Campus lunch wagon operator "drops in" to classes to get college education.Campus lunch wagon operator "drops in" to classes to get college education.Campus lunch wagon operator "drops in" to classes to get college education.
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Wow! I finally managed to stumble onto the name of this show and found a web site with clips. I recalled this show years later when at college, mentioning that it was the first time I had heard of the term "auditing a course". No one recalled it, and some implied I imagined the whole thing. A couple of times in the 80's, I wrote TV newspaper columnists about the show and had my article printed saying they could be no help. I was starting to think the show was a dream!
Anyway, I enjoyed the short run of "Hank". It was somewhat like the more popular "Dobie Gillis", but with more positive role models.
Anyway, I enjoyed the short run of "Hank". It was somewhat like the more popular "Dobie Gillis", but with more positive role models.
7ff9
I remember this show well from my childhood, along with the other TV sitcom Camp Runamuck. I was in 5th grade when this show came out and watched every episode. It was funny, and to this day every once in awhile, the show's catchy theme pops into my head and I try to remember the lyrics. I saw the lyrics elsewhere on this site or another only today and can finally see what they are, because I had long forgotten them. I liked the show because Hank was always a positive guy, doing his best to take care of his sister, get a good education and better himself. Of course, all the running around, the costume changes and his efforts to get an education on the sly kept me entertained. I too remember the last episode when he was caught, but in the end, it had a happy ending. Being just a kid who really loved the show, I watched knowing it was the final episode and stayed glued to the tube through the closing credits and the last run of the theme song. Isn't it something how some shows touch you and are remembered fondly in your memory as you're growing up? By the way, the notion of somebody repeatedly slipping into classes without paying, etc. isn't so far-fetched. It was recently in the newspaper here in Southern California about some guy attending several college courses to learn, yet he was never enrolled in them. I can't remember the rest of this true incident, but it did happen.
to all "Hank" fans, I seem to recall the theme song going something like this:
He's up with the sun, And he's got the college singing, As he goes off on another swinging day.
There're jobs to be done, Or errands to run, He's A - Number One - OK!
He'll drive, clean your clothes, Be a butler or a porter, If it means another quarter in the bank.
He'll get his degree, His Phi Beta key, And get 'em both for free, That's Hank.
He's up with the sun, And he's got the college singing, As he goes off on another swinging day.
There're jobs to be done, Or errands to run, He's A - Number One - OK!
He'll drive, clean your clothes, Be a butler or a porter, If it means another quarter in the bank.
He'll get his degree, His Phi Beta key, And get 'em both for free, That's Hank.
I remember watching the show as a young teen. Its vague, but I remember him in a medical school class episode. It seems there was also a professor that was supportive of his attending class, though I don't remember if he knew Hank was not enrolled.
Although I only saw a few episodes it had quite an impact on encouraging me toward college. As a teen without much in the way of funding, I tried Hanks method of attending college classes by audit,less the fake mustache. I attended at least 15 classes just to learn the material.(audit without paying used to be pretty easy in the 70s). Professors were always willing to read my papers and let me test. I later earned my BS and graduate degree, and work in emergency medical research and nanotechnology, in part thanks to Hanks example. Thanks Hank!
Although I only saw a few episodes it had quite an impact on encouraging me toward college. As a teen without much in the way of funding, I tried Hanks method of attending college classes by audit,less the fake mustache. I attended at least 15 classes just to learn the material.(audit without paying used to be pretty easy in the 70s). Professors were always willing to read my papers and let me test. I later earned my BS and graduate degree, and work in emergency medical research and nanotechnology, in part thanks to Hanks example. Thanks Hank!
I was a fan too. The main thing I would add to the other comments is that Hank was a terrific athlete. Dabbs Greer, who seems to coach all of the college's teams, always had a practice or a game or a meet in the way of Hank's next class. So when he'd cut across the field Greer would always wonder who that wonderful, sprinter, kicker, halfback was. I haven't seen anything resembling a tape of this but perhaps one will surface on TVLand or at the Museum of Television and Radio. Maybe they'll do a Title IX remake of it. An athlete dropping into class has more of a farcical element than in 1965.
Did you know
- TriviaIn an unusual move for a one-year-and-out series, NBC allowed the last episode to resolve all the series' recurring plot points.
- How many seasons does Hank have?Powered by Alexa
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