TELEVISION
Wednesday, March 11
NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC YOUNG PEOPLE'S CONCERT (CBS, 7:30-8:30 p.m.).* "Jazz in the Concert Hall," a study of modern symphonic composition incorporating jazz. Leonard Bernstein conducts.
THE DANNY KAYE SHOW (CBS, 10-11 p.m.). Guest: Diahann Carroll.
Thursday, March 12
NBC WHITE PAPER: ADAM CLAYTON POWELL (NBC, 7:30-8:30 p.m.). Chet Huntley narrates this report on the contentious New York Congressman.
Friday, March 13
THE GREAT ADVENTURE (CBS, 7:30-8:30 p.m.). A newspaperman in 1893 tries to find out why President Grover Cleveland has disappeared for several days; with Barry Sullivan and Leif Erickson.
THE JACK PAAR PROGRAM (NBC, 10-11 p.m.). Attorney General Robert Kennedy reminisces about J.F.K., Bobby's first such appearance since the assassination.
Saturday, March 14
ABC'S WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS (ABC, 5-6:30 p.m.). Soviet World Champion High Jumper Valery Brumel on a special trip to the U.S. to receive the program's Athlete-of-the-Year Award; also the World Professional Alpine Skiing Championships.
Sunday, March 15
FACE THE NATION (CBS, 12:30-1 p.m.). Facing Barry Goldwater.
DISCOVERY (ABC, 1-1:30 p.m.). A repeat of "The Day That Life Begins," a program for children on birth.
ONE OF A KIND (CBS, 4-5 p.m.). Fourth in this show's series on great American educators, this program will look at History Professor Dr. John Hope Franklin, whose specialty is the Reconstruction Era.
MISTER ED (CBS, 6:30-7 p.m.). With Mae West, in a rare appearance.
THE THOUSAND MILE CAMPUS (NBC, 10-11 p.m.). A news special on California's system of higher education, focusing for the most part on the University of California.
Monday, March 16
HOLLYWOOD AND THE STARS (NBC, 9:30-10 p.m.). "The Many Faces of Paul Newman."
THEATER
ANY WEDNESDAY lodges an executive's sweetie in an executive suite as a tax and marriage dodge. As a kept waif, Sandy Dennis chug-a-lugs champagne from the bottle like Coke and cries through her smiles, leaving playgoers choked with laughter. Liquor may be quicker, as Ogden Nash once argued, but Sandy is dandy.
FOXY dogsleds Bert Lahr up to the 1890s Yukon, and from there on the evening is fool's gold, a bonanza of comic Lahrgesse.
DYLAN. Whether Alec Guinness, as Dylan Thomas, spars with newsmen, spats with his wife, or speaks in the soft dark ness next to a sleeping child, he conveys the poet's warmth and witas we! as his decline through sycophancy, self indulgence and alcohol.
HELLO, DOLLY! In a bouncy, daffy, ro mantic Little Old New York musical Matchmaker Carol Channing juggles lonely hearts and sassily wangles one fo herself.
NOBODY LOVES AN ALBATROSS. Rober Preston is gleeful and guileful as a phon) TV writer-producer trying to keep his career from dissolving into a test pattern.
BAREFOOT IN THE PARK. A proper young lawyer and his minx of a wife are the explosively funny tenants of an apartment that makes the housing shortage look desperate.
Off Broadway
