Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, September 07, 1958, Page 63, Image 63

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    SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1958
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
PAGE FIFTEEN
Radio-J&lsiviAion 'Suidsi J1 oh Jh& U&&k
KVIP-TV
September 7 - September 13
SUNDAY
3:00 Meet The Press
2:30 Christian Science Program
2:45 Western Wonderland
3:00 Mr. Wizard
3:30 Youth Wants To Know
4:00 Frontiers of Faith
4:30 Town Crier Linn & Fulkerth
4:45 Through the Porthole
5:00 20th Century Fox Theater "Sit
ting Pretty" Clifton Webb. Rob
ert Young, Maureen O'Hara
7:00 Steve Allen Color
8:00 Chevy Show Color
0 00 Suspicion 13 DB
10:00 Late News'
10:05 Sign Off
MONDAY
10:30 Luncheon With Jerrio
11:00 Lucky Partners
11:30 Haggis Baggis
12:00 Today Is Oura
12:30 From These Roots
1:00 Queen For A Day
1:45 Flyngo Casino
2:00 American Bandstand
2:30 Whom Do You Trust
4:00 Summer Session
4:30 Komic Karnival
5:15 NBC News
5:30 Kit Carson "Hermit Indian
Ridge"
6:00 Our Miss Brooks "Pet Shop"
6 30 Curtain Calls
7:00 Medic "Break Thru the Bars"
7:30 Tales of Wells Fargo
8 00 Twenty One
8.30 Lawrence Welk Top Tunes and
New Talent
9:30 News Summary
9:40 Late Show "Aerial Gunner"
Richard Arlen, Chester Morris
11:00 Lato News
TUESDAY
10:30 Luncheon With Jerrio
11:00 Truth or Consequence
11:30 Haggis Baggis
12:00 Today is Ours
12:30 From These Roots
1:00 Queen For A Day
1:45 Flyngo Casino
Comic Will Return To TV
Answering Public Demand
By CHARLES MERCER
NEW YORK (AP) For two
years, various people have been
urging Milton Berle to return to
television on a regular basis. For
two years, Berle has been saying
that an hour a week is too much,
that even eight or 10 hour-long
shows in a season are too much.
Then, after he convulsed a na
tional audience at the Emmy
Awards presentations and ap
peared in a straight dramatic
role on "Kraft Theater" several
months ago, something interest
ing happened. The public began
urging him to come back. Thou
sands of letters poured in, saying
in effect, "We want Berle."
So Milton Berle will return to
weekly television Oct. 8 with a
half-hour show which, he says, has
"a no format format." He comes
back a far more relaxed man
than the comedian who qUit tele
vision two years ago, vowing
never to return.
"Nothing is going to bother me,"
he says, "all I'm going to do is
try to do the best I can. All I
care is that the public be pleased."
Except for Berle and Billy May
and his orchestra, there are no
plans at present for regular per
formers. Does that mean nume-
ous big name guests?
'Well," says Berle, "I think the
guest bit has become a bore to
the audiences. They're tired of
seeing X pop up on Y s show and
then. Y pop up on X's. No matter
what they do, they look the same.
When we have guests, we hope to
make them off beat.
"There's a tremendous amount
of talent that has yet to be dis
covered by a national audience.
I want to put new comedian on
the show and a new singer.
There must be another Judy Gar
land around.
Berle is putting his new show
in the hands of a top flight staff
headed by Hal Kantor as produc
er and chief writer. So great is
Berle's faith in his new staff that
he'd rather talk about it ("the
brightest, best in the country")
than himself.
"There was a time I was afraid
to put a show of mine in other
hands. Now that s no longer so,
he says.
Nudiiy Could Turn Vegas
Into Honky-Tonk Town
By JAMES BACON
AP Motion Picture Writer
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) The
forces of decency, helped by the
hard economics of the gambling
fraternity, could eventually cover
up Las Vegas' controversial nude
6hnwgirls.
As one big gambling operator
put it tersely: "Gambling and un
dressed broads just don't mix.
We've got a good thing here in
legal gambling and we don't want
to see it taken away."
Rock 'N' Roll
King Soys Style
Will Pass Away !
By FRED DANZIG 1
United Press International
NEW YORK (UPI) Alan
Freed, the embattled "King of
Rock 'n Roll," says his beloved
"big beat" music is slowly fading,
but not dying.
While under indictment in Bos
ton on charges of inciting a riot,
Freed told United Press Interna
tional, "These musical eras go for
about 10 years, it seems, and we've
had rock n roll for about four
years. I don't see it any different
for us."
"But," he added, shortly before
presenting his daily teen-age
dance program on a New York
television statlun, "I don't think
we'll live to see a 'top 10' list
without two or three rock 'n roll
tunes on it."
At present, rock n roll artists
dominate the popularity charts.
The New York disk Jockey-im-pressario
conceded that he is di
versifying his musical appeal to
teenagers.
Veteran Las Vegas hotel men,
such as Ben Goffstein of the Riv
iera and Jack Entrattcr of the
Sands, fought the bare-breasted in
vasion from its inception more
than a year ago. Both reasoned
that nudiiy could well turn the
plush-oasis into a honky lonk town
And more important, that it
could drive away the lucrative
family vacation trade.
"We spent millions of dollars
publicizing Las Vegas as a place
where the whole family can have
a happy vacation, see the finest
entertainers in the world and gam
ble legally, only if they want to.
said Goffstein.
Entrattcr says the married bus
inessman who brings his family
with him is still Las Vegas' best
customer.
During the Labor Day weekend
the Sands had of its 300 rooms
allotted to children. -"If
the town goes for the strip-
lease boom," says Entrattcr, "the
wives will keep the kids home and
their husbands too.
Las Vegas is a unique night
club city, especially during sum
mer. Children often make up as
much as a fourth of the dinner
show audiences.
They are barred, however, from
the nude girlie shows-
The major hotels have good eco
nomic reason to believe that lam
ily-type entertainment pays off
better than strip-teasers.
Red Skclton, a great favorite
with kids, just broke the all-time
house record at the Riviera. Then
Goffstein shelled out. $250,000 to
bring the Broadway hit musical,
"Li 1 A bner, " d i rect from New
York for an eight-week stay. It's
a clean show, so reflected in ad
vance family reservations for the
hotel.
2:00 American Bandstand
2:30 Who Do You Trust
1:00 American Bnndstand
1:00 The Northerner
1:30 Komlc Karnival
5.15 NBC News
5:30 Brave Eagle "Papoose"
B:00- Wagon Train 20 DB '
1:00 The Investigator
9:00 Colgate Theater
):30 Famous Fights
1:45 Phllco Playhouse "They Live by
Night" Farley Granger, Cathy
O'Donnell
1:00 Late News
WEDNESDAY
10:30 Luncheon With Jerrio
11:00 Truth or Consequences
11:30 Haggis Baggis
12:00 Today is Ours
12:30 From These Roots
1:00 Queen For A Day
1:45 Flyngo Casino
2:00 American Bandstand
2:30 Who Do You Trust
3:00 American Bandstand
4:00 Summer Session
4:30 Komic Karnival
5:13 NBC News
5:30 My Little Margie "Blonde Mar
gie" 6:00 Royal Playhouse
6:30 Chevy Showcase Andy Wil
liams 13 DB
7:00 Disneyland
8:00 Kraft Theater Color
0:00 San Francisco Beat "The Keat
ing Case"
9:30 News Summary
9:40 Late Show "Dakota" John
Wayne, Vera Ralston, Walter
Brcnnnn
11:00 Late News
THURSDAY
Luncheon With Jerrio
Truth or Consequences
Haggis Bnggir
Tod ay Is Ours
From These Hoots
Queen For A Day
Flyngo Casino
American BAndstnnd
Who Do Yoi- Trust
American Bandstand
U.S. Army Show Army Rec-
crulting Film
Komic Karnival
NBC News
70 Sports Club
Flyngo Casino
Best of Groucho
Dragnet
People's Choice
Buckskin
Price is RiRht
News Summary
Late Show "No Place For a
Lady" William Gargan, Marga
ret Lindsay"
Late News
FRIDAY
Luncheon With Jerrio
Truth or Consequences
Hnggis Baggis
Today Is Ours
From These Roots
Queen For A Day
Flyngo Casino
American Bundstand
Who Do You Trust
American Bandstand
Summer Session
Komic Karnival
NBC News
Death Valley Day
Cavalcade of Sports
Fight Beat
Jefferson Drum
Shirley Temple Storybook
Sheriff of Cochise "Federal Wit
ness" News Summary
Week-End Fishing and Boat
ing News
Bob Albert son Presents "Wom
an Hater" Stewart Granger
Late News
SATURDAY
Baseball Game of Week
Industry on Parade
Billy Jack Wills
Bar 7 Theater
True Story
Sheriff Bill's Ranch Roundup
Local Live
Wrestling From Chicago
U 'n Smoot He port
Big Game Color
Royal Playhouse TBA
People Are Funny
Bob Crosby Show Color
Target 1024 Unreasonable Doubt
Turning Point
Amateur Hour
Brains and Brawn
Late Show "Crime Takes A Holl
day" Jick Holl
Late News
TV
RADIO
SILVERTONEv
Sales Service
Free pickup and delivery or take
ro our ihop or Market and Elm.
Phone TO 2-4481.
CEADC 133 So. Eighth
Phone TU 2-4481
ACE TV
ZENITH Sales ( Sen.
FOR THE FINEST
in ty-rawo SERVICE
PHONE TU 4-3511
1140 Rlverddt Drive
Op 9 to 7 Mon. thru Sot.
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"Colypsomaniac"
Is New Word Now
CHICAGO (UPD-The 195b En
cyclopedia Brit arnica Book ol the
Year came up with a list of words
and phrases that crept into the
Knglish language last year, possi
bly while you weren't looking.
A sampling: "Calypsomaniac"
a lover of calypso music; art
saker" one who believes strongly
in art for the sake of art; tcleven
glish" a TV performer's own
brand of speech; cmneoaDe
a shapely movie starlet; "meter
maid a policewoman who writes
un parkins tickets.
There's also "moonwatcher'
someone who spends his time
looking tor earth satellites; and
"moonlighter" someone who holds
two iobs at -he same time.
And don't forget "egyptianize"
to expropriate foreign holdings.
as a wife gome tnrougn ner bus-
band's pocket.
RADIO -TV REPAIR
We repair moil brands ... we
are the warranty repair station
for Strom berg Carlson, Motorola,
Automatic & Bendix car radios.
Authoriied Factory Supervised
Service for PhJlco, G-E and Motor
ola ond WestinghouM TV's. Calls
accepted until 8 p.m. Monday
thru Saturday. Pickup and Deliv
ery Service. We ere happy to
leave you a "loo ner" while your
set is being repaired. '
jflJ
We ore now the authorized West
inghouse Dealer for Radio, TV, and
Hi-Fi!
Drop in - See our Complete Selection!
BARABOO'S
RADIO & TV SERVICE
"You Can Be Sure If It's WESTINGHOUSE"
333 East Main Phone TU 4-4616
Service
Advertisers !
O Advertising space
on these radio-TV
log pages is
available for your
use.
O This one listing
of the entire week's
radio and television
programs will be
published each Sunday.
O It will remain "live"
for the week, in the
hands of radio and
TV fans.
O For advertising
information tele
phone the Herald &
News, TU 4-8111.