Dublin Core
Title
Box 17, Folder 14, Document 16
Text Item Type Metadata
Text
TV e Radio e Comies
15
T
‘C-TV" 5
r Mel Torme
luests,
the Italian
epeat)
eles.
fowes, Pat
quests,
Madonna
Marcello
imbskulls
‘glary.
en Show
ope
tediscovered
Bullpen
Some
iglas
tin Newman
shy Martin
~ M
Talk
ow
‘ary. Fond
dughes
Show
Il Muelle!
‘om Fro
Cooper
r Dick
Wyatt
Il Show
nthe
Rogers,
to's
Lorre,
1
‘of the”
roll
Father
tle
fer
Iney
traldine
Son,’
ay
Reporting From The World
Of Television and Radio
rl
Civil Rights’ 2 Faces
Confrontation on ABC
By John Horn
Govs. Orval Faubus of Ar-
kansas and George Wallace
of Alabama, former Mayor
William Hartsfield of Atlanta,
Ga., and the Rev. Dr. Martin
Luther King jr., founder and
president of the Southern
Christian Leadership Confer-
ence, will be among those in-
terviewed Aug. 11 on “Chron-
ology of a Crisis,” first of fiive
ABC-TV half-hours on civil
rights (Sundays at 10:30
p.m.).
The ABC-TV series, “Cru-
cial Summer: The 1963 Civil
Rights Crisis,” announced last
week, will be the first net-
work airing of the nation’s
dominant domestic issue. A
three-hour NBC-TV special
on the subject, announced
Monday, will be telecast
Labor Day.
The first ABC-TV program
will be a review of major and
significant events of the civil-
rights story in the United
States, especially since the
end of World War II.
Filming is continuing in
Atlanta, Ga.; Clinton, Tenn.;
Jackson, Miss.; Little Rock,
Ark.; Montgomery, Ala., and
New York City and other
areas,
Others who will appear on
the series are Autherine Lucy,
first Negro at the University
of Alabama; Mrs. Dasy Bates,
NAACP leader in Little Rock:
Rosa Parks, of Montgomery,
who refused to yield her bus
seat to a white woman; Wil-
liam Simmons, leader of the
Jackson Citizens Council, and
Atlanta Constitution pub-
lisher Ralph McGill.
Opinion is expected to range
from segregationist to inte-
grationist, not excluding the
equivalent of the fabled Mrs.
Murphy, small Southern busi-~
ness woman.
The fourth program, on
Sept. 1, will include coverage
of the planned march on
Washington and a review of
President Kennedy's civil-
rights legislation.
Ron Cochran is anchorman,
with John Rolfson and Roger
Sharp heading a traveling
corps of ABC news corre-
Spondents. The producer is
Bill Kobin.
€ < > >
“Press and Race Issue’
_ An hour program on press, —
television and radio handling
of the race issue will be tele-
cast on CBS-TV Aug. 21
(7:30 to 8:30 9, .m).
_ The program, “The Press
‘and the Race Issue,” will in-
clude a discussion of Southern
and Northern press charges
and countercharges moder-
ated by Dean Edward Barrett
of the Columbia University’s
Graduate School of Journal-
‘Participants will include
Grover Hall jr. editor in
chief of the Montgomery,
Ala., Advertiser; James Kil-
patrick jr., editor of the
Richmond, Va., News-Leader,
and CBS News president
Richard S. Salant.
el > »
1
t
h
d
fi
m™
vi
——*
15
T
‘C-TV" 5
r Mel Torme
luests,
the Italian
epeat)
eles.
fowes, Pat
quests,
Madonna
Marcello
imbskulls
‘glary.
en Show
ope
tediscovered
Bullpen
Some
iglas
tin Newman
shy Martin
~ M
Talk
ow
‘ary. Fond
dughes
Show
Il Muelle!
‘om Fro
Cooper
r Dick
Wyatt
Il Show
nthe
Rogers,
to's
Lorre,
1
‘of the”
roll
Father
tle
fer
Iney
traldine
Son,’
ay
Reporting From The World
Of Television and Radio
rl
Civil Rights’ 2 Faces
Confrontation on ABC
By John Horn
Govs. Orval Faubus of Ar-
kansas and George Wallace
of Alabama, former Mayor
William Hartsfield of Atlanta,
Ga., and the Rev. Dr. Martin
Luther King jr., founder and
president of the Southern
Christian Leadership Confer-
ence, will be among those in-
terviewed Aug. 11 on “Chron-
ology of a Crisis,” first of fiive
ABC-TV half-hours on civil
rights (Sundays at 10:30
p.m.).
The ABC-TV series, “Cru-
cial Summer: The 1963 Civil
Rights Crisis,” announced last
week, will be the first net-
work airing of the nation’s
dominant domestic issue. A
three-hour NBC-TV special
on the subject, announced
Monday, will be telecast
Labor Day.
The first ABC-TV program
will be a review of major and
significant events of the civil-
rights story in the United
States, especially since the
end of World War II.
Filming is continuing in
Atlanta, Ga.; Clinton, Tenn.;
Jackson, Miss.; Little Rock,
Ark.; Montgomery, Ala., and
New York City and other
areas,
Others who will appear on
the series are Autherine Lucy,
first Negro at the University
of Alabama; Mrs. Dasy Bates,
NAACP leader in Little Rock:
Rosa Parks, of Montgomery,
who refused to yield her bus
seat to a white woman; Wil-
liam Simmons, leader of the
Jackson Citizens Council, and
Atlanta Constitution pub-
lisher Ralph McGill.
Opinion is expected to range
from segregationist to inte-
grationist, not excluding the
equivalent of the fabled Mrs.
Murphy, small Southern busi-~
ness woman.
The fourth program, on
Sept. 1, will include coverage
of the planned march on
Washington and a review of
President Kennedy's civil-
rights legislation.
Ron Cochran is anchorman,
with John Rolfson and Roger
Sharp heading a traveling
corps of ABC news corre-
Spondents. The producer is
Bill Kobin.
€ < > >
“Press and Race Issue’
_ An hour program on press, —
television and radio handling
of the race issue will be tele-
cast on CBS-TV Aug. 21
(7:30 to 8:30 9, .m).
_ The program, “The Press
‘and the Race Issue,” will in-
clude a discussion of Southern
and Northern press charges
and countercharges moder-
ated by Dean Edward Barrett
of the Columbia University’s
Graduate School of Journal-
‘Participants will include
Grover Hall jr. editor in
chief of the Montgomery,
Ala., Advertiser; James Kil-
patrick jr., editor of the
Richmond, Va., News-Leader,
and CBS News president
Richard S. Salant.
el > »
1
t
h
d
fi
m™
vi
——*
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