Word: schultze
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN (NBC, 7-7:30 p.m.). Michael Shea as Huck Finn, Kevin Schultz as Tom Sawyer and Lu Ann Haslam as Becky Thatcher find themselves in a forest inhabited by leprechauns in "The Magic Shillelagh." Premiere...
...horoscopes into station breaks last January. That feature became so popular that WPIX hired Harper's Bazaar Horoscoper Xavora Pové to turn out a weekly 30-minute series. Miss Pove, an astrology devotee since her days at Sandusky High in Ohio (where she was known as Rosemary Schultz), devised Guess My Sign this spring. It was an instant hit, and, for better or worse, the show is almost sure to be syndicated nationally...
...EDUCATION. Because it has great social consequence, is economically productive and the key to solving the nation's racial problems, education should be handled with extreme care in the effort to save money. University of Chicago Economist Theodore Schultz calculates that the steadily improving education of the U.S. labor force has increased real national income by one-fifth. But Congress is imprudently making some penny-wise reductions in worthwhile federal programs. Example: in fiscal 1966, the Government supported 15,000 graduate students, many of whom intended to become college professors; this year the number is down...
...ultimate in Method acting, for at the time, he happened to be onstage in a new off-off-Broadway drama called Life with the Family, and playing the toughest role of his career: being himself. Schultz believes that real eating-talking-sleeping life has all "the pathos, humor and drama of the theater." To prove it, three weeks ago he and his sons Lyle, 4, and Elan, 5, a jazz musician named Marzette, 28, and three dogs and a cat set up house on the stage of the Headquarters theater in Manhattan's East Village-and invited the public...
...playing to audiences of 20 to 200 daily, the "live-in" has been a series of haphazard happenings-arguments, jam sessions, talkathons-as well as plain old views of the Schultz family eating, watching TV, reading, and chatting on the telephone. As theater, Life is worth leaving; as peep show, it is an offbeat, sometimes curiously intriguing look at the denizens of bohemia caged, as it were, in their natural habitat. Among their most pressing problems are housekeeping and housebreaking the dogs. Just when things might get interesting, the mutts have the distressing habit of upstaging the cast by urinating...