The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 17 October 1968 — Page 7
Thursday, October 17,1968
The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Indiana
Page 7
THE DAILY BANNER
Daily TV Guide
THURS., OCT. 17
FAST
SLOW
5:4(0 2 6 NEWS
4:00
3-4 El.INTSTONES—* 8 M (HALE’S NAVY
13 HEW ITCHED
5:30 2-3-6-8-10-13 NEWS
4::Mi
4 OK LANDS AND SEAS + 1 HOUR. ••Caribbean Contrasts." «:»•» 2-13 SUMMER OLYMPICS—♦ 3:410 «::«> 2-6 THE FABULOUS SHORTS ♦ SPECIAL. 1 HOUR. Five Oscaru inning cartoons and excerpts from other short subjects honored by the' Academy of Motion Picture Arts ASciences are leatured. Mel Blanc explains the art of animation. Jim Backus is host. 3-8 BLONDIE—Comedy ♦ Dagwood is afraid that Mr. Dithers is about to replace him with a younger, more vigorous
man.
Blondie Patricia Harty Dagwood Will Hutchins Mr. Dithers Jim Backus 4 TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES + Marriage statistics and weight guessing are the key to winning valuable prizes. KiJOlO GUNS OF WILL SONNETT .»::«> ♦ A Bible-quoting bounty hunter is out to get James Sonnett dead or
alive.
Wiley Rex Holman preacher Henry Jones 13 I LOVE LUCY 1:00 3-8-10 HAWAII FIVE-O—Police fi:00 ♦ 1 HOUR. Honolulu rackets boss Tokura is in trouble with a secret society. It's up to McGarrett to protect Tokura even though he's trying to convict the man McGarrett Jack Lord Tokura Ricardo Montalban Deedee Caroline Barrett Danny James MacArthur 4 HAZEL—Comedy + "Mr. Griffin Throws A Wedding " 13 GILLIGAN’S ISLAND—Comedv !::«> 2-6 SOUL—Music «::«• + SPECIAL 1 HOUR Grammy Award-winning singer Lou Rawls heads a cast of Negro entertainers showcasing the contemporary music and humor of the American Negro. Participants include George Kirby. Redd Foxx, Slappy White. Nipsey Russell, the Soul Sisters. Martha Reeves and the Vandellas. Joe Tex, the Chambers Brothers. Hines. Hines &• Dad. Leroy Daniels, and H B Barnum and his orchestra. 4 PASSWORD—Game + Carol Burnett and Ross Martin tWild, Wild Westt are tonight’s guest celebrities. 13 UGLIEST GIRL IN TOWN—Comedy + "Cover-Up Girl.” Timothy Peter Kastner Gene Blair Gary Marshal Julie Patricia Brake 3 8 10 THURSDAY MOVIE *:00 2'4 HOURS "Youngblood Hawke.” James Franciscus, Suzanne Pleshette. Eva Gabor. Genevieve Page. Mary Astor. Lee Bowman. i’64i A naive young man from Kentucky writes a novel that is accepted by a New York publisher. 4 MERY GRIFFIN—Vartely A 90 MINS Frankie Randall. Jackie Mason. Angie Dickinson, Hugh O'Brian. Ron Carey. Mario. 13 THE FLYING NUN—Comedy + “The Return Of Father Lundigan " A priest-psychiatrist re-visits the convent and finds a 'mini-hab-ited' Mother Superior who thinks she can fly.
g::tO 2 SUMMER OLYMPICS -.::{0 « SPECIAL 90 MTNS Scheduled events: track and field, swimming and diving, cycling weight-lifting. * 6 DRAGNET—Police drama + Frldav and Gannon crack down on tow-truck racketeers operating on Los Angeles freeways when complaints start to pile up at the po1 lice commission investigation divi-
sion.
13 BEWITCHED—Comedy *::4» ♦ Samantha and Darrin are in trouble because of a promise Endera made years earlier to the wicked
witch Carlotta.
9:00 6 DEAN MARTIN—Variety 8:00 ♦ 1 HOUR. Guests: Linda Bennett, Ben Blue. Cyd Charisse, Don Cherry, and Stanley Myron Handleman. Dean solos "Almost Like Being In Love" and “Green Grass Of Home." Miss Bennett sings "You Do Something To Me" and "You've Got That Thing." Cherry vocalizes to the tune of “Take A Message to Mary" and plays miniature golf with Dean. Miss Charisse dances in a tropical setting as she sings
"Katie Went To Haiti.” 13 THAT GIRL—Comedy
+ Don Hollinger is sent to the West coast to write an article about Hollywood. Ann goes along to trv her luck at film acting. •LUO 4 NEWS 8::«l
13 SUMMER OLYMPICS
♦ SPECIAL 90 MINS Scheduled events: track and field, swimming and diving, cvcling. weight-lifting. 10:00 2 HOLLYWOOD PALACE—Variety 9:00 ♦ 1 HOUR. Milton Berie is host. Guests: Irving Benson, the Checkmates, Shani Wallis, performers from the “Bottoms-Up Review." Leonard Nimoy. Johnny Puleo and
the Harmonicats. and
Suzv Buhrer.
4 PERRY MASON—Mystery 1 HOUR. "Case Of The Drowsy Mosquito.” Perry is asked to investigate a dishonestly - managed mine and ends up defending a grizzly old prospector charaed with
murder.
6 STEVE ALLEN—Variety ♦ 55 MINS Guests: Teridi King. Pat Harrington. Jim Moran. I0:?0 3-8-10 NEWS 9:10 10:50 3 LATE MOVIE 9:50 "She Wore A Yellow Ribbon." John Wavne. Joanne Dru. ('50' Western
8 LATE SHOW
+ "The Lone Hand " Joe! McCrea.
Barbara Hale ('53> Western
10 THE AVENGERS—Adventure + 1 HOUR. A mad scientist comes
up with a diabolical plot quer the World by mean-
warfare.
6 SI MMER OLYMPICS 2-6-13 NEWS 4 U.N.C.L.E.—Adventure
1 HOUR
2-6 TONIGHT—Variety
♦ 90 MTNS
3 JOEY BISHOP—Variety
♦ 90 MINS
CALIFORNIANS—Western STARLITE THEATRE "The Long Grev Line.' Power. Maureen O'Hara TO BE ANNOUNCED
SOME HE ROIC AL SPIRITS
songstress
10:55 11 :00
11:50 10 I‘1:00 4
1:00 1.3 1 :ilO 13
fn ennof germ
9:55 10:00
10:30
10:50 11:00
Tvionc
■'55' 1*:00 I'1:30
FRI., OCT. 18
FAST SLOW
(i:30 3-8 SUNRISE SEMESTER—+ t 4 COUNTRY MUSIC—* 6 TODAY IN INDIANA—* 13 EDUCATIONAL PROGRAM 7:00 2-6 TODAY—*
3 NEWS—*
8 TOWN A COUNTRY—* 13 KINDERGARTEN COLLEGE
7:05 10 NEWS—*
7:;5 8 CHAPEL DOOR—* 41:25 7:30 3 SUN-UP—* 6:30
4 CARTOON’S—*
8 NEWS—*
8.00 3-8-10 CAPTAIN KANGAROO—*7:00 13 TREASURE ISLE—* 8:25 6 SUMMER OLYMPICS 7:25 8::!0 6 TODAY—* 7:30 8 COFFEE CUP THEATRE * "Comanche Territory.” Maureen O’Hara, Macdonald Carey. (’50) 13 DREAM HOUSE—* 8:55 4 NEWS 7:55 9:00 2-6 SNAP JUDGMENT—* 8:00 3-10 LUCY SHOW—*
4 SPANISH I
13 FAIL DIXON SHOW—* 9:15 4 SPANISH II 8:15 9:25 2-6 NEWS—* 8:25 9:30 2-6 CONtLNTKATION—* 8:34)
3-10 BEVERLY HILLBILLIES
4 LUCY SHOW
9:55 8 NEWS-
8:55
IO:oo 2-6 PERSONALITY—* 9:4(0 3-8-10 ANDY GRIFFITH—* 4 SECOND CUP THEATRE "Last Of The Buccaneers." Paul Henreid, Karin Booth, t’51) 10:30 2-6 HOLLYWOOD SQUARES—* 9:30 3-8 10 DICK VAN DYKE 13 DICK CAVETT SHOW—* 11:00 2-6 JEOPARDY—* 10:00 3-8-10 LOVE OF LIFE—* 11:25 3 NEWS—* 10:25 8-10 FASHION SHOW—* 11:30 2 EYE GUESS—* 10:30 3-8 10 SEARCH TOMORROW—* 4 NEWS 6 AROUND THE TOWN—* 11:35 4 LITTLE SHOW 10:35 11:55 2 FARM REPORT 10:55 12:00 2-13 SIMMER OLYMPICS—* 11:00 3-8-10 NEWS 4 CARTOONS—* 12:20 6 SUMMER OLYMPICS 11:20 12:25 6 DOCTORS HOUSE CALL—* 11:25 12:30 3-8 10 WORLD TURNS—* 11:30 . 6 LET'S MAKE A DEAL—* 1:00 2-6 DAYS OF ,OUK LIVES—* 12:00 3-8-10 SPLENDORED THING—* 4 DONALD O'CONNOR—* 13 50-50 CLUB—* 1:30 2-6 THE DOCTORS—* 12:30 3-8-10 GUIDING LIGHT—*
2:00 2:30
1:04l
1:30
2:00
2:25
SLOW
10
5:30
I: (((( 2
4
10
0:00
13
4:30 2
2- 6 ANOTHER WORLD—* 3- 8-10 SECRET STORM—* 2 6 YOU DON'T SAY—* 3-8-10 EDGE OE NIGHT—* 4 DIVORCE COURT—* 13 ONE LIFE TO LIVE—* 2- 6 MATCH GAME—* 3- 8-10 HOUSE PARTY—* 4 DARK SHADOWS 13 IT'S HAPPENING—*
2-8 NEWS—* 3 EARLY .MOVIE
95 Mi NS. "Man Who Turned To Slone." Victor Jory. i'57> 6-10 DOC TOR'S HOUSE CALL 13 CHILDREN'S DOCTOR—* 2-13 NLWT.YWED GAME.—* 2:30 4 DENNIS THE MENACE 6 MIKE DOUGLAS * 90 MiNS. Guests: Allen Ludden, Gloria Di Haven. Hcnuy Youngman. Co-host: Durward Kirby.
8 EARLY >IIOW
90 MiNS. "Touch Of Evil." Charlton Heston. Janet Leigh. (’581 DON'S CARTOONS DARK SHADOWS—* 3:0(1
90 MiNS "Colossus And The Headhunters.” ilialian. 'till
* 1 HOUR.
TV in review By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)— ABCTV’s new western series, “The Outcasts,” which deals with two cowboys—one white, the other black—has raised considerable discussion about Negroes in frontier days. Among the most interested viewers of the series is Jean Castles, an ABC publicist who is also a longtime student of, and expert on, western lore. Some of her research about the Negro and West is contained in a story circulated by the network this week. For example, she notes that a black slave named York took part in the Lewis and Clark expedition. “York accompanied his master, William Clark,” she writes, adding: “To the Sioux, Mandan, Nez Perce and Flathead Indians who met the explorers York was an object of wonder, even more amazing than the ‘solid water’ (mirrors) of the white men. The ‘charcoal paint’ that wouldn’t rub off mystified them. Some tribes thought he had blackened himself to signal a great victory over enemies; others believed he was to be the honored guest at a scalp dance. A Charles M. Russell painting shows York in a Mandan lodge, standing tall before admiring red men. “In the years before the Civil War, the majority of the Negroes in the West were slaves. Some were sold or traded for herds; others worked for their masters as cowboys.” After the North-South war, “the majority worked for white
men, as cowboys, horse breakers, cooks on cattle drives up the Chisholm Trail to Abilene, to Dodge, along with Goodnight. Loving Trail to Fort Laramie, to Bozeman . . . “The first Kentucky Derby was run in 1875. The winner, Aristides, was ridden by Oliver Lewis, a Negro. “A year later Isaiah Dorman, a Negro employed as a civilian interpreter by the Seventh Cavalry quartermaster, was numbered among the Custer dead at the Little Big Horn. He was known to the Indians who killed him. They called him ‘Teat.’ He was mourned by a Santee Sioux woman, his widow. “The Indians had a special respect for the black men who fought them. In 1866, Congress passed an act authorizing regiments of Negro troops for the U.S. Army; two of cavalry and four of infantry. The soldiers of the Ninth and Tenth Cavalry, ex-slaves for the most part, were called many things— most of them uncomplimentary —by the whites they protected from Laredo in Texas to Fort Totten in the Dakotas, from Fort Leavenworth in Kansas to Fort Verde in Apache country. “Buffalo soldiers, the nickname they were proud of, was what the Indians called them. The buffalo was sacred to the Indians, and for them to give its name to these soldiers . . . was a great honor. (The blacks’) role in the winning of the West hasn’t been documented in television westerns, but it is preserved in the, paintings of
YONCASTLE
Evenings -7:30 -9:30 Matinee —Sat. -'Sun. —2:00
OUR PICTURE OF THE MONTH Showing Wed., Oct. 16 thru lues., Oct. 22 ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST DIRECTOR JOSEPH E. LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS PRESENTS A MIKE NICHOLS-LAWRENCE TURMAN|««»uct.o*
m
This is Benjamin. He’s a little worried about his future. TECHNICOLOR* PANAVISION* AM EMBASSY PICTURES RELEASE
THE GRADUATE
Frederick Remington, which hang in museums around the world.” Miss Castles notes: “They weren’t all heroes, of course. Many earned the black at of the villain with their guns.” Cherokee Bill, for instance, “who died at the end of a rope at Fort Smith, Ar.” And then, adds Miss Castles, there were those Negroes who found unique prominence: “Early in this century Bill Pickett was the cowboy who ‘invented’ bulldogging. He rode for Miller Bros. 101 ranch as a cowboy
and rodeo star, performing his specialty in Chicago, New York and London. Henry Clay, another 101 cowboy, worked with Will Rogers when he was periecting his rope tricks. “Negroes left their mark on the West as soldiers, cowboys, mountain men, army scouts, killers, confidence men, explorers, cooks, horse breakers . . . the trail ridden by bounty hunter Jemal David on ‘The Outcasts’ was broken for him by several generations of exslaves.”
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS 1. Revived, in a way 6. Flood 11. Resurrected 12. Potato, for one 13. Article of value 14. Steve or Ethan 35. Form 16. More’s partner 17. Do a job on the blackboard 20. Wild pig 23. Caustic 27. Relative of a motel 28. Furrow 29. Tiny 30. Candy 32. Auctioneer's cry 33. Implant 35. Gypsy reading matter 38. Eyes: slang 42. Ecclesiastic’s garment 44. Water at the mouth 45. Vertical pipe 46. Summon 47. Savor 48. Subscribe again DOWN 1. Macaws 2. Desire
3. Thessaly mountain 4. Custodian 5. Matriculate 6. Union, for one: abbr. 7. Hen 8. Dexterous 9. English river 10. Sea eagles 18. Touches 19. Dog trainer’s command
20. Receptacle 21. Biblical name 22. Akkadian god
Yesterday’a Answer
24. verbially, company 25. Elusive
one
26. Like Crane’s
badge
28. Moved
swiftly
31. Kind of 1
sharp
eye
32. Famish 34. Senior 35. Charlotte
or
Chester
36. Solo 37.. Young girl 39. NASA's goal 40. Prod 41. Killed 43. Before
1
2
3
4
S
%
6
7
8
9
10
II
12
13
14
(S'
16
%
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
2S
26
27
26
29
30
31
32
33
34
%
iS
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
AS
46
47
48
10-17
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work It: AXYDL.BAAXR is LONGFELLOW
Cne 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 UNOAQLSQM DSJ KRTNI VDN ALURISLM CALZNL OALN URKRVM VDSI DN NTNL DSU. — JRIQPS T *. L
PNCR J
Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: HE WHO OPPOSES THE PUBLIC LIBERTY OVERTHROWS HIS OWN. — WILLIAM LLOYD GARRISON (O 1968, King Feature* Syndicate, Inc.)
Daily Comic Features BEETLE BAILEY B T Mort Walker
CALLlsIGr 7 THAT ISN'T BIRDS ( A BIRD CALL, - A STUPIP
ARCHIE
By Bob Montana
HE. DIDN’T ARfcUE/ HE JUST HUNG? UP/
CE
f OKAY/ ( 6ET HIM A
BUZ SAWYER
By Roy Crane
JOHNNY HAZARD By Frank Robbins
WALT DISNEY’S SCAMP
BARNEY GOOGLE and SNUFFY SMITH By Fred Lasswell
BLONDIE
By Chic Young
a
