Television: Jun. 11, 1965

Thursday, June 10

JAZZ ON A SUMMER'S DAY (CBS, 10-1 p m ).-Jazz Greats Louis Armstrong, Gerry Mulligan, the George Shearing Quintet felonious Monk, Mahalia Jackson and others in performances filmed at a pas Newport Jazz Festival.

Friday, June 11

FDR (ABC, 9:30-10 p.m.) "Victory in Sight" focuses on the last bloody chapter of the war: the final European offensive and Allied victories in the Pacific. Presi dent Roosevelt is inaugurated a fourth time; his children James and Anna appe< in a special sequence.

Saturday, June 12

ABC'S WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (ABC, 5-6:30 pm.) The Grand Prix of Monaco from Monte Carlo, and the Tandem Event of the International Surfing Championships from Makaha Beach, Hawaii.

Sunday, June 13 LAMP UNTO MY Feet (CBS, 10-10:30 am) An examination of Hungary's diminished but still active Jewish.community, with rare films of Sabbath Eve services in Budapest's Dohany (Tabak) Synagogue-the center of the Jewish ghetto during Nazi occupation. LOOK UP AND LIVE (CBS, 10:30-11 am) "The Evolution of Church Music." An explanation of the ethnic adaptations of liturgical music, an analysis of the Gregorian chant, and illustrative performances by Composer-Conductor C. Alexander Peloquin's Chorale comprise the first of a three-part series.

DIRECTIONS '65 (ABC, 1-1:30 p.m.). The purposes and intentions of Protestant re ligious retreats.

THE TWENTIETH CENTURY (CBS, 6-6.30 om) Rerun of a report on the No. 3 Nazi, Rudolf Hess, whose flight to Scotland on a one-man "peace' mission was one of the most bizarre episodes of World War II.

Monday, June 14

THE BERKELEY REBELS (CBS, 10-11 p.m.). Four Berkeley college students, the chairman of the Faculty Emergency Executive Committee and the acting Dean of dents discuss campus discontent.

Tuesday, June 15

CLOAK OF MYSTERY (NBC 9-10 p.m.) Repeat of "The Fugitive Eye, with Charl ton Heston playing a one-eyed circus strongman who attempts to convince po lice he has spotted a corpse moldering in a car and three gravediggers working nearby.

THEATER

On Broadway

THE GLASS MENAGERIE. The texture of Tennessee Williams' 1945 family drama remains unfrayed, a tight weave of poign ancy and poesy. The cast is lackluster, but the play is the best on Broadway.

HALF A SIXPENCE skims along as lightly as a kite, kept in motion by the airy charm of cockney Song-and-Dance-Man Tommy Steele. Kipps, the H. G. Wells story of a rags-to-riches-to-rags-to-riches hero, pro vides the plot for this pleasant musical.

THE ODD COUPLE. Art Carney and Wal ter Matthau are roommates in Neil Si mons hilarious study of two men who thought they couldn't live with their wives— until the tried living with each other.

LUV. Anne Jackson, Eli Wallach and Alan Arkin play three wildly amusing neurotics whose feet never quite touch the ground because their minds never get off fhe psychiatrist's couch-except when swept up by their own hot air.

THE OWL AND THE PUSSYCAT. Diana Sands, as a prostitute with paws of s claws and purrs her way into the once-serene life of a self-protective but defenseless book clerk (Alan Alda).

Off Broadway

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