Grecian island, is offered the bejeweled crown of a dethroned king in "Surprise Package," starring Yul Brynner and Mitzi Gaynor.
11:38 p.m. Ch. 7. The Late Show. An adventurer runs guns to the Syrians fighting the French in 1925 Damascus in "Sirocco," with Humphrey Bogart and Marta Toren.
Tomorrow 11 nan. Ch. 2. Pat Boone
Show. Guests include Lana Can-trell and the Geezinslaw Brothers.
11:30 a . m . Ch. 4 . T h e D i c k Van Dyke Shew. Pippa Scott guest stars as a rabbi's wife when Buddy secretly studies for his long - delayed bar mitzvah.
Noon. Ch. 7. Money Movie. Part in of "The Loves of Carmen," with Rita Hayworth and Glenn Ford, is presented. When a youngster of twelve decides to go with her brother on his honeymoon and escape her "drab" life, it seems logical to her that everyone else should agree in "Member of the Wedding," with Ethel Waters, Julie Harris and Brandon De Wilde.
2:38 pan. Ch. 4. House Party. Art talks about Hollywood's famous Sunset Strip with Sheriff's Department captain Victor Ri-seau.
4:38 pan. Ch. 4. The 4:38 Show. Tony Curtis and Mona Freeman star in "Flesh and Fury," the story of a deaf - mute prizefighter, involved with a mercenary dancer, who regains his speech and hearing with the help of the girl he loves.
Buy US. Savings Bonds
Television in Review
Old-Fashioned Heroes Making Comeback on Video
By RICE DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) — Could it be that the American television public is yearning; for series with some good old-fashioned heroes, and is finally getting slightly weary of shows that make fun of them?
There are signs this season that such may be the case.
The most notable example is the situation of the production firm that turned out one of last season's big hits, "Get Smart," a tongue-in-cheek approach to the secret agent and spy epics. Still a Hit
"Get Smart" is still a hit; but the production company has fallen on its face with two more new series that try a somewhat similar approach.
One is NBC-TV's "The Hero," a b o u t a television Western idol who is a real-life bumbler. The other is CBS-TV's "Run, Buddy, Run," about a young man who overhears some big gangster plans in a steam room and is pursued by the hoodlums in each show. Neither new series has shown any appreciable signs of catching on strongly with the viewing public.
On the other hand, consider an opposite trend of a minor sort, beginning with some
Barry Sullivan
Lives Alone And Likes It
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Barry Sullivan, surrounded by family in the new series "The Road West," lives alone and likes it in private life.
After three previous series, and three unsuccessful marriages, the 53-year-old actor is willing to attempt still another television skein, but not another fling at matrimony.
Barry lives in a Connecticut-farm style home perched atop the Santa Monica mountains with a sweeping view of the city. Because his previous home was decorated with modern furnishings, Sullivan haunts antique shops for early American and 18th Century English pieces to match the architecture of his new surroundings.
The house itself has three bedrooms and a den, spacious quarters for a single man.
There is also a guest house with two bedrooms and bath.
'Til find uses for all the rooms," says Sullivan, "When my youngsters come to visit they stay in the guest house."
He is the father of Patricia, 11; Jenny, 19; and John, 23. Patsy spends the summers and holidays with her father, returning to live with her mother in New York the rest of the year.
The only other occupants of Sullivan's home are his mongrel dog, Gigi, and three cats, Maxie, Precious and Stinker.
An apartment over the garage is inhabited by Sullivan's man Friday, Chuck Wagner, a jack-of-all-trades who cooks, tidies the house, answers fan mail. He has been with Sullivan for more than a decade.
Sullivan's swimming pool sees little use. His arduous hours begin at 5:30 a.m. He drives to Universal studios in a small convertible English sports car. He seldom returns home before 7:30 pan.
Two or three nights a week he squires a pretty girl to dinner. Frequently Chuck whips up a feast for eight or 10 guests. Twice a year Sullivan throws a lavish party as a means of seeing all his friends.
"The show takes up so much of my time I'm not free to socialize as much as I'd like," he explains.
Sullivan is a weekend tennis player, usually on the courts of friends at Malibu. Most of his fellow players are writers and directors.
Sullivan's evenings are devoted to reading biography and historical novels in his den.
"I have no time to be lonely," he says. "I believe in the institution of marriage. But it's difficult for an actor to be the kind of husband he'd like to be.
"Now I'm single and free to come and go as I please. Am I happy? If I'm not, I'm a dope."
Television Schedule
shows that have caught on this semester: Hottest Series
"Rat Patrol," an action-hero type new ABC-TV program about some Allied jeep jockeys who fight the Nazis in North Africa in World War II, is the hottest new series of the season.
"The Bridge on the River Kwai," the famous movie that is also a World War II story with heroes and action, earned for ABC-TV an audience estimated, incredibly to be about 60 million persons, more than any spoof could hope for.
In addition to war-hero-action formulas, two other standard series types show evidence of returning—westerns and police stories.
"Iron Horse," a frontier opus, has established itself thus far, with a free swinging gambler - turned - railroad-tycoon as its hero. Traditional Approach
"Felony Squad," a series about policemen has also caught on, and it is a show with a traditional approach.
"Dragnet," the old police series favorite, is being returned with new episodes on NBC-TV next year, as that network perhaps is sensitive in this case to the changing audience backlash.
"The FBI" caught on last season, and has held on.
Paging Eliot Ness. And maybe a good thing too.
Two new NBC-TV daytime series had their debuts Monday, each half an hour long. One is "The Pat Boone Show," and if you like being sung to in the morning by a cheery fellow in white shoes, I guess you'll enjoy it. The other is "The Hollywood Squares," another game show in which actors and actresses reveal their consummate wit.
Programs subject to WGR-TV 2
TUESDAY chance without notice. (C>—Color Pros ram
WBEN-TV 4 WKBWTV 7 CFTO-TV t
6 00 World 15 Series 30 Huntley-45 Brinkley
Chuck Healy Reports
£vening (c ) N e w s
Theater: "Gunman's Walk," Van
7 00 Complete 15 N e w s S o m e (e) 45 Girl
Honey-mooners
Daktari (c) with
Heflin News, Wea. Combat <c>
with
Channel t Theater
News: Weather Sports
F (c) Troop
Star ( c ) Trek,
8 00 From 15 UNCLE 30 Occasional 45 Wife ( c )
Marshall Thompson
The (c) Red
Rick J as M
The (c) Rounders
William Shatner
Musical Showcase
9 00 Tuesday 15 Movie: 30 "Papa's 45 Delicate
Skelton Hour
Petticoat (c) Junction
10 00 15 30 45
Condition," (c) Jackie Gleason
CBS News Reports: Men in Cages
(O
The (c) Pruitts
Love on a Rooftop (c)
The <c> Fugitive, David Janssen
Love on a Rooftop ( c )
A Singin' (e) Music
I Spy (c) Robert Culp. Bill Cosby
11 00 News; Wea. 15 Tonight (c ) SO Johnny 15 Carson
Mews, Wea. Sports 11:20
Show
News, Sports Weather Late
Show
News (c ) Metro (c) The (c)
Hawk
WEDNESDAY WGR TV t WBEN-TV 4 WKBW TV 7 CJrTOTV • _
7 I News 1
» The Today 15 Show Mike Wallace SO with Hugh) Mike's 15 Downs f Attic
World Window News Rocket-
ship
8
10 11 12
» The Today 15 Show JO Hugh 15 Downs
Captain Kangaroo, Bob Keeshan
Seven with Dave • Thomas
University of the Air
Bright ana -Early_ (c l Robbij Tane"
Romper (c> Room
— Big 00 Bozo's
15 Top 30 Jack 45 La Lanne
"bo Eye (c) " 15 Guess 30 Concen-4" tration
00 Chain (c) 15 Letter 30 Show- (c) 45 down
Bonnie Prudden
Love of Life
Dialing fee Dollars Dialing for Dollars
Playt ime with Uncle Bobby
I Love Lucy
The McCoys
Ani^y of May berry
Dick Van Dyke
Girl Talk
Donna Reed Show
Supermarket Sweep
Dating Game
Fractured Phrases
rv Bingo
Mr. and Mrs. (cl
Magi s tra tes Court
00 Jeopardv (Noon 15 Game (c) News 30 Swingin* (c),Tomorrow 45 Country I Guiding Light
Money Movie: "Loves of Carmen," Part III
Toronto Today, Toronto Today
1 00 The 15 Merv 30 Griffin
45 Show
Meet the Millers
Th« World Turns
Ben Casey. Vincent Edwards
2 00 D a y s of (c) 15 Our Lives 30 The 45 Doctors
Password g a m *
House Party
3 00 Another 15 World 30 You Don't 45 Say
To Tell the Truth
Edge of Night
Vewlywed Game
A Time for U s _
General Hospital
Superman show
4 00 The 15 Mike 30 Douglas 45 Show
Secret Storm
4:30 Show: "Flesh
program and Film Features
Matinee: "Once More My Darling," Robert Montgomery
People to Conflict
Words and Music
It's Your Move
11
I Love Lucy
Theater: "Stairway
5 00 with 15 guests 30 Passport 45 Two
and Fury," Tony , Curtis
Laramie, with John Smith
to Heaven,** David Niven
>
Highlights I On Radio I
WBEN-FM, 102.5, presents Ar-turo Toscanini conducting the NBC Symphony Orchestra in Brahm's Symphony No. 3 and Leonard Pennario as soloist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra under Erich Leins-dorf at 8 tonight.
WEBR, 970, features Part II of Ted Sorensen's interview, on "Assignment People" at 6:45 p.m. WEBR broadcasts the Buffalo Bison vs. Quebec hockey game at 8:45 tonight.
On With the Show RIVIERA THEATRE — Spin-
out, 6:45 and 9:55; The Singing Nun, 8:20.
STAR THEATRE—The Greatest Story Ever Told, 8:25 only.
SHERIDAN DRIVE-IN — Color Cartoons, 7:15; Spinout, 7:41 and 11:30; Around The World Under the Sea, 9:30.
1-290 DRIVE-IN - Master of Horror, 7:35 and 12:15; Master of Terror, 8:45; Master of the World, 10:25.
DIFFERENT ROLE HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Joan
Thomas, Miss Los Angeles of 1964, will play a streetwalker in "Chubasco" for Warner Bros.
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Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069
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