Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 20
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 20

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 THE COUR1ERJ0URNAL, LOUISVILLE, KY. WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 10, 1967 Bill Lacld's TV Almanac Today's Television Programs KB A Warned of Controls Channel Chuckles 1 WAVE-TV WHAS-TV WLKY-TV 3 11 32 :40 Howdy, Nelhber 7:05 Sjnrisa Itmisttr Today an Firm 7:31 CBS Marnlna Ntwt 7-t Todiy (color) 1:00 Captain Kanaaroa 1:10 Jack Lai-anna (color) 9Marnin Show (color) Tr-V Ranch Morv Griffin Show Dialing for Dollars a a a New (color) Pal Boona (color) Andy-Maybtrry (rorun) Mary Oriflln Show I Hollywood Squares Dick Van Dyka (rarun) On In Million (coior) njaopirdy (color) Lov of Lit (coolor) Everybody'! Talking Lovo Lifo; Nawi Ey Gums (color) Search Tomorrow (color) Donna Raad (rerun) Eye Guem Newt Ouidlna Lisht (color) Candid Camera (rarun) The Put lllv (rarun) Dialing tor Dollar Al World Turn. 1 a (color) Day of Our Llva Nawlvwtd Oam (color) 1 Houia Party (color) KmKiwi Anothar World (color) To Toll eTrulh (color) General Haialtal You Don't Say (color) Tha Ed a of Night Dark Shadow Match Gam (color) The Secrat Storm Dating Gam (color) TeoTor) Bavarly Nlllblllla Datalin: Hollywood concentration icoiorj (rarun) JiJJChlJdJi Doctor 4' Channel I Movie? Maverick (rarun) Mike Deu.lai Show (clor, a a Channel I Movia Peoay' Cartoon Clrcu Mike Douglas Show (color) (color) Stingray (color) CBS Now (color) Metro News; Weather ii Now 6 Weather; News Focus: Today's New ABC New (color) News; Sports (color) Weather; SPOrtraits NBC News (color) Lost In Space Batman (color-rerun) (color) 'I 7 Country Music Caravan Lost in Space The Monroes (color) 'color) (color-rerun) The Vlrsinlan Beverly Hillbillies, (color-rerun) (color-rerun) 8 The Vlrslnian Grsen Acres Rawhida (rerun) (color-rerun) (color-rerun) Gomer Pvle-USMC (color-rerun) 9 Bob Hope Theater Danny kayo Show Wednesday Movie (color) JJ (color) (color-rerun) The Long Hoi Summer a a a 1fl 1 SpX ck)r-rerun) Whit' Your Question? Wednesday Movie (color) III jj The Rlflamn (rerun) 1 4 News (color) News Metre Report New I I Weother; Sport Weather; Sports Weather; Sports I I Toniiht Show (color) The Late Show Joey Bishop Show Sin Off 1 A.M. (color) Kentucky broadcasters yesterday heard two appeals for the government to keep out of the regulation of radio and television advertising. Lee Fondren, general manager of KLZ, Denver, painted a dreary picture of the state of the union in 1980, when, he dreamed, the government had outlawed all forms of advertising.

John M. Couric, vice president for public relations of the National Association of Broadcasters, contended that the right to make a profit is necessary if broadcasters are to be responsible leaders in their communities and that the rights of broadcasters are the rights of the people they serve as well. The two addressed about 125 broadcasters representing commercial and noncommercial stations at the Kentucky Broadcasters Association's spring convention at Stouffer's Louisville Inn. Says More Under Way Fondren contended that the outlawing of advertising is already on the way with the attempt to remove billboards from highways and the fight to limit advertising mail. Calling direct-mail advertising "junk mail," he said, was the opening wedge.

Fondren urged that broadcasters, as well as everyone in the advertising field, join in the battle to resist restrictive legislation or orders affecting any one segment. He claimed that an assault on any phase of advertising is an assault on advertising as a whole. He foresaw a time when all products spending should be diverted to public spending and taxation on all forms of marketing to get money for such causes as public education. It was Couric's contention that broadcasting is "the biggest and the best" in the field of information and advertising and for that reason attracts heavy attack from "professional critics, amateur do-gooders and semi-pro Cassandras." Broadcasting, he said, must be freed from the threat that "dynamic, viable, voluntary codes" be turned into "unrealistic, inflexible government regulations." He urged that broadcasters cease attacking other broadcasters in their promotional material and center their fire on the other mediums. Thomas Kerr, farm program director of station WCTO, Campbellsville, was awarded the eighth annual Farm Bureau's communications award at last night's dinner.

In Broadcasting 30 Years Kerr is also commercial manager of the station and has been in broadcasting for 30 years. Active in many civic affairs, he was instrumental in the Taylor County committee for the development of the Lake Cumberland 4-H Club and in raising money for the establishment of the center. The Community College system of the University of Kentucky announced that it was establishing a two-year course in broadcast technology. The course is designed to produce graduates who can pass the first-class license tests of the Federal Communications Commission. The board of directors decided to hold the fall session in October at Jenny Wiley State Park.

Today's program will include a business meeting. "Don't bother ME with the kind of bleach your mother uses! SHE bought us the Edsel!" would be designed according to government specifications and competition would be eliminated. His hypothetical situation will not be brought about by a sudden outlawing of advertising, he said, but by a creeping paralysis in the will of the people to run their own affairs. This, he said, might cause a tendency to feel that private Crusade Buys Ricardo Montalban and Joanne Dru JVlysferv drama on Bob Hope's Theater, NBC-3 at 9 p.m. 9:00 Channel 32: The Merv Griffin Show Joan Crawford, Alan Young, Jose Melis and Dr.

Benjamin Spock. 4:00 Channel 32: The Mike Douglas Show, color Gloria De Haven, Paul Lynde and Mrs. Adam Clayton Powell. 6:30 CBS-11: Lost In Space, color Dr. Smith (Jonathan Harris) insists he has seen an all-green space Lorelei hovering outside the spaceship.

6:30 ABC-32: Batman, color Julie Newmar and Michael Rennie as guest villains planning to bilk a spaghetti heiress (Spring Byington). 7:00 ABC-32: The Monroes, color A wolverine preys on the Monroes' cattle and pelts. 7:30 NBC-3: The Virginian, color Elizabeth Grainger (Sara Lane) tames a wild white stallion in "Beloved Outlaw." 7:30 CBS-11: The Beverly Hillbillies, color Two blackmailers plot extortion for banker Drysdale. 8:00 CBS-11: Green Acres, color Eddie Albert and Eva Gabor picture themselves as immigrant farmers after 40 years of toil. 8:30 Channel 15: The Creative Person Folksinger Joan Baez discusses her political beliefs.

8:30 CBS-11: Gomer Pyle USMC, color Sgt. Carter enters Gomer in a foot race to represent the platoon. 9:00 NBC-3: The Bob Hope Theater, color Ricardo Montalban and Joanne Dru play a private detective and his secretary who clash on the trail of a murderer in "To Sleep, Perchance to Scream." Pat Hingle and Lola Albright are featured. 9:00 CBS-11: The Danny Kaye Show, color Leslie Ugganis sings "If My Friends Could See Me Now" and "Glow Worm" and gospel singer Steve Sanders offers "You Gotta Move." 9:00 Channel 15: Your Dollar's Worth Richard McCutchen narrates a feature on used cars and what the buyer should know. 9:30 Channel 15: In My Opinion Sen.

Wayne Morse is interviewed by Paul Niven. 10:00 NBC-3: 1 Spy, color Kelly Robinson (Robert Culp) meets his now-grownup foster WEDNESDAY ON CHANNEL 13 (A-Adult YA-Young Adult Ch-Childran) 7:15 Modern Math 8:00 What' New (Ch) 8:30 Tha Creative Person (A-YA) 9:00 Your Dollar' Worth (A) 9:30 In My Opinion (A-YA) phone 969-3289 5400 PRESTON HIGHWAY OPEN 9 A.M. TO 1 P.M. DAILY OPEN SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M.

11:30 ABC-32: The Joey Bishop Show, color George Burns, Sandy Baron and The Lettermen on the panel- won. 937-8784 5507 VALLEY STATION RD OPEN 9 A.M. TO 4 P.M. DAILY OPEN A.M. TO 9 P.M.

448-2514 448-2780 4102 CANE RUN RD. MM SIRLOINS CHUCK ROAST Hearing Aids For Needy Youth A $14,000 grant from the 1966 WHAS Crusade for Children has been used to purchase 70 hearing aids for Indigent children in Kentucky and Southern Indiana. The Kentucky Society for Crippled Children, which administers crusade funds, said 40 to 50 children are being placed on a waiting list for hearing aids but that funds are exhausted. Dr. William J.

Brown, director of the society's hearing and speech center, also reported another $3,000 crusade grant, which the society matched, is being used to set up a hearing aid follow-up pro-grain. Summer programs are being planned to provide audiometric, psychological and counseling services to recipients of crusade-purchased hearing aids. The programs will be in Louisville and Owensboro and at the Danville School for the Deaf. STEAK 1 1 1 flr WVAitv.r.ttW. TODAY'S MOVIES ON TV 4:00 Channel 3: Richard Burton, Curt Jurgens and Ruth Roman in "Bitter Victory," 1958 An inexperienced major leads the British desert commandos on an unsuccessful mission to obtain important secret German Army papers at General Rommel's fortress in 1942.

9:00 Channel 32: Paul Newman, Joanne Woodward, Anthony Franciosa, Orson Wells, Lee Remick and Angela Lansbury in "The Long Hot Summer," 1958 A young man arrives in a small Southern town dominated by a wealthy landowner; based on William Faulkner's novel. (Color) 11:30 Channel 11: Robert Mitchum, Faith Domergue and Claude Rains in "Where Danger Lives," 1950 The wife of an older man on the verge of insanity almost ruins the life of the doctor who loves her. GRADE A LB. LB.S CARTON 29. EGGS D0Z.

daughter in Rome (Kaitaeiia carraj. 10:00 Channel 11: What's Your Question? Commonwealth Attorney Edwin Schroering answers phoned-in questions. LEAN SLICED BREAKFAST i ROUND I NO. 1 ALL MEAT WIENERS 12-0Z. CEU0-WRAP I II '4 BACON 3 Radio 3j BS.

FOR $1119 I i IB. vJ 420 WTMT Country music a.m. to 7:3 P.m. Sport Review p.m. Waterfield Vows Repeal Of Full-Assessing Rule 790 1 1 WAKY Top 40" music 14 hour News at tii and iSS Obscenity Case Delayed for Study Of High Court Ruling Action on an obscenity case was held up in Criminal Court yesterday so that an assistant commonwealth's attorney could study a decision announced by the U.S.

Supreme Court Monday. Assistant Commonwealth's Atty. E. C. Hume asked for the delay so that he cou assess the Supreme Court's re -v r- rN A ABC New (40 at WHAS COUNTRY STYIE nigrum jiTiwNw- 1 8 a LBS.

FOR 8 V- 4:50 Ch. Downs Race 5:05 News 5:20 Sports; Business 5:35 P.M. on HAS 4:30 Dreier; Harmon 6:50 Bob Considine 7:00 From the Capitol 7:30 Randy Alchtr 0:30 JU 5-2305 10:00 News 10.15 Sports; ABC Reports 10:35 Music for Tonight News; Sports 11:10 Music (or Tonight 11:55 News; Sports 12:05 Sign Off WEDNESDAY A.M. HAS Frolic 4:00 RFD; Market Digest 4:15 Farm News; Tob'co 6:40 A.M. on HAS 7:00 News A.M.

on HAS 7:25 Earl Nightingale 7:30 A.M. on HAS 10:00 Breakfast Club 11:00 Wednesday on HAS P.M. 12:00 Farm Roundup 12:15 News 12:30 Wednesday on HAS 1:00 P.M. On HAS versal of the conviction of a Paducah magazine dealer on a charge of selling by existing laws" which allow "fuzzy-brained groups of longhairs and local agitators to encourage outside agitators who come into our state and undertake to disrupt law and order." Kentuckians are "fed no and tired of the type of government we have been having in Frankfort," he declared, including the Breathitt administration and that of previous governors. Waterfield included the administration of A.

B. Chandler. He said there were many areas of uncertain operation in the Chandler administration and that it "was costly to the taxpayer because of the big tax increases saddled on the backs of the people." allegedly obscene magazines. Judge J. Miles Pound agreed to the OLD FASHIONED 1 DAI a.i i BAQON SQUARES 291 delay.

900 A tVSa.VSV7rMM SHANK HAtF I A New Ha" Hour Religious programs a.m. to 7:45 p.rtv The case at Issue was an appeal by 970 NBC News on Hour Hl Hour WAVE Abraham Zimmerman, 91, of a $o00 fine for belling what police charged were obscene magazines. Zimmerman, owner Helicopter Traffic Reports: Associated Prat Declaring that the property tax "has reached and passed the point of endurance," Lt. Gov. Harry Lee Waterfield said yesterday that if elected governor he will seek repeal of the section of the constitution calling for 100 per cent assessment.

After the people approve the repeal, he said in a statement in Fort Mitchell, "I would then recommend the General Assembly authorize assessment of property at a reasonable fractional value, so long as the value is uniform for all taxing districts throughout the state." Waterfield is a candidate for the Democratic Party nomination for governor. Reiterating his belief that "compulsory open housing in Kentucky is a state-wide issue," Waterfield asserted that as governor "I will maintain law and order and if there is any section of any civil rights bill that prevents me from doing it, I will ask the legislature to repeal it." "I will use the executive powers to protect the personal rights of individuals," he added, "and the property rights of all." Waterfield said he hoped to eliminate "some of the special privileges permitted to 5:35 p.m. LEAN PORK STEAK of Zimmerman Book Store, 306 W. Jef ferson, was convicted on a charge of BONELESS PORK ROAST 3 ALL LEAN MINUTE STEAKS 2 FOR 25' selling five nudist magazines. HICKORY SMOKiD PICNIC HAMS 37 SLICED FREE! Pound scheduled a hearing June 16 7:15 to IS WEDNESDAY A.M.

5:00 Gallo-Crowner 0:00 Jack Gallo 7:00 New 7:15 Jack Gallo 7:30 World Roundup Jack Gallo :05 Jim Lucas 11:05 Joe Fletcher P.M. 12:00 News; Market 12:10 Joe Fletcher 12:50 Louise yVeillef 1 Joe 00 Pat Murpny 5:00 News 5:10 Pat Murphy 5:30 Stock Market 5 35 Pat Murphy 7:05 Nishtbeat NBC News :15 Niqhtbeat 10:00 News 10:10 Ni9htbeat 11:30 Ask Professor 12:00 Sign Off on Zimmerman's appeal. 4i Warner Says Model-Cities Bid Will Be Pushed Negro College Fraternity HOME FREEZER SPECIALS! 1080 VKLO News at :25 and Race Results torn. Pop music 24 hours i ostpones Carnation Bail 1240 WINN A Negro college fraternity has post CBS News on Hour Music 24 Hours 7 p.m. Reds-Met poned its annual Carnation Ball in CHARGE IT! NO MONEY DOWN 6 MONTHS TO PAY NO INTEREST CHARGES Louisville because of the present open 1290 housing controversy and the non-buying boycott against downtown merchants, News Good Music 5:30 a.m.

to 7:45 p.m. WLOU hTVo55 Music a a.m. to p.m.. 1350 according to fraternity spokesmen. The fraternity is Epsilon Beta Sigma, 100o mm SATISFACTION GUARANTEED I 4 0 graduate chapter of Phi Beta Sigma.

WX VW I MM TJimu ir. vilLtfJtjaK Mr jv mm utaitai Maw MjMa 1 H3 un raricriri, luiru ri frtinrntin. MBS News on Half Hour Music 24 Hours iMiiirim nun rinvun Hnu linutnntl) rllllin lu UHl) Nium Proposes National Office To Seek Industry i I YOUR ORDER WILL BE REPLACED OR YOUR MONET REFUNDED.1 The dance was to have been Saturday at Convention Center, which is within :55 p.m. White Sox-Orioles ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR WE FILLED HIS FREEZER the boycott area. U.S.D.A.

CHOICE WHEL News on Hour 15 7 0 Town and country music tj.nr. to 7:45 p.m. WNAS FM 1:45 a.m.-l p.m. Information 1-3 p.m. Classes, J- p.m.

Sounds MO Advertisement Lemon Flavor Recioe Checks BEEF I I William T. Warner said yesterday that Louisville officials would pursue current plans to qualify the city for federal funds under the model-cities program despite criticism of open-housing advocates. Several groups, including the Kentucky State Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and the Ad Hoc Committee on Open Housing, have asked federal officials to reject Louisville's model-cities application until the city passes a strong open-housing ordinance. Warner, city coordinator of federal projects, told the Louisville Board of Aldermen that the "ill-informed and unreasonable attempts" to block Louisville's application will have no effect on the city's plans.

"We're just going ahead full blast," he said. "If Dean Estill (the Very Rev. Robert W. Estill, chairman of the state advisory group) and the others are man enough and big enough to sink our plans, Rheumatic and Arthritis Pain WFPL a.m. ta I 9.

1 p.m. Lecture FM p.m. Music 1 QUARTER 9 1.9 WFPK 1:45 a.m. -2 p.m. Classes 2-11 p.m.

Music 97.5 A Ntw 1 m- 11 ''m I p.m. Verdi's Nabucco Special to The Courier-Journal McKEE, Ky. Republican gubernatorial candidate Louie Nunn called for establishment of a Kentucky headquarters in Washington to recruit industry for the state and to step up the number of federal programs channeling funds into Kentucky. Nunn spoke in the courtroom of the Jackson County Courthouse at McKee. He said this was part of his over all plan to set up industry recruiting headquarters throughout the state.

He said the Washington staff would work to attract industry best suited to particular areas. If ynu suffer the nacgine minor pains of rheumatism, arthritis or neuritis, try this simple inexpensive home recipe that thousands are using. Get a can of RU-EX Compound, a 2 weeks supply, today. Mix it with a quart of water, flavor with the juice of 4 lemons. It's easyl No trouble at all and pleasant.

You need only table-spoonfuls 2 times a day. Often within 48 hours sometimes overnight-splendid temporary results are obtained. If the pains do not quickly leave and If ynu do not feel better, return Ihe empty can and RU-EX will cost vnu nothing. Available at Tayler Orua teres. 99.7 JUdUA S'i ((chdjce) I SELECTED LEAN 1 BEEF 1 HALVES I Newf at I a.m.

to i p.m. Popular music 5 p.m. to 12 Midni9ht Duplicate WKLO LB. 10 2.1 WLRS Multiplex stereo 24 Hour 60-LB. SPECIAL! let them sink them.

Then we can hang WSTM-FM Stereo adult music a.m. to II midnight SLBS. PORTERHOUSE STEAK IN COLOR the blame on them." I CDCn BLAST irVCC! FREEZING YOUR CHOICE PORK CHOPS PORK ROAST FRYERS 105.5 WSAC-FM "7 Ti News on Hour Stereo music a.m. to 12 midnleht 5 LBS. CLUB STEAK SLBS.

CHUCK STEAK SLBS. MEAT LOAF LBS. GR. BEEF PATTIES 5 LBS. CHUCK ROAST 106.9 WKRX-FM CBS 'Yount Sound" Stereo adult music 24 hour (32W SLBS.

PORK ROAST Sen. Buckman Asks Taverns To Put Their Politics on Tap LIMIT 5 LBS. SHORT RIBS SLBS. SAUSAGE 70-LB. Vj HOG INCLUDES: HAM, PORK ROASTS, PORK CHOPS, LARD, SAUSAGE, PORK STEAKS, SPARE RIBS, BACON.

15 5 LBS. PORK CHOPS 5 LBS. COUNTRY RIBS $250 Diamond Ring Stolen From Home SLBS. GROUND BEEF WITH BEEF HALF OR HIND 95 LB. keeper probably talks to at least 50 people a day.

"Vou can make the difference as to what candidate wins the election," he said. "I know your influence in your neighborhood." Earlier in the evening, Buckman $3395 $29 Yaur Order Will Cut Ta Tour Double Wtoppfd And Labeled Al An Additional Sii (enti Por Pound. Neighborhood tavern keepers were asked to switch the conversation from the weather and baseball to politics last night by state Sen. J. D.

Buckman Jr. Buckman, a candidate for governor in the May 23 Democratic primary election, appealed for vocal support last night from the Kentucky Tavern Operators Association, meeting at the downtown Holiday Inn in Louisville. 'Teople bring to you their trials and tribulations," Buckman said. "They come to you for advice. This is one tim? you can ask them for a favor." Buckman suggested that each tavern A $250 diamond ring was stolen from the home of Dr.

Gordon C. Williams, a University of Louisville professor, at 11:45 a m. yesterday. Police said Williams' wife, Mildred, was working in the jard'of their home at 1722 Trevilian Way when she saw a man standing at the back door. She said the man identified himself as a house painter see kin? work.

When she went Ma the house she found a first-floor bedroom ransacked and the ring missing, police said. 125 LB. SPECIAL SC995 100 LB. Vi HOG $H95 addressed the Louisville branch of the National Hairdressers and Cosmetologists Association at the Kentucky Hotel. He promised that if elected he would seek a separate state professional examining board and staff for hairdressers and cosmetologists, rather than lumping them together with the barbers.

The problems of the two professional groups are different, he said. PORTER HOUSE T-BONEAND SIRLOIN STEAKS WHOLE TRIMMED STEAk LOIN JOANNE WOODWARD 9:00 P.M. ML LB..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Courier-Journal
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Courier-Journal Archive

Pages Available:
3,638,381
Years Available:
1830-2024