ROANOKE TIMES Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times DATE: Saturday, February 24, 1996 TAG: 9602280025 SECTION: SPECTATOR PAGE: S-1 EDITION: METRO DATELINE: PASADENA, CALIF SOURCE: LUAINE LEE KNIGHT-RIDDER/TRIBUNE
People such as former president Jimmy Carter, anthropologist Jane Goodall and astronomer Carl Sagan will converge electronically when the Disney Channel kicks off its new series, ``This I Believe,'' at 8:30 p.m. Sunday.
Based on the old Edward R. Murrow show, this 30-minute special will be a preview of the five-minute series, hosted by former CBS correspondent Charles Kuralt, which premieres Tuesday at 8:55 p.m.
The program, which examines the thoughts and philosophies of people who have made a difference, originated as a radio show. Kuralt remembers hearing it on short wave.
``I was in college and I had one of those Zenith Trans-Oceanic portables, with glowing tubes ... I think it was the best-listened-to broadcast of all, for a number of years ... It does suggest that either on television or radio this notion of someone thinking seriously and expressing himself from the heart has appeal,'' says Kuralt in a ballroom in the Ritz-Carlton Hotel.
Some of the guests on the show will be Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel, civil rights pioneer Rosa Parks, violinist Isaac Stern, Olympic champion boxer Oscar de la Hoya and John Wooden, the famed former UCLA basketball coach, who led his teams to 10 NCAA championships.
Often called the best basketball coach in history, Wooden takes exception to that. ``To be considered among the best is fine. But no one is really the best ... As I become older I know that the things that have given me the greatest satisfaction are the fact that practically all the players that I had under my supervision graduated. And practically all have done well in their chosen professions.''
Thirty have become lawyers, 10 are doctors, seven ministers, many are teachers and businessmen.
``I'd rather be remembered as one of them that was a teacher,'' says Wooden.
Asked to pick his favorite team, Wooden demurs, saying it was like choosing among his nine great-grandchildren.
``I've had teams that didn't win the national championship that gave me perhaps as much satisfaction as any that did,'' he says.
But his first team that won the national championship in 1964 is still in his heart. ``It's kind of like the firstborn, I guess. They didn't get along well off the floor, but on the floor they were just perfect unison. And they were the smallest team to ever win.''
The next team that he remembers with special fondness is the team he calls ``the team without.'' ``That's the team without [championship player Lew] Alcindor,'' he remembers. (Alcindor later changed his name to Kareem Abdul Jabbar).
``He'd graduated and there are those who felt now that he was gone we'd get our comeuppance. And fortunately we didn't get our comeuppance. We did win the next four years in a row. That team immediately following him, they just wouldn't give up,'' he says.
``And the last team I ever coached, of course, gave me great satisfaction because they weren't expected to win.'' That was 1975, and Wooden remembers, ``We had only one returning starter from the year before and then lost two superstars in Bill Walton and Keith Wilkes. So that one gave me a lot of satisfaction.''
Kuralt says he was particularly impressed by Jimmy Carter. ``I can't wait for you to see him talking about how many people don't get started in great enterprises because of the fear of failure. I really do believe that just as the original series inspired and educated me when I was young ... I still have the hope that some young people will take away inspiring ideas.''
LENGTH: Medium: 71 lines ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO: ``This I Believe'' previews Sunday night at 8:30 on Theby CNBDisney Channel. Charles Kuralt hosts. Type first letter of feature OR type help for list of commands FIND S-DB DB OPT SS WRD QUIT QUIT Save options? YES NO GROUP YOU'VE SELECTED: QUIT NO login: cquit