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U.N.C.L.E. Episode Guidegrey line

SEASON THREE 1966-1967

Excerpted from
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Book - The Behind-the-Scenes Story of a Television Classic , by Jon Heitland, (c) 1987

Used with permission from author

8:30 p.m. EST Fridays

For the entire season:
Producer: Boris Ingster, Irv Pearlberg (episodes 85, 86 only)
Associate Producer: Irv Pearlberg
Assistant to Producer: Norman Siegel

60. The Her Master's Voice Affair
Solo investigates a girl's school for the daughters of VIP's, including Miki Matsu (Victoria Young), who has valuable secret information from her father, a Japanese diplomat. THRUSH agent Jason Sutro (Joseph Ruskin) has gained the cooperation of the headmistress, Hester Partridge (Estelle Winwood). The assistant dean, Verity Burgoyne (Marianne Osborne), and all of the girl students have been brainwashed by Sutro to go into a trance upon hearing a recording of Brahm's Lullaby, and are ordered to kill Solo.

Prod. #8426
Airdate: September 16, 1966
Filmed: June 23-24, 27-30, 1966
Former Titles: "The Master's Voice Affair", "The Creme de la Creme Affair"
Writer: Bernie Giler
Director: Barry Shear
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Ray Williford
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: April 28, 1966

61. The Sort-of-Do-It-Yourself-Dreadful Affair
Solo is nearly killed by a superhuman, robotlike girl, Margo Hayward (Pamela Curran), one of an army of such devices invented by Dr. Pertwee (Woodrow Parfrey) for THRUSH. Illya joins up with Margo's ex-roommate, Andy Francis (Jeannine Riley), and finds the laboratory, where a roomful of robots attack them.

Prod. #8413
Airdate: September 23, 1966
Filmed: July 13-15, 18-20, 1966
Former Title: "The Dreadful Affair"
Writer: Harlan Ellison
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: None

62. The Galatea Affair
In spoof of "My Fair Lady," Solo is recuperating from a fall into a Venice canal, Illya teams with Mark Slate to uncover Baroness Bibi de Chasseur (Joan Collins), a THRUSH money courier who has contact with the treasurer of THRUSH. They recruit a barroom entertainer, Rosy Shlagenheimer (also played by Collins), an exact double, to impersonate her. The switch is made, but in the confusion the Baroness makes another switch and poses as Rosy, then finds herself falling in love with Slate.

Prod. #8424
Airdate: September 30, 1966
Filmed: June 14-17, 30-32, 1966
Writer: Jackson Gillis
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: August 4, 1967

63. The Super-Colossal Affair
Frank Cariago (Bernard Fein), the U.S. head of a crime syndicate, is under pressure from Uncle Giuliano (J. Carrol Naish). Cariago decides to buy a movie production directed by Sheldon Veblan (Shelley Berman) so his girlfriend, Ginger Laveer (Carol Wayne) can have the starring role. But the picture is a disguised plan to drop a bomb on the family's biggest rival-Las Vegas.

Prod. #8438
Airdate: October 7, 1966
Filmed: July 21-22, 25-28, 1966
Former Title: "The Sodom and Gomorrah Affair"
Writer: Standord Sherman
Director: Barry Shear
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Ray Williford
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Rerun Date: September 1, 1967

64. The Monks of St. Thomas Affair
THRUSH agent Abbot Simon (David J. Peter) takes over the monastery at St. Thomas to use the mountain location to aim a new laser gun at a long distance target the Louvre in Paris. Solo visits the area and meets Andrea Fouchet (Celeste Yarnall), and together they try to stop Simon before he destroys the world's greatest art treasures.

Prod. #8429
Airdate: October 14, 1966
Filmed: June 6-10, 13, 1966
Former Title: "The Monastery Affair"
Writer: Sheldon Stark
Director: Alex March
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: None

65. The Pop Art Affair
A dissatisfied THRUSH collaborator tips U.N.C.L.E. off to a new deadly hiccup gas. A pendant he wears leads Illya to Greenwich Village and an art gallery run by Mark Ole (Robert H. Harris), a THRUSH agent. Starving artist Sylvia Harrison (Sherry Alberoni) joins Illya, who is nearly suffocated at the hands of a foam producing machine.

Prod. #8423
Airdate: October 21, 1966
Filmed: July 29, August 1-5, 1966
Writer: John Shaner, Al Ramus
Director: George WaGGner
Assistant Director: Richard F. Landry
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: April 21, 1967

66. The Thor Affair
Solo and Illya are assigned to protect Dr. Fazie Nahdi (Harry Davis), a Gandhi like peace advocate, during a conference. Nellie Canford (Linda Foster), a high school teacher, becomes linked to their efforts when her dental work begins receiving radio transmissions. Mahdi stays at the home of Brutus Thor (Bernard Fox), who is actually a THRUSH leader who is trying to kill him and Illya is trapped in a room full of toys that begin firing real bullets.

Prod. #8428
Airdate: October 28, 1966
Filmed: August 9-12, 15, 1966
Former Title: "The Second Banana Affair"
Writer: Don Richman, Stanley Ralph Ross
Director: Sherman Marks
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried, Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Rerun Date: April 21, 1967

67. The Candidate's Wife Affair
Solo and Illya protect Miranda Bryant (Diana Hyland), the wife of a presidential candidate, from a THRUSH plot to kidnap her, not realizing that she has already been kidnapped and replaced with a double Irina (also played by Hyland), an unwitting dupe of THRUSH. When they do catch on, the candidate, Senator Bryant (Richard Anderson) and his aide Fairbanks (Larry D. Mann), agree to play along but Fairbanks is the one behind the plot to put a THRUSH agent in the White House.

Prod. #8420
Airdate: November 4, 1966
Filmed: July 5-8, 11-12, 1966
Former Title: "The White House Affair"
Writer: Robert Hill
Director: George WaGGner
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried, Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Rerun Date: May 5, 1967

68. The Come with Me to the Casbah Affair
Solo and Illya go to Algiers to obtain a rare old book containing a THRUSH code from Pierrot La Mouche (Pat Harrington Jr.) who has stolen it from his boss, Colonel Hamid (Jacques Aubuchon). But La Mouche has a high price he wants U.N.C.L.E. to help him obtain Janine (Danielle DeMetz) whom he is in love with.

Prod. #8436
Airdate: November 21, 1966
Filmed: September 7-9, 12-14, 1966
Writer: Robert Hill (teleplay and story), Danielle Branton and Norman Lenzer (story)
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Keough Gleason
Rerun Date: August 11, 1967

69. The Off-Broadway Affair
An off-broadway actress is murdered during a phone call to U.N.C.L.E., and Solo and Illya investigate a connection between the show and a sudden malfunction in U.N.C.L.E.'s communications. The understudy, Janet Jarrod (Shari Lewis), takes over the lead role, and Illya joins the cast to find the jamming device.

Prod. #8427
Airdate: November 18, 1966
Filmed: September 15-16, 19-22, 1966
Former Title: "The Legit Affair"
Writer: Jerry McNeely
Director: Sherman Marks
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Elmo Veron
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Rerun Date: August 25, 1967

70 & 71. The Concrete Overcoat Affair, parts 1 and 2
While in Italy investigating a THRUSH plan to divert the Gulf Stream with heavy water, Solo finds himself eluding THRUSH guards, and ends up hiding under the bed of Pia Monteri (Letitia Roman). Solo escapes a shotgun wedding, the family feels Pia's honor has been compromised, and the girl's American uncles retired Prohibition-era gangsters "Fingers" Stilletto (Eduardo Giannelli), Enzo "Pretty" Stilletto (Allen Jenkins), and Federico "Feet" Stilletto (Jack LaRue) are called. At the island headquarters of Louis Strago (Jack Palance), Illya is tortured by Strago's sadistic female assistant, Miss Diketon (Janet Leigh). Solo joins forces with the Stilletto brothers to try and rescue him.

Prod. #8433, 8434 (feature version, The Spy in the Green Hat , #6021)
Airdate: November 25, December 2, 1966
Filmed: August 18-19, 22-26, 29-31, September 1-2, 6-7, 1966
Writers: Peter Allan Fields (teleplay), David Victor (story)
Director: Joseph Sargent
Assistant Directors: Robert Webb, Bill Finnegan
Editors: Ray Williford (Part 1), Joseph Dervin (Part 2)
Music: Nelson Riddle
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle, Francisco Lombardo
Rerun Date: None

72. The Abominable Snowman Affair
Illya goes to the Himalayan country of Chupat to protect the high lama, but is shot by "Calamity" Rogers (Anne Jeffreys), an American rodeo star. Solo is sent to find Illya, and learns that the prime minister (David Sheiner) has kidnapped the real successor to the throne and intends to install his own son instead. An entranced girl, Amra Palli (Pilar Seurat) tries to kill Solo after being brainwashed by the prime minister.

Prod. #8430
Airdate: December 9, 1966
Filmed: September 23, 26-29, 1966
Former Title: "The Nervous Elephant Affair"
Writer: Kirshna Shah
Director: Otto Lang
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Keough Gleason
Rerun Date: May 12, 1967

73. The My Friend the Gorilla Affair
In Africa, Professor Kenton (Arthur Malet) has developed a superman formula which he has been using on the natives, hoping to build an army with which to conquer all of Africa. Premier Khufu (Percy Rodriguez) resists the use of the drug on his people. Illya meets up with Harry Blackburn (Alan Mowbray), a shady safari guide, and Marsha Woodhugh (Joyce Jillson), who is searching for her lost sister, a Tarzan like woman named "Girl" (Vitina Marcus) who has captured Solo.

Prod. #8440
Airdate: December 16, 1966
Filmed: October 20-21, 24-27, 1966
Former Title: "The Not So Far Safari Affair", "The African Affair"
Writers: Don Richman, Joseph Sandy
Director: Alex Singer
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Ray Williford
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Story Consultant: Milton S. Gelman
Rerun Date: None

74. The Jingle Bells Affair
Solo and Illya must protect Premier Georgi Koz (Akim Tamiroff), a Khrushchev like European leader, on a visit to Mew York, Priscilla Worth (Ellen Willard) is befriended by Loz and she takes him to a school for Santa Clauses run by Francis X. O'Reilly (J. Pat O Malley) where just one of a series of assassination attempts against him must be thwarted by the two U.N.C.L.E. agents.

Prod. #8443
Airdate: December 23, 1966
Filmed: November 8-11, 14-15, 1966
Writer: William Fay
Director: John Brahm
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Elmo Veron
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Story Consultant: Milton S. Gelman
Rerun Date: August 18, 1967

75. The Take Me to Your Leader Affair
Scientist Adrian Cool (Woodrow Parfrey) spots a UFO approaching earth on his radar. His daughter, Coco (Nancy Sinatra) is kidnapped, and Illya follows and he's captured also. Simon Sparrow (Paul Lambert), a power-mad millionaire, has faked the approaching UFO to secure power for himself as the representative on earth of the "aliens". Sparrow captures Solo and puts him in an experimental wind tunnel to kill him, but he is saved by Corinne (Whitney Blake). Coco develops a crush on Illya; while they are trying to stop Sparrow, they end up aboard his "UFO"

Prod. #8437
Airdate: December 30, 1966
Filmed: October 12-14, 17-19, 1966
Former Title: "The Flying Saucer Affair"
Writer: Bernie Giler
Director: George WaGGner
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Elmo Beron
Music: Nelson Riddle, Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Keough Gleason
Rerun Date: None

76. The Suburbia Affair
Dr. Rutter (Victor Borge), after inventing antimatter, hides out in Suburbia under the name Willoughby because he fears his creation will be used destructively. Solo and Illya take a house there to find him. But THRUSH agent Miss Witherspoon (Reta Shaw) also wants to find Rutter, and when Rutter sends his neighbor Betsy (Beth Brickell) after some rare medicine from the pharmacist, Fletcher (Herbert Anderson), the chase is literally on the find Rutter first.

Prod. #8439
Airdate: January 6, 1967
Filmed: October 28, 31, November 1-4, 1966
Writers: Stamford Sherman (teleplay), Sheldon Gibney (story)
Director: Charles Haas
Assistant Directors: Bill Finnegan, Dick Bennett
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Keough Gleason
Rerun Date: May 19, 1967

77. The Deadly Smorgasbord Affair
Solo goes to Sweden to obtain a new suspended animation device from Dr. A.C. Nilson (Peter Brocco), but the device and its inventor are taken by THRUSH. The doctor's daughter Neila (Lynn Loring) helps Solo find him, and the doctor's assistant, Inga Anderson (Pamela Curran) also feigns cooperation but is actually working for THRUSH agent Heinrich Beckmann (Robert Emhardt). Beckmann uses the device to invade U.N.C.L.E.'s Scandinavian headquarters, and only Solo has a chance to stop him.

Prod. #8441
Airdate: January 13, 1967
Filmed: November 16-18, 21-23, 1966
Former Title: "The Sad Gun Affair"
Writers: Ralph Soos, Peter Bourne
Director: Barry Shear
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Ray Williford
Music: Gerald Fried, Nelson Riddle
Set Decorator: Keough Gleason
Rerun Date: June 16, 1978

78. The Yo-Ho-Ho and a Bottle of Rum Affair
Investigating the shipment of a tidal-wave machine by THRUSH, Illya ends up aboard a merchant vessel run by Captain Morton (Dan O'Herlihy). Morton is obsessed with his past disgrace in a court martial, and the crew is on the verge of a mutiny, which Illya leads just as THRUSH arrives to take possession of the device.

Prod. #8450
Airdate: January 20, 1967
Filmed: November 28-30, December 1-2, 5, 1966
Former Title: "The Bounding Main Affair"
Writer: Norman Hudis
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Story Consultant: Milton S. Gelman
Rerun Date: May 26, 1967

79. The Napoleon's Tomb Affair
President Nasasos Tunik (Kurt Kaznar) visits Paris. His assistant, Malanez (Joseph Sirola), is determined to persuade the president that the French are his enemy, and arranges for various embarrassing and insulting incidents to occur. Solo and Illya are assigned to see that the visit goes smoothly, but Tunik falls in love with Candyce (Mercedes Moliner), and Malanez plans to disgrace Tunik by framing him in a plot to steal the body of Napoleon from his tomb.

Prod. #8431
Airdate: January 27, 1967
Filmed: October 4-7, 10-11, 1966
Former Title: "The Napoleon Bonaparte's Tomb Affair"
Writer: James N. Whiton
Director: John Brahm
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Keough Gleason
Rerun Date: None

80. The It's All Greek to Me Affair
In Greece, Illya tries to recover stolen U.N.C.L.E. documents, but they fall into the hands of Stavros (Harold J. Stone), a Greek bandit, who has ambushed Illya, thinking he is his daughter (Linda Marsh) Kira's convict husband, Manolakas (George Keymas) returning from prison. Kita is in love with Nico (Ted Roter) instead, and Solo and Illya must resolve the love triangle in order to retrieve the documents.

Prod. #8445
Airdate: February 3, 1967
Filmed: December 6-9, 12-13, 1966
Writers: Robert Hill (teleplay), Eric Faust (story)
Director: George WaGGner
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Keough Gleason
Rerun Date: None
Note: February 10, 1967, episode preempted by Danny Thomas special.

81. The Hula Doll Affair
Brothers Simon and Peter Sweet (Jan Murray, Pat Harrington Jr.), both rival THRUSH leaders vying for promotion, do not realize that the toy hula doll they possess has an extremely powerful new U.N.C.L.E. explosive inside that is activated by heat. As the outside temperature rises, Illya and Solo try to recover it with the help of Wendy Thyme (Grace Gaynor). Solo poses as a representative of THRUSH Central, but Mama Sweet (Patsy Kelly) a real member of THRUSH Central appears on the scene.

Prod. #8442
Airdate: February 17, 1967
Filmed: December 14-16, 19-21, 1966
Former Titles: "The Executive Sweets Affair", "The Inside THRUSH Affair"
Writer: Standord Sherman
Director: Eddie Saeta
Assistant Director: Al Sheinberg
Editor: Ray Williford
Music: Nelson Riddle, Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Rerun Date: July 28, 1978
Note: Rerun of #81 scheduled for June 9, 1967, preempted by coverage of Israeli war and UN proceedings

82. The Pieces of Fate Affair
Jacqueline Midcult (Sharon Farrell) writes a best selling novel, The Pieces of Fate, which U.N.C.L.E. recognizes as being based on a series of missing THRUSH diaries. She loses her memory during a THRUSH attempt to kill her, and THRUSH agents Ellipsis Zark (Theodore Marcuse) and Jody Moore (Grayson Hall), a book critic, plot to kidnap her and find out where she found the diaries. Solo and Illya take Jacqueline to a small town where her Uncle Charly (Charles Seel) and Aunt Jessie (Opal Evard) live, to try and revive her memory, but Zark and Moore follow and they all converge on the attic where the diaries are hidden at the same time.

Prod. #8447
Airdate: February 24, 1967
Filmed: January 4-6, 9-11, 1967
Former Titles: "The Missing Diaries Affair", "The Novel Affair"
Writers: Harlan Ellison, Yale Udoff
Director: John Brahm
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Ray Williford
Music: Nelson Riddle, Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Keough Gleason
Story Consultant: Milton S. Gelman
Rerun Date: None

83. The Matterhorn Affair
A dying man carrying a partial film with the secret of Project Quasimodo, a miniature atomic bomb, gives only one clue to finding the rest of the film: the name of Marvin Klump (Bill Dana), inept car salesman. THRUSH agents Rodney Backstreet (Oscar Beregi) and Beirut (Vito Scotti) capture Klump. Solo and Illya, with the aid of Klump's sister Heather (Norma Chase), follow them first to the Alps, them back to the U.S.,where the answer to the puzzle lies in a cemetery.

Prod. #8449
Airdate: March 3, 1967
Filmed: January 20, 23-27, 1967
Former Title: "The Long Blonde Wig Affair"
Writers: David Giler, Boris Ingster
Director: Bill Finnegan
Assistant Director: Donald Verk
Editor: Bill Gulick
Music: Gerald Fried, Nelson Riddle
Set Decorator: Don Greenwood, Jr.
Rerun Date: None

84. The Hot Number Affair
A THRUSH code is hidden in a dress pattern, and Solo and Illya go to the garment district and encounter the design shop of two down on their luck designers (George Tobias and Ned Glass) and their model Ramona (Cher) and the cutter who has a crush on her, Jerry (Sonny Bono). THRUSH also tries to retrieve the garment, but Ramona keeps forgetting where she left it.

Prod. #8456
Airdate: March 10, 1967
Filmed: January 12-13, 16-19, 1967
Former Title: "The Fashion House Affair"
Writers: Joseph and Carol Cavanaugh
Director: George WaGGner
Assistant Director: Al Sheinberg
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Rerun Date: June 30, 1967

85. The When in Rome Affair
In Rome, American tourist Darlene Sims (Julie Sommars) becomes the unwitting carrier of a perfume atomizer with a secret formula. THRUSH uses a suave ladies man Cesare Guardia (Cesare Danova) to charm Darlene, but he falls in love with her in the process.

Prod. #8445
Airdate: March 17, 1967
Filmed: January 31, February 1-3, 6-7, 1967
Writer: Gloria Elmore
Director: George WaGGner
Assistant Director: John Banse
Editor: Ray Williford
Music: Nelson Riddle, Gerald Fried, Robert Drasnin
Set Decorator: Richard Pefferle
Rerun Date: July 7, 1967

86. The Apple a Day Affair
Solo and Illya find that THRUSH agent Colonel Picks (Robert Emhardt) has developed exploding apples, which will be used to trigger a nuclear stockpile. Nina Lillette (Jeanine Riley), a pretty hillbilly girl, latches onto them for excitement. Illya joins a picking crew at the farm, but he is buried alive in a tunnel with the volatile apples.

Prod. #8453
Airdate: March 24, 1967
Filmed: February 8-10, 13-15, 1967
Writers: Joseph Calvelli, Les Roberts
Director: E. Darrell Hallenbeck
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Don Greenwood, Jr.
Story Consultant: Milton S. Gelman
Rerun Date: July 14, 1967

87 & 88. The Five Daughters Affair, parts 1 and 2
Solo and Illya visit the laboratory of Dr. True (Jim Boles), who has discovered how to extract gold from seawater. But Dr. True dies from a poison given him by THRUSH agent Randolph (Herbert Lom), and Randolph also kills his wife Amanda (Joan Crawford). The gold extraction formula was distributed in portions by True to his daughters, in inscriptions on a photo of himself. Solo and Illya meet Sandy True (Kim Darby), who accompanies them to Rome, to find her half sister Margo (Diane McBain), now unhappily married to the destitute Baron de Fanzini (Telly Savalas) to London, to find the next sister Imogen (Jill Ireland), who has been arrested by a Constable (Terry Thomas) for indecent exposure and finally the Alps, to find Yvonne (Danielle DeMetz), who is breaking off an unhappy relationship with Karl Von Kesser (Curt Jurgens). But after decoding the message in Japan, Solo, Illya, and Sandy are captured by Randolph and taken to THRUSH central for execution.

Prod. #8457, 8458 (feature version, The Karate Killers, #6025)
Airdate: March 31, April 7, 1967
Filmed: February 17, 20-24, 27-28, March 1-3, 6-9, 1967
Former title: "The Five Women Affair"
Writers: Boris Ingster, Norman Hudis
Director: Barry Shear
Assistant Director: Bill Finnegan
Editor: Ray Williford (Part 1), Bill Gulick (Part 2)
Music: Nelson Riddle, Gerald Fried, Robert Drasnin
Set Decorators: Richard Pefferle, Don Greenwood, Jr.
Story Consultant: Milton S. Gelman
Rerun Date: None

89. The Cap and Gown Affair
Solo and Illya are responsible for the security during Waverly's upcoming address to his alma mater, but the campus is seething with protest. Illya joins the demonstrators, and meets Minerva Swight (Carole Shelyne), the daughter of the dean (Henry Jones). The head of the board of regents, Jonathan Trumble (Larry Mann), is a THRUSH agent, and he hires campus agitator Gregory Haymish (Zalman King) to try and kill Solo and Illya, while Trumbull's THRUSH superior, Number 24 (Tom Palmer), undergoes plastic surgery so he can impersonate the dean during the ceremony and kill Waverly himself.

Prod. #8459
Airdate: April 14, 1967
Filmed: March 10, 13-17, 1967
Writer: Standord Sherman
Director: George WaGGner
Assistant Director: Eddie Saeta
Editor: Joseph Dervin
Music: Nelson Riddle, Gerald Fried
Set Decorator: Don Greenwood, Jr.
Story Consultant: Milton S. Gelman
Rerun Date: July 21, 1967
Note: Rerun preempted June 2, 1967 by special, Welcome to Japan, Mr. Bond.

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