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FOOD FOR THOUGHT Television Will Examine Man, His Ideas And His Universe Events and ideas the world over are closer these days—as close, in fact, as your TV set. Unless you refuse to tear yourself away from the usual run of light TV entertainment, your mind is due for a complete overhaul. At least two operas will be premiered, NBC will scientifically probe the world of 1976, the Russian steppes and the African veld will be explored, elder wisemen will dispense philosophy, and psychology will fill die air. On Oct. 9, on NBC, Dr. Benjamin Spock starts clearing away the mys¬ teries of child rearing, covering ter¬ ritory from splinters to the id. On You and Your Child, Dr. Frances Horwich continues to advise parents right after Ding Dong School. Viewers awed by Medic should take to ABC’s Medical Horizons, a show concerned less with fictional story lines, more with the accomplishments of medi¬ cine. Quincy Howe moderates, from various research centers, this expand¬ ed version of last year’s Horizons. Both NBC and CBS plan special, un¬ scheduled shows that will pre-empt existing programs. For example, Ed Murrow (whose Person to Person is back as usual) has a sponsor for six See It Now shows of varying lengths. One, slated for October, will study the Vice Pres¬ idency as an institution. CBS also has a series of hour-and-a-half documen¬ taries planned, titled simply, “Giants.” In cooperation with the Air Force, CBS’ Air Power, slated for the late fall, gives a definitive picture of our air strength from the flight at Kitty Hawk to the projected excursion into outer space. Viewers will be given a look at Russian air strength, see cap¬ tured enemy film taken by German pilots as they downed American planes. Ekldie Rickenbacker, Laurence Olivier and Walter Cronkite are among the varied narrators. NBC will put on unscheduled shows at least once a month. The Assignment Series, about people and places, is set to go with a show on India on Nov. 24. In color, it will be narrated by