The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 January 1968 — Page 5

Monday, January 29, 1968

Tha Daily Banner, Oreencastle, Indiana

^age I

THE DAILY BANNER

DAILY TV GUIDE

TELEVISION IN REVIEW

MONDAY. January 38, 196*

Evening

•:00 Ch. 2—News, aporta. weather 6-13—News, weather, sports-e 8—McHale a Navy 10—News, weather, sporta 6:30 Ch. 2-6—News, Hunley-Brlnkley-6 4—Perry Mason 8-10—News, Cronklte-e 13—Cowboy in Africa-c V:00Ch. 2—Dating Game-c 6-8—News. Weather, Sports-c 10—Second Hundred Years-c 1 :J0 Ch. 2-8—Monkees-c 4—Truth or Consequences-e 8-10—Gunamoke-c 13—Drama Special-s-g 8:00 Ch. 2—W-2 Reports 4—Divorce Court-c 6—Rowan and Martin-c 8:30 Ch. 2—Drama 8peclal-s-c 4—America-c 8-10—Lucille Ball-c 8:00 Ch. 4—Merv Griffin-c 6—Movle-c 8-10—Andy GrlHith-c 13—College Basketbal, ID vs.

DePaul

9:30 Ch. 8-10—Family Affair-# 10:00 Ch. 2-6—1 Spy-c 6—Carol Bumett-c 10—News, weather, aporta 10:30 Ch. 4—News and weather 10—Carol Burnett 13—Big Valley-c 11:00 Ch. 2—News, sports, weather 4—Alfred Hitchcock 6-8-13—News, weather, sports-c 11:30 Ch. 2-6—Johnny Carson-c 4—Ski with Stein-c 8—Movie-c 10—Laredo-c 13—Joey Bishop-c 11:35 Ch. 4—Adventures In Paradise 1:00 Ch. 2-6—News 13—Understanding Oor World 1:30 Ch. 13—Childhood 2:00 Ch. 13—News-# TUESDAY, January SO, 196*

Morning

6:30 Ch. 6—Today In Indiana-c 6:55 Ch. 13—Five Minutes to Live By-e 1:00 Ch. 2-6—Today-c 8—Town & Country-e 13—Continental Comment 7:05 Ch. 10—News, Joe Bentl-o 7:25 Ch. 8—Chapel Door-c 7:30 Ch. 4—Kartoon Kamival-# 8-10—News-c 13—Kindergarten College-c 7:55 Ch. 8—News-c 10—Doctor’s House Call 8:00 Ch. 8—Captain Kangaroo-# 10—Treasure Isle 8:30 Ch. 10—Linus the Llonhearted 13—How’a Your Mother-In-

Law?

8:00 Ch. 2—Newlywed Game-e 4—Spanish I & H 6—Movie 8—Movie 10—Captain Kangaroo-c 13—Paul Dizon-c 8:30 Ch. 2—Donna Reed 4—Treasure Isl#

By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD UPI—NBC-TV paid William Hanley $112,500 for his two-hour play, “Flesh and Blood,” which arrived during the weekend. It Is reported to be the highest amount video has paid a writer for a single work. It comes out to about $1,000 a minute. I hope the sum gives Mr. Hanley cause to smile, even for just a moment, in his next play. I guess the first thing to say about this drama of a contemporary New York family whose members find out how little they really know each other Is that it had powerful moments, was acted well and—as previously described — was “bold and daring” by television standards in its frankness. And I guess the second thing to say about it is that in two hours there was not the slightest opportunity to summon a flicker of a smile about the human predicament, the human comedy that even tragedy can bring. It was two hours of sheer, unadulterated misery. The producer and director was Arthur Penn, and the strong cast was composed of Edmond O’Brien, Kim Stanley, E. G. Marshall, Kim Darby, Suzanne Pleshette and Robert Duvall The setting was an apartment in a condemned building where a family was gathering for New Year’s Eve. O’Brien is an aging ironworker, uncertain of himself at great heights, tortured because he

couldn’t save a young colleague whe fell to his death. Miss Stanley portrayed O’Brien’s stoical wife. Her secret is that after he was believed killed In wartime, she and his brother (Marshall) sought to comfort each other, and the result was a child (Miss Darby), who is shattered when she finds out as a grown girl in the play. The fact is that O’Brien has known all along, and borne the pain. Marshall Is a former Ironworker, an ex-alcoholic who wanted to be a priest, and who now is dying. Everybody knows it. Miss Pleshette is O’Brien’s shallow, sharp-talking daughter whose marriage is breaking up partly because her husband wants to engage in a wife-swap-ping experiment with another couple. And Duvall, a son wounded severely in war, is a vegetable in a wheelchair, not hearing, saying or understanding anything. Hanley showed a moving compassion in his treatment of his characters as their secrets and destroyed memories came out in conversations. The high point was O’Brien’s poetic recollecton of a daredevil contest he engaged in with the young ironworkers on high before the boy plunged to his death. But how much more genuine the whole play would have seemed if it had only offered more dimensions than its single note of misery and despair.

10:00 Ch. 2-6—Snap Judgment-# 4-10—Candid Camera 13—Bewitched 10:25 Ch. 2—News, Dlckerson-e 6—Doctor’s House Call-# 8—News, Stan Wood-c 10:30 Ch. 2-6—Concentration-#

4—Fugitive

8-10—Beverly Hillbillies 13—Donna Reed 11:00 Ch. 2-6—Personality-c 6-10—Andy Griffith 13—Temptation-c 11:25 Ch. 13—New*. Sanders-# 11:30 Ch. 2-6—Hollywood Squares-# 4—Little Show 8-10—Dick Van Dyk# 13—New Show-o

Afternoon

12:00 Ch. 2-6—Jeopardy-# 4—Cartoons-c 8-10—Love of Llfe-e 13-50-50 Club-c 12:25 Ch. 8—Tops In Fashions-# 10—Doctor’s House Call 12:30 Ch. 2—Eye Guess-c 6—Around the Town-e 8-10—Search for Tomorrow-c 12:45 Ch. 8-10—Guiding Light-# 12:55 Ch. 2—Farm Report 1:00 Ch. 2—Dating Game-e 4—Woody Woodbury-e 8—News, weather and Women’s Features-c 10—News, weather, farms 1:25 Ch. 6—Doctor’s House Call-c 1:30 Ch. 2-6—Let’s Make A Deal-c 8-10—As the World Turns-c 13—Dating Game-c 2:00 Ch. 2-6—Days of Our Llves-c 8-10—Love Is a Many Splendored Thlng-c 13—Newlywed Game-e 2:30 Ch. 2-6—Doctors-c 4—World of Women-e 8-10—House Party-e 13—Baby Game-c 2:55 Ch. 13—Children’s Doctor-e 3:00 Ch. 2-6—Another World-c 4—Billie Boucher 8-10—To tell the Truth-e 13—General Hospltal-c 3:26 Ch. 4—Optometry 8peaks-e

8—News-c

10—News. Edwards-c 3:30 Ch. 2-6—You Don’t Say!-c 4—Dennis the Menace 8-10—Edge of Night-c 13—Dark Shadows-e 4:00 Ch. 2—Cartoons-c 4—Cartoons-c 6—Match Game-e 8-10—Secret 8torm-e 13—Mike Douglas-c 4:25 Ch. 6—News, Floyd Kalber-c 4:30 Ch. 2—Casper-c 6—Pat Boone-e

8—Movie

10—Movie-c 5:00 Ch. 2—Garrison’s Gorillas-# 4—Flints tones-c 5:30 Ch. 4—Man from U.N.C.L.E.-e

13—News-c

Programs subject to ehange without

notice.

- Evansville •ourt after every basket. DePauw lost the ball five times to the press and three times Evansville scored with it. TTiat Browning’s scoring punch was needed shows up in the box score. His replacement, the team’s best shooter normally—steady Dick Tharp, could hit only one of 12 shots, and the other guard, playmaker Dale Barrett, never did hit a basket in his three attempts. Consequently, 23 of DePauw’s 26 baskets came from its front Hne. Mickey Schramm got the other two from the backcourt. The Tiger and Ace first units battled to a 13-13 standstill un-

ONE DAY ONLY

SUNDAY, FEB 11 2 SHOWS ftM P.M. W0P.lt

* wine

★ PORTER WAGONER ★ DEL REEVES ★ BOBBY HELMS it DOLLY PARTON ★ BUCK TRENT * MARTY ROBBINS it WARNER MACK ★ JACK BARLOW * HAROLD MORRISON * THE WAGON MASTERS * THE DOODLE DOO’S it AND THE WIRE * COUNTRY GENTLEMEN STATE FAIRGROUNDS • INDIANAPOLIS tOUSIUM LOW-LOW ADM. $1.50 Rmrved $tats $2.50, $3.01, $3.50

TICKETS NOW ON SALE Mall order# #l#o #cc#pt#d Enclosed I* check or money order for

for 230 □ or 730 □ Show d $1.50 0 *2.50 OIS.OO 013.50 NAME ■Annaccg WTY Meke payable to Claypool Ticket Agency C'ivdocI Hotel, Indianapolis, Ind. 46204

. 'OSC St t* st f'nvp’rfO**

til McCutchan inserted his second five. This had the opposite effect from that desired. DePauw shot out ahead 21-16 before the Ace second platoon knotted the count 30-all with 6:02 left In the half. Then back In came the first five. McGurk put DePauw ahead momentarily 32-30, but Evansville hit four fouls and a tip in and eventually moved to its four-point halftime spread. The 7,461 who saw the ICC game watched DePauw hit 26 of 68 for .382. Evansville, which made 26 of 33 at the foul line, made 33 of 79 from the field for .418. Evansville out rebounded DePauw, 51-47. Jackson led both teams in rebounding with 16. DePauw will go to Butler Wednesday night before starting a fat seven-game February home stand with Indiana State, Ball State, Valparaiso, Butler, Indiana Central, Wabash and Evansville.

WAY DOWN UPON THE YAZOO? GREENWOOD, Miss. UPI_ Both Florida and Mississippi lay claim to the orgin of Steven Foster’s “Way Down Upon the Suwannee River.” Foster was supposed to have been looking at the swampy Suwannee at a bend in Florida, but some Mississippians say he never saw the Suwannee end was looking at the Yazoo River In Greenwood when he wrote the lyrics. They claim Foster just liked the sound of “Suwannee.”

SHORT LIVED SIGNS NEW YORK UPI—How long do road signs last? Not long, according to a recent survey by L. B. Foster Co. The average sign has a life expectancy of from three to five years. After that the message begins to fade. And not all signs last that long. Of those that don’t, 10 per cent are damaged in traffic mishaps and 20 to 30 per cent are shot up or defaced by vandals.

The first police department to adopt the fingerprinting system was the St. Louis, Mo„ Metropolitan Police Department.

FRI„ SAT., SUN.

Ip frank fk s * natra ■Kjij rome

NATIONAL WEATHER OUTLOOK

INDIANA WEATHER: Considerable fog and mild with rain today. Cloudy with some fog and occasional rain tonight. Turning colder late tonight. Mostly cloudy and colder Tuesday. High today 50 to 56. Low tonight 35 to 42. High Tuesday 38 to 44. Precipitation probability near 100 per cent today, 60 tonight. 30 Tuesday. Outlook for Wednesday: Becoming partly cloudy with near normal temperatures.

Minimum 47° 6 A M 48° 7 A.M 47* 8 A M 48° 9 A.M 48*

DAILY CROSSWORD

18. Firma-

PjRlE lAjD

rKJE.

Saturday’# Aaawer

ACROSS 1. Tin plate 5. Mast 9. Conceal 10. Dye 12. Gruesome 13. Appetizer 14. Matures 15. Female

deer

16. Eridu’s chief god 17. Cupronickel coin: abbr. 18. Drinks 19. Highway: abbr. 20. Hit 23. Throw 25. Some 26. Man’s nickname 27. Sand 29. Drove cattle, sheep, etc. 32. Sun god 33. Kind of cheese 35. Greek letter 36. Natural

self

37. Pole 38. Fuse partly 40. Upright 42. Constructed 43. Detection device 44. Narrow roadway 45. Actor Mineoand namesakes

46. Malt beverages DOWN 1. Instructed 2. Measure of land 3. Stitchbirds 4. Man’s nickname 5. Large

ladle

6. Guide 7. Moslem

name

8. Wanderers 9. Rank 11. Peruses 15. Tool

ment 21. Thai meas-

ure

22. Inward 24. Kind of

home week

26. Gar-

ment

border

27. Suitcases 28. Transistors 29. Possessed SOL Banishes 31. Song 34. Gates

38. Sated 39. Vex 41. Prescription term 42. Cry of a lamb

%

1

2

3

4

S

<o

1

8

9

10

II

12.

13

14

IS

%

lb

17

15

IS

20

21

ZZ

%

23

24

%

%

2S

28

27

28

29

30

31

52.

i

34

3S

%

31

35

38

40

41

42.

45

44

46

4b

T-YY

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE—Here’s how to work it: AXYDLBAAXR Is EONGFEEEOW One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apostrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the code letters are different A Cryptogram Quotation XIUMWXKG XK BPU RLQWU BLTM BPMB CLWXBXFMW TURBWUGUR I A M C U L> J U A BPUXA EXWW B h

CLEU A. —M WILHK PHZWUN Saturday’s Cryptoquote: I SHALL NEVER ACT DIFFERENTLY, EVEN IF I HAVE TO DIE FOR IT MANY TIMES.— SOCRATES tc 1968, King Features Syndicate, laej

Blondie

By Chic Young

THEY'RE ^ ADVERTISIWG PULL-LENGTH MINK NIGHTIES AT $300^j

GOOD HEAVENS/ Tf THEY'RE WHO'O WANT > VERY A MINK (PRACTICAL NIGHTGOWN ) >— j. FOR $300?/

PRACTICAL. FOR WHAT?

TTf COME NOW, DEAR--DON'T BE SO j*

Johnny Hazard

By Frank Robbins

Beetle Bailey

By Mart Walker

Archie

By Bob Montana

AND YOU’RE WEAR1 NG> THOSE HIGH [7 HEELS?

ARCHIE IS TAKING ME OUT TO SZ dine / Ar

Buz Sawyer

By Roy Cram

i BUT YOU SHOW? ENJOY \ THE ADVENTURE OF : BEiNG PIONEERS IH 1 THE EXPLORATION OF

1 THIS LAST FRONTIER

FURTHERMORE, Y0W BE CONTRIBUTING TO THE NATIONAL DEFENSE AS WELL AS ENRICHING MANKINDS FUTURE. ^ WELL, WHAT DO YOU SAY, I / ER, UH, ITWNK SAWYER? 7 / XV BETTER

Walt Disney's SCAMP 9

BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH ® By Fred Lassweil

DURN VORE HIDE, LOWEEZY i* MV MAW JEST TOLD ME VE BEEN CALLIN' HER NAMES

ALL I SAID WUZVO’RE A MEDDLESOME OL' HEN"

I’M SORRY VO'RE A MEDDLESOME OL' HEN