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Wednesday, April 8

CBS REPORTS (CBS, 7:30-8:30 p.m.)— An hour of analysis and commentary on the political scene by Walter Lippmann.

Friday, April 10

THE TENNESSEE ERNIE FORD HOUR (NBC, 8:30-9:30 p.m.). Variety special with Guests Jack Benny and Andy Williams. Color.

Saturday, April 11

THE DEFENDERS (CBS, 8:30-9:30 p.m.). Guest Milton Berle in the role of a comedian who has attempted suicide and finds himself committed to an institution by his wife.

Sunday, April 12

DISCOVERY (ABC, 1-1:30 p.m.). A look at the world of microphotography and microprojection.

DIRECTIONS '64 (ABC, 1:30-2 p.m.). Drawings of the creation and the Nativity by children all over the world.

ISSUES AND ANSWERS (ABC, 2-2:30 p.m.). Guest: Michigan's Governor George Romney.

MASTERS GOLF TOURNAMENT (CBS, 4-5:30 p.m.). Finals of the four-day, 72-hole tournament in which 1963 Masters Winner Jack Nicklaus tries to defend his title.

THE TWENTIETH CENTURY (CBS, 6-6:30 p.m.). The life and times of New York's colorful Mayor Jimmy Walker.

WALT DISNEY'S WONDERFUL WORLD OF COLOR (NBC, 7:30-8:30 p.m.). Disney's famed photographers have spent two years in Brazil's Amazon rain forest filming the habits of the jaguar. Color.

THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW (CBS, 8-9 p.m.). A full hour of the famed Moscow State Circus, taped in Minneapolis.

CARNY (NBC, 10-11 p.m.). The American carnival, a billion-dollar business involving 15,000 people and 550 different carnivals. Hostess and narrator is Fan Dancer Sally Rand. Color.

Monday, April 13

HOLLYWOOD AND THE STARS (NBC, 9:30-10 p.m.). Rita Hay worth.

36TH ANNUAL ACADEMY AWARDS (ABC, 10 p.m.-conclusion).

Tuesday, April 14

THE CAMPAIGN AND THE CANDIDATES (NBC, 11:15-11:30 p.m.). Report on the Illinois presidential primary election.

THEATER

On Broadway

ANY WEDNESDAY. Sandy (Dennis) is dandy as an executive sweetie kept in an executive suite. She appears to be crying through her smiles while playgoers laugh till they cry.

FOXY. Agile in the choreography of cowardice, Bert Lahr leers maniacally, gargles dialogue, and scurries up the scenery in this zany musical about fool's gold in the Yukon.

DYLAN. Alec Guinness as Dylan Thomas during his U.S. reading tours keeps up a marathon dance of death, pacing it with poetry, word plays, promises—unkept—and an inner pain that even vast quantities of liquor cannot kill.

HELLO, DOLLY! high-steps its musical way back to turn-of-the-century Manhattan. Gower Champion's dance company sets a brisk pace, but at the curtain it is a saucy saucer-eyed Carol Channing who just about steals the show.

NOBODY LOVES AN ALBATROSS, by Ronald Alexander. A hypocrite's hypocrite of a TV writer-producer, roguishly played by Robert Preston, presides over the decline and fall of practically everybody whose talent he can use and abuse.

BAREFOOT IN THE PARK. A pair of newlyweds clamber five flights to a Manhattan flat to coo, tiff, and tousle in a variety of dress and undress. Playwright Neil Simon is a laugh merchant who never runs out of good lines.

Off Broadway