SHORTRIDGE DAILY ECHO the World's Oldest High School Dotty Vol

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

SHORTRIDGE DAILY ECHO the World's Oldest High School Dotty Vol 61 YEARS OF CONTINUOUS DAILY PUBLICATION SHORTRIDGE DAILY ECHO The World's Oldest High School Dotty Vol. 61, No. 167 SHORTRIDGE HIGH SCHOOL, INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA, TUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1959 3 CENTS Good Morning . 'Spring Sampler,' English Shortridge Senate to Hold NO ERROR CLUB By Joel Whitaker Department Anthology, Annual Banquet June 8 NEW MEMBERS Big Ben! Big Ben! to Be Distributed Soon The Shortridge Senate will hold The clock they could not kill, The "Spring Sampler" for 1959 its annual banquet this year on LISTED FULLY Chime out again and tell all men has been printed and will be ready June 8 from 7:00-9:00, at the Eighty-nine students from Typ­ That England's England stiU. for distribution early this week. American Fletcher National Bank ing I, II, and III belong to the Thus did Sir Alan Herbert pay The written work of freshmen, and Trust Building. No Error Club for this semester. tribute to the clock that's function­ sophomores, juniors, and seniors is Senate awards will be given for The student who leads the list Is ing as well today as it did when represented in the booklet. the best piece of legislature, the Michael McGulre of Typing II, hav­ it was first started 100 years ago The "Sampler" is an anthology outstanding retiring senator, and ing been on 11 times. Joann Pap­ yesterday. of prose and verse in both the jun­ outstanding service to the Senate pas is second with 10. Being on This week the British are cele­ ior and senior high schools com­ this year. seven times is Nancy Skinner. Both brating the centenary of an insti­ piled and edited by teachers in the The Senate banquet committee are from Typing II classes. Having tution synonymous with England English department and by a com­ members are Jenna HUlard, Marion been on six times each, these four around the world. mittee of students. Klumpp, Robert Martin, John Mc­ girls are members: Bette Jo Dus- Really, ln the strictest sense, Big The student* committee consists Auliff, Nancy Simmons, and Mark kin (III), Betty England (III), Betty Ben is nothing more than a bell of Carolyn Bill, Pat Brantllnger, Tinsley. The committee chairman Settle (II), and Serita Slocum (I). weighing 13 Vi tons which was cast Edward Buecher, Nancy Christy, is Ted Sigward. Judi Dorman, Typing III, has been on April 10, 1858. The clockwork Judy Lee Davis, Jean Kammen, listed five times. that moves Ben's hands began to Aurzella Osier, Kirk Sargent, and Guntis Strikis. Several Seniors Faculty Named turn on May 31, 1859, and the first Teachers of the classes are Mrs. bong rang out on July 11. The The "Sampler" was illustrated by Shortridge art students: Carter Indicate Choice Betty Berck, Miss Florence Day, name comes from Sir Benjamin Miss Florence Griepenstroh, Mrs. Hall, a rather portly gentleman, Booth, Carol Buecher, Nancy Brei­ ner, Nancy Christy, Clifton Conn, of College Genevieve Keehn. who was London's Commissioner of Members of the club who are ln Works at the time. Sally Cross, Norman Ettlnger, Jew­ Many seniors have chosen the ell Gaffney, Quin Groth, Paul Har­ Typing I are listed. Kenneth Barker, Like our own Liberty Bell, it was colleges they plan to attend and Dorothy Barnes, Jeff Booth, Larry mon, Martha Snyder, and Carolyn have been accepted at those cracked, therefore lt emits a flat­ Tidd. Brafford (3), Ronald Bremen (2), tened "E" rather than the sharp schools, announced Miss Elizabeth Constance Brooks, Sandra Coburn, "E" originally called for. The anthology will sell for 35c. Evans, college adviser. Sharon Delwert, Davv-TBlrks, Olga During World War II, it was Big Going to Antioch will be Patrick Doney, Jirn^ F**\endei*^2), Herbert Ben, heard 'round the world over ANNUAL PIC SALE Brantlinger, Jean Kammen, and Frankovir2,'judlth Gold (2), Aletha the British Broadcasting Corpora­ REALIZES $31.0> Kirk Sargent. Elaine Reuben will Hill,-Joe Hood, Erich Kopitzke '.2), tion, that buoyed everyone's spirits attend Brandeis. Brown University Janice Landy, sSundra Littlejohn, (except those of the Nazis), and The Shortridge Al J. Kettler is the choice of Carter Booth and Carolyn Miller, Sharon Miller, Sid­ assured all English-speaking peo­ chapter of Quill and Scroll has BUI Dyer. Going to Butler are Vir­ ney Miller, Mike Power, Shirley ples everywhere that London still announced that $31.07 has been ginia Doss and Robert Rodabough. Ramsey, Sandra Regenstrief, Ka­ stood. made from the sale of Annual pic­ David Badollet will go to the Col­ ren Roney, Gary Russell, Stephen Big Ben is not the largest clock tures. This money has been donat­ lege of Emporia. Schenck, Serita Slocum (6), Dale or bell in England, but it is the ed to the Echo fund, announces Both Kenneth Harker and Rich­ Smulyan (2), Bill Taylor (2), Clara most famous. Diane Grosvenor, president. ard Myers are going to the College Underwood (2), Mike Walters (2), It is a massive clock with a min­ Pictures were sold Thursday and of Wooster. Attending DePauw will Patricia Washington, Donna Wldes ute hand that travels almost 100 Friday in the cafeteria by Quill be Jim Broffitt, Nancy Burns, Da- (3), Susan Williams, and Shelia miles per year, a pendulum 13 feet and Scroll members. (Contlnued on page four) Yates. long, which swings only once each Second Semester List two seconds. Pipe-Puffing Detective of Popular From Typing II, the members of Wound by an electric motor the No Error Club are Usted. thrice weekly, kept accurate despite TV Show Fascinates Reporters Nancy Anderson, Sheila Balti­ changing weather conditions by the The ability of Efrem.Zimbalist Jr. Also ln his early TV performances more (4), Suzanne Barnhart, Judy addition of pennies, we salute Big to clench his pipe in his mouth he did a bit as a gambler on Beaty, Lana Bevan, Barbara Boyd, Ben, England's booming voice. while talking and puff on it be­ "Maverick" as Warner Brothers Otis Boyd, Bill Brandt, Edward tween syllables fascinated Barbara holds his contract. Buecher, Alice Byrd, Barbara Car­ New Fall Members Wilson, Friday Echo editor, and He fears a rash of detective se­ penter, Catherine Chapman (3), of Shortridge Music Men Edward Buecher, Tuesday Echo ed­ ries for next year on TV and be­ Barbara Cohn (2), Carolyn Frakes itor, who interviewed the popular lieves "westerns" will probably see (3), Deanna Glasel (3), Willie Listed by Mr. Neuen detective of "77 Sunset Strip" In his type of show enter the grave­ Gholston, Sonya Gwynn, Anna HIU, yard. Linda Liscomb, Faye Lunsford, The members of the Shortridge a pre-500-Mile Race parade high Janet Mann, Steve Marion, Michael Music Men for next fall have been school press conference at WLW-I Thirteen of his shows will be McGulre (11), Bonnie Noblitt (4), recently announced by Donald Friday. rerun this summer. Claudia Otten (3), Joann Pappas Neuen, sponsor. The engaging and cultured actor The average day for most Holly- (10), Erma Richmond, Sandra The new members are BUI Ack- told how he quite literally drifted wood-ians, he stresses, does not be­ Ritchie (2), Barbara Rust, Betty erman, John Batchelder, Jim Bean, into TV after an early music ca­ gin at noon. As an example he Settle (6), Nancy Skinner (7), Sigel Bickel, John Carley, Ted Clay, reer didn't work because of "no cites himself. He rises at 6:00 in Shirley Smith, Delores Thompson Wesley Coleman, Danny Cook, Joe gift" and also "no career for solo­ the morning, takes a dip in his (2), Ann Wallace. Lahr, Dave McDonald, Manon ists these days." pool, and is off to work. Actors' Mears, Walter Plummer, Charles Mr. Zimbalist would never be a hours are early to bed and early Typing III Rogers, Hasty Smith, Steve Smith, detective in regular Ufe; "too rou­ to rise. Those of Typing III who belong and Chuck Tunnah. tine," he declares. He did his first Mr. Zimbalist, who attended Yale to the club are listed. The Music Men were formed late "Sunset Strip'" show with Erin briefly, doesn't believe a college Barbara Bingham, Beverly But­ in the school year and focus pri­ O'Brien, who was in IndlanapoUs education Is necessary for success ler (2), Judi Dorman (5), Bette marily on harmonizing. for the 500 race to kiss the winner. (Continued on page three) (Continued on page three) Page two THE SHORTRIDGE DAILY ECHO Tuesday, June 2, 1959 QUITE! Prof. Klattletrap Probes Echo Editor Gives It Is established fact that half of the high schools in the the Vikings in America; United States do not have the benefit of college advisers or voca­ State Secession Attempt? Honorary Awards tional and employment services. Out ot the fortunate ones with By BUI Atkins The Tuesday Echo editor, Edward these facilities, a great number of the advisers must serve so great Buecher, has listed his nominations a number of students that they cannot give any sort of aid to the ST. LAWRENCE SEAWAY- and awards for reporters, colum­ majority of the student body. USED 600 YEARS AGO? nists, sportswriters, and general Truly Shortridge with its many facilities for this sort of as­ What support, besides the Norse riffraff. sistance is one of the best equipped in this field. Instead of the sagas that were word-of-mouth ac­ The following awards are not in­ students having to search and struggle to find out what opportu­ counts until about a century be­ tended to alienate anyone towards nities are available for assistance in college or after-school and fore Columbus set sail (and, after­ said editor as he is a junior and vacation employment, we are asked to apply for aids and grants.
Recommended publications
  • Available Videos for TRADE (Nothing Is for Sale!!) 1
    Available Videos For TRADE (nothing is for sale!!) 1/2022 MOSTLY GAME SHOWS AND SITCOMS - VHS or DVD - SEE MY “WANT LIST” AFTER MY “HAVE LIST.” W/ O/C means With Original Commercials NEW EMAIL ADDRESS – [email protected] For an autographed copy of my book above, order through me at [email protected]. 1966 CBS Fall Schedule Preview 1969 CBS and NBC Fall Schedule Preview 1997 CBS Fall Schedule Preview 1969 CBS Fall Schedule Preview (not for trade) Many 60's Show Promos, mostly ABC Also, lots of Rock n Roll movies-“ROCK ROCK ROCK,” “MR. ROCK AND ROLL,” “GO JOHNNY GO,” “LET’S ROCK,” “DON’T KNOCK THE TWIST,” and more. **I ALSO COLLECT OLD 45RPM RECORDS. GOT ANY FROM THE FIFTIES & SIXTIES?** TV GUIDES & TV SITCOM COMIC BOOKS. SEE LIST OF SITCOM/TV COMIC BOOKS AT END AFTER WANT LIST. Always seeking “Dick Van Dyke Show” comic books and 1950s TV Guides. Many more. “A” ABBOTT & COSTELLO SHOW (several) (Cartoons, too) ABOUT FACES (w/o/c, Tom Kennedy, no close - that’s the SHOW with no close - Tom Kennedy, thankfully has clothes. Also 1 w/ Ben Alexander w/o/c.) ACADEMY AWARDS 1974 (***not for trade***) ACCIDENTAL FAMILY (“Making of A Vegetarian” & “Halloween’s On Us”) ACE CRAWFORD PRIVATE EYE (2 eps) ACTION FAMILY (pilot) ADAM’S RIB (2 eps - short-lived Blythe Danner/Ken Howard sitcom pilot – “Illegal Aid” and rare 4th episode “Separate Vacations” – for want list items only***) ADAM-12 (Pilot) ADDAMS FAMILY (1ST Episode, others, 2 w/o/c, DVD box set) ADVENTURE ISLAND (Aussie kid’s show) ADVENTURER ADVENTURES IN PARADISE (“Castaways”) ADVENTURES OF DANNY DEE (Kid’s Show, 30 minutes) ADVENTURES OF HIRAM HOLLIDAY (8 Episodes, 4 w/o/c “Lapidary Wheel” “Gibraltar Toad,”“ Morocco,” “Homing Pigeon,” Others without commercials - “Sea Cucumber,” “Hawaiian Hamza,” “Dancing Mouse,” & “Wrong Rembrandt”) ADVENTURES OF LUCKY PUP 1950(rare kid’s show-puppets, 15 mins) ADVENTURES OF A MODEL (Joanne Dru 1956 Desilu pilot.
    [Show full text]
  • Live on the Sunset Strip
    robert landau Excerpt: Live on the Sunset Strip The street that made music history Robert Landau’s Rock ‘n’ Roll Billboards of the Sunset Strip was published in October 2012 by Angel City Press. Downloaded from http://online.ucpress.edu/boom/article-pdf/2/4/79/381413/boom_2012_2_4_79.pdf by guest on 28 September 2021 The Sunset Strip is that 1.7-mile stretch of Sunset Boulevard that is now part of the city of West Hollywood, connecting Hollywood on the east (where funky Laurel Canyon descends to Sunset and meets Crescent Heights) with Beverly Hills to the west (where Doheny Road climbs to the posh mansions of 90210-land). There are actually many Sunset Strips—versions that live in real time and space, and versions that live in our collective fantasy. The actual landscape of the Strip is typical of Los Angeles, featuring buildings of every imaginable architectural style, a look captured perfectly by artist Ed Ruscha in his 1966 book Every Building on the Sunset Strip. Outdoor advertising permeates the vista, ready to capture the attention of the steady stream of eyeballs that comes with continuously heavy traffic. Billboards of varying sizes are sandwiched between and above colorful hotels, restaurants, offices, gas stations, sleazy strip malls, and trendy retail shops. Now, thanks to digital technology, billboards engulf entire buildings and cover whole city buses, adding even more visual congestion to an already over- saturated urban scene. By day, the Sunset Strip was where the business of the music industry was conducted in the Sixties and Seventies. Both high-rise luxury offices and older, cottage-style buildings have long housed record companies, producers, talent scouts, business managers, personal managers, public relations executives, advertising agencies, design firms, and even a few film, photo, and recording studios.
    [Show full text]
  • Once Upon a Time in Hollywood
    RICK DALTON—Once he had his own TV series, but now Rick’s a washed-up villain-of- theweek drowning his sorrows in whiskey sours. Will a phone call from Rome save his fate or seal it? CLIFF BOOTH—Rick’s stunt double, and the most infamous man on any movie set because he’s the only one there who might have gotten away with murder. SHARON TATE—She left Texas to chase a movie-star dream and found it. Sharon’s salad days are now spent on Cielo Drive, high in the Hollywood Hills. CHARLES MANSON—The ex-con’s got a bunch of zonked-out hippies thinking he’s their spiritual leader, but he’d trade it all to be a rock ’n’ roll star. HOLLYWOOD 1969— YOU SHOULDA BEEN THERE COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS A FILM BY QUENTIN TARANTINO LEONARDO DICAPRIO BRAD PITT MARGOT ROBBIE IN ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD MARGARET QUALLEY TIMOTHY OLYPHANT JULIA BUTTERS DAKOTA FANNING BRUCE DERN AND AL PACINO TECHNICOLOR ® PRODUCED BY DAVID HEYMAN SHANNON MCINTOSH QUENTIN TARANTINO WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY QUENTIN TARANTINO Dedication This book is dedicated to My Wife DANIELLA and My Son LEO Thanks for creating a happy home from which to write in. ALSO To all the actor Old Timers who told me tremendous stories about Hollywood in this period. And it’s because of them that you hold this book in your hands now. Bruce Dern * David Carradine * Burt Reynolds Robert Blake * Michael Parks * Robert Forster and especially Kurt Russell Contents Cover Title Page Dedication Chapter One: “Call Me Marvin” Chapter Two: “I Am Curious (Cliff)” Chapter Three: Cielo Drive Chapter Four: Brandy,
    [Show full text]
  • EVERLYPEDIA (Formerly the Everly Brothers Index – TEBI) Coordinated by Robin Dunn & Chrissie Van Varik
    EVERLYPEDIA (formerly The Everly Brothers Index – TEBI) Coordinated by Robin Dunn & Chrissie van Varik EVERLYPEDIA PART 2 E to J Contact us re any omissions, corrections, amendments and/or additional information at: [email protected] E______________________________________________ EARL MAY SEED COMPANY - see: MAY SEED COMPANY, EARL and also KMA EASTWOOD, CLINT – Born 31st May 1930. There is a huge quantity of information about Clint Eastwood his life and career on numerous websites, books etc. We focus mainly on his connection to The Everly Brothers and in particular to Phil Everly plus brief overview of his career. American film actor, director, producer, composer and politician. Eastwood first came to prominence as a supporting cast member in the TV series Rawhide (1959–1965). He rose to fame for playing the Man with No Name in Sergio Leone’s Dollars trilogy of spaghetti westerns (A Fistful of Dollars, For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly) during the 1960s, and as San Francisco Police Department Inspector Harry Callahan in the Dirty Harry films (Dirty Harry, Magnum Force, The Enforcer, Sudden Impact and The Dead Pool) during the 1970s and 1980s. These roles, along with several others in which he plays tough-talking no-nonsense police officers, have made him an enduring cultural icon of masculinity. Eastwood won Academy Awards for Best Director and Producer of the Best Picture, as well as receiving nominations for Best Actor, for his work in the films Unforgiven (1992) and Million Dollar Baby (2004). These films in particular, as well as others including Play Misty for Me (1971), The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976), Pale Rider (1985), In the Line of Fire (1993), The Bridges of Madison County (1995) and Gran Torino (2008), have all received commercial success and critical acclaim.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ledger and Times, February 25, 1967
    Murray State's Digital Commons The Ledger & Times Newspapers 2-25-1967 The Ledger and Times, February 25, 1967 The Ledger and Times Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt Recommended Citation The Ledger and Times, "The Ledger and Times, February 25, 1967" (1967). The Ledger & Times. 5598. https://digitalcommons.murraystate.edu/tlt/5598 This Newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Newspapers at Murray State's Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Ledger & Times by an authorized administrator of Murray State's Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. 2 • 4 , II I; WM" 11!tig R4 II - x a c K,13 irlIntrri"trt tririrgg tri it &C.3 ci g :11 :e4 .414:= I/1 ist- 1 IR! l!k !Alba .41 5 51E 41 illIgig s 4411 ig liegl141541411 113 V I:• W ! 4 ;:i1;1ii5 14 '145: isfil;11 q-6:1° illit 111%! pi' 111-wl;le & > q4a " 1 91,5 it 4troi 0171018110240 ti-. lk -il 054 isl 41!8 OIL I E "x l Ili kg , -I 161 /1 i I 15 i t qi t5151 gl'`41 I 115"111. 1 ii ocb I a J8 iIIII, g *Iliiil 0 15414 It11=1.140i3 841/14 Y1W 44 AP!'E55 illigaltillf4,1111:1 Ithallilildilla A ilv IIR4 II i ilAI ilh un r auflpf ;=Hgt 03 Pltd4ml i liVii 1 11 Eig 5L-t4-14/ itilyWV4111 Vi 11 ;,E5JK 177' ?Ii. 0 12- "15s Nor leRP!°114" 11 , 1Fr r yll; 10.1 tfilkz c, ;61: 42"[W 4 'V54 OR 4 15 Figai g E;49.1 e t 110 i 0 0 54a51 :11 0)1t • > 1 a clil Ei 1 4401 U.5.1 g x0131'1 711:1°q11 i2-045 24 : 2 1 cFNc.ri = 0e°11 eta1,11,wg 4114g1 "V:T> 1°24 ita Vq..vg rtliWililla70;11;1 1 1/Igh t4 ! 141 SW! 't17 -1P§ 112 tititlil !iii "I 0 114J;tilivi A q il( IY 1 .9/611-Iilipl; ,..: [xlip;51W 1 P g-.
    [Show full text]
  • Lindsay Giggey 2008‐09 ARSC Research Award Submission Surf
    Lindsay Giggey 2008‐09 ARSC Research Award Submission Surf, Song, and Cricket Blake: Capturing the Emerging Teen Girl Market with Hawaiian Eye As America progressed from the post‐war era into the sixties, the idea of teenagers solidified itself within popular culture. Job opportunities during World War II drove young people into the workforce establishing independence from their families and created a new purchasing demographic. Post‐war America’s abundant prosperity increased leisure time and allowed more young people to enroll in high school. Mass high school enrollment created new social opportunities and further alienated parents from their teenagers. The population skyrocketed as a result of the baby boom, and as the 1960s began, almost half the American population was under twenty‐five years old.1 By this time, teenagers asserted themselves as independent consumers with time and money to indulge in music, movies, clothes, cars, and whatever else interested them. Further compounded by America’s fascination with youth (especially President Kennedy and his family), advertisers finally noticed the massive but previously untapped market with time and money at their disposal. Advertisers found that young people could easily be swayed to follow fads and continuously consume more goods. They guided gullible young people towards products to substitute for knowledge or reassurance they could not receive from their ignorant parents.2 By the late 1950s, television networks followed suit by developing programming more inclusive of young people. During its first two decades, ABC featured more teen Giggey 2 programming as a ploy to establish itself as a viable network in competition with CBS and NBC.
    [Show full text]
  • Dream a Dream
    FINAL-1 Sat, Apr 13, 2019 7:09:05 PM tvupdateYour Weekly Guide to TV Entertainment For the week of April 21 - 27, 2019 Dream a Dominic West stars in “Les Misérables” dream INSIDE •Sports highlights Page 2 •TV Word Search Page 2 •Family Favorites Page 4 •Hollywood Q&A Page14 On Sunday, April 21, witness the next chapter in Jean Valjean’s (Dominic West, “The Affair”) extraordinary journey of redemption as he eludes the persistent Inspector Javert (David Oyelowo, “Selma,” 2014) after serving a brutal prison sentence in a new episode of “Les Misérables,” on PBS. The prestige period piece’s cast is rounded out by Lily Collins (“The Last Tycoon”), Ellie Bamber (“Nocturnal Animals,” 2016), Adeel Akhtar (“Counterpart”) and Oscar winner Olivia Colman (“The Crown”). WANTED WANTED MOTORCYCLES, SNOWMOBILES, OR ATVS To advertise here GOLD/DIAMONDS BUY SELL please call ✦ 37 years in business; A+ rating with the BBB. TRADE ✦ For the record, there is only one authentic CASH FOR GOLD, Bay 4 Group Page Shell PARTS & ACCESSORIES We Need: SALES Motorsports& SERVICE (978) 946-2375 5 x 3” Gold • Silver • Coins • Diamonds MASS. 1 x 3” MOTORCYCLE We are the ORIGINAL and only AUTHENTIC INSPECTIONS CASH FOR GOLD on the Methuen line, above Enterprise Rent-A-Car 1615 SHAWSHEEN ST., TEWKSBURY, MA at 527 So. Broadway, Rte. 28, Salem, NH • 603-898-2580 978-851-3777 Open 7 Days A Week ~ www.cashforgoldinc.com WWW.BAY4MS.COM FINAL-1 Sat, Apr 13, 2019 7:09:06 PM COMCAST ADELPHIA 2 CHANNEL Kingston Sports Highlights Atkinson Londonderry 8:00 p.m.
    [Show full text]
  • Labor Day Weekend Crashes in County Leave 1 Dead, 10 Hurt
    <* 0 I llth Year No. 20 ST. JOHNS, MICHIGAN THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 8, 1966 2 SECTIONS-26 PAGES 10 CENTS CLINTON COUNTY Traffic deaths Labor Day weekend Since Jan. 1- 12 crashes in county This time last year: 7 leave 1 dead, 10 hurt High speed was blamed for an Meridian Road south of Alward Bloodmobile at early-Sunday accident which Road and hit a sign and fence. claimed the life of a St. Johns man, William E. Ike, 24, of 501 LATER SATURDAY morning, Ovid Sept. 15 Lambert Drive. Morris F. Noonan, 20, of R-3, The Red Cross Bloodmobile There were several other St. Johns lost control of his car will visit Ovid next Thursday, Labor Day weekend accidents on West High Street east of Hol- Sept. 15, to serve blood donors around the county which result­ lister Road in Ovid and the car from both the Ovid and Elsie ed in injuries. went Into a ditch. He'and two areas. Tentative arrangements Mr Ike died at 3 a.m. Monday passengers were unhurt. are for the bloodmobile, to beset in Sparrow Hospital in Lansing. Robert R. Begley Sr., 34, of up at the Memorial Hall in Ovid He was Clinton County's 12th Northridgeville, Ohio, and Wil­ from, noon to 6 p.m. traffic fatality of 1966. liam E.'Cummings, 54, of Jack­ Mrs Earl Slagh of Elsie and son were drivers of two autos Mrs Ada Wittenberg of Ovid are THE ACCIDENT occurred which collided Monday evening chairmen from their respective about 5:30 a.m. Sunday on Price in the homebound rush on US-27.
    [Show full text]
  • Na.' Libr October 5, 1959 © 1959 Triangle Publications, Inc
    WEEKLY Television Digest NA.' LIBR OCTOBER 5, 1959 © 1959 TRIANGLE PUBLICATIONS, INC. ezi VOL. 15: No. 40 The authoritative service for executives engaged in all branches of the television arts & industries SUMMARY -INDEX OF WEEK'S NEWS Congress Manufacturing dr Distribution TV QUIZ SPECTACULAR promoted by Harris, who reserves big STEEL STRIKE HAS INDUSTRY UNEASY as stockpiles dwindle. cacus room for crowds expected for House hearings this week on Survey of manufacturers shows TV sales generally good & im- 1958 network show -scandals (p. 1). Other Congress (p. 4). proving, but continued strike will begin to cut buying power nationally (p. 14). FCC ARMSTRONG FM -TV PATENT suits make progress in & out of POSING THE EQUAL -TIME PROBLEMS, panel of top-flight attorneys court. Most manufacturers now have settled claims. Emerson case 1 at Federal Bar Assn. meeting points up FCC's tough job of draft- may set costly precedent (pp. 15 & 17). ing new rules (pp. 2 & 4). RUSSIAN ELECTRONICS ON UPBEAT, say Microwave Associates' Film á Tape Atchley and Jerrold's Shapp, recently returned from Soviet Union (p. 16). LATIN-AMERICAN FILM -TAPE SUPERMARKET and framework for OCDM STUDYING IMPORTS IMPACT on U.S. electronics industry's tape network-that's TISA, which may unite big Cuban & Mexican defense capacity (p. 16). interests for first time, handling Latin film needs (p. 2). Networks Auxiliary Services DIMENSIONS OF THE CATV INDUSTRY, as shown in new Fact- SPACE TV RELAY TESTS by Bell Labs to begin early next year, book directory: about 2,250,000 people served by 597 systems. to TV using passive balloon satellites relay pictures 2,300 miles in Average U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • The Gossip Industry
    Copyright by Anne Helen Petersen 2011 The Dissertation Committee for Anne Helen Petersen Certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: THE GOSSIP INDUSTRY: PRODUCING AND DISTRIBUTING STAR IMAGES, CELEBRITY GOSSIP, AND ENTERTAINMENT NEWS 1910 - 2010 Committee: Janet Staiger, Supervisor Thomas Schatz Michael Kackman Susan McLeland Mary Desjardins THE GOSSIP INDUSTRY: PRODUCING AND DISTRIBUTING STAR IMAGES, CELEBRITY GOSSIP, AND ENTERTAINMENT NEWS 1910 - 2010 by ANNE HELEN PETERSEN, B.A.; M.A. Dissertation Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy The University of Texas at Austin May 2011 Dedication For my mother, who has always modeled intelligence with verve. Acknowledgements I would not be the scholar I am today without the tremendous and ongoing support of a number of professors, all of whom have modeled the type of mentorship, scholarship, and dedication to the field that I try to emulate. From my first semester as an undergrad to my final semester as a Ph.D. student, Janet Staiger, Thomas Schatz, and Michael Kackman at the University of Texas, Michael Aronson at the University of Oregon, and Robert Sickels at Whitman College have served as models, mentors, colleagues, and friends. The dissertation-writing process was an arduous one made enjoyable by the efficiency and editorial guidance of Janet Staiger and the keen eyes of my committee members. I am particularly grateful to Susan McLeland and Mary Desjardins for their close readings and insight on early versions of various chapters.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 1 (Introduction) the Street Fighter Takes on the Two Champs
    Chapter 1 (Introduction) The Street Fighter Takes On The Two Champs For many growing up during the 1960’s, ABC-TV seemed to talk to us. It was always hipper than either CBS or NBC-TV. Turns out, that’s correct. ABC head Leonard Goldenson set out to go for a younger demographic - as far back as 1954. But there’s much more to the story. When Leonard Goldenson’s United Paramount Theaters bought and began operating ABC-TV - it was a dawg. This was 1953 - and competitors NBC and CBS-TV were already making money. Not so for ABC-TV. It was in a fight for survival and had no momentum. But it did have a cash infusion from the theater group and the TV network now had Leonard Goldenson - whose ideas and vision cemented ABC-TV’s destiny. Two major problems plagued the network - distribution (TV stations) and programming. CBS and NBC locked-up the best available TV stations outside the top-10 markets and - they had their radio star power locked up in television. Not so for ABC-TV - which, in April of 1953 - had 13 primary affiliates serving about 35% of the country. Places such as Syracuse, Rochester and Providence wouldn’t see ABC-TV programming for years - but they could tune into CBS and NBC. Also in 1953 - another network - Dumont - was fighting for ad dollars, affiliates and programming. It was a 2 ½-station world where there were four networks. What to do? First knock off the other weak competitor - Dumont. What came first? Better programming.
    [Show full text]
  • Rosemary Clooney Dvds
    0 DV-10531 0 DV-16424 • The Bob Hope Chevy Show - 3/10/57 Wally Cox, Lana Turner, Rose- • Biography - Rosemary Clooney: Girl Singer 12/22/2001 mary Clooney, and Steve Allen(cameo in Wally Cox skit) 60 min w/o/c Order Form (Major Quality Upgrade) 0 DV-16480 • Command Performance - An All Star Salute to President Reagan – 0 DV-10558 ABC 11/11/89 Guests include Jane Seymour, Harry Hamlin, Frankie Rosemary • The Bob Hope Special - 5/19/90 USO Road Show To the Berlin Wall Laine, Rosemary Clooney, Robert Klein, James Stewart, Frankie Avalon, and Moscow with Rosemary Clooney, Yakov Smirnoff, Miss Universe Shirley Jones, Bobby Rydell, LaToya Jackson, and Fabian 46 min Clooney Mona Grudt, Latoya Jackson, and Brooke Shields 90 min w/o/c Number of DVDs Ordered ________ 0 DV-16792 DVDs 0 DV-10826 • The Colgate Comedy Hour - 3/29/53 Rosemary Clooney, Mickey Cost per DVD (1-9/$15 10+/$12) ________ • The Bob Hope Buick Show - 5/15/59 Rosemary Clooney, Joan Col- Rooney, and The Bell Sisters. 60 min w/o/c lins, Wendell Cory, and Sam Snead 53 min 0 DV-17691 Total Cost of Order ________ 0 DV-11062 • The Bob Hope Special - NBC 3/2/83 The Road to Hollywood Starring • Colgate Comedy Hour - 6/14/53 Bob Hope, Rosemary Clooney, Lucille Ball, Janis Paige, Dina Merrill, Martha Hyer, Rosemary Clooney, Frankie Laine, Bess Myerson, and Randy Merriman (No Credits) 47 Virginia Mayo, Jane Russell, Rhonda Fleming, Dorothy Lamour, Martha Name: ______________________________ min Raye, Jill St. John, and George Burns 100 min Mailing Address: ______________________ 0 DVD-11100
    [Show full text]