Time Listings: Oct. 1, 1965
Wednesday, September 29 CHRYSLER PRESENTS A BOB HOPE COMEDY SPECIAL (NBC, 9-10 p.m.).* Guests include Douglas Fairbanks Jr., Beatrice Lillie, Dinah Shore and Andy Williams. Color.
I SPY (NBC, 10-11 p.m.). In "Carry Me Back to Old Tsing Tao," Bill Cosby and Robert Gulp star as American intelligence agents asked to return $1,000,000 in back taxes to the U.S. for a Chinese-American agent. Color.
Thursday, September 30 THURSDAY NIGHT AT THE MOVIES (CBS, 9-11:15 p.m.). The Notorious Landlady (1962), with Kim Novak, Jack Lemmon and Fred Astaire.
Friday, October 1 THE WILD, WILD WEST (CBS, 7:30-8:30 p.m.). In "The Night the Wizard Shook the Earth," Michael Dunn is featured as the dwarf head of an outlaw gang, whose principal ambition it is to take over half the state of California to form a model kingdom for children.
Saturday, October 2 N.C.A.A. COLLEGE FOOTBALL (NBC, 4:30-7 p.m.). Washington v. Ohio State at Seattle, Wash. Color.
THE TRIALS OF O'BRIEN (CBS, 8:30-9:30 p.m.). In "Notes on a Spanish Prisoner," Danny O'Brien (Peter Falk) defends Oliver Maxwell (Buddy Hackett).
Sunday, October 3 AMERICA THE BEAUTIFUL (NBC, 6:30-7:30 p.m.). Chet Huntley reports on urban and suburban blight and on the deterioration of natural resources. Color.
THE ED SULLIVAN SHOW (CBS, 8-9 p.m.). Judy Garland, Sophie Tucker, Singer Tom Jones and Comic Jackie Vernon are guests.
Monday, October 4 RUN FOR YOUR LIFE (NBC, 10-11 p.m.). A young man (Ben Gazzara) with only a short time to live is caught behind the Iron Curtain. Color.
Tuesday, October 5 CBS NEWS SPECIAL (CBS, 10-11 p.m.). "Henry Moore: Man of Form"the story of the famous British sculptor and his recently completed work, a two-piece reclining figure designed for the plaza at New York's Lincoln Center.
RECORDS
Folk
BIG BILL BROONZY AND PETE SEEGER IN CONCERT (Verve Folkways). The two folk greats met at Northwestern University one autumn evening in 1956, just at the start of the great campus folk revival, and sat down to tell the kids and the tape recorder all about it. Broonzy, then 59 (he died in 1958), recalled the days when he and Bessie Smith sang in Mississippi, punctuating his anecdotes with his guitar. So good are the songs (Green Corn, Back water Blues, Why Don't You Come Home, Bill Bailey, Midnight Special) that, after the first interlude of conversation, the talk is distracting.
INTRODUCING THE BEERS FAMILY (Columbia). The Beers family of Montanafather, mother, teen-age daughteris dedicated to pure folk music, mostly Irish and Scotch songs taught to Robert Beers by his pioneer grandfather. In addition to the fiddle, guitar, dulcimer and psaltery, the Beerses work the "limberjacks" (jointed wooden blocks that are clapped together like castanets, popular in colonial times) and "beat the straws" by banging on dulcimer strings with a spear of buffalo grass. The most beautiful of these seldom-heard instruments is the ethereal psaltery; the record stopper is Evelyne Beers singing an old Scotch ballad Dumbarton's Drums, while the sound of the psaltery sways like silver leaves in the wind.
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