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Retro: Tucson and Phoenix, November 22 and 23, 1963

Source: Arizona Daily Star, 22 November 1963

Stations:
3 – KTVK-TV (ABC), Phoenix
4 – KVOA-TV (NBC), Tucson
5 – KPHO-TV (Independent), Phoenix
6 – KUAT-TV (NET), Tucson
9 – KGUN-TV (ABC), Tucson
10 – KOOL-TV (CBS), Phoenix
12 – KTAR-TV (NBC), Phoenix
13 – KOLD-TV (CBS), Tucson
27 – KUAS-TV (NET), Tucson
Although not listed, KUAS was transmitting from Mount Bigelow as a satellite of KUAT to reach those viewers in the Northwestern sections of Tucson whose reception of Channel 6 was blocked by part of Mount Lemmon. As well, KAET was operating in Phoenix on Channel 8, transmitting educational programming as an NET affiliate.

* denotes a colorcast

NOVEMBER 22, 1963
MORNING
6:00
10 – Sunrise Semester
12 – Continental Classroom (x2)
13 – Test Tunes, Farm & Ranch

6:30
10 – D Word Roundup (I have no idea what this would be)
13 – Sunrise Semester

7:00
4/12 – Today
10/13 – Captain Kangaroo

7:40
6/27 – Chemistry (through to Noon)

8:00
4/12 – Say When
9 – Test Pattern Bulletin Board
10/13 – CBS Morning News (Mike Wallace anchored; one of the stories was about The Beatles)

8:25
4/12 – NBC News

8:30
3/9 – Bugs Bunny/The King & Odie
4 – Word for Word *
10/13 – I Love Lucy
12 – Play Your Hunch

9:00
3/9 – The Price is Right
4/12 – Concentration
10/13 – The Real McCoys

9:30
3/9 – Seven Keys
4/12 – Missing Links
10/13 – Pete and Gladys

10:00
3/9 – Tennessee Ernie Ford
4/12 – Your First Impression *
5 – Calendar of Events
10/13 – Love of Life

10:25
10/13 – CBS News

10:30
3/9 – Father Knows Best
4/12 – Truth or Consequences
5 – Philosophy (x2; probably an educational program from Arizona State University)
10/13 – Search for Tomorrow

10:45
10/13 – The Guiding Light

10:55
4/12 – NBC News

11:00
3/9 – General Hospital
4 – Local News
10 – George Burns & Gracie Allen
12 – Romper Room
13 – Visiting with Virginia (local housewife chat)

11:15
4 – Divorce Court

(The Kennedy assassination took place in Dallas at 11:30 Mountain Time; as KOOL-TV and KOLD-TV were taking CBS’ live East Coast feed of As the World Turns, they would have gotten Cronkite’s initial bulletins live and, therefore, were likely to be the first TV stations in Phoenix and Tucson to break the news. Only KGUN-TV appears to have taken a network feed from ABC, and NBC wasn’t offering a network program during this half hour.)

11:30
3 – Jack LaLanne
5 – Bold Journey
9 – Day in Court
10/13 – As the World Turns
12 – Love That Bob

(By Noon, each of the networks was underway with their continuous coverage of the assassination, so all scheduled entertainment programming on Channels 3, 4, 9, 10, 12 and 13 were wiped out until Monday. Nobody I was able to reach at KPHO, KAET and KUAT/KUAS knows what those stations were doing; I suspect KPHO picked up one of the networks with the permission of the Phoenix affiliate – they had originally been an ABC affiliate, so I’d tentatively go in that direction – and KAET, KUAT and KUAS may have had someone break into the instructional programs with the initial bulletin, after which they may have picked up a network’s coverage with permission of the Tucson and Phoenix affiliates.)

AFTERNOON
12:00 NOON
3 – Douglas Fairbanks Presents
4/12 – People Will Talk *
5 – Cartoonland
6/27 – Geology
9 – Frank Kalil (local talk show)
10/13 – Password

12:25
4/12 – NBC News

12:30
3 – Day in Court
4/12 – The Doctors
5 – News and Weather
6/27 – Science Reporter
10/13 – Art Linkletter’s House Party

12:45
9 – Women’s News

1:00
3/9 – Queen for a Day
4/12 – Loretta Young Theater
5 – Open House (local talk)
6/27 – Spanish (5th Grade, level 1)
10/13 – To Tell the Truth

1:30
3/9 – Who Do You Trust?
4/12 – You Don’t Say *
10/13 – The Edge of Night

2:00
3/9 – Trailmaster
4/12 – The Match Game
5 – The Best of Groucho
10/13 – The Secret Storm

2:25
4/12 – NBC News

2:30
4/12 – Make Room for Daddy
5/13 – People are Funny
10 – Peter Gunn

3:00
3/4/12 – local movies (with inserts of business news on KVOA-TV and news headlines on KTAR-TV)
5 – 5-Star Playhouse (probably syndicated reruns of ‘50s anthologies like Schlitz Playhouse)
9 – Ann Sothern
10/13 – Our Miss Brooks

3:30
5 – Leave It to Beaver
9 – Marshal KGUN (cartoons)
10 – December Bride
13 – The Life of Riley

4:00
5 – It’s Wallace (local kiddie show)
10 – Talent Show
13 – The Folk Sing (I’m guessing this is a regionally-syndicated folk music program similar to Hootenanny!, as it is also scheduled on KOOL-TV in the following half-hour)

4:30
10 – The Folk Sing
12 – Ann Sothern
13 – KOLD-TV News

5:00
3 – The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis
4 – Woman’s/Pictorial/Business Report
5 – Rocky & His Friends (x2)
9 – Popeye
10/13 – CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite (The Beatles item from that morning’s CBS Morning News had been originally scheduled to be repeated on this broadcast; Cronkite postponed it until December 10th)
12 – News Headlines

5:05
12 – Sea Hunt

5:15
9 – Rocky & His Friends

5:30
3 – ABC News with Ron Cochran
4 – The Huntley-Brinkley Report
5 – Bachelor Father
9 – Amos ‘n’ Andy
10/13 – The Mickey Mouse Club
12 – Sports Report

EVENING
6:00
3 – Sgt. Bilko
4/5 – local news
9 – Silents Please
10/13 – Yogi Bear
12 – The Huntley-Brinkley Report

6:30
3/9 – 77 Sunset Strip
4 – Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theater
5 – Maverick
10/13 – Route 66
12 – International Showtime (Don Ameche hosting European circus acts)

6:45
6/27 – Spanish (5th Grade)

7:00
6 – What’s New? (children’s series)

7:30
3/9 – Burke’s Law
4 – Harry’s Girls
5 – The Trail West
6/27 – Visit with a Sculptor
10/13 – The Great Adventure
12 – Bob Hope Presents the Chrysler Theater

8:00
4 – The Jack Paar Program *
5 – High School Football
6/27 – Congress of Strings 1963 (scholarship student orchestra conducted by Eugene Ormandy of the Philadelphia Orchestra; sign-off at 9:30)

8:30
3/9 – The Farmer’s Daughter
10/13 – The Twilight Zone

9:00
3/9 – The Fight of the Week (scheduled match was light heavyweights Johnny Persol versus Allen Thomas; was this match cancelled or postponed due to the assassination?)
4 – Thriller
10/13 – The Alfred Hitchcock Hour
12 – The Jack Paar Program *

Approximately 9:45
3/9 – Make That Spare (bowling program hosted by Johnny Johnston that filled the remainder of the hour immediately after the boxing match ended)

10:00
3/4/5/9/10/12/13 – local news (the newscasts for KOOL-TV and KOLD-TV are both listed as Niteline; dunno if it’s a simulcast or just the title was shared)

10:15
4/12 – The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson *
10/13 – The Steve Allen Show

10:30
3/5 – movie
9 – Theater 9

11:00
4 – news

11:05
4 – movie (followed by news headlines and sign-off)

11:45
10/13 – news

12:00 Midnight
3 – movie
12 – news
13 – Mahalia (perhaps a film of gospel singer Mahalia Jackson to sign off the day?)

12:05
12 – movie

12:15
9 – Peter Gunn (followed by news headlines and sign-off)

The Arizona Daily Star of November 23rd carried a story indicating that the three commercial television networks (and four national radio networks) were all cancelling entertainment programs until after President Kennedy’s funeral on the 25th, and all of the local affiliates were following their network’s leads by doing the same on locally-originated and syndicated programming. There was still a question as to whether Tucson radio station KCUB would carry the Los Angeles Rams-Baltimore Colts NFL game from the West Coast circuit of the Mutual radio network on Sunday, but the Notre Dame college football game that weekend was definitely called off. However, ads for KOLD-TV and KOLD Radio appeared on the same page, promoting Saturday’s scheduled commercial programming; apparently, nobody at KOLD contacted the Star by press time to get the ads pulled. The KOLD Radio ad promoted the New Mexico-Arizona NCAA football game that had been scheduled for that night at 7:45; the schedule listed in the KOLD-TV ads http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_ItyDNJp-jj4/TOq0tY_1y1I/AAAAAAAAAGA/eH5FhhqOC3g/s1600/KOLD23nov63.jpg included the following:

6:50 Farm & Ranch Report
7:00 Captain Kangaroo
8:00 Quick Draw McGraw
8:30 Mighty Mouse
9:00 Rin Tin Tin
9:30 Roy Rogers
10:00 Sky King
10:30 Do You Know? (local high school variation on College Bowl)
11:00 Alvin
11:30 Tennessee Tuxedo
12:00 Football Kick-Off
12:15 NCAA Football (Wisconsin vs. Minnesota)
2:45 Football Scoreboard
3:00 Moments in Music
3:30 Mariachi Matinee
4:00 Desert Trails
4:30 Championship Bowling
5:30 Jackie Gleason’s American Scene Magazine
6:30 The Defenders
7:30 The New Phil Silvers Show
8:00 Gunsmoke
9:00 Adventures in Paradise
10:00 Wanted: Dead or Alive
10:30 Million Dollar Movie: The Outriders (starring Joel McCrea, Arlene Dahl and Barry Sullivan)

A second ad specifically promoted the showing of The Outriders at 10:30.

There’s also one additional item to add here, although unrelated to the TV schedules listed above. In researching this post, I came across a rather startling two-line headline in the November 17th edition of the Arizona Daily Star, the top of the two lines reading JFK SELECTS COFFIN. The story was about Kennedy choosing diplomat Frank Coffin to become the U.S. Ambassador to Panama, but I still can’t quite get past the phrasing of that top line!
 
"Day In Court" aired at 2:30 (ET), and since KGUN
had a local talk show from 12-1 (MT), I would suspect
it aired on delay. Remember that both ABC and NBC
were down when Cronkite broke into "As The World Turns";
ABC, at the time, aired "General Hospital" at 1 PM (ET) (it
wouldn't move to 3 until Dec. 30), then went down from
1:30-2:30; NBC was down from 1 to 2.

"Do You Know?", unless you're talking about a different
show, aired on CBS from Oct. 12, 1963-Apr. 25, 1964 at
12:30 (ET). Two teams of kids aged 9-12 were assigned
a book to read, then quizzed about it; it probably did resemble
"College Bowl". Bob Maxwell, who used to be the voice of the
SFM holiday network, was host of this show. A similar program,
"Reading Room", had aired same time, same network, the previous
year, with children's-book author Ned Hoopes as host.
 
bpatrick said:
"Day In Court" aired at 2:30 (ET), and since KGUN had a local talk show from 12-1 (MT),
I would suspect it aired on delay.

The '64 Yearbook lists KGUN-TV as having one tape machine (same for KVOA and KOLD)
so it could have been a day behind, but what if the head loads up during recording? One
might say the same for KVOA with its daily one hour delay of Huntley-Brinkley.

Or...it could have been a kinnie on a one week (or more) delay. Or a third left-field idea:
KTVK tapes the feed at 12:30 while airing the show, and sends it to Tucson on Greyhound
for KGUN to play the next day. That scenario was used (early '70s?) where KOOL-TV ran
Merv Griffin (CBS late night) in pattern at 10:30 PM, then the next morning sent their
backup tape (90-min. reel) of Merv down to Tucson on the bus for KOLD's airing at 4 PM.
 
Ultimajock said:
9:00
3/9 – The Fight of the Week (scheduled match was light heavyweights Johnny Persol versus Allen Thomas; was this match cancelled or postponed due to the assassination?)

The Persol-Thomas fight at Madison Square Garden was postponed one week to Friday, November 29. Persol won the ten-round bout by a unanimous decision.
 
Ultimajock said:
Although not listed, KUAS was transmitting from Mount Bigelow as a satellite of KUAT to reach those viewers in the Northwestern sections of Tucson whose reception of Channel 6 was blocked by part of Mount Lemmon. As well, KAET was operating in Phoenix on Channel 8, transmitting educational programming as an NET affiliate.

KUAS-TV was not listed because it didn't exist yet, and wouldn't for another 25 years. The CP was issued in 1985 and it went on the air in 1988. I've never seen any reference to KUAS prior to the mid '80s. The FCC's database says the callsign was issued on 8/26/1985. Also, there were no UHF allocations for Tucson (or Phoenix for that matter) in 1963.

I don't believe KUAS-TV has ever transmitted from Mt. Bigelow. IIRC, they've always been transmitting from someplace near downtown Tucson. In fact, in 1963, KUAT-TV Channel 6 wasn't on Mt. Bigelow either, per the 1963 Broadcasting Yearbook.
 
10:30 AM

3/9 : Father Knows Best

Wasn't Father Knows Best one of the shows that was pre-empted by ABC at the time that the news of Kennedy's assassination took place? This may be a one day delay from Thursday meaning that Monday's episode (the Friday episode that was pre-empted by the ABC news coverage) wasn't shown or was substituted for a rerun of another show that 3 and 9 had to offer.
 
Are there any TV listings for Chicago from 11/22/1963 on Radio-Info?. A friend of mine wants to know what was on and would have been on later in the day on that fateful day.
 
KeithE4 said:
Ultimajock said:
Although not listed, KUAS was transmitting from Mount Bigelow as a satellite of KUAT to reach those viewers in the Northwestern sections of Tucson whose reception of Channel 6 was blocked by part of Mount Lemmon. As well, KAET was operating in Phoenix on Channel 8, transmitting educational programming as an NET affiliate.

KUAS-TV was not listed because it didn't exist yet, and wouldn't for another 25 years. The CP was issued in 1985 and it went on the air in 1988. I've never seen any reference to KUAS prior to the mid '80s. The FCC's database says the callsign was issued on 8/26/1985. Also, there were no UHF allocations for Tucson (or Phoenix for that matter) in 1963.
...I was going on the insistence of a couple of people I spoke to this morning at Arizona Public Media; they insisted that 27 went on the air in 1960...
 
Braves2005 said:
10:30 AM

3/9 : Father Knows Best

Wasn't Father Knows Best one of the shows that was pre-empted by ABC at the time that the news of Kennedy's assassination took place? This may be a one day delay from Thursday meaning that Monday's episode (the Friday episode that was pre-empted by the ABC news coverage) wasn't shown or was substituted for a rerun of another show that 3 and 9 had to offer.

By one of the ABC affiliates, apparently on a one-hour delay; New York's WABC-TV, as noted in the New York TV listings for Nov. 22, 1963 (if you can find it here), had run the FKB episode in its entirety (it ran at 12:30 P.M. EST); what ABC interrupted for bulletins on the JFK shooting on WABC was a local rerun of a 1958 Ann Sothern Show episode. David von Pein's aircheck which showed FKB being so interrupted clearly has 5 kHz telco, whereas WABC airings would have had full 15 kHz audio.

BobbyNBC10 said:
Are there any TV listings for Chicago from 11/22/1963 on Radio-Info?. A friend of mine wants to know what was on and would have been on later in the day on that fateful day.

Not that I could tell . . . however, the Fuzzy Memories website (which deals with classic Chicago TV) has the would-be schedule:
http://www.fuzzymemories.tv/forums/index.php?showtopic=179
 
Ultimajock said:
KeithE4 said:
Ultimajock said:
Although not listed, KUAS was transmitting from Mount Bigelow as a satellite of KUAT to reach those viewers in the Northwestern sections of Tucson whose reception of Channel 6 was blocked by part of Mount Lemmon. As well, KAET was operating in Phoenix on Channel 8, transmitting educational programming as an NET affiliate.

KUAS-TV was not listed because it didn't exist yet, and wouldn't for another 25 years. The CP was issued in 1985 and it went on the air in 1988. I've never seen any reference to KUAS prior to the mid '80s. The FCC's database says the callsign was issued on 8/26/1985. Also, there were no UHF allocations for Tucson (or Phoenix for that matter) in 1963.
...I was going on the insistence of a couple of people I spoke to this morning at Arizona Public Media; they insisted that 27 went on the air in 1960...

Nothing I've been able to find had anything about KUAS being on the air that early. In fact, the UHF non-comm allocation for Tucson didn't exist until 1965. It was originally Channel 28, and was moved to 27 the next year. My sources were Broadcasting Yearbooks and Vane Jones station guides from that era, courtesy of the Old Gringo's basement.
 
KeithE4 said:
Ultimajock said:
KeithE4 said:
KUAS-TV was not listed because it didn't exist yet, and wouldn't for another 25 years. The CP was issued in 1985 and it went on the air in 1988. I've never seen any reference to KUAS prior to the mid '80s. The FCC's database says the callsign was issued on 8/26/1985. Also, there were no UHF allocations for Tucson (or Phoenix for that matter) in 1963.
...I was going on the insistence of a couple of people I spoke to this morning at Arizona Public Media; they insisted that 27 went on the air in 1960...

Nothing I've been able to find had anything about KUAS being on the air that early. In fact, the UHF non-comm allocation for Tucson didn't exist until 1965. It was originally Channel 28, and was moved to 27 the next year. My sources were Broadcasting Yearbooks and Vane Jones station guides from that era, courtesy of the Old Gringo's basement.
...okeh, another correction to be made. Thanx (and no thanx to the guys at APM! heh heh)...
 
When KPAZ 21 Phoenix went on air in 1967, it was touted as the first UHF station in Arizona. However, there were UHF translators before that, mostly in the channel 70 - 83 range.

The U of A applied for the station that would become KUAS in Feb 1985. The CP was approved in July 1985, and the station applied for its license in July 1988, which was granted in December. It had an ERP of 30.2 kW. The original permit specified Tumamoc Hill, not Mt. Bigelow. Besides, it was the Mt. Bigelow signals that couldn't reach the NW foothills, as they were blocked by Mt Lemmon.

The U of A did operate a translator on ch 27, K27AT, also from Tumamoc Hill, but not in 1960. The U of A applied for K27AT in Nov 1980, but it wasn't granted until Jun 1985. The same day that the KUAS application was granted, the U of A requested to upgrade K27AT to 20 kW, which the FCC approved in Sept 1985. K27AT went on air in Dec 1985 with 20 kW and was licensed the following March.
 
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