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1-50 of 203
- A mental ward attendant poses as a psychiatrist and is caught by an unforgiving nurse.
- A shy young construction worker is troubled by the fact that, while his fellow construction workers--including his beefy, aggressively macho brother--engage in all sorts of "manly" activities like drinking, brawling and chasing women, he has no desire to do any of that. He begins to think that that he may be a homosexual, and comes in for help and advice.
- A professional gambler finds himself on the run from the mob, the federal government, and a band of Indians, all of whom have an interest in a piece of land he won in a poker game.
- Nichols and his biplane buddy head to Mexico to rescue an Army Captain's kidnapped daughter.
- After twenty years in a school back east Bertha's daughter is coming to town. Bertha plans to close down and become "respectable" during her daughter's visit, but instead Nichols convinces her to let him run her place while she's "gone".
- An acting troupe arrives in town complete with famous diva (Joyce Van Patten). In choosing a bodyguard, Nichols picks the one man who didn't volunteer - bookworm Fred (John Rubinstein). Fred and Ketcham are both infatuated and Fred spends most of his time trying to avoid a fight with Ketcham.
- When Kansas (Bo Hopkins) sees a story in a newspaper about the death of his old friend, Homer the prospector, along with a picture of Nichols wearing only one glove, he tracks him down. Apparently, Kansas and the late Homer have the corresponding halves of a treasure map tattooed on their hands. We see Nichols burying Homer before the opening credits. He now has a paper copy of Homer's half of the map and wants to join up with Kansas and find the hidden booty. Will Nichols' latest get rich scheme go awry like all the others?
- In the 1914 town of Nichols, Arizona, Sheriff Nichols tries to get to the bottom of an accusation. Ruth marries Charlie (Tom Skerritt) only to learn that is he may be already married to Caralee.
- Nichols enlists the help of an airplane pilot--who looks exactly like Ketchum--to track down a killer known as the Dutchman.
- With Nichols away, Ketcham takes over as deputy sheriff and subsequently abuses his authoritative power, but when two thieves nearly murder him, he has a change of heart.
- An aging hell-raiser tries to enlist Nichols into helping with a train robbery.
- Nichols has two headaches to contend with. First, he caught a serial killer, who's known for repeatedly escaping from jail. Second, the townsfolk want to euthanize Mitch's menacing mongrel Slump, who's known for biting people.
- After an earthquake, Nichols, a young Army vet, and a mule are trapped in a cellar while three armed morons threaten them, thinking they're hiding silver.
- When Nichols is mistaken for a safe cracker named Fingers, he gets involved with a plot to break into the bank and steal over $400,000 in cash the railroad is storing there.
- When Nichols jails a man who assaulted a girl, his three violent brothers intend to get him out, not by paying the 54 dollar bill but by aggression and damages. With the town unwilling to help, Nichols considers quitting his job.
- Nichol's Uncle Zachariah (Strother Martin) comes to town and asks him to dig up some money he had stashed before he went to prison. Nichols doesn't know Zachariah's old cellmates are also after the money.
- After two decades and 874 in-depth oral history interviews, The Archive of American Television will be the foundation of The Interviews: An Oral History of Television. The Interviews houses original Archive collection, the Bob Hope Comedy Collection, Emerson College's American Comedy Archives, plus additional interviews produced by and with partner organizations. And the Academy will also continue producing new interviews. Founded in 1997, the Television Academy Foundation's Archive of American Television has conducted over 850 oral history interviews (over 4000 hours) with the legends of television. Rebranded in its 20th year as "The Interviews: An Oral History of Television" these conversations chronicle the birth and growth of American TV History as it evolves. The Interviews continue to produce new oral histories every year. The collection covers a variety of professions, genres, and topics in electronic media history.
- Hoping to gain some back pay, Nichols challenges an army post from close by to a game of baseball in order to help the town's finance committee.
- Gulley and Hansen have been feuding for twenty years. When Ketcham and Mitch goad them into a gunfight to settle the matter, they go too far and things get out of hand.
- When Nichols learns the location of a fortune in stolen money, he assembles a gang of specialists to help him heist it.
- The owners of the Red Ox have outlaws after them due to a shipment of gold.
- After an eccentric old woman comes to the town of Nichols claiming that in her youth she nursed a wounded Jesse James after he was shot by the cowardly Bob Ford and that the infamous outlaw is still alive, Sheriff Nichols takes a road trip on his signature motorcycle to confirm or debunk this extraordinary tale. On route he is sidelined by a con man (Jack Elam) who overhears about Nichols quest for James. Eventually, they meet the old gunslinger or do they? At one point on his road trip Nichols disguises himself as a parson. An alternate title for episode 19 is "Man of the Cloth." (Charles McGraw, who played Hansen in the Gulley vs. Hansen episode, plays "Jesse James.")
- Apache Juan Garcia has Ketchum, a U. S. Marshal, and others on his heels attempting to prevent the native American from hunting a big buck before the season begins. Nichols has to walk a fine line to keep the peace and somehow skirt the law too.
- When professional fighter "Gentleman" George Gorman comes to town looking for a fight, Nichols sees a way to make a quick profit.
- Non-violent Nichols has his hands full when a Indian named "Flying Fox" comes to town claiming he owns the Ketcham's land and has the papers and deed to prove it. Ma Ketcham isn't about to give up without a fight.