wednesday, february 12, 1964 the leader herald, … 11/gloversville ny... · 2011. 1. 18. ·...

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* : T * A '• WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1964 THE LEADER HERALD, GLOVFRSVILLE - JOHNSTOWN. N. Y. ' \" *Jk—<4- 4f' TV Key: f ', . Jules Verne's Rocket Dusted off for Moon Trip by Zany Britons Todays top television shows ». previewed and selected by TV Key's staff of experts who attend rehearsals, watch screen- ings and analyze scripts in New York and Hollywood. CHRONICLE. "A Trip to the Moon." Jonathan Miller's "free" adaptation of Jules Verne's lsth Century novel is the kind of frolic you'd expect from one of the authors of "Beyond the Fringe " His "artillery intellectuals" of the Baltimore Gun Club, bored to tears in 1865, six months after Appomattox, "must aim for the moon or rot." For the rest Of the hour, human beings are alternately lampooned and applauded for the faulty but imaginative creatures that they are. Peter Cook. Alan Bsnnett and Dudley Moore join their collaborator on stage, and an assortment of filmed montages, animated and still, give proph- ecy a waggish run for its money. 7:30--(10). THE VIRGINIAN. "First to Thine Own Self." Youngsters will be interested in Randy Boone, the blond guitar player from "It's a Man's World," who takes his place as a regular on the series. As a loner, Randy is accused of murdering a gold miner and winds up finally on the Garth ranch. In between the dialogue Randy gets to sing a few numbers. (Color). 7:30—(6). DICK VAN DYKE. A funny episode spoofing amateur psychia- trists, who think their diagnoses are so right. TV writer Rob Petrie develops an ailing back just before a weekend outing, and the feeling is his problem is mental. Van Dyke is amusing getting about with a stiff back, and the one-line jokes by the gag writers will make every- body happy. 9:30—(It). DANNY KAYE. Comedy between tough guy actor Peter Falk and Danny Kaye, songs by Broadway's pert Michelle Lee, and New Orleans j a z z ^ the Pete Fountain Group make the show. In addition to sketches iftwflr^ptaVW and a desert movie takeoff with Peter Falk, Kaye has two sprightly song numbers in a nicely balanced outing. 10—(It). THE ELEVENTH HOUR. "The only rfmaining copy is in the British museum." Roddy McDowall makes this an above average entry. He's cast as a near genius with a photographic mind who's a perfect impostor, able to pass himself off as a professional expert, but emotionally unable to find a career for himselL Though you've seen the character before, Roddy is worth watching. Incidentally, book editors will be impressed by the home one of their colleagues can af- ford on this show. 10—(6). TV Tonight, Thursday ^ ^ ^ » * * » * s ^ s * *S**aH. * • * ^~.^~~. HMoj* — ^••^•••Y^I—M-S—>*^r*i~i*\i"t -«* r irv-*^r~kr\rxTKrkj*f\j\j\i>f~i*-<*Lr\/ww PRETTY PROTEST — T h l » South Vietnamese coed was among several who paraded in front of the Ministry of Information in Saigon in de- fense of a university profes- sor. A paper had claimed the professor was pro-Diem. WTKN (|«) Albany Karl? Show " •• tt WKOB <•) 84:h*nrrta<l7 Nows. Earl* Puilnev News. Wath'r ri llejr. Kkley Wyatt Earp The Virginian Chronicle Tolor) p. m. « oo 8.15 «:30 0:45 WAST (IS) I WKTV <t> All.anj VUtm ******* W*^*»^M^a% I m*0m0*0W^*0^m 1 Movie i Sketchbook 1 World New* I H t'ey Bkle."* Adventure Playhouse Adventures In raradise 7:00 7:14 ) 7:30 iOzzie. 7:45 ff» •• •» Tell It to S:00 8:15 8:30 the Camera > 8:45 Espionage Eleventh Hour Beverly Hillbillies Dick Van Dyke Danny Kaye •• »* .. News Final Sporta Tonlrht Show (Ceter) News. Wther Late Show *:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 10:15 10 :M 10:48 11:00 11:15 11:30 11:45 12 00 " I Viewpoint ' " I Mr. Magoo Harriet The Virginian (Celor) Patty Duke .. •• Farmers Daughter Ben Casey .. .. .. Ben Casey Channlng Eleventh Hour I N\,. -a Steve Allen ...... Wcathereast World Tonight TonisM Show (Osier) LBJ's Speech Shows He's Irked by Critics From Page 4 really •**^^^^**^*-^^^^^^*» WaweaHsjB •* —-|—,•*• lejweyWMt -•)•-—,—r*--r*r- •*»—r'wyh'V^r'ir-t. ni~tojnTLru-ijXru» Today I tt tt ,- •• w . . . I* .. .. •> •• » VVTMHT Presents Popeye King A o.ile Captain Kang*ro» fc._Kt__N'Wi I Romper Room Music 11 ! Hake Room , - - •• for Daddy ' " •• " News ». .» 1 Love Lucy lay When »» •! Word for Word (C> Concentration 1 Real McCoys »».».»• { ...... Missing Link < Pete. Gladys (Color) 1st Impression <C»lor) Truth <- Cons'q. (O) Movie •» .» #. i •# *• •# The Doctors Love of Life S'rch for T'm Guiding Light Girl Talk ! 1:00 1:15 As the World ( 1:30 Turns Password ! Houseparty Loretta Young Tou D6n't flay <Coler) Satellite Fix (Color) R-ky A Pri'nd B'dtlme Sto'rs ! Tell the Truth I M » I Edge of Night Secret Storm Mlrkey Mouse Choyenne tt »• ti •« .* tt Early Show »• .. tt A. M. 7:00 7:15 7:30 7:45 S-00 8:15 S 30 8:« 0:00 0:15 »:30 »:45 10.-00 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 11:15 11:80 11:45 12:00 12:15 12:30 12:45 IHS 2:00 2:15 2:30 2:45 8:00 3:15 3:80 3:45 4:00 4:15 4:30 4:45 5:00 5:1.*, 5:30 ft 45 Sign On Farm Fare This Is Answor Compass .. •• .. Ed Allen >* •. «• Dav» Bauier Davo Sa ater Price Is Right Dbject Is Seven Keys Father Knows Best Tennessee Ernie Trail master •• •« to Today Cartoon Time Good Living Genera! Hospital Say When *• II tt Word for Word Concentration ». .. #» Missing Links Day In Court .. tt it General Hospital Queen For A Day Bo«o Show Superman tt ^t tt Dick Tracy Movi«~ 1st Impression (Celor) Truth or Cons'q. (C) Tennessee Krnie I Father Knows Best Let's Make A Deal The Doctors lx>retta Young •I »i ti Tou Don't Say (Color) Bo*o * Rocky it t. .. Mek« Room For Daddy Milton Dollar Movie Radio Station WENT —1340 wr.rmF.8r»AY NIOHT <l OO-NsWS, Music • :15—Fulton County Sports :30— Party Line 7:15— Sports T:30-Nlght Flight i :4o—Birthdays. Anniversaries ; no—World Tonight , 8:15-Nlght Flight 0:0O— N e w s t;15—Orcncstra -lt:00-8lgii Off THIRSIIU t 7 ,!»•)— MUSIC. News T:15—Community Event* i :30—Weath-r. ToMn :15—Local News H-.TO - . l o h n s t o w n U . S . A . :00— News e-l.v-.ft* ToWn Show 9:49—1840 Man 10:00—News. Godfrey 11:00—House Party 11:30—Oarry Moore 12:00—News, Weather 12:15—Devotions. Musle 12:30—Sounds of Fulton County 1:00—News 1: IS—Easy Street 2:30—News, Easy Street 3:00— 3:30- " "~ 4 ;00— » » »:15— " " 4:80- " 4:*S—^ " 5:00— - * 5:18- " " 5:80- " m 8-48—News A Report on Fight For Soul of Africa From Pftft 4 Father Arttro, who helps adminis- ter 1ft schools in an area SO milts in diameter, cultivating coffee at one time to raise the money to keep hit Mission work going. She admires Dr. Schweitzer, but she wsnU to know why a young Fran- ciscan nun from Padua in Italy, Sister Bianca, isn't a toast of lib- erals fof single-handedly taking cars of 40 ifpets at her leprosar- ium in the Copperbelt country of ity will not givs ground td Com reunism in its fight for the African soul. Cardinsl Rugsmbwa of East Africa, the "M black Afnc.n Northern Rhodesis, Philippe Schuyler had audiences with many Africsn Negro prelates who sre convinced that Christian the book published in Rome, by cardinal in Africa's history" by the decision of Pope John XXIII told Philippe with calm confidence that his church can successfully counter the "Zanzibar technique." Cuban -and Red - Chinese-trained guerillas have recently been kill- ing Christian missionaries in the Kwih Province of the Congo. Phi lippa Schuyler's book provides a good measure of the fores that the Christian missions in Africa can muster to fight the importation into Africa of the Chs Guevara's and Mao Tie-tungT own secular religion of communism. The pity of it is that Philipps had to have Case Editriee Herder. What's the matter with American publishers, anyway? Abraham Lincoln would be ashamed of them. presidential campaign gets rolling? In the 1060 presidential cam- paign year—before he got the Democratic vice presidential nomination on the ticket with John F. Kennedy—Johnson was critical of Eisenhower's han- dling of foreign policy. And he was critical before that during those years of his majority leadership, which he mentioned Tuesday. If Johnson ruhs for election this year, as expected, and for- mer Vice President Richard M. j Nixon once again is the Repub- lican presidential candidate, as he was in I960, this will be the 1960 campaign in reverse. Among Republicans Nixon and Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, in particular, have been Johnson critics. Although Goldwater is operuy seeking the nomination. Nixon insists he is not a candidate while, ?t the same time, sound- ing more and more like one in his trips and speeches. He does say he'd accept a draft. . In that i960 campaign Nixon, after two terms as Eisenhower's vice president, was in a politi- cal box. He had to defend the Eisenhower-Nixon foreign policy while Democrats were free to bang at it. Johnson did his. share-of bang- ing, although Kennedy did the most of the talking. Now John- son will hav* to defend his policy while Nixon is free to criticize. In doing it now he sounds, in a way, like Johnson of 1960. which is one of those oddities in American politics which must make a foreigner wonder how Americans are ever able to choose between their politicians. Recently Nixon said some areas of U.S. foreign policy need a "new direction." He men- tioned Latin America, especially Psnama, and Southeast Asia. In 1960 Johnson said "we need a new, vigorous and different foreign policy," and he especial- ly called for a "positive and dynamic" policy for Latin America. He was also critical of American Asian policy. The relationship between Johnson and Nixon, judging from what they have said about each other, could hardly be called clubby. Nixon recently called Johnson a "past master of a political shell-game" with "something for everybody—liberal to the liberals, conservative to the con- servatives." In I960 Johnson called Nixon "dangerous" and "deceptive" and accused him of resorting in the campsijrn that year "to the kind of language little boys write on fences." Injuries Prove Fatal PEEKSKILL, N.Y. (AP) - William Barthtlmei, 40, gener- al foreman of the city public works department here, died in s hospital Monday night of in- juries suffered in an automobile accident Jsn. 31. * The earth rotates, or spins. from west to east on an imagin- ary asis running through at the North and South Poles. PAGE 7 Hollywood 4 Rim Stars Honored by Fraternity By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) -It was one of those rare, warm evenings when the past and the f iresent merged for a mutual ove—the movies." The occasion was the annual dinner of Delta Kappa Alpha, which is not a rah-rah frat but the national fraternity for stu- dents of the cinema. It was being held at the University of Southern California, which has the oldest school of the cinema of any college in America and perhaps the world, Gloria Swanson, Adolph Zuk- or, Jack Lemmon, Charles Brackett and Billy Wilder has been chosen for honorary mem- berships, and that's what made it a rare evening. Their friends and associates of the long his- tory of films had been invited to share in the occasion. Today's Hollywood was repre- sented by such names as Steph- en Boyd, Omar Sharif, Edd Byrnes. Diane Baker, Steve Forrest, Rhonda Fleming, Mau- reen O'Hara. Robert Stack, Dick Van Dyke, etc. From the movies' earlier days came Donald Crisp, Madge Kennedy,- Betty,. JUylbc, Ma* West. Jack Oakie, Claire Wind- sor, etc. Informality was the plan of director George Cukor, des- cribed by Stack as the "house mother" of the fraternity. Film clips of the honored guests were shown. Miss Swanson and Bob Cummings roamed the room to chat on microphones with old • and new-timers. "I came to Hollywood in 1916," said Miss Swanson. "I'll bet nobody else in the room can say that." GOAL IS STARDOM —This is Allyson Ames—a talented blonde beauty—and mother of four small children. Film stardom is her goal and, if hard work and singleness of J urpose will do it, Allyson as it made. ( Hew Panel Show to Bring Millionaires into View By CYNTHIA LOWRY A PTelevision-Radio Writer NEW YORK (AP)—America's affluent society may soon have a new status symbol, a televi- sion show that may make yachts, imported limousines, chinchilla wraps and collections of French impressionist paint- ings as passe as bustles and congress gaiters. • • . It is a new panel show called "I Made a Million." which CBS will put into its Sunday night schedule starring April 5. right after Ed Sullivan's variety show. Each week, the usual celeb- rity panel—names to be an- nounced—will be called upon to guess which of several contes- tants is the real millionaire. The lucky winner of the round will be awarded "up to $600," the network announced in the sol- emn manner it reserves for im- portant announcements. JACOBY On BRIDGE th&mw&a&ifo Another innovation in my IMS book "The Four Aces System" was the three-card minor suit op- ening. The wording in describing it was, "The three-card minor suit bid is a general utility man. It is neither used nor intended as a psychic and is employed only with a hand which is a compulsory bid and when there is no other satis- factory opening bid." We qualified this bid further by explaining that we only bid it with one of the three top honors and "Why dear, I came here in iwhen we could bid either three- 1912," Harold Lloyd corrected. Claire Windsor reminisced of being stuck in the elevator dur- ing a party at Miss Swanson's palatial home. Edward G. Robinson com- mented that he had never ap- peared with Miss Swanson. "I was always public enemy No. 1," he sighed. "They never gave me anyone as glamorous as you." Gloria closed the evening with a reflection: "How I wonder what would have happened to us if Mr. Edison hadn't invent- ed that wonderful box. We be- came famous because they could put us in tin cans and send us around the world. Those were wonderful times, and every time I come back to Hol- lywood I feel as if I'm home." Today's Menu SATURDAY BUFFET Chestnuts make dressing for turkey extra flavorful. Roast Turkey with Chestnut Dressing. Giblet Gravy Green Peas Tossed Salad with Orange and Avocado Bread Tray Assorted Cookies Beverage CHESTNUT DRESSING V% pound (2 sticks) butter or margarine % cup chopped onion 1 cup paper-thin celery cres- cents 2 cups boiling water 2 bags (8 ounces each) herb- seasoned dried bread stuff- ing 1 pound chestnuts (roasted, Shelled, peeled and quar- tered) In a large saucepan over low heat, melt % pound of the. butter; add onion and celery; cook gently. card minor we opened one club. The three-card minor is a part of every system and every ex- NOBTH (») IS 4AQ3 VK*54 • 765 ••Alt mtiT EAST 478 4 1093 Wt71 VA1081 • KQJ2 t-A.1094 *J9«4 4102 SOUTH 4K.JI64 • ts *KQ75 No one vulnerable North Bast Sstjth West 1* Pass 14 Pass 2 4 Pass 4 4 Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4 K pert's kit of bids today. Further- more, it has not changed one iota from my original concept. It is only used with a three-card suit headed by an honor. It is only us- ed when there is no convenient other bid and it is not a forcing hid. If partner has a bad hand partner passes a one club opening just as he would pass a one dia- mond, heart or spade opening. North's opening club bid is standard today. Not that it mat- ters much. The final contract of four spades would be reached by almost anyone. It also would be made by al- most anyone. All South has to re- member to do is to go after hearts before he releases dummy's ace stirring often, until wilted. Add remaining Vi pound butter and boiling water; stir until butter melts. Add stuffing and stir to moisten. Stir in chestnuts. Makes enough for a 12-pound ready-to- cook weight turkey. of clubs. Eventually he discards one club on the king of hearts so as to hold his losses to two dia- monds and one heart. V*CHRD fr/iJf'U Q—The bidding has been: Swath West North East 14 Pass 2 4 Pass 2 4 Pass 2 4 Past ? You, South, hold: 4K J104t WA22 4AS2 4Q« What do you do? A—Bid four spades. Tou have 14 high card points and two CONSTANT VIGILANCE—Silhouetted against the sunset. Hawk missiles at Key West face south, toward the Straits of Florida. Xhe Hawk is a low altitude, surface to air weapon with supersonic speed, a conventional warhead, homing radar guidance system, 1 range of 25 miles and ceiling above 38,000 feet. These missiles are under the control of the North American Air Defense Command. Economists Optimistic About 1964 NEH YORK (AP) - Many corporation economists are quietly revising their predic- tions for 1944. In most instances they are raising their sights from the levels of only one or two months ago. They are telling company ex- ecutives to look for a quicker spurt in the general economy than seemed likely awhile back. Their bosses can translate this into at least a better chance to increase the firm's revenues and net profits. The economists could be wrong. They've been known to be, in the past. . But many of them think the next few months look even brighter than they did in the final quarter of 1903, when annual forecasts were made. Their reasoning: —A federal tax cut seems as- sured, and much sooner than expected last November. The cut in the amount withheld from pay checks for federal income taxes should give consumers more to spend than first thought —and much sooner than busi- nessmen had hoped. This big- gest prop to the economy- consumer spending—should be stronger than ever. —President Johnson's frugal- ity promises have lulled at least the worst' fears of the fiscally conservative. At the same time, business economists doubt if still more federal funds would be long withheld if an unexpect- ed downturn in industry seemed to call for any government pump priming. Total federal government spending is not going to drop materially at any rate. —Businessmen indicate rhey thmk the Washington climate has turned more favorable fo business. This belief already Is coloring their planning. In th last three months many com- panies have sweetened the out- lays they plan for expansion or for new equipment. This secon source of economic . growth should be larger this year tha last. —While federal spending holds | fairly steady, state and local government outlays seem sure I to rise. This feeling of greater pros- perity might fade in later months, but many corporation economists are now betting that 19*4 as a whole should he much better than they once thought. tt was only five or six years ago that television was dedicat- ed to game shows that, by one means or another, were turning humble cobblers, cops and col- lege instructors into men of fi- nancial substance. By curious coincidence, the producer of "I Made a Million" will be Steve Carlin, who not so long ago was the producer of a memorable CBS quiz show called "The $64,000 Question." Probably some millionaires will turn down an invitation to be contestants. After all, $000 is just cigar money to a million- aire. The CBS staff may have its hands full checking the bona fides of self-confessed million-, aires. The program ought to be marvelous for newly rich fel- lows who want everybody to know they made good. It may be helpful to the Internal Rev- enue Service, too. We may be getting to a point where we have as many of these game and panel shows as we can take. Not counting the new CBS entry, there are seven eve- ning shows in this category on the three networks and 14 in the daytime. ABC commentators Howard K. Smith and Edward P. Mor- gan will team up as the net- work's television anchor men for the broadcasts of the.politi- cal conventions next summer. The 'pair performed together smoothly during the four-day emergency after President Jbhn F. Kennedys assassination. They will be competing against tough competition—NBC's Chet Huntley and David Brinkley and CBS' Walter Cronkite. SADDLED with SOILED SLINDS? Send Them Down! We LAUNDER Host Sixes For '1.25 WE STOCK. TAPE, CORD. REPAIR. PARTS For Almost All Blinds DO - IT - YOURSELF or WE • WILL - DO - IT READY MADE BUNDS From $2.S0 CUSTOM MADE BLINDS To Fit Any. Window HOUSE BEAUTIFUL 357 S. Main 4-S7H GiovsrsvilU FLOWERS fXKMS tour ThauqhtfulsMS Roy's Greenhouse 101 NORTH ST. DIAL I-SS17 MIMBIR OF PTB THE PRESCRIPTION STORE AHEARN PHARMACY -iQ W MAIN ST JOHNSTOWN N Y AREA'S LARGEST and MOST COMPLETE DRUG STORE Serving ths area far all Prescription, Health and Surajcal Nsodi. Tha most complete prottiq* IIMI of Cosmoflcs, «if» Itomt aad ©rooting Cards. Opao Daily 1:30-10 Urn. ft Holidays 9:30-1. !-• PRO DBUVERY DIAL 6-3191 _ SPECIAL SAMPLE SHOES 4B's & 5B's VALUES TO NOW WHILE THEY LAST P. GOULD Family Shoe Store 793 ALBANY ST.. Cor. Hiilett Dl 6-2780 Schesiectady "One sjrada only—th. bo«t" "difficult tint a«r •e**la*y H THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY- AT THI NEW PARIS SHOP DRESSES I GROUP REDUCED TO 9 VALUES TO $29.98 fSisesS to B2'/i. Twenty-three per cent of the 18,000 U. S. philanthropic founda- tions are located in New York City. Flowers PICK'S FLOWERS 101 M. Mols 4*7110 •l.v.rtylllo U High Priced DRESSES $ 8 SQ.00 up ALL SIZES VALUES TO $59.50 COATS & SUITS Untrimmtd Fyr Trimmsd •is:; '45^ SPORTSWEAR '3 00 ep SLACKS SKIRTS SWEATERS — HOUSES ALL SALtS PINAL ew Paris ** Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069 www.fultonhistory.com

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    WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1964 THE LEADER HERALD, GLOVFRSVILLE - JOHNSTOWN. N. Y.

    ' \" *Jk—