EditoriaLLy Speaking ... T O DAY we're feeling pretty doggone very publication. It is authoritative il1 smort. We know, for instonce, 't ho t the sense t h(l t much research h(ls the first womon to sing over the radio gone into its preparation. It is good was Madame Eugenia Farrar, the reading in t h(lt the p(lr(lde of charac­ Swedish concert artist. We know presi­ ters which it depicts is a colorful one, dential election returns were put on and the era which it covers is crowded the air for the fi rst time in 1920, that with signific(lnt events. the first church of the air was heard The e(lriy days of r ~dio and t he in 1921 and that the first opera conditions under which inventors strug· broadcast was made in 192 3. In f(let, gled (IIld artists worked (I re the most there (Ire m(l ny things (lbout r(ldio we interesting. They ~re vivi d, alive and know this week we hectic. Ra dio's more didn't know before. re c e nt a c complish­ We've been (lssimi­ ments (I re as yet too la ting this information familiar to most to be in 0 not only painless as thrilling, but t hey but enioY(lble f(lshion round out a complete the past few days by picture nicely. reading a new book Dr. John Ro mulus on radio just issued: Brinkle y, t he fabulous "Sound ond Fury," by Kansan who become Froncis Chase, J r. known via radio for an (Harper's, $3.00) . unusual operation he Labeled "on infor­ developed and per· m(ll history of brO(ld­ formed, and his battles c(lsting," the work is Fra ncis Chase, Jr., with the American just th(lt . From the author of new book Medical Society ma ke wireless operator in, on rlldio just iss ued (In interesting chapter, Brooklyn Navy Yard !\ ... - "Sound li nd Fury" (IS does the radio his­ who heard a woman's tory of F(lther Charles voice coming over the (lir inste(ld of E. Coughlin, the famed r(ldio priest. the usu(ll dots ond d(lshes in 1907 to Other personalities, milestones of a prediction of whM r(ldio will become broadcasting and interesting "inside" when the W(lr is over, the book is com­ stories add to the book's interest. pletely absorbing to onyone at all All in 011, "Sound and Fury" is a "Well, here I am all by me wittlo self-and in II jam. Ain't I II mess?" interested in this industry's history and complete, informative, well-rounded b(ldground. history of r(ldio and the personalities Francis Ch(lse, Jr., the (luthor, is a who m(lde it. Anyone who thrills to the widely experienced reporter (lnd f(lcile twist of a dial will thrill to the flip of writer who brings to this first book a its pages as t he dr(lmatic story of wide knowledge of radio, much of it broadc(lsting unfolds. obtained (IS a staff member of this -The Editors.

MOYIE-RADIO GUIDE CO NTENTS Atte nt ion, S e rvice Men ! H e re's "Your Blind Date" ...... Movie · Radio G uide Vi sit$: " T he Nationa l Barn Danee" . 2 Movie-Radio G uide Recommends: "Butch Minds the Baby". 3 "Um.m-m, bllbble gum! If I do-" "I get a whipping ... I dood it!" Why George Montgome ry Is Marrying H edy .. . 4 Ban ishing T hose "Big City Blues!"...... 5 The Bar bour F amily, as S een by Neighbor Mrs. Ca rlton E. Morse ( Part 3)...... 6 T he Movie F ront, by Evans P lumm e r . 8 T he Radio F ro nt, by L ie ut. Col. Curtis Mitchell, Glen A nderson, Don Moore ano Arthur Mill e r ...... 10 Classical Music, by Robe rt B~gar . . . . 12 Shor t Waves, by C harles A. Morri! on ...... 14 Frequeney Modulation, by Diek Dorrance ...... 16 Programs Broadcast Mo nd.:ays Th,·ough F r idays ...... 18·t9 Other Prog rams .. .' ...... 20·31 Mo.>;. W inners in the " Defe nse Bond- Stamp Slogan Contest" ...... 32 F e minine Fo r um, by Albe rta North . .34 Wha t's Coo k ing! by G eo r g Ia Scott. .•.. :15 Cover Photo by ttVI,I:tl! t'rcuhch Volume 11 , N umber 28 Apr il 18·24, 1942 "Whee! Sticky stuff, lIin't it7" "This will only lead to bloodshed!" •. "~UI .~ ..W "",TV" , ..! .•. "'·11, ..<1<, x,,'~"''' ... A.'" ,'."'" '.AT'u.'· u ••'~~. ~",.,," I,.r""" b~.,,!wJ\ ;1\ I'",,,,,,,,,,, l .. ". l'hk•• u. lUlu.i, '·"u ... c·,'''.' "H.I"">: . ,,",11 ,.j"c~, ,'"'-'''''''.''.' '·'",.c·ruo:. ~'''H'' lA·,,1. A""'·"·'~ ~.,.T,,". t;,.. o· "'U""''''. "~"~~.:oo.I; ,~.... )I_e. ) !!~"""; -",Iou, .\I'"er. ~.". "I DODD IT" lu,k; U',"ard ""''''0,"0. " ,o~ ..",,; J.", •• <'. U'''''.'. t.,'ue.'I~"; t·" .... "" M",,' ..., . ~J ..', "",,e.: 1>1 .... 1)0"" "0•• · f .... "e .. '_ )1 .... ",,,, ..,; I:o....r, " ...,. n.".u. IIU".. ". ':'.1< "'.' .",.",.<1 ••• ",."e, .' ,I", '·u,( '''tI«. '·h' ..~". 1111'", •. Fe",u"" ~,. 1~1t. ""hl .•eU·.d· I. " .. t.,lrtI ~""'. with Tom Sawyer, Peck's Bad Boy, darling of listeners-and you'll be .'·""·""''''U.' UU" In II ..... ~ ...>, ror ..."", '" '"~""P"o", '" tho it" is sweeping the country by storm. tell·-" and "Ouch! You broke me 'u,,, .... ,,,"oo ,><.""",,,,,. "II I' b",,,,"" '."''''. t'h'.. ~ •. "11,,.1>. , . >:"~~,, ", ~. ". ~. It took Red's young gag-writing wife, wittle head!"-all adding up to one of Edna, a lony time, though, to con- the brightest comedy spots of the year.

II/a I' ATTENTION, SERVICE MEN! HERE'S "YOUR BLIND DATE"

" YOUR. BLI ND DATE" is not only a radio show but the real thing for bluejackets. dough­ boys (above) who attend the broadcast each week, dance with pretty girls afterw ard SO NGSTRESS on the "Blind Date" show, which goes C oast to Coast April 20, is C onnie Haines, above, with Nathan Scott and his "Date" orchestra. Wac ~ y L ATEST radio show to spoilight entertain- women's hats boys wear get a laugh from audience. ment for service men is "Your Blind Date." During show a wh ole bevy of lovely girls, invited Beginning as a West Coast show, only a few to broadcast by emcee Scully, sit on the stage with weeks ago, program goes Coast to Coast over east, dance afterward (below) with service-men guests, Blue Network April 20. Time: Mondays, 9:00 p.m. EWT. Emceed by Frances Scully, show features Connie Haines, comediennes like Brenda and Cob ins, and Tizzie L ish, together w ith the Melodates. A movie star is also highlighted in a skit each week. Unique feature of the program is that service men who attend the broadcast at Radio City in Hollywood really have a blind date in store for them after the show, when they dance with girls that emcee Scully in­ vites to be their hostesses for the evening. Soon as the program is over, the stage is cleared of mikes and other props, a juke box is set in motion, and boys take their pick of pretties on the stage to dance with them. Another grand feature that Miss Scully has brought to the ''Blind Date" program, styled for service men, is the letter read each week by a mother to her son in America's armed forces. A separate recording is made of this FRANCES SC UllY, charming emcee of this all-girl feature and presented to the mother by emcee show for Uncle Sam's boys, talks over " Blind Scully, which makes "Your Blind Date" sbow Date" script with guest star lucill e Ball (right) a national family affair for the boys. MOVIE-RADIO GUIDE VISITS: "The National Barn · Dance"

W E'VE visited the Old Hayloft, borne of the "National Barn Dance," be1ore. We like to drop in there, because the Hayloft gang, with their genuine pep and good nature and their aged-in-the-heart music, have a way of making one feel welcome and warm-spirited. So we took in a recent special anniversary broadcast of the ''National Barn Dance" to make sure the Old Hayloft was still the same. It was the tenth anni­ versary of the show's moving into Chicago's Eighth Street Theater, though the WLS "Barn Dance" itself, from which the ''National Barn Dance" sprung, is older, in fact eighteen years old this week. The same old crowds swarm laughingly into the doors of the theater and till it twice each Saturday night, though the show's admission fee is unique in broadcasting. In the decade of frolickinl in the Eighth Street Thea­ ter, the stage of which Is popularly known as the Old Haylolt, more than one million fans have paid $662,000 to see the shows. And nobody ever asked for his money back. On two successive Saturday nights recenUy a survey was taken among 1,000 of the 4,800 people attending. It was 10und that 447 towns in thirty-four states, Canada and England were represented. And probably some of those in attendance had been visiting the Old Hayloft more or less regularly during the past ten years. They've learned that this rustic spot in the heart of metropoli­ tan Chicago is a dandy place to shed cramping sophistication as easily as taking oft their shoes. It's a .fine place in which to forget the high cost of living and war 10r a while, and have some plain, lively fun.

STAGE-PROP barn rafters sway with laughter and applause (above) as the "National Barn Dance" goes on the air Saturday night over NBC, coast to coast. The Hoosier Hot Shoh mill around emcee Joe Kelly, who is introduc­ ing the show. Other performers will drift in and float about the Old Hayloft in free-and-easy manner. After the opening of the show there's plenty of wnoop-de-Ia without the prompting of the "applause" signs

/ JOE KElLY (above) is the chuckling gent who welcomes you to the "Barn Dance" with: "Hello, hello, mother and dad, grandmother and grand-dad and all the kids! How's everybody tonight7" Kelly is also emcee of "Quiz Kid s" and veteran Jolly Joe of children's programs on station WLS. "National Bam Dance" script is written by Jack nost. Bill Jones directs, and Pete Lund handles for the agency

ABOVE: Some may call the music RIGHT: The hillbilly ballads of Lulu of the Hoosier Hot Shoh "corny." Belle and Skyland Scotty were a But the farm boys have popular fixture of earty "National made plenty out of their re<-'Ord s, Barn Dance" days. They are fea­ personal appearances and WOrl on tured again after a few seasons at the "Barn Dance" and other radio WLW, Cincinnati. In private life progams. They are, L to r., Henie they've been married (Mr. and Mrs. Trietsch, Gabe Ward, Ken Trietsch, Scott Wiseman) since 1934, have nank Kettering. Fondled by Henie two children. Both North Carolina is wonder-washboard Sophronia born, they met on the "Barn Dance" 2 (CONTINUED ON PAGE 33) MOVIE-RADIO GUIDE RECOMMENDS: UButch Minds the Baby"

HOLLYWOOD'S newest and most adorable discovery is lusty, apple-cheeked Harold Michael Barnitz, thirteen-month-old wonder boy who won a Universal contract in race with 150 other babies 10r screen job. Sunny dispositioned, only time Mike cries is when he's put to bed; then he sets up a yell. But after protest, he goes to sleep, isn't heard from again until morning. Mike's mother, a nurse before her marriage, doesn't believe in coddling, keeps him on a strict feeding, rest and sleep schedule. Says Mike's dad, Blair Barnitz, sales manager for a heating-system: "We aren't concerned over the idea of a movie career, fame, for Michael. The opportunities and advantages would be nice, but if it doesn't work out, we can still give him a good home and the necessary training that makes for useful citizenship." Studio executives who worked with Baby Michael were much more ex­ cited over his prospects than parents. Director Al Rogell even thought up speeches for him to make in "Butch Minds the Baby," until Brod Crawford (Butch) reminded him that kids of that age wouldn't be apt to carryon such adult conversation. "All right, all right," Rogell came back, "but this baby's a wUahi.~ That retort got plenty of laughs on the Universal lot; that is tmtil Baby Michael commenced doing his stuff, justified the director's praise of his talents. And when movie-goers hear Butch telling Michael how much he loves him in "Butch Minds the Baby," he isn't act­ ing; for lines voice the feelings of "Butch" Crawford; as a matter of fact, everyone who works with Baby Michael.

BABY IN A MILLION is Movietown's verdict on thirteen-month.old Harold Michael Barnih \abovel, star performer in the Univer5al film "Butch Minds the Baby." PictUre (eft) shows how Butch (Broderick Crawford) manages it. First youngster tested out of 150, director AI Rogel! insists that Baby Mike is a natural· born actor, hits his cues right on the dot. is tops for ali·time screen babies!

HIGHLIGHT in film from story BUTCH meets Baby Mike when he "GREAT kid, wish I had a dozen AFTER safe--cracking (done in a by Damon Runyon is scene where is forced to take the undignified like him. even though he is a scene· good cause) Baby Mike is awarded uninvited guest upsets gaiety of "lOb of janitor, finds his mother stealer," says Brod Crawford. first prize in Easter Walk Baby Pa· welcome·home banquet for Butch Virginia Bruce), a widow, is broke Above: Butch and Mike blow safe rade, and everybody takes a bow! 3 Why George Montgomery Is Marrying Hedy

A Stalled Car and a Driving Rain-Storm - These Were In­ gredients for Love at First Sight!

URPRISE nole that ushered in spring for S Hollywood, and a high note in romance to boot, was the announcement of Hedy Lamarr that she was going to marry ex-cowboy George Montgomery. George's rapid rise on the movie front has had aU Movietown talking; but his lassoing of the beart-throb of several million masculine movie-goers, and the most beautiful girl in the fl.lm colony, via the left-hand, third-finger route, had the village speechless. Well, almost! Their first meeting that was a prelude lor romance is one lor the book, too. George was walking down Wilshire Boulevard, in Holly­ wood, one rainy afternoon, when he spied a much-distressed girl in a stalled car at the curb. The motor was grumbling, refusing to talk, so George offered help. It wasn't until the motor responded to his coaxing that George looked up and observed: "You look and talk like Hedy Lamarr." Being a robust ex-cowhand from the great open spaces of , George rudn't faint­ but he came near to it-when the beauty smiled and said, "I am Hedy Lamarr." Instead, he swnmoned his courage and asked for a date. That date led to another and another, and whizzed right up to an engagement for life before Movietown rOlllance-rwnors really had time to simmer, let alone boil! Montgomery, now a contract player at 20th Cenwry-Fox, was a cowboy sans any movie experience when Darryl Zanuck signed him on his personality and good looks. Questioned about his engagement to the dream girl of a million men, George said: "I have two more pictures to make, and Hedy has two; but we aren't going to wait that long." (George's next picture will be playing oppo­ site Linda Darnell in "Orchestra Wife," which leads to the conclusion that his luck is really double-barreled on all fronts.) Hedy, M-G-M star, when interviewed on the set of "'Til You Return," said she hadn't set any definite date for the wedding but that it would be some time this summer. General consensus among those in the know in Hollywood Is that the pair will slip away quietly with Hedy's mother one of these week­ ends, possibly before this issue of MOVIE-RADIO GUIDE hits the newsstands, and be married without any great fanfare or publicity, thus culminating fllmdom's most recent romance which grew from love at first sight.

WHAT young man's fancy wouldn't turn- to thoughts of love in spring, or any other season for that matter, when the girl is Hedy Lamarr? George Montgomery, to whom Hedy became engaged, agrees A BIT OF HOME for service men Ilway from home is Stage Door Canteen. CANTEEN will be open daily from 5 p.m. until midni9ht for the duration. sponsored by the American Theater Wing War Service, Inc. Canteen is There is no admission charge to uniformed men, and al1 facilities of club, loeated in Manhattan's 44th Street Theater, west of Broadway. Any mon includin9 refreshments, dancin9 and general entertainment, are free to ser­ wearing -the un iform of America's armed forces is al wa'f\ welcome. Stars vice men. Above: Hostess BeHe D.wis. Below, center: Se lena Royle, co-chtlir­ of stage, ,screen and rad io receive them. Above: Hostess Tallulah Bankhead man on canteen committee, Gertrude lawrence, Re9inald Gardiner entertain

B'a n ish in g Those

JOHN GARFIELD also appeared DANCING partner for uniformed on the entertainment roster for can· men at the canteen WtlS Betty Field, teen. Through combined efforts, tal­ "BIG CITY BLUES!" talented movie star on vactltion in ents of theater crofts, the Stage . Five hundred youn9 wo­ Door Canteen has been radeeo­ men of the theater are re9istered tilted in 'li gay and modern manner for Theater Wing War Service

EW YORK with its throngs of gay Theater, just west of Broadway. --once the Little Club, one of Broad­ Canteen Is all of Broadway and Radio N crowds lind pleasure-seekers is a Open daily from 5 p.m. until mid­ way's night-spots during the 1920's City's salute to Amcrica's fighting legend to millions of Americans; but night for the duration, all service and 30's- were given rent free to the men. It is New York's way of saying to newcomers it can be the loneliest men are welcomed, made to feel at War Theater Wing by Lee Shubert, that the stars of stage, screen and city in the world, until they have home in gay, informal surroundings. veteran producer and theater opcrator. radio arc backing them up on the Cound their special niche and Criends Ali facilities of the canteen are free Through the combined efforts and home front, doing everything they to enjoy it with them. to any man who wears the uniform talents of the many theater crafts, can do to banish their blues among This is particularly true of service oC any of America's fighting forces the premises were entirely redone in New York's teeming millions. men who fmd themselves In the city on land, sea or in the air. This in­ a gay, but friendly. modern manner. As playwright Rachel Crothers, who for tbe first-and oCten for a s.hort­ cludes admission, refreshments, danc­ All services at the canteen, from headed the Stage Womell's War Relief time, with little or no money to spend ing, general entertainment. those of highly paid stars to dish­ in World War I and is now president and nowhere to go. Only time the general public was washers, are performed by volunteers, of the American Theater Wing, so Reali:ting the need for a home away admitted to the canteen was the first drawn trom the ranks of the theater aptly put It, "The whole purpose of from home for these boys, the Ameri­ two days the place opened. Admission and its many allied organizations. Stage Door Canteen is lO make a pool can Theater Wing War Service, Inc., to the previews was not by ticket Added to these is an impressive list into which the entertainment world an organization headed by big-name but by one of following foodstufTs: of free-lance newspaper artists, pho­ will pour its gifts for the men who entertainment folk, decided to do One pound of chcese or sugar, a jar tographers and many firms contribut­ are going to fight for us. It is the something about it and opened the of peanut butter, a jar of jelly or ing needed supplies for the canteen's most direct way we can give our Stage Door Canteen In former Little five cans of tomato soup. upkeep. In fact, the roster of con­ pride, our gratitude, and Godspeed Club Quarters at the 44th Street Quarters of the ,stage Door Canteen tributors indicates that the Stage Door to our bo)'s." • 11/=' 5 Th e BARBOUR FAMILY As Seen by Neighbor Mrs. Carlton E. Morse

Continuing the Fictionized Version

01 "One Man's FamI 'I" y, Radio's B e~t. Loved Serial. This Third Instalment

Brings a Happy Surprise, Grim Tragedy!

almost WILL a cessation of lile home and Clifford returned to the rather than make an admission of its Barbour lamily home, and the house earthy, cruder aspects. Anne was one next door once more stood empty. of these. The sheltered, almost hid­ Clifford was like a lost child alter den life she lived with her unworldly that. Alternately sobbing his heart out father had done nothing to mitigate and running blindly, madly, bumping her own inborn instinct for retreat himself Into all sorts of hurtlul situa­ from harshness of any sort. tions and problems seeking assuage­ The honeymoon, a trip to the ment of his pain. There seemed to be Orient aboard the China Clipper, no end to the trouble he found, and given them by Father Barbour, was no way his family could help. They thrill and adventure to Clifford. It stood by helpless until the night he was one long violence to Anne. A drove his car into a maintenance truck violence of her very spirit. They did on the San Francisco-Oakland bridge. not think alike, they did not feel The whole story of that accident never alike, To Anne, steeped in a deep, came to light, but this much was dis­ almost Old World culture, Clifford's covered: Clifford had gone to Berke­ brashness, robust vig­ ley to make one more effort to come The first two imralmenu 0/ Mn. orousness, was a for­ to an understanding with Anne. The Carlton MOTse', jicti011ized version of eign language. The outcome of that last desperate effort the radio serial "One Man's Family," -H.""."~_ things she held im­ for reconciliation was so final, so HAPPY SURPRISE, tinged with amaze­ heard evcTY Sunday night at 8:30 portant, counted dear, devastating that Clifford turned home­ EWT oveT NBC, under the sponsor­ ment, is what Betty (Jean Rouverol) and were beyond his reach. ward dazed and almost blind with ship of Tender Leaf Tea, introduced Jack (Page Gilman) bring to the Barbours H e loved her music grief and hysteria! The accident on readers to Father and Mother Bar­ with their unexpected, successful marriage and stood in pleased the bridge undoubtedly was caused by bOUT and their five children-Pauly amazement at her abil- the strain he was under. That accident veteran of World War J; Hazel, her ities, but he could not was to have a far-reaching' effect on father's favorite; the twins, Claudia understand them. To Clifford's life, for It left him with a and Cliff; Jack, the youngest 80n, said that the first brother to many Clifford a swing tune was much more silver plate in his skull. Years later, and Paul's adopted daughter, Teddy. will get it just as it stands for a wed­ intriguing than a sonata. when the country's need for men was Trouble clouds gather when Claudia, ding present. Paul, CliO or Jack~ For months the gallant efforts Clif­ urgent, he tried to enlist in the Army left a rich widow with onc daughter, which ORe will it be? Now go on Wit/I ford and Anne made for each other and was refused. That was the final Joan, quarrels with her family and tile story.-The Editors. kept them together, but it couldn't and perhaps the most bitter of the rushes off to Europe; CliO, the play­ last. Th·ey loved deeply but could only wounds received by Clifford as the boy, /olls in love with a girl who T WAS Clifford who first moved carry that love in their hearts, always result of his tragic marriage to Anne. turns him down; Hazel finds that her into the house next door-the house seeking, never finding ,a common Clifford's grief, puzzlement and husband, Bilt Herbert, is a victim of I Claudia promised to the first of her resting-place on which to plaoee their harassment reached a climax the day amnesia; Jack, the kid, gets interested brothers who married. Clifford and love; never ,any foundation for future news came that Anne was dying. She in girls, and Paul struggles with the his beautiful wife Anne. Her name years together. Anne perhaps suffered died, the doctor said, only because problem of being a bachelor fatller was Anne Waite, the daughter or a least in this maelstrom of emotion, she refused to live. Clifford had not to Teddy_ Mother and Father Barbour professor of music. and she was a fine for she had some escape in her music, even known she was to have his child, finally follow Claudia to Europe, find musician and composcr in her own her books, her tremendous mental re­ and his anguish and rebellion at that she has realty fallen in love with right. Neither Clifford nor any of his courses. Clifford had none oC these to Anne's death turned almost to hatred a Captain Nicholas Lacey, British family, except perhaps Paul, had ever soften the blow to his pride, to mod­ Cor the son she left. Mother Barbour nobleman. Reconciled with her par_ known anyone quite like her. She erate his knowledge that he had failed took the baby, sure that in some way ents, Claudia returm home, marries was Hke a gentle strain of music her­ hopelessly with this woman he loved. she could open Clifford's heart and Captain Lacey. Their purchase of a self, so gossamer delicate were all her Clifford's mind was a wide, straight arms to the little boy, all that was ranch keeps family excitemellt bub­ reactions to life. Clifl'ord loved her road leading from one end of his life left to them of poor, lost, unhappy blillg, and Father Barbour is elated madly, fIercely, but his efforts to ap­ to the other. Anne's mind was full or Anne. It was months before Mrs. Bar­ over the fact that CliO has quieted proach her softly, to reach her plane little winding paths, small. secret by­ bour succeeded In her hope, but the down and become a paTtner in his of thought and feeling were obviously ways wherein she and her broken day did come when Clifford held his Dad's stock-and-bond business. Hazel's failures from the moment they were heart might hide. There was no such son in his arms. From that day to PToblem isn't solved, but it has been married. Anne tried and Clifford tried, retreat for Clifford, no spot on his this they have been inseparable. lightened bU a talk with Paul. Big but it was like trying to put a slar open road where he could bind _his Young J. D., alias The Skipper. as question is, who will move into in your pocket. They simply didn't wounds in hiding. They were there his father calls him, Is four years old Claudia's beautiful city home, now fuse. for all the world to see, and all of us now and is the happiest, dearest that she and her new husband have Some there are who can never face in the neighborhood grieved with him thing in Clifford's world. The last gone to the Tanch? For Claudia has the world and its realities, who can when Anne returned to her father's four ycars have brought several in- 6 III " I' •

THE CAST The Character The Player Father Henry Barbour ...... J. Anthony Smythe Mother Fanny Barbour ...... Minetta Ellen Clifford Barbour .. Barton Yarborough Claudia Roberts Lacey ...... Ktllhlccn Wilson Hazel Burbour Herbert...... Bernice Berwin Paul Barbour ...... Michael Raffetto Teddy Barbour (Paul's adopted daughter). . ... Winifred Wolfe J ack BMbour...... Page Gilman Captain Nicholas Lacey ...... Walter Paterson Betty Carter Barbour ...... Jean Rouverol •

Icresting girls into Cliff's life, but none s" interesting that she quite measured up when with J. D. (John Doe), and so they departed out of Clifford's life as easily as they had come in. About the names "Skipper" and "J. D.," Clif­ ford maintains 1:1 child should be a1- 10wc<1 tn select hl~ ",,\\1. 1''l.ll:C. SU until his son ;s of an age to lJick and choose he is to be knowlt by his "lillie nflrrcs." We wondered if ever the "house next door" would have peace and love and happiness in it. Then Just when It scemed fatl..'y, so lusty, so young. so "meant-to-be" that we for­ got Clifford's tragedy and joined thc excitement caused by Jack's marriage to little Betty Carter~ Those crazy kids! Those cr8%y kids! Yet not so craz)' after all, as time proved. They are the sort of youth which is rampant in the world today. They are completely and, oddly enough, very wisely sure of them- ~elvCl'i and what they wallt from life. Jack They had plenty oC clothes anyway, fere in the completion o[ Jack's law a r. d AeHy had known just being together was all the Cun course. Betty was doing her best to al.,-:ost since childhood TRAGEDY strikes through the death of they needed and they could wait Cor become a good housekeeper and cook they were destined Anne, Cliff's (Barion Yarborough's) wife. children until Jack's college education and they were having a completely, for each other, and Big sister Halel (Bernice Berwin), shown was completed. absolutely wonderful time living their with no advice, In fact with Cliff, also faces break-up of marriage There seemed tQ be no flaws in this own Jives, when something so shock­ not even the knowl­ arrangement except for a certain dis­ ing happened in the Barbour family edil'e or'their families, satisfaction Betty's mother began to that all the branches instantly became they secretly married feel at the economic straits her daugh­ a single unit; a loving Corce to guard ... years bcfore it became known, fer at all. Very well, stormed Father ter must face. Mrs. Carter's attempts and sustain the grief-stricken mem­ They had kept their secret well and Barbour, what were they Intending to influence Betty came to nothing, ber. The member was Hazel! Fate had only giggled together when Clif­ to live on? Just what they had been though, for Betty was firm in her de­ suddenly and viciously struck at her ford and Anne had moved into the living on, said Jack. cisions and very determined that she through her husband, Bill Herbert, huuse next door. Their house, because A plan was finally made that satis­ and Jack make their own way with­ destroying her whole world! Claudia had promised it to the first fied both the Carters and the Barbours out parental interference. Father (To be continued) of her brothers to marry. But only and more than satisfied the young Barbour did not use his generosity as tlley knew that, and they never meant couple. They would live in their an excuse to force his opinions upon Read this heartwarming story, for anyone to know of their prior house. tor it really was theirs, thanks them, though he frequently offered adapted by Mrs. Carlton E. MOTse, claim, but now that Clifford and Anne to Claudia. Father Barbour would advice, and that only some of it was then listen to "Olle Man's Family" had lert it, Jack and Betty moved in. continue the allowance he had been put into practise he did not resent. over NBC- written by Cariton E. 'fhere were reverberations for making Jack and they would live on It was surprising how much sound Morse and heard every Sunday at weeks from Jack's family and from that as best they could. Jack and sense the two youngsters had. They 8:30 p.m. EWT, 7:30 CWT, 6:30 MWT, Betty's family. The children were too Betty were wild with joy! Surely this made their small allowance go so 5:30 PWT, under the sponsorship of young to marry. To that the children was heaven. They had their own much further than seemed possible. Tender Leaf Tea. blandly answered that they WERE house. a family acknowledgment and They must have had many financial marricd. Jack's college education was agreement to their marriage, and each problems, but never a murmur of not complcte, his whole career at other! Of course the tiny budget complaint came over the hedge to Coming Sooo­ stake. To that they answered, Jack would not allow for children, or new the Barbours. would complete his course at the uni­ clothes, or much or anything that re­ They were living up to their agree­ Winners in the Star of Stars Poll versity, and his career would not suC- quired money but. who cared? ment to not permit anything to inter- 7 T HE E HTERTA I I.M[N T WEEK The Movie Front Abbott and Costello Plan to Raise S500,OOO for the Army Emergency Relief Fund; Carole Landis Denies Marriage Plans; Clark Gable May Sell War Bonds

cendiary bomb exploded last week, the latter that now he will be "the cales! ... Edward Arnold's twenty­ HOLLYWOOD will be a veritable exhibition of the voice" for "The Pied Piper," which one-year-old son, Bill, is now ~\l By EVANS PLUMMER latest approved gadgets and devices he's also directing. and "The Loves Army Air Corps cadet ... Bette Davis for civilian defense. One of these Is of Edgar Allan Poe" ... By the way, is selling out her Hollywood real OLLYWOOD leading men and the "Fire-Hter," a specially designed Roddy McDowall's father, ashore estate and homes; likes New England directors are marching off to trailer to be hitched onto any privnle brieny from his work as officer on best ... Milry Pickford now has Pick­ H WDr faster timn conscientious automobile, with pumps powered by convoy duty for His Majesty's Navy, fair open to USO-okayed service men objectors can assert themselves! Ron­ the latter. Another machine is the has returned to sea. Mickey Roo­ daily from 2 to 6 p.m .... Jimmy ald Reagan, star of the currently mono-ambulance, a scooter-powered ney and Sidney Miller, his tune col­ Cagney has kissed Warners good-by shown "Kings Row" and next to be adaptation of the old motorcycle side­ laborator, would like you to know and started his own producing com­ screened in "Juke Gir!." who has held car. but one in which an injured per­ that their fourth song, "Cymbal Sock­ pany; he'll release through United a rescrve lieutenancy in the U. S. son lies full length and is protected in' Sam," is published and on sale at Artists Barbara Stanwyck gave Cavalry ever since he lelt college, has by a rigid canopy of plexiglass ... the music-counters. . Orson Welles her full s.1lary check for her "Penny been called to active service April 19. will end his RKO pact after making Serenade" broadcast to United China John Huston. Warncr Bros. director, What goes and where: Irving Pich­ one more picture; he has about three War Relief .. Republic is looking was granted time to flnish his work on el, the rme actor-director who did the linished or almost fini~h.ed pictures over the field for new leading ladies "Across the Pacific" and will Join the unbilled narration job on that excel­ awaiting release ... UI'II",rsal now (or Gene Autry 'Tis said Clark U. S. Army Signal Corps as first lieu­ lent "How Green Was My Valley" has the "Sherlock Holmes" rights and Gable is contemplating a natic.nal tenant April 27. Bill Holden. young picture. has clicked so big be<:ause of will film 'the stories in modern 10- tour to sell war bonds

LEFT; Lew Ayres aboard train that took hiM to a work camp in Cascade Locks, Oregon, tel!s II reporter lind a 50ldier reasons that led him to tllke a conscientious objector's route when clliled for active service in the U. S. Army

RIGHT: Lovely Virginia Field, in her snllpPY VACS (Volunteer Army Canteen Service) uni­ form, turn!. ticket-seller to raise funds for can­ teen. Buyers are Dorothy Lamour and Albert Usher. Place: The Hollywood Brown Derby

actor and husband of Brenda Mar­ Most lavish, glamorous and funniest shall. became a private in thc Army set in town is Paramount's "Road to April II, and the much maligned Oleg Morocco," where Dave Butler is fret­ Cassini, dress-designing husband of ting over the direction of Bing Cros­ beauteous Gene Tierney, is reported by. Bob HOI)e and Dorothy Lamour. to be receiving his U. S. citizenship Right now the trio is milling about in papers in a few days and enlisting the vast courtyard of Princess La­ immediately as a buck private. He mour's boudoir, I guess it is. and also told me, shortly after his nlar­ slaves, soldiers, Arabs and the loveli­ riage to the glamour queen, that he est handmaidens in town arc part of intends to drop his count title when the set dressing. Hope and Crosby keep he becomes a citizen. That, of course. the place in an uproar. Butler chews is automatic. But If Oleg does all that his nails ... One of the (unnlest gags he promises. he will quiet much talk, in the picture is when Hope, haunliJ1g just or unjust Ring in a dream and dressed as his own deceasf!d Aunt Lucy. admonishes Doing their bit In another impor­ Crosby for selling Bob into slavery tant way are Abbott and Costello. for $200. In a cracked soprano voice, comedy kings, who have been asked '"Aunt Lucy" starts to tell Crosby by Undersecretary of War Robert P. what to do in order to rescue Hope Patterson to devote their money-rais­ from the slave~lraders, and winds ing activities preferably to the need­ with, "Can'l teU you the rest. I've ful AI'my Emergency Relief Fund got to go now. Here comes Mr rather than other activities. such as Jordan" .. their '"Buy-a-Bomber" campaign. A & C had planned to raise $350,000 in Casting and contract.~: Van Hellin. personally financed theater appear­ the M-G-M phenom, is being tested ances. Now they have raised their for the lead priest role in Cronin's ante to $500.000 and will open May 6 '"Keys of the Kingdom" _ .. Fredric at the Golden Gate Theater. San ~larch is here to start work in "I Francisco. in the first of these appear­ Married a Witch." with Veronica Lake ance swings. to make at least $20.000 --5~ .... <., •.• ... 20th-Fox has'rediscovered Brenda as their first instalment of their JACK BENNY dons Father of His Country regalia in order to capture Joyce ('"The Rains Came"). most pledged sum _ the mood for his new Warner Bros. picture, "George Slept shapely of all Hollywood starlets. and Here," based on the Broadway hit by the same title. Carefully guarding has cast her In three new and good Monogram's picture "She's in the Benny's slumber mood (left to right) are; June Millarde, Jean Ames, Ann pictures. The same lot has SigllCd Ann Army." on the set of which the in- Corcoran, Juanita Stark and Dolores Moran, Warner Bros. starlets Rutherford away from M-G-M; Annic 8 THE ENTERTAINMENT WEEK

Brief Picture Guide Find Your Best Entertainment Here

EXPLANATION ; RUings of pi~turcs are In Vs-"fo, Viuory"---Ind VYYV. I. four·Y rilting. i5 l((o'dtd only iI top"lnlr.in,. illmosl periHI pro~u(lion. YYY is iI winner. uullentl,lm I~'t; VV i5 lYer.ge, .nd v. unfo'tunilttly. 15 below ... t ragt. Nalurill-color films 1ft so inditlltd IS "In (olor" right ilter the t,tie, .nd ALL films art judged al ··a~ull." "family," or Simply "ju~enilt" filrt.-THE EDiTORS.

OUTSTANOING OF \IARTI~ BAIIA~IA I'ASSAGE (\'\'). In Set il.-hmily. (010' ..\Iadoleillt Car,oU and Stir· EDE~ (\'n'): Gltnn Fo.d, E~. lon, Ih yd~n bll in lewt 0" I BABES OX OROADWAY I)-n Kt}-e, in ulty 1~le of h~1l 1V~.t Indian salt t.y.-Adull. (\'\.\.\') Mitkty Iloo'''~ and .h,p lIluliny.-F.mily_ Judy G.tland d.liver a"olher In­ CAPTAIXS OF THE n.oCDS i.h danein,; Inu,irOllled) of lhe BeT(."H MIXDS TilE 11,\0\ (V\'\'); H_ C. ,\_ F., Ji""'li~ Ca~. Bab .. ,o,iu.-FBmily. (\'\-\"): Broo CrawfQrcl " "f}", ."d ucile",ellt. A1o" of nith JOII,\"'" EAGER (n'V), a,d t.I~wtllyn·s no\"tl.-~·a.lllily. COMEOIES HobNI Ta)'lor " Ih ~3"2'lt' KINGS HOI\' (\,\,V\") T,uly BALL Of Fill!:: ("\'VV)· lovo ,nil h.d who 13k., 1.01111 slarted at Republic with Gene Autry ~'UI pitlUriulio" of Ihe be_SI. TurtI.r 10 the (I.aneu.-Adull. Gar)' Cool'~r, iI~ a lo,·o,sla,,·w MOVIE REVIEW ~Ihng "ov~1 of nou,olio<, '"Ih 'Tis, whispered that George Mont­ bonk .. orlll. foll~ in 10"e "ilh K\TII1.EES (\·\·V) "hirl.~ ~t~ 1>e.fo,",."C CUllIllIinu. UM itu moll Barbara SI;", .. ~~k. ,,1'0 h~lle rich "-,,I.-Fanlil)· work in "Ten Gentlemen from West «.n, O~II)- Fitltl_-'-\,!ult """. "puIS hi", h~p. "'--"'I"il~ Kif) GI.II\E KILLEr. (\'\\"); "Juke Girl" Point" is seen ..• O~E FOOT [~ 1lE:.\\·I::~ [Spt URC!::~\", I~C "-V) Ed oial) \,V): 1"'I,i,.',onal \'a" 11"11",. of "Pulhdm'- ... ,,1 n-'-\ Robin":,,, lum~ 10 to,,,.! 10 mo RIT,\ Ivn'\"): Ont of prominent in the cast are Richard In the marriagc column, Errol AhooU 31111 (·o.'ell,,·. r.e-.I. "ilh d,,,,,'If tir! .i,,~r. 10, !'ki"n'j SIIEI'II£RD OF nlE 07..\RKS Whorf, George Tobias. Gene Loek­ Flynn and Lili Damila became single E'''li,' b,and_-Falllil,-_ Ih~ a.. M .. d "til of tood ",u'i<.­ Fan,ily. 1\'\"1 .\nll,- m3n""""", 1• ...1 hart, Alan Hale. Betty Brewer and again when she won an uncontested SO~ OF Ft"!n' t \'\'VV): A \\ fd' 0' IIro<. 4: EII-i,)- 10 I... litn TilE CQl'II1'SI1II' OF A~DY Faye Emerson. divorce, $200,000 in settlement, and mi .. "r. of exc;lin( In,·. an,l ~;Ih hiI,-. bet" ;n,-ad ..1. \\,Ih onttlll. SIU" T,-,nn. 1'0"'" an,1 liAR!)" 1\-\"\" _""olhor "ic~~, \ldfll", 11. .., Frank ,\Ibe". '". the custody or Sean Leslie Flynn, age ROOII<)", "ilh 1'3th' G.n~ Tir,,,.y.-Fa,,,,I, frcrha baok F_""il)" This Is the Story: The truck-farming ten months ... Private Jackie Coogan and O""n~ n.ttl in"",lurffl_­ region of interior Florida, a section Til" FLI':F.T·S !\ (\'\\'\'\ F,",il,·. Sl"f.li\.\S'S TIl\\I':I.S and wile admitted April 3 that they 1l0r.. ~ial) Th~ lank t"(I'J" lah. on' Str· '(v\"\"n') I"di .... ilh aU it. , ""1 W~llac. Oftl"}", tI,-all"}· one of thesc. BI'ent spoke her vows with Stephen nllilv. pi,·I"'" a 1n~lnd'."'."r r~",,",l)­ .boUI I'ubl!. tllem) :\0. Ollt \·,Id.LI':Y OF rUE SU" Reagan beats the charge against him, Bruce Cabot with starlet Katherine of "~I .Inchn Pola.,d. "ilh Jack pla)'i"l hi .If in -rH' "en III and settles down with Ann on the B"uny f"'~lar_-Fa'nil)" I\'\'V} Lu,ill. B.ll .nd J.",... Booth. . Belly Hutton is simply of h, ·,f. ·F tI) ("'"0' a I'" ,,- . ,IOry.­ farm that Tobias had willed to him. mad about Phil Silvers and vice Y.\:\K O~ TII~: RUm, F.m,ly. IIOAIl 1\'\'\"\') T"I';<,I and u CARTOONS versa: t just learned that she and Verdict! Strong, virile stuff, a guar­ rll,nt. Truehr liar,)· ",I",n ~IR BU; I.Ollb TO TOWN SHORT FEATURES Glenn Miller's Marian Hutton are sis­ .,,,1 LOflin. Ilo.- ~Ol ,11. "u (V\"V): In t"lo,_ Tho h."I. of anteed entertainment for film-goel's ters ... Michele Morgan and Bill Irurk, Ihro".h_· F.llllit.-. Ih~ to" I,· ,n,,"I, a~.i">1 Ih. CO\1~Tlty rAIR (\'V\'V): who like their plots and their char­ Girard Vicki Lester putting 011 MUSICALS lIumlil I-.'r~ ,,"ioh Ihink- IT y"" vi,~ .• lair full 01 talkill( acters raw and unadulterated. But ha, ~ I... nle "" il~ h,.d __ oni",.I· "-ue I .,d Imly!­ pounds with Terry Hunt. ALWAYS I", 'IY IInnT ~- mill adult only. ,. ,. ra""h 9 THE EHTERTAIHM E HT WEEk The Radio Front Elsa Maxwell Plugs Sponsor's Product by Reducing; "One Man's Family" Nears an Anniversary; "First Nighlern Slar Les Tremayne Grows a Beard

The Washington report by Lieut. She is following the Ry-Krisp diet, on that program. His background is as broadcasting Irom ship radio work. Col. Curtis Mitchell, 1lsually published and you can almost see her grow colorful as his name--Zero Mostel. He will serve in the United States Mer­ on this page, has been omitted this lighter. Society's big party-thrower is has had his fine oil paintings shown chant Ma rine a8'ain this summer as a week. Lieut. Colond MitcheU's inside down twelve pounds already-

By GLEN ANDERSON In about ten days, April 26 to be The West girds for war: Arch exact, "One Man's Family" (are you Oboler, at the request of George J. reading its thrilling fictlonization by Vogel, coordinator of Inter -American Mrs. Morse?) will observe its tenth Affairs, has granted the government anniversary on the air. Indeed . it is permission to use any or all of the radio's Royal Family. The serial plays of his current NBC series drama started as an experiment ; be­ ("Plays for Americans") without came the most popular drama on the charge; they'll be short-waved in air. It now may claim credit for guid­ Spanish and Portuguese to our friends ing the younger generation through on the south ... Monroe Upton, AI turbulent depression times, (or "bring­ Pearce writer who branched into Ing up" many youngsters properly!

BOB HO PE didn't get very fll r trying to throw former footbll U player Andy Devine (left) and form er professionll l w r e~ tl e r Man Mountain Dean after a recent Hope bro adc a~t. Dean. II World War I veteran, is an active Army sergeant, has permission to grow agai n his fi erce "wrestler's beard"

maestro, now in his seventy-fifth and for thr ight work as CBS cor­ y ear, looks quite spry as he makes his respondent; Norman Corwin's great way, eyes on the floor, Irom the Bill of Rights broadcast; "Against the studio elevators to his backstage Storm" among daytime ser ials; Alfred dressing-room. And cer tainly you Wallenstein for his diligent and con­ don't th ink of his age when you see sistent musicianship the fiery vigor of his musical direct­ ing ..• Eddie's Ida m ade one of her rare visits to one of Cantor's "Time to Milo Boulton, who traveled thou­ Smile" broadcasts recently. Eddie had sands of miles as master of cere­ promised h is modest wife he wouldn't monies on the "Defense for America" reveal her presence to the studio series, wilt be the master of cere­ audience, but he couldn't resist. Mrs. monies of the old show with a new Cantor graciously took a brief bow, theme, "We the People at War," when but said nothing. Whereupon the co­ it returns to CBS April 26. He joins a median remark ed to the audience that distinguished procession of "We, the the "no talk" policy would be re­ People" hosts-Phil Lord, Gabriel versed when Ida got him hornet ...

Heatter, Edgar A. Guest, BOrgess -C)...... _ •• Meredith, HalT)' von Zell and Eddie Listeners are perhaps wondering, Dowling ..• and those connected with the "Basin LOYAL Navy Girl Betty J ll ne Rhodes gets pointers on technique of salut­ Street Chamber Music Society" pro­ ing from lieut. John C~nady, N~v ~ 1 Aviation Cadet Selection Board Elsa Maxwell Is doing a double job gram are talking about the back­ officer, while Navy flight student Jllck Hilbert grins approval. Betty Jane of advertising her sponsor's product. ground of the new radio comic heard is song stress-hostess of the Mutual Network's new "Tune Up. America" 10 II, U l' THE EHTEItTAIHMEHT WEEK Coming Events New Shows: "Tillie the Toiler"; "Blind Date"; "People Are Funny"

SATURDAV. APRIL 18 ",,", prow: r.II" "'0' 't ,,"rlPI •• ~" ••I ~o",rtlie"". •· Ll'TI"ERY z~'" Pit!. ",II bt d~)~. \UC. ~"..r the ~1"IO. Blue . ,.. ... Co."., ...... ~ .,. .... ~, .. .,IS ..... •. 00 .... .,00 ., .. , Ibt K"t,1 star 0" "L".~"I" IIiKh ... ,'s.. ,., ...... , ".y" Ihi, !»I"rd~l _ 1'>IK .'n._­ .... , ?OO ...... 00...... ~...... c.~ ..., ...... --,.'- ",00 •. ",. '0,00 .... . _ •• t&,~ ~"" ... "I.L\ RADIO THEATER" "ill SUNDAY, APRIL t9 II,DO •. "', .0'00 .... , 1>O~""nI Frt",,01"1'-- f",... ItQII~"""" lloc" mo"" 10 an utlier I,mt of thtir hil fitm, "One Foot i" I,ar.rle ~o"'bu., ~",I '''' S""dl.' .•ffecli.·. Ihi, .. rp~ lIuHn," lhi, Monda,. fBS. will ",a"l' •••, ••" • C ~ ...., co"'girl I,kl"re slars uf Ih~ 1' ••1 ...-lIe "00 .,M. .,00 9,", ".,~ c ..... , ...U~ ...,.. ~ .. ,". alld ,lre_tlll before Ihe ""tro •.. , ••. M. ?·oo .... , .,00 .,m . 12~::" t; .. li<1 ".,., . "ho"t. Th guesl i"d"de" • ...• ,00 .' ... n,oo _ Willi.", S. H.rl, II.rry (',.rC)·. WE:DHESOAY. APRIL 22 Willi.", r."""",. Buck J""t_. Till, MIIRL"ES han l.ndc,1 Col. Ti,,, McCo"J lIa~ \\'hill~). U" tht airlall~S wilh Ihir ,.. ," "TtlS£ UP, AM£R1C\ I\ill OUTSPOKEN Cecil Brown , back Tc ~ Hitler. Charlc' SI ...~tl. , ..lio vru~,"m. It'~ a half hour I""CIII a •• l"e'l RUlh W.II JOHN GUNTHER, noted author in America after eventful term Ru,wU lIa.nlon. Co"looy 1I.",bln ,how of and by Ihc l~a1h~,"«~,. '1r." ...ho d•• i~n. I"rbi"e. fo, of the "Inside __" booh, is do­ Bold. And}' Clrde. Gabb~ Ihyt" ~all... "11311, of MOllltB('. Cor,.. ~ .. al San Oi"'lo. ('.!if, in •• d'.I",~·cr namw in ho,,,,r commentaries as latter v"c"tions ~ ..... ~ ""~" and il's in iu _OI,d "«k. 'IB" ", 0". of hec ."C .... I""'. Capla; ' ,.", ., ...... ,..".,~ C.o, •• ' ._...... ~...... ,...... ,:00 .... J"lu, £ri.. ,.,,,, ,,100 de.i(nw Iht ' , ...... -~ .. ;~ ~"".< i,~"da,' ""uniIOr" 01 ('iI'il \\'~ • ., ... ,.", 2,'" •. M f~,,,r. MRS . CO",.. , It's a great I'ecord author Carlton E. JACK 1I1' .... ;.;\' "iI! ~ XUC" 0" ...... ,...... 0' ...... ~ lady bug who had lost her way! . __ "~il~ec Thea!.r" i" • ,~diu .. Ia~ ... , Morse hai made for himself with .,00 •.;.'" .. lill'" "The A",a.;,,~ \1,. lI'illo -" .. .' .....on "One Man's Family." Take for in­ ',,, •. " ('II,.;. FRIDAV. APRIL 24 But who threw the rock through ,.. COH".' stance the recent singing of Edna 1,00..... """. s,oo .... Mrs. Uppington's window? "0', .. '.'" ...."ft. KIITE S~II T11 "ill bruadc3.1 Fisher's "Great - Great - Great-Great­ 4,00 .'.., 2,00 ..... I .. , IJCOj!:.a", fro,," \\'e" l'"i"l Grandfather" song on the show, not .. SCU EE .... GIII!.D TflEtlTEU" Ihi, ...... friday. CBS. once but several times. That was be­ ",ill ''''\-elll B.1t~ lla,'i_. O_~ .,00 .'"" ..._~ ..I" CHICAGO cause Morse is sold on its power to Ma"~,,, Co"ta..r V,i,h .",1 \\'arr~II '0'00 •. m. \\illi.", in 1 radio nr,iM of Ih~ inspire American patriotism ... "LI\'!> Juh" "Jlttla~ular crim•• ",1 rrt!~"t.a CO.\lME."TATOn By DON MOORE lio" film in "'hirh Joan (' ....., •..., \i \'an..r ...ook "ill be Th. reid> .."t M~t.-)·" l)ou(la. "ttt _\l,J ';1,' "100 lTill "'ul ~"d frel Ibi_ By way ot clever dramas with social F,;,I.)· as dr.mali~ 'Iar Fans who attend "First Nighter" Il(OrT ..t b) Mi .. \f.",,,. \',~h of "('" significance and pointed morals. there ~n'l olh ••_ fB". If'll,;ly ThUle,." II i. ",hid" .. ill broadcasts are accustomed to seeing is little doubt that "Big Town ," star­ , ... ~ C.~" .. I>r llid'~N Con,,~H·~ '11,e MO.I leading man Les Tremayne "slicked y'...... 1.:00 .... ;. Ila"~erou. Ca"'t," ad.pt~1 b, ring Edward G. Robinson, is one of _.... ~.." .r;" up" for the show and sporting only a Fredric M"rch-on ., ...... Mort I.t.. is. Blut. . radio's most influential crusaders. But .' ...... ~ c ..., .., neat little mustache as an extra facial .,~o ...... ,00 .'",. in addition to acting the part. Robin­ "lux R"dio The"ter" MO .... TY IVOOLL£Y. lhe .."." _.,.,. ._.k feature. They're getting a shock now, Who Camt (0 Di"",," ."d 7'~0 •• '" .,:to .... son lives it. Last week, Robinson an­ b",o~hl 1'."00: "'ith hi", in ,,,.' for Lcs is blossoming a beard. He's nounced the selection of Providence. "IIHLI>G£ Of S IlII' ~" i, The 1'1a)' ."'! the ,,,o,·i. of Ihe .bu,'" also letting his hair sprout over his R. I., llS the winner of his Traffic Ihe"," iJI Ihis Sal""I"I", "Thi, tille. "'in be Ihe man \\100 ""it. cars and down his neck in the Holly­ .. W.," b',,~(kaR h',' Ih< ,111<) ('h ..lie M~('aclhy - .",1 fi,,", Safety Award. a plaque provided by of h"" Ih~ t'nil",1 Snt~. i, h.,'O<' w.ilin" for I,i," - ,t.j. wood mode. But it isn't a publicity the stllr and which was announced ~"' li,,~ Ihro,,~h 10 it. "or~1 ~",,,d.y, ... Be. stunt or a fear of razor-blade short­ to be given to the city of 250,000 or allie, "ilh n,unili"",. lood alld .,...... 00 ..... ~ age. Every June Les goes to Marshall­ Olher vilal ~"I'I,lic': at..., Ihe .....•. 00 _'...... town, , to star in a religious more population which during the • 1"11· .. r ho" OllC ,hiJJ~a"ls art past five years has had the lowest .,,~illi,,~ 10 Ih~ UU"O" 10 ".",,1 MONDAY. APRIL 20 pageant. "A Broken Idol." For the average automobile death rate. Provi­ "' .... n.... 'hil" """n lh. ,,~, allegorical role of Eternal Life he dence rated lowest with 9.0 deaths per than Ih. Axi~ u" &in~ nss. ft.Al·OE RA';';S .. ill ""r1f~ .• needs a beard and long hair. In the "'OC. 'HI". Biut. 110.1 ~"al \'oiCt of lil>rr" hundred thousand people. according to c .....' Thn",a. !'aint. i" • dramati ...lio" past, wigs and false beards have given 7,00.' ..... ~.",. .'00 .. .. Iii ltd '1" Ih, (.i,i," 0" "('aul the National Safety Council, judges "",,~ "" .... him a little uneasiness and discom­ .. '", '0'...... , .. . rhd. 01 1I",,,r;1 \i\ Ih~ Ole" ",ric, Ih.1 for ••,vice me", bu\ Ii,'e" past fourteen years have thcy had a ( II~. tr> ,tl 10 """"I) in 0" lh. ",.11'1, co-star with M"rch high at a microphone, but the singing vacation. and this year will be like u ..... i". UI' buoint... Only ~C\·ic. m", darling of the " oog House" is getting 7,'0...... ,m .. the thirteen majority. "Amos," or _ I" uniform art admiltw ill10 llor to be a big figure in the affections of S, ..... ", oludi" for lhi. pnl'odu< ,net",lr' bl.,o"d Franc.. StuH)· .. Co."" vited Mary Ann to visit its Air Corps j,,~ It.. n~ of h,I",. 'eri~" mi_Ir." of etrt"'onie;, b(u"e1t~ .0,00...... ,,", '" . ,00 .... , Which remllld~ me that "Lum and thvullh .aclo "";0" ",II h.vt it. IH.oIIgotrr.> I-hi" .., a IUct! ... "~ ," ... .. boys recently. On the same tour she Co""ie ,,00. p ..... "00 ..p.... Abner." who started the usc of the took in Maxwell Field at Montgomery, eXI)I'esslon "Wonderful world!" in Ala., Elgin Field and Pensacola Naval their five-weekly scripts, found they opening [n : he and wiCe signed to record two albums of his Air Base and MacDilI 'Field. all in have started something! Picked up Ina staged a jam session for pals at own translations of Hans Christian Florida. At MacDiII Field the camp and used by other performer friends their ranch .. Hedda Hopper de­ Andersen's famed Fairy Tales ... ball team had chosen her its "Dugout of Lauck and Goff here in Hollywood. parted for the East on Easter eve Edgar Bergen is struggling along with Girl" ... the "Wonderful world!" expression dressed more like an Easter egg than headaches and colds but still saying ha~ become a byword and-to many probably anyone she saw promenad­ yes to every request to do a service Alice Goodkin is wondering if you listeneNl--3 necessity. Lum and Abner ing on Firth Avcnue; even the soldiers camp show ... can't do a job too well for your own drOI)J)ed its use just two days from whistled! .. Reducing tip: News­ good. Several months ago she was their radio series and had to put it casler Bob Garred lost twenty pounds It really happened. The King'S Men, assigned the role of ])Qtty Stamm, a back the thirrl because of telegrams in thirty days by foregoing lunch and grouped about the piano for their vicious young woman in "Bache­ and Ictters. The point made by the playing a couple of games of bad­ weekly singing stillt on the "Fibber lor's Children." Alice made Dotty fans was that the expression has a minton instead ... Speed demon Jack McGee" show, took their cue from so-o-o mean that listeners began certnin spiritual lift and should be Benny didn't use his Maxwell March the control booth, looked dowll at the writing their wrath to author Bess continued regularly ... 29, or he'd have missed his cue! He sheet music and then gllsped! The note Flynn. Original script plans had Dotty had just four minutes to get from his on which they usually started had marked for delivery to the Grim Odds and ends: Gene Autry cele­ program on NBC to the "Screen Guild been changed. There was that awful Reaper next winter. But the apparent brated his twelfth wedding anniver­ Theater" over CBS, and he made it flash of thought-the wrong music­ verdict of the fans that Dotty was too sary April I Just prior to his depar­ with two minutes to spare Jean and then the "note" started moving bad to live forced the author to mur- ture on his eastern rodeo swing ("Dr. Christian") Hersholt has been aCr09.9 the page. It was an errant (Continued on Page 32) II THE ENTERTAINMENT WEEK Classical Music Thousands of Radio listeners Will Hear "Siegfried Idyll" Over CBS on April 19', But the First Time It Was Played, Audience Was Just One Woman-Cosima Wagner!

By ROBERT BAGAR A Coloratura Standby garno, Italy, was originally slated for Afro-America n Union the career of a lawyer . But he later New York World-Telegram Music The Mad Scene from Donlzettl's turned to architecture, owing to Winner or such d istincti ve honors Expert and Associate Program "Lucia di Lammermoor" has been, strong artistic instincts, and then to as the Harmon Award, a Rosenwald Annotator Jor New York Phil- practically from the first performance music. His father, a practical parent, Fellowship and several Guggenheim harmonic Society of the opera at the Teatro San Carlo, Insisted that the composer give music fellowships, besides commissions Irom Naples, on September 26, 1835, a lessons lor a livelihood, whereupon the Columbia Broadcasting System, N CHRISTMAS morning, in the battle-horse of literature. The ftor id young Donizetti revolted against Paul Whiteman and the 1939 New year 1870, a little orchestra sopranos, from Fanny Perslanl-who what must have seemed an abhorrent York World's Fair, William Grant O took its place on the staIrcase created the role of Lucia-on to those Idea and enlisted in the army. Luck Still Is the best known of the con­ of Richard Wagner's villa at Trieb­ of the present day have reveled in the was with him through that move. for temporary Negro composers. Born In sehen, on Lake Lucerne, the composer countless opportunities the music his "egtment was stationed in Venice Woodville, Mississippi, on May 11 , gave the cue, and the mukic of the holds for them, since it is the display and there he could take an active 1895, he began his musical studies at "Siegfried Idyll" floated provocatively piece par excellence. We come across interest In the bristling musical liCe. an early age, later took up work with through the house, Soon Cosima such distingUished names as Jenny It was In that city that.he wrote his Edgar Varese and George Whitefield Wagner appeared. She leaned over Lind, Adelina Patti, Emma Albani, first operas, which served 1tI win him Chadwick. the railing of the upper floor and Christine Nilsson, Luisa Tetrazzini, a quick ..eputation as a talented com­ Orchestration al>pealcd to him al­ gazed mystified at the scene below, Marla Barrientos, Amelita Galli­ poser for the stage. most from the start. nnd he developed Slowly it began to dawn on her that Curci, Toti dal Monte and Lily Pom Donizetli died a t the age of fifty­ himself at the ort, doing arrange_ this performance of a new composi­ in tracing the history of the opera's one. He composed his first opera at ments tor compositions of W. C. tion was lor her benefit and she stood Lucias and all of these have taken the age of twenty-one. In all, he Hondy, arranging lor Paul White­ there enraptured with the beauties of full advantage of the Mad Scene's wrote something like sixty- five, of man's orchestra, for Don Voorhees and the score, It was her birthday, and teeming coloratura. which "L'Elisir d'Amore." "Lucia di a number of Brondway musical shows. her husband had taken this means to Based on Walter Scott's novel "The Lammermoor." "La Fille du Regi­ However, while this sort of work pro­ honor the occasion. Bride of Lammermoor," DonizetU's ment," "La Favorita," and "Don Pas­ vided him with a comfortable living, Preparations for the event had, opera has been a favorite of audi­ Quale" have proved the most endur­ he was most Interested in producing naturally, been made In secret. The ences the world over for almost one ing. compositions of his own. orchestra had been assembled by hundred years. The composer, son of Mr. Still came to a serious decision Hans Richter, and only the day before a minor government official In Ber- in 1925, namely, to devote himself to Wagner had conducted the last re­ the development of the Negro idiom hearsal at the Hotel du Lac. On the as well as to utllb;e that idiom in his eventful morning, the group did their works. Thus, following in the wake tuning up In the kitchen with the of that decision, he composed a sym­ greatest possible dispatch, lest the phonic trilogy, consisting of "AIrica," whole thing be givcn away before the the "Afro-American" Symphony (both important moment. dating trom 1930) and the Symphony The "Siegfried Idyll" is one of the in G Minor (1937 ). It is interesting gems of the orchestral repertory. to note that "Africa" was rcvised no Wagner, at the time, was scoring less than five times, such is Mr. Still's ;'Siegfried," and for themes in the eagerness to perfect his writing. The "Idyll" he utilized music Irom the "ACro-American" Symp h ony has third act of that opera, the slumber graced the programs of a number of motive from "Die Walkuere" and the our major orchestras as well as sev­ German cradle song, "Schlale, Kind­ eral abroad. ( ••_ ..... , __ "'... ,,_ .... ~ .(...... ~. W;" .. 9 ' ...... chen, Schlafe," besides some other .~_ ...... b .. ~.ft .. _ .. ~ ... _. __ •_ .... ,... • _ ••~ ._.... ~ ..~ ..... _. us. __ "T", To' .... material. Oddly enough, the two chief _ "_•. , .'_' __ nC _.j themes of the piece, which originated • • • in "Siegfried," had once been in­ Music for Films tended for use in chamber-music, but the idea was later abandoned. These days composers are immense_ ly concerned with the creation of film music thot can also serve its purpose

New Approach to Opera vIa Films IN THESE modern times, comp osers are vitally concerned with t he creation of film mu si c fifted for outtets via the conce rt ha ll and ope ra. l atest of these compositions is a score wr itten by Mi.los Rona for Korda's Technicolor movie version of Kipl in g's "Jungle Boo •. " Rona, shown a bove wi th Sabu, hero of the piece, has contrived music that is unusual-a te ntat ive approach to "film opera." Rona, with the NB C Symphony and Sabu as narrat or, has mad e a series of recordings for Victor, with t he score vir­ tually tell ing t he story of Mowgli's (Sabu's) dramatic exploits in music. l eft: Josephine Tumini a si ngs Mad Scene from Doniletti's "lucia di lammermoor" on MBS' " Treasure Hour of Song" Saturday. Right: J et!l n Te nnyson, comely soloist on C olumbia's "Great Moments in Music" progrt!lm 12 THE ENTERTAINMENT WEEK

Guide to This Week's Fine Music Programs

SATURDAY. APRIL 18 J&hn .1101,'" ...,1 l'rl.dU". fro,,, t:O:\TENTED 1I0UIl. NBC )k(;"rr~.,··. U ~.,I,·" .. I'hltlll'" William ~Iiller, leno.; lIei"hohl """~" t~r. Hah,,. "", .... Ih·ad U. S. MARll'E BA~'D, (ll!:i. ••• ,•• " e..".' S~h,n;d l , ~u"'; thor\>; and or· ~ •• ,00 '.",. '0,00 . .... chestra diru.. ,d by P~r<~' Faith ...... ,00C.n' ...... ' • 0,00 •."'. _n",n ...'k ~ ... k .,00 '."'. .,00 •. m. ..•••• ~ c • • , ••, .'00_~"'A ..... 1 ,00 . .... ,0,00_...... ,00."... ,"", .,00 p... 7 ,00 .... YOUSG PEOPLE'S Cm.TERT; REnTAL PERIOD, Blue ",el Dr. and SEW YORK PIllUlAR"O~lC· ..·ork. frsnk Bluk WOQ•• n'.'...... ",OO''''ft. •. m . ...." U ,05 •. ,.,, MUSIC AND AMEIl!("AN ".. ." .... ,~ ~,.,,,' .. \'OUTII, NBC. School ~.our>s. .... Nat ••", •• ,. " ...... COn".' Nat- ••• " ..... U. S. MARISE B,\ ND, NBC. MR. SWING, the world's great. BRUNO WALTER. world-re­ ,... "..... , ",30_n"'...... '0..'''''•• , ...•. "' ..2.'00...... ,. .,00.·._,M .. · .'.0...... I,,,,, ..... EILEF.." F.\RHEll an,1 ROll est xylophonist, and Red Norvo nowned conductor. who will direct 12,00 _ .,,00 ..... ER'r S\CIIOIM:\. "ilh Emer) (above) are all one and the same D~ut"h E"1I0-':K STRINGS. ~ms. :'>E\\ YOIlK Pll1lIlAIl'IOl'[{ eo··,." RED It. The latest of these attempts is the \If,,·d Wallcn0. born in Beal'dstown, Hlinois, a town pol!! Spil"lny, :1 s1, used to feature some lelaael:r.· Or~h f,"·lt; AII,ero "».lI.1 U. !>. SAn" B.I.'>!). \I\(" He has even utilized such a dcvice TIlE.\!:il' RE HOrll OF ~."G. of the greatest jazz musicians oC the ;n~. ,;01i""1. h ~"cia Whit~. •..... e'.'''4' .,00 .... S 00 ~ ... as the "leitmotive," cmploying one 'Ill'" AIf.~ .. \"Io",,,r, Orrb~. "",rao> 'c I. ... ;Ok day. Red was I)ractically brought up Ir~; J....:'I,hi,,~ Tu,n'"ia. ."l"u I_or" ...... ,,~, 0,00_·.""n •. '" '.00 .... for each of the animal and human .'30 ..... S·,...... on this "river boat ji\'e" and is en­ lura ""I,rano; ",i.,ed chotal ••o"p. "O"n"',. characters in the film. He has dwelt n".,I.lljn. . .. ';" .... 2,'0 ..... ,,""' ",'M ..... titled to describe himself as a pioneer on "continuity of literary theme" and ",·ml,"lh)·. fron, "1'" ••·j ... n1· GI1I·,\T ,\Om::\f<, 1\ \Il'SII of this type of rhythm. rs~ (;r"'~~ S~~.,tia". ,·"",10..- .111",,..1 ...... '".", he has composed somo. "genuine sym­ 1""·,·,,,· ... ,,1 THE FA~I1l.\' 1101111. f'B !:i 1M. I'~~rr~. He got the xylophone bug when, all I'"",,· I" 111\" F.I •. .1",,,,,, J." Jea" ·r,·""",,,, . phonic sequences in the more spec­ G13d) , S".rlh""I. "'~.,,, "'I"""'; Il oherl W• .,le and n",r,,~ m i."J~'. ~"""' ....• ' .,;.".~ a youngster, he heard a movie-house tacular scenes," so that " the score )1,·.\1,·) Dr ~.·I,·,·II . ,,,·. Yo"","'" I)~ e"" Ta,I",. ,o""".n!"',,,; AI "\Ii~,,,,,,," b.,· Tho,,,"' xylophonist doing "wonderful things" The "",1 "n·,,". I.,,'" ··I.u ·l~ C.,."lman·, O,d,e,lra. ."'''. c. , ••• , virtually tells the story of Mowgli in ttl n eo., ... 10,," ..... 0.," ,I, ,~"",,, .. tn>''''·· n",,'. U"•• .,00 •.m .,'s with those sticks. This, therefore, be­ r.,'••• c~ " •• , s.oo...... n ..'" ...... music." •. 00 .... "00 ~ .. _ ,. .. .. ,"'" .'n .... , '" came his liCe work. He had already S,OD .... . 2",0. on • ...... n"',A ... ,.,. Victor has already reeorded the • ,00 •."'. • ,00 .... had piano instruction, so that it took music, which rather evidences its im­ THURSOAY. APRil 23 little time for him to mastcr the porwnce. Mr. Rozsa himself conducted 1I0ftlF:STEIl CI\"IC ORrllr..:. MONDAV, APRil 20 xylophone. He later went to Chicago, TII.\. mue ~.I\\",k. r.", J.",.~ • ("J:\{"[:\:\ATI fO:\"'I~Il' ,\TOII" the NBC Symphony Orchestra for Ihe lIar';,oo. . 11,,~h "ri,,,,,,. where he joinC<1 Paul Ash's orchestra. l£.\(;\'I: OF (·om>()sl:ns. .·",,,Iudor; [.oui, Koh""I'. ", ... ,;,1 recording, and Sabu, young stal" of the 311d I.",,". piln" ~"I"i"" (BS. (O)I"",I.l. ro,,~er' O,d.c' In 1!J29, determined on a leader's 'h""""~ 1o "jlorrlu,' "r VI film, docs a narrativc commental'y '·n·I",'. 10 .1,.. TTl I""" "I~' I".,,~tl .. ••. . .. \1'h"Pt Ira; I[""ant Uarl,,,, ~u,,,!u

  • ok •. I~nor. S; 1\'FO"IErro\. 'IB!>. Alf.1'd Hungarian, have been performed by S; ••tn"Mrs; Cu.l.n lIocn,ohm', Orrh,'r•. \'0""" "I ~1"lnl1 ..•. ' ... ~,,~""' \\"alltn ' I~i", «>ndudor. organized again a group of his own, Onl) l'.~ ~'H'" ...... 1.. such outstanding conductors as Bruno ",.,~",,,I"...... 'r",~11I '''0...... C,O, •• ' which, with the e:Kception of some rAt,.· IlIu,.". Ilrl ~O .,00 ..... ?,OO •. m. I'U •. "' .... ". )If ~.·'· ..·I II ~ .. '. \(pt .... , ••.. 1.0 ForlCP ~ Waiter, Pierre Monteu:K, Hans Lange, .,00... ,."' •. .. ",. .... ,". reshufflings. he leads to this day. fro'" ··c"""·...... 1"'" 1'1",,," l'Q"'.'" m .. l !,<,,,", ., 1':,,·,,11,1_ .("""I~· S'OO •. '" Ernst von Dohnany! and others. T" ~""D~. ..;.I<-J 11 . :":r::i"~~~1::. l;etwork. Wall~r \)a,nro'rh. It is only right to start off this sec­ items in'its April list, some of which (ondu.lor. TIlE TEl.EPIlO:>lE 1I01'R, .. ,.. .. C,., •• , tion "Of the column with a favorable we have already mentioned. There A\IEIliO PHEn:llttED. NBC. SY"'I,hon)' Or~hcSl.a; non 2,00...... 1,00 •. m. word concerning the first recording of "U". "oun ..l. ~en" TaylO)r. <,,""ll(1Ilal,,'; .. .. ,... are others worth consideration. For Vooth.t5, ...mluClor; J am •• \1.1 , ~,oo_ ",00 .... the new Norvo band. They play on instance, the performance of the Rich­ Carlo Morelli, baritoOle, Rut'l; 10", (enor; Fran.ia While. ..., Alfred W3I1en'I~'''', Orch(.,ra. prano; Ih. Ben rho.\!, Columbia 36557 "Arthur Murray ard Strauss "Death and Transfigura­ w.""10.,, •. ··.\n~ ..... ("I,.al,'''· S""' ....rlim.. t...... ··I·".~, 1'1I 11..AOEI.I'III,\ OllrllF.STRA Taught Me Dancing in a Hurry," and tion" by Leopold Stokowski and the •...... •• . .... G~",Uno .",1 It.<-oot·· ...•...•. t;,· .... h"'h MSS fondu Sl"ln~ !;.,","0" , ... I',.')"...... T.. j.dl ._. eo .., .. dred Bailey, the incomparable. sings 2,,,,, ...... " M .. ... creditable and scarcely out of line 1':1 T".!llI~"', ...... , .... "i~~,i,,;'; r"nolb"·. ..II~{I~~~~ _..,.'Oi. • ... Ik the \'ocal In the former. These pieces 1':1 ('''1'11".1_ Ro)o. V"lk·S;<>1 (10. My I",,'·~. Ih::<,n'l8 12.:00 ..... with the import of the music. Then c .... , •• , " ."" ... show versatility, fo r in the first named h".... .\t.... .\1"...... a ~)·"'I'I'''D)·.I · .'' Adolf Busch and Rudolf Serkin, an '0'" ...... ,If ..... the playing is rhythmic, but not to the .'U...... ,. " .."".U •. ", 1 ),,~.lll "i.. "", " " 0';':"'·, ... I''''~'!l~:: lll1lTISII ,\~1EIIiCAN n:!>l"I e:Keellent violin-and-piano team, sup­ .....," e.""" exclusion of the melody itself. In .,00 0."'. 8.00 ..... I'M•• CBS. IJcrnard J1~ .....,a,,", ply a thoroughly satisfying version of -,.~ ;" ~ "J ersey Bounce" the idea is swing . • ,00 ..p.",. ,.00.. ''''.... 'O",IU""·,·"'· 1>"I"'r A fine and timely Victor album Is SUNDAY, APRil 19 M" ... · f." ~I,","~, I~"I" Fritz Rciner can usually be depended ~"II,' 1M tlTd" .,," ~'\lf.. r" that containing "Songs of the Ser­ NBC STIIl"C QI·ARTET. l\BC. c .....~ c.".. .., upon to give a musicianly interpreta­ 2,:00 ..... vice," including sucn spine-tinglers as •~S::.:.':". 7~;""':·!. .,------, .. "" .. ... '". tion of any piece he conducts, and no .....,~. _"n,",. . _n...... ~.. ... ,... ,. "Anchors Aweigh." "The Marine's N •••••" ...,...... _ ....'. .. .. 'vo,"." less so with respect to his recording, TO BE ANNOUNCED Hymn," "The Caissons Go Rolling at the head of the Pittsburgh Sym­ MILESTONES IN A\IERICA:>I SOON - Winners in ("I1"IES SEl!\'I("E ro:\CEllT, Along." and other items representa­ phony, of three c:Kcerpts from Wag­ MUSIC, CBS. E.,tman S~hool :\1lI' Dr. Frank Sbtk. tonduc· tive of the dilTerent branches of Uncle ncr's "Die Meistcrsinger," comprising Junior 5)·"'1'100")" Or. I'aul Movie-Radio Guide's ,or; L"dll~ ~!"nuc'" IIOpra"", While. (onductor. 110'1 Grah.m, baritone. Sam's armed forces. Leonard Joy con­ the Prelude to Act III, the Dance of 11<"1>,' ..0 I ...nt Atro·""'''t.k~n Star of Stars Poll ducts the Vielor Military Band and the Apprentices and the Procession 8I"n'I""'"1 ..••••.• , ...... l'Ctill • ...... ,00 •. m )11.1'" fOT So\>r."" ..... Or· ,~ the Four Clubmcn (\0 the vocals. of the Meistersingers. ~1>~'IT"I I"""'PI L ______~ •- 00...... 13 1'11/21 THE ENTERT.4.ItOt EHT WEEK Short llives . IIAmericans Calling Home" American Soldiers In Australia nothing can beat providing our troops in far corners of the world with their N ABSOLUTE program "must" favorite "home" radio programs. NBC for those who have sons, Talk to Their Loved Ones at Home International is doing its bit by put­ A brothers or husbands on active ting on rebroadcasts of the following duty "somewhere in Australia," is the top-flight radio programs for the en­ new Australian program called ;loyment of America's fighting men in "Americans Calling Home," which you By CHARLES A. MORRISON the Atlantic, Pacific and Caribbean can hear Tuesday, Thursday and Sat­ defense areas (CWT): urday mornings at 6:45 a.m. or 10:20 President, International DX'ets Alliance SATURDAYS , a.m. CWT over VLG2 (9.54), Mel­ 11:00 a.m.-Bob Hope: WRCA US-lS) bourne. By tuning in at one of these WBOS (15.21) 11.30 a.m._Soh..,f~r Revue: WRCA (1$.IS) times you may get the thrill of a life­ WBOS (15.21) time by hearing your loved one talk­ increased shortly. This Is undoubtedly aganda formula. The anti-British, 10:00 a.m._Jack Benny: WRCA (15.15) a Na:ti-controUed station-somewhere anti-American, anti-Communist, anti­ WBOS (15.21) ing directly to you over ten thousand 10:30 a.m._The Aldrich Family: WRCA miles of land and water. On each pro­ in Asia or even India-whose sole Jewish, in fact, anti everything but (IS.IS) WBOS (15.21) excuse for existence is to sell Axis National Socialism talk which Joe 11:00 a.m.-l!:llcry Qu~en: WRCA (l5.iS) gram, announcer Braddon Mitchell in­ WBOS (15.21) propaganda to the peoples of India, to gives is the same sort of Nazi propa­ 11:30 a.m.-Burns and Allen: WRCA (IS.15) troduces five or six soldiers who then WHOS (15.21) t.1ke over the mike one at a time for confuse and divide them, to separate ganda drivel that Goebbeis reels oft 12:15 p.m._AI Puree and His Gang: WRCA a little informal one-way chat with them from the British Empire. his mimeograph in b,les day and (15.15) WBOS (11.87) night. After Joe has hllklMl himself 10:30 p.m._Command Performance: WRCA the folks at home. Just in case you ilBunk" from Station Debunk (9.61) WBOS (11.87) haven't heard this program yet here oul, there.. being no further excuse for SUNDAYS Joe Goebbels seems to have an in_ the station to be on the air longer, 1:15 a.m.-Bill Stern·. Sports Newsreel: are a few of the things our boys are WRCA (15.15) saying: "Having a grand time" ... exhaustible supply of tricks to use in announcer closes the broadcast with 8:30 a.m.-Fitch Bandwagon: WRCA attempting to put over his seditious the statement that they will be on the (15.15) WBOS (15.21) "The people here are swell. They are g:OO a.m._Command Performance: WRCA doing everything in the world they Nazi propaganda. The latest and most air at the same time the following eve­ (15.15) WBOS (15.21) corny of the lot is station DEBUNK. ning, the "Star-Spangled Banncr" is 9:30 a.m._F;bb~r McGee and Molly: WRCA can to make us feel at home: showing (15.15) WBOS (15.21) us the sights and inviting us into their This illegitimate station is on the air played on the piano and the carricr 10:00 a.m._N.,ional Barn Dance: WRCA nightly from 7:30 to 8:00 p.m. CWT vanishes. The whole program put on (IS.U) WBOS (15.21) homes for dinner" ... "The Women's 11 :00 a.m.-Bine Cro~by: WRCA (15.15) U. S. Auxiliary Corps are doing a on a frequency of 7.20 megs. The by this obnoxious station is decidedly WBOS (15.21) transmission begins with the piano amateurish in nature, the modula­ 12:15 P.m.- Johnn, Pres.nU: WRCA (I5.l.S) wonderful thing. You can get real WBO ( 11.87) melody for the words ". . . by the tion is as rotten as the talks. The American hamburgers and coffee at MONDAYS the Hospitality Centers" .. ·'This 12:15 p.m._MUSical Steelmaku5: WRCA is a country of wide open spaces. The (\5.15) WBOS (15.21) THURSDAYS scenery is grand. Wonder where the 12:15 p.m.-Milton Berle Show: WRCA kangaroos are?" One fellow asked his (15.15) WBOS (11.87) dad to say '·hello" to his dog for him, FRIDAYS IZ;U p.m.-Maxwell House Coffee Time: another asked his folks to pray hard WRCA (15.15) WBaS (11.81) that his tooth would stop aching­ just simple little homey things but things that bring a real heart-throb From My Propaganda Notebook and a sudden tight feeling around the MOSCOW RADIO said many of the chest to us here at home. The "Aus­ German prisoners that had been taken sics" are grand people and we won't recently had not removed their coats forget how they have opened their or shoes since January 11 ... The hearts and homes to our lads. FINNISH RADIO-displaying sudden Timings and frequencies for the distaste lor their Nazi overlords--was Australian transmissions to North heard to predict that "China may sud­ America underwent some changes denly rise up strong and Germany effective April 1. The new set-up is collapse" ... The [ollowing message, as follows (CWT): purporting to come from a Guam To eastern North America-6:25 to Island prisoller of war in Japan, was 7:10 a.m. over VLG2 (9.54), VLQ4 read over TOKYO RADIO: "I am (7.22). safe, uninjured and in good health, as To western North America-1l:25 are all of the Guam personnel here at p.m. to 12:10 a.m. over VLG7 (15.16); KobL I get ten hours of sleep each 10:00 to 10:45 a.m. over VLG2 (9.54), day. My weight is normal, as I am fed VLQ4 (9.58). on a balanced diet of American food. WGEA AND WGEO of Schenectady were first shori·wave stations in this I am getting more exercise than J country to carry Spanish and Portuguese programs on a regular schedule IIVoice of Free India" have had in a long time. Each dny we to latin America. In a program celebrating 15th anniversary of this service, are given more liberty by being al­ A few days ago I received a letter Hermon Reyes (e.), announcer of first program in Spanish; Robert S. Peare, ' lowed to play football and baseball from Mrs. Mabel Allen of Lafayette, General Electric manager of broadcasting: John R. Sheehan (II fbok part in the near-by parks. I am being Rhode Island, informing me that she treated fine. The Japanese people was hearing a mysterious undercover don't seem to have any grudge against station, identified only as "The Voice us." (Not bad, Johnny, but that ain't of Free India," nightly from 8:30 to dawn's early light," which is repeated announcer tries to give the imprcssion the way 1 heered it.) 9:30 p.m. CWT on a frequency of over and over to attract the attention that this station is actually located 9.40 megs. News in English---of a of the listener. As a variation the an­ in the United States, but this is ex­ decidedly anti-British nature - was nouncer sometimes whistles the mel­ tremely doubtful, as our Federal au­ News About the Stations given at 9:10 p.m. CWT. Later, a ody and yells into the mike: "Tune thorities undoubtedly are aware of the XGOX (\5.19), Chungking, is being West Coast listener, Harold Baxter of in, please. This is station DEBUNK. station's existence and could fix its heard from approximately 5:30 to Berkeley, California, furnished me Phone your neighbors to get tuned in position and make short work of it if 7:45 p.m. CWT, with an all-oriental additional details concerning this sta­ on us. We will start our program in this were true. At any rate, know this program.. Network pick-ups from tion. He stated that "The Voice of a few minutes." When the barker has wolf in sheep's clothing for what It New Zealand arc made over anyone Free India," operating on dual fre­ gathered around him as big a crowd really is-just another outlet for Nazi of the following frequencies: ZLT5 quencies of 9.-10 and 11.47 megs, was as he thinks he is going to get he propaganda. And remember the main (12.295), ZLT4 (10.98), ZLT3 (8.90) being heard very well there daily starts the program off by playing a purpose of their propaganda is to win or ZLT2 (7.39). ZLT4 is usually ulil­ from 10:00 to 11:00 a.m. and from couple of noisy jitterbug records. At this war-not for us but for National ized for the morning shows ... August 8:30 to 9:30 p.m. CWT. The programs about 7:40 p.m. the announcer intro_ Socialism. Balbi of Los Angeles, CaliCornia, re­ often feature anti-British, pro-axis duces the "soap-box orator" Joe Scan­ ports that Taihoku, Taiwan's daily talks by Indian leader Bose. Accord­ lon, who immediately starts in to sell program from 9:00 to 9:50 a.m. CWT ing to an announcement over the sta­ his bill of goods. From here on the NBC Entertains Our Troops is again being heard over JIB (10.53) tion the hours of operation are to be program follows the usual Nazi prop- For morale-building possibilities and JIE3 (9.69). 14 lila T THE EHTERTAltlMEHT WEEK

    War News in English Short-Wave Broadcasling Stations Daily Man.jng Guide to Programs of the World CWT MWT CITY STATION DIAL 1:00 •. m. 6:00 ~.m. Mouo"", 9.567 The pro,,,,,,," li".d h.r• ..r. tho .. brood. .. ,t doll, ot th.... m. tim •. h ••ptlo"" .. r. I~di ...t.d . f Alphabetlcall 7:151.m. 6:15 ~.m. Melb'rne VCR 9.58 TI",. S!tOWII II CWT; subtract Oil. IIollr for MWT 7:30 ~.m. 6:30 a.m. O.lhi VUOl 9.59 7:50a.m. 6:50 ~.m. K'bysh ~v 10.04 1:15 &: 9:30 p.m.-1.ondoll­ This is the third stction of I complett list 8:15 a.m. 1 :15 i.m. DAILY MOI~o", 9.567 "[.olldon f,lIi,,~" and 31lI~r" :\"rrh Amenu", Sl"=ah": GSt (9.58) Gst) 10:05,.m. 9:05I.m. Melb'rne VLG2 9.54 Ii,w'e.. : \'1.Gl (954) n.Q~ (11.75) ETHIOPIA 10:301.111. 9:30 I.m. Am,t'd'm 15.21 (7,22) 7:30 p.m._fl: esc (9.58) GSI) Helsinki OF" 6.110 2:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. Rome '" 11.81 Lahti OFE 11.78~ 2:15 p.m. Ankar, I'1i,h): VI.T03 (959) VUD4 (IUS) 9.495 1 :15 ,.m. 9.~65 Il1.S3) ... OlE 15.19 OlH 17.80 2:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. Berlin "'"OX, 7.24 -" 8 ,.m.-B,nlal'"'t-:"iord, "mer '" '" 8:30 a.m.-8 e r t i (En. Georg es Andre "ro~ram 11,, "~ar)". Si le unk~o .. n Freedom Slation 11 .615 3:45 p.m. 2:45 p.m. l ondon ceo 11.68 n_.\'~". ic.n from 3:50 p.m. 2:50 p.m. B'charut 9.26 ~!i'I'I: !).lB (15.20) Droulia, native _born 8:20 & 9:25 l).""-)\~'" I En FRANCE 4:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. Rome lR06 15.30 9 ~,m.-C h u 11 g k i IIII'-Sor(h ~li!'iod: (15.23, 11.885) Vichy 951 11.8~5 9:30 •. m.-To ~.' _,~". n:n. 8:3-0 p.m.-"\·o;""". (E" 5:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. Bulin '" 10.543 6.188 Ol'OXLl 11885 9:40 •. m.-Melbourne 1'~'lh_ .-li,h): (952) 11.115 5:-45 p.m. 1:45 p.m. london esc 9.58 Np,,, (En~li_h) \ 1.G2 (9.54) 8:45 p.m.-He,o--Enfti_1t pro GERMANY CSO 11.75 11.\\'2 (9.615) (l0.s~3) OXI,7 {l1.88S1 t)JJ} tr.", fo' Xo.th ,\,,\pri<3; 9 Berl in OJC 6.02 DXP 603 Daily Ev.n/ng lil,30 ~.m._ "''''lenlan, _ N"I' (15.20) DXL2~ (9.621 I>.m.-~.w' (Engl;"c\\, anal) 19.535) IIERS (11.855) 6:00 p.m. 5:00 p.m. Mosco ... 15.23 DXM 1.21 OJ! 7.29 10:45 I.m.- S a ill''''' -E"~!i'" "_ ",,1 "'ar ZK 15.16 DXI 9.57 DXB 9.61 11 :30 I.m.-Ber1i,,--()ff;~;al l!i~h 5:55 p.m.-1'0ky_l'r,,~r3111 for 9:15 p.m._l·""a",,_~" ell' \E.,~li'h) 10':15 p.m.-\l". c 0 ,,-Enll'li"ell, (E,,~li,h) ,0.11"';<,; 12:30 ~.",._,,~w, OJB 15.20 OJO 1528 """U ~~"., Ir"m Fr"" Fr~,,~h .\Inta [)ZD (10.5431 DX1.1 (11885) (.:"~I;'hl JZJ (l1.S:)) JZK OXU 1532 OJR 15.14 8:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. Londo" esc 9.58 (11.97) CSO 11.75 nl I)JI} (15.20) DX1.2~ (9.62) 115.161 0210 1536 DJE 17.76 8:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. Berlin OX, 1.24 1:15 p.m.-.\lo'."\\-Ii,,.li," l)XJ (7.24) 10:45 p.m.-Braua,·illt. rro·"d. DJH 11.815 9.62 \I~r;"'1 (15.23. 11.885) 6 p.m.-"o.... 'w-SO\"iOl I""(ta,n E"ul!or;al Africa - All t;,,(li,h Sitt unkno ... n Germin 8:15,.m, 7:15 p.m. MOS(o'" 15.23.11.885 4:15 p.m.-I."" .1" n- .. t.n",lnn in En(li.h for :'>",.rlh .\",prir~n I'''''~I'''" lor l'nir"" SUI'" J'Z[ FTftdom Stnd~r 9.48 9,54 9:00 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Btrn H<""4 "H5 (alhllll'."· haoth"e ,,<"_ ,",1 li"t"tr" 115.23. 11.885) (11,97) German Revolution", 9.65 9:10 p.m. 8:10 p.m. Tokyo >ZK 15-'6 l'I"Of!,"'" ",t"ie" GSII 111.751 6:30 p.m.-Toky,,--" I .i~hl fr"", 11:30 p.m.-I... ".!o,_Lal. :'>"e," GOLD COAST G!,>(' (9.58) IIIP I':a"," "3r ,,,,,,,ntn"r) a,.,1 \'.~" •. Cst:· (9.58) G'o1. II 8~ Acer, lOY 6.005 9:30p.m. 8:30 p.m. Rom. 2ROl 96] 4 :50 p.m...-O ~ r I; n--<:N"•• n~·. JZK rl5.161 JZJ ~11.801 16.11) '"2R04 1181 l'rn~r.'" for " .. "I. An'~ri.,,, 1:15 p.m.-FinI3",'-E,,~li_1. I""; 11 ,55 p.m.-~[.\oou",<-':"~I;"orlh A"'Pri".: OH p .. '~r>I" fnr "~_ter" .... ., .. Polnlt·,·Pitre FG8AH 7.4~6 esc 6.11 (6.03) /J:\r2 (11.71, DW 111.7851 AII'tri,'~: I'1.G7 (15,16) GREECE 10:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m. Berlin ,X> 7.14 Athtn5 7.075 10:15 p.m. 9:15 p.m. Mosco'" 1I.R8S 9.551 GUATeMALA 10dO p.m 9:30 p.m. Tetro 11 8~ SPECIAL PROGRAMS GUilemlla City Tewc 2.32 >ZK 15.16 TC1 6.196 TGWB 649 10:45 p.m. 9:45 p,m. Br·u·v·e. '" ,,- 73. TGWA 9.68> Free Air. 11.97 Saturday, April 18 19.5ih CoSD (\1.75) W.dnelday, April 22 TGWA 15.11 11 ,00 p.m. 10:00 p.m. Berlin '"OX, 7.11 1 :~5 p.m.-l.o"d",_'~" _ "r~ma Qlltultenlngo TGQA '.105 CWT City Progflm Stltion 6:45 ~.m.-"~Il>oum_"I" A .. , 60' li .... l· Gst' 19.58) G~f) (11.75) tral,a TI,;, \I'm" VI.(;2 HAITI 11 JO p.m. 10:30 p.m. London m'" 9 '.m.-\~" York """on-Itr 8,15 p.m.-B. r I i n-I... rd Ih .. 19.54) Port·,,,·P';n,, HH2S 5941 w '58 bro""l<-a,r_ for In, 1'- 0<>1, II.,,: DXJ (7.2~1 11.\1.24 6:45 p.m.-London-·Kha~i HHBM 9.658 HH3W 10,]] 12:OOmld, 11:00 p.m. Mtlb'rne VLG1 15.16'" If"pe. 9:30 a.III.-Sd,a<'rr Itr (9.62) t)X1.1 (11.13851 11:00 p,m. ~'~I~>OO~": G;'(" (9.58) C':oD HOLLAND 12,00 mid. B~r'in ,X> 72. "u~: 10 a.",,~3t~ Il~",,),. 8:45 p.m.-O~rli,,-Talk b) Jane 111.75) 12:00 mid , 11:00 p.m. Rome 2M3 9.63 Hulzen 10:30 6,1". - .\I,ldeh ~·a"'ill.; A",I.",.n: I)XJ (7,24) 0:\1.7 7 p.m._I. 0" d n n-",",ide "'a.1 9." PCJ 15.22 11 a.m.-Elltry QIIN'''' 11:10 • (11.385) I)XU4 (9.62) ],;urol>l''': GSf (9.58) GSD HONDURAS'" Important Stations a.,,,,-BIIl"~ & Allen; ~2,~5 10 p.m.--Gual~nla1a-:,ytt'l>ho,,) (11.75) LI Celb, 6.24 ".,,1. _,\1 R ~.r<~' \lltfA Or.-l'~'Ir" TGIVA (9.685) 7:15 p.m.-Oerlin-Paul Jl,,"~rt Sin Pedro Sui, HRPI"RO 6.357 ( M ••'~1d •• or thou .. nd. of knGo,cl •••1,0 ..nl 115.15) II'H05 (15.11) OW (10.543) /JX1.1 (11.885) Tttueigilp, 5.875 6 p.m._LondOIl_"TIu> War al CBFY. CO ...d. 1I.74~ PZX&, D, GIII.n. u.~,& Mondoy, April 20 1)X124 (9.621 HONGKONG"" COCH. Cub. '.43& BV.I1,S.S.1I;. 16 °3. ""a."' II r .·~TFah) G~ {'OK." 11,12 11.181. '.M7, I I~& 19.58) GUll (9.831 GS!) (11.75) 11 :15 p.m.-St" York {ir) 80, Hongkon, JZHA 9525 C1I;7BE .•ou"'\lI~... halo • II r,,,,-.\I ,,$; r a I SI .... I",al. .... ThMrlday. April 23 '.It 8H.8weda- U,IU 7 p.m.-L"ndo,.-"l.il. 0,'" 12:15 p.m.-\'~" York fjl~ llo. HUNGARY ClW1. P ....t .... 1 ',7U 8BI1.·· •. &3! II ..... GSC 19.58) WllrA cl5.l5) WBQ<, c1S.21) 1'AP. 'ruTk., •. 6 p.m.-I... nd"n-"Tht War in lOn-Tl"H Rj,,~ Tim.: Wltf" Bud'l"=s! HAT4 9.125 DlD.O.rmoa,. n .• tn 8:15 p.m._I.... IlIq,,_W""~h· ".lI (15.15) WOOS (15.21) Dm ... 11.77 1'GWA. G .. ot..... I. !h~ A,,:' Olil-er S'... ·at! G"'{' ICELAND lUI ',115. n.1T I .. It.. AII.~ri .. n E.tlp fIuh. 6 p.m.-Londoo--TIr War ;n m. 19.58) (OS!) (I1.7SJ Re1k~"'k TFJ 12.235 DJO, U .t~ VLG. " .. lInU. '.$1 III~"U.' lro", '\"'~ri,·a" t;,,,. Air:' Olinr SIe"'~tt: GSC 6:15 p.m.-lkrlin-P~ul Iltvtrt II.. D~J. 1.tt VLGt." ,.tt ill 'h H"I.F .•,,,1 ,,"," I'e 19.58) CSD (11.75) IND IA D~P. 1.03 VLG3, 11 .71 laml' G!-o( (9.58) GSIJ (11.75) /JW (10.5.(3) D;>'; 1.7 (11.885) lIZO, IO.~43 VLGI. lau 6:15 p.m.-R.ykja.ik. I ~tbn"­ 80mhy VUB2 4.88 VUB2 124 11)" i II.SS5 VLG7. 1&.18 8:15 p.m.-B. r I; n-[.onl Ih,,' 1 '.m.-Lo"'loo--.. " ~ a" Hjorn Ojorn",n reports to VUB2 9.55 OXt.7. F .. "". 1\i ( I,, ": CS( (9.5S) G~J) OXt.2t ... '.1Il VLOt. 11 81 II.", DXJ 0.24) [):\1.24 NOr. TFJ (12.235) C,lcuth VUC2 '.84 VUC2 7.21 ElitE. J .... ond 16.11. VLQ3. 1&316 (IUS) ,9.62) 1 0" II " n-"[kI1IOlIrn_.\l3il Il.~ M~drlS VUM2 4.91 VUM2 7.27 GSF. 1&.lt 17.113, 1& t'l. II ~5. VUM2 9.57 081.. 111. 17. 11.l13 II,IT I',nll'r,,,, h)' Br~ddo" \lild,.11 Tllelday. April 2f Friday. April- 24 OSV. 1711 WCD" . Ne. Y ~·k Cit, l'u;2 (9.5~) nQ9 (7.25) 6:15 l.m.-\I .. lbOllrn~-''Tht IRAN '/IATt. T'IuD,'''' •. It! 11," ~ 11 8:15 •. m.-\"" \'ork nly 80, 6:40 l.m.-~lelbourll_\I'ar Trollh 01 It .. . .. 1.... I'aun Tehtran 6.155 EQC 9.68 HCJ'H. Eetlador It.M WCIlC. Ne. Yo,. Cit. t""-Htb,,,aJcasr. lor (r.... p. r(Omm~nrary by F~ 'uh.l ,Ia ru;tw: \'1.Co2 (9.54) 'Q' HEllt. S.tt.... I."d !I.U EPB 15.10 '.635 II.S'! WilE ... , ~'II • .,.,.todT. ~I".rt. '~,...... I; 8:30 •. m.­ \'J.GZ (9,54) 12:15 p.m.-\'"" York "Iy ~ IRAQ HP&-'. Pu• ..,. 11.10 11'. Y. '160 1& '13. I,U ~'Il~h 8~nd"';lIl'O"; 9 a.n1.­ 6:45 '.m. (Tues .. Thurs .• S,t.)_ Ion - "u,,·.,11 110""'" C"fl .. o,ghdad 9.78 HP50," 11.76 WGEO. Ik~n",u'h, fo"""an~ [)"rforman~f; 9:30 \1~I"oun,_~1 t" a (t ~ f,o'" Prot:MI">: WlleA (15.15) I\'aos IRELAND ( Eirtl Jl'IIP6 Thon"." lI.n N Y. U:'\3. 9,13 •. m.-tit.ber \I,G...,: 10 a.n,.- A"'tr;can lfOO,,< ;n AU

    News on All FM Fronts Continues to Mount With Amazing Rapidity as Its Geographical Boundaries Stretch to Include More and More Territory!

    By DICK DORRANCE FM, like television, is s[1lted Cor a Guide to Programs brilliant career as a llost-war industry, The great mnjority of all letters FM and the Deaf April 18 through April 24 trom renders of MOVIE,RADiO GUIDE HE u nexpected discovery that ~'M 5:00 News 2:15 ,\",Iri"i ( onli".,,131. contain inquiries about the iocation of programs can sometimes be clearly W45BR 6:00 Newl; ('Ia",. h .. oril" 3:00 l\alt. Tim. FM stations, or the probability of Theard by persons w ho suITer from 6:30 1,,1', Go 1J0"rint 3:15 n,,1, ":tli"",,; ...- ... , eventual FM service in definite cities, impaired hearln& has brought joy to 7:00 N.... ; I'iono l'autr", ~:OO Cla"i•• 1 Mu,ie To nnticipllte many more of these 7 ,30 Hom any Trail ~:30 FI ji,,;: l'alrol more than one handicapped radio lis­ 8:00 S~".; Martu.ril., horp,.1 1 :15 nor,." Suns queries, even before they're asked, we tener, The wide tonal range, from the P.M. Sahlrda, fj 30 Mu.i. & Me,,,ori .. 5:00 .\111';. b)· ~hred,,,k; ~tw. olfer the following brenkdown of lowest notes to the highest, is able in 2:00 N~'n; Mat",..., '" Ub)"hm 9 ,.,..s; Dallu _\Julie 6:00 Dinner MIl.,j~ 2:00 N,,,·,: 1I01I",I",;n( 7:00 ('unt ~llli!"h~ U.,·u. , you may count on hearing 3:00 Nt... ; "I"r &. "".,,,.h 1"1\1 broadcast, and this is how he en­ 430 5.uurda) ::.oirN 7:30 ( 10 _iul 'rll'i~ one to nine Fl\I stntions, depending on S:OO N~ws 3 30 /lurl ~"in.' II ('() I.i(h. n'"ie< 4:00 "'-~""; nO'Meal ruo;,tts thusiastically described the experi­ 6:00 X~".; Pia"o Pal1uns 8:30 S)n't>i>ony Orcb )'our location. New Yorkers have a 430 Radio (;u,~1 ence: 6;30 Concert :..>I«,iolll 9:30 '191"(0" IJr~I1Y choice of six; Philadelphians, three. 5:00 ...-~ ... s 700 XtwS; Da"cinc I'u" 9:~S na •• iral \lu,i.. "My hearing Is a bit dull. In quiet 6:00 ...- ...,,; ~I.ry;ueri ••. hal'Pll1 There is FM service throughout New 8:00 N£IOs; Music IQ:OO ...... -. surroundings I have to employ a hear­ 6:30 On I·...... Jersey, in both eastern and western 8,30 Ilb)'lhll,ic Itha" ..,.lic- 1():15 St.,n~" by Oln,,,,..! ing-device. When listening to the ra­ 900 X.... I 1:00 ~f ... "; Hbck & \\hi•• Pennsylvania, around Albany and 730 Uo,n,u,lin 10:30 F:pnc \I ... h;",'~ro·. Or(b dio it is necessary for me to sit right Guh"h. Schenectady, and in Rochester, N. Y. P.M. Sunda, 8:00 .... .,n; Lel-' ~" l)on(",. 1',\1. W e dnesday next to the receiver or else turn up 2:00 Ne ..... ; Orpll Mdod," 8:30 l)j~itla"d Balld 2:00 nO'.iul \IueT Ind.; Baton Rouge, La.; Milwaukee, 7:00 Club Rio Havana; N~w. 'Iusic lIill",." & Li",U.y, "ell'l large room, with heavy drnpes and n 1:30 tl~t U'~li 'l nmreh 2.-00 (Ia ,jeal ~h"i( 6JO Wis., or Los Angeles. There are edu­ 6:~5 (l.~let of lesser range serving these addi­ 1,00 Ji",my U ON~y'. Orch 7 ,30 1.i~bl n ••• io. proves toughest on my hen ring acuity. P.M t.l a ndoy ~:OO ·\",orioan \lo)o,h Ilour tional elUes: Cleveland: San Fra n ~ 2:00 Nt... ',: Paul (jaro,,'. Ortb ~:30 Mu,iul '·O'I .... u"i Oh, yes, the ceiling wns high. And 530 Clu.ioal ",,,ie 8:30 rb.sinl ~'u.i" cisco: Washington. D. C.; Springfield 2:30 GUll. 01 ~!dody 9:00 lla(hflttr G"le Orrh Others A-Building 9:00 B~lie'-. It Or .... Q. 7:00 N~s; Pi ."o I'auun. P\I Thursda, fcet or more nway from the speaker 9:30 C.. m~n Cnall.ro·, O",h New FM stations have recently cabinet. 1 could hear perfectly the full 730 Let's Go D... ,in. 2:00 ('la.sical Mu";r 800 Xr".; Fra,,~ir lIIa.ttr.' 10:00 N~", 2:30 \0"'$ gone on the air in Boston and Pitts­ rich tones of the piano-high notes Orch, 10:15 !:Il0ri,.. by Ol"wtd 2:15 I·:.rl Wn~bt""D 1030 lIi ••rbou lIenl. burgh. Others are expe~ted shortly and low notes caually well. That goes 830 Band Coneut 3:00 nuh 'htin.... ; 'I ...., for Philadelphia, Fort Wayne, New for the music of the other instruments 9:00 N,.,..·s P.M. SlI lI day ~«l ~'u.i. by Ddlello ~.3O .·I);no; I'~trol York City, and a large part of the that were broadcast, too. The an_ P,\! Tue$da, 2:00 Wake Up, A'''cnu 2:00 'It"'; '·oiet< ,n Sou 3 00 !.i"ht fl... i« ~ :~5 Sfl'rt( ('i,y South (via W4IMN, atop Clingman's nouncer's voice was clenr and distinct 2:30 lII.,,~~ of Mu

    through Asia and his book, "The Re­ By JOHN PAUL Use These Columns as a Guide volt of Asia," became a best-seller. the New York Times called him "thc Newsman in the News to the Week's News Broadcasts prophet of New Asia." And eight Cecil Brown is a name you hear years ago Close wrote- in his book, orten when the talk is about cor­ "Challenge Behind the Faee of Jo­ respondents who get into the middle , . pan." that America and Jap;;!11 should of things and who speak out force­ Mondo .,. Thrbl/911 FridQ'" JOhn Gunthtr. n~" John B. HI/gh". nt'" ~nalY'1 not fight and that lIeither had :my­ fully. For that trail he has just won \lU:. 'illS thing to gain by war. But he wrote Til. pro,'o",. lI.hd hre or. ,,,,';; ~.!.I';:':~. 'j,;j;:,,'nio ~.';". t;"'~T the Peabody Award among newsmen. tIIol. bro.. de".t Mo"du,. Tw.s· , "' also of his conviction that the break do,. W.d.ndo,. Thundo, und Wlllo~m L. Shlnr. forn,.r Iltrli" For outstanding radio reporting he F, ido, ot the 00"'. t im •. Sundoy would come and explained why. was a lso honored a short while ago ("rr~'I",,,de"! alld aUlhor 01 O'looen CYnn,nghlm, ,It", lro,,, "u..rlill 1>"'.y' (liS '" v. Now there are those who say that by the distinguished Overseas Press Clifton Utley. ne", a,,~ly"t, ""it It""ol"I", Leslie NichoL~. n~"" If the public had heeded carefully the T' ...... ".... <"" I "'.~"'~,. ,.",';:"-;;;;''',::;,n::· ~.~::: , .... Club. ~, .. , -.~ I""" ('~iro. 4H-,t: Frank CU htl. Jr.,,,, \ldhourue: Mn ... words or Upton Close these past few Brown's name is best known, of Georg! Bry1n. "til; rep-orin: ,,,''c, I",,,,, ",00. I."" ","" '.n'­ years, we might have headed otT the ,'''T, ,,,,.,,, "-'n. ",WT, ", '" "m. W.dnOldo.,. course, for his spectacular eye-witness (SS Far Eastern war or at least been bet­ ', ...... '-"'., ..... "''T . • ",0 "n' ,'''' Rlthud LUon. ,,~,... ".!),I report or the sinking of Britain's OH, ...... '" I. ".e ,.On .,.t '0- Uptan Clost. Fir EaOl~n' e'pert tcr prepared to engage in it. There is ... ,.,...... \Ilt· \IU~ Wales, ...... ,'~, ",", '1\''1', .,.,., p .•• Prince oj and Repulse. which H.I.n Hiett. "e\\'~ re!Jorltr; Ulut ,'. _'''"' ~."' .•"'·r. ,~ ..• , -... 0"' ..~ _,,' 'ft ...... 08 .., , •• , still much timely truth and projec­ f"', ",,~, ".",. L"'. "i~,' " ...~" he was aboard. But Brown has been "WT "I', ,",,"' tion or the futuL'e to bc gleancd from l'\cl (lIS ." ...... "J.,~ ...... ,."'. Q"~ •. '" 8ill Hury. nr", ,,,,,,,rttr: in close on other momentous events. U'T, ~,'~ •. m. "''''-: ,".w '.0'. ,'11 ,. H. V. Kllttnborn. lie'" ana!)'SI lie. _,. " ...... , ""'T, _". ", "Challenge Behind the Face of Ja­ He was in Jugoslavia when the N:lZis I\!K ~" pan." and the book is therefore to be MerflLl Ruddock. ntWI rt\>',rlt" "._1,1_ p,.,. "-"'1', J"~ p." Ed ... ,n C. Hill. Th~ lIu",~n Side Invaded that country. He started for '11l~ :.::~' ,,15 p ..... M"'T. I"'·> " ..... reissued by Its publishers. of ,h~ x.. ,,·s: (,B~ t"~~ '~:::, ,!;:"''T' ',?'Z:"'i~': Ul>ton Close was born Josef Wa~h ­ Belgrade by automobile, was captured ,·.ft,· ...... William L. Shire •• fo,mN Berii" , ... ..,.....,.,"' ""~' '.""" _ .., ,. I ;"., and later released by the GeL·mans. IllS Diary" (' Il~ eight years ago. of a French mother ,., .. ·_'.,W """" n.,: J' "", .".n, y"n<·.... ,.·u " ..... ~"T, 0." p.",. .\1U~ <"r, '''''''' ...... ''r._'''''... 'o ~'''T, c'o" p ... >1WT, 2' ,'. p .... "" T T •..-...,OO p.". ~".,., • ,,,, p.", too truthful reports from Rome. He's (,"-T: ,0.'3 ".",... ".,., .. ,'~ p.",. and a down-East Yankee father. In ...... - Drew PUl'$On lnd Robert Alltn. m the man who more recently spoke John B. Hughes. n('\\, a"al)"1 both official and unofficial capacities "\\·.,hjn~Lo" l>lerr), Go HOllnd" John B. Hughes. "'''S analysl. very plainly about Singapore. got ~1Il~ he has traveled much, investigated """_,,"" ~.'n. ,,"'I', '~'W n'".' ""III"",i.I" Illue XeL l>IIlS l· ... T. "",0 ' .m... Wl': ""'" o.m, ,.", much in the Far East. He has also himself barred by British authorities. ,~''f; '6'71:i3;~"t;w-r:"/~, ~,:::::, /!'II'T'.. ~,,~~":;'~'~, r.. 'U'T~;1,:o ~'': f!i\"'i Still more recently he has been talk­ H. R. B,uklllgt. tx.,... 1 on afla;r~ Glbriel Hutter. nt"" rOrI~r: written and talked much about the M~ )or Gtof,t "tiding Eliot. n,,"! in Wa,hi".'on: Ulup .\tl \1HS ing straight t.·dk from Australia. and ~ ('B~ Orient. He has written ten books on '1'." •. ,,,,,, p ..... ""'T, '201>0 _. ,._." p ... ""'T •. ~, p."' . anall',1 he is now back in the Un ited States .::",-, " "'" ...... '" 10,00 ,.m, '·"'T. '- "..... ,~ ...... '.1 ••nd ,'O. .·,:4:-;;:': ',~:,r':::' ~!.~i.:.?'Z'.;'ti::: adventure. history, romance and ''''T "'''' ._- ,.". ,·n .. , with a militant reporter's picture of Ctdric Foster. ntllS a"31"" \111:. Elmer D~yi s. news ~naI1Sl: CBS biography. also over II thou~and , •• "_,,,., p .•,. n.r "'•• , .... , the war in the Far East. ,'Wl', IV., ... _ ""T' II,,,.) .,m, ,."'!;~';;;t~'.. \,,P.~;..,':":;r~. 'p,~~ f.'.. m-j Thllrsda.,. magazine and newspaper articles, He'S "11" Tall, lean and hard, Brown is Walter W,nchell. eoluo "I ."d now a special writer for Reader"s Knol M,nnin9. ne"S r<\KIrlt. Rlchord E1ton. II,,", .".1.• " n ...', r<\KIrltr: 01"" I\rl thirty-three. married, a native of (Il~ MIl:> Digest. 'T,..-oj.'K' ,..... ""... , ~"., p.m, >:11"'T, 7.,., p,," '''' r They're hearing shrewd and stral~ht­ "ice sent him to Rome, where he re­ . CtSU Surchingt" Slory Ilehind H. V. K1ltenborn. "e"'l a'IIIYII forward comment about the Pacific Fu lton Lewis. J r.. Wa'hi,,~ton Nile th~ Hcad li"u: Nile signed to join CBS. with which nct­ ",,' ...... ," ".,n, ""''T, e,u p,'"' war and its ramifications. And they're "t~o~~.!~~t;P.~Il~;"T' .. ''''-' ,," ("T,·r' ...... __ ".'~ p,..,. ,m M,_"0: ... '1', onIO,'~ ...... p."'. ('''T; "'" _ .., '0 ,, __ 10' ...... 1'0. work he has helped make the news co. .. , ~,n" p.m... " ... , ~.,.) p ..... ~,,~ c",,,'_ h earing a voice already established as ~o"" ...... with his reporting of the news. Do rothy nOllllll-Gn Comments : number one in that field. J ohn W. Vandercook. n .... ' ana Mondoy Diu. X.. L lyO!; EJrI God ... ln. \\·.,hinllon Elton. ne", exp""; Robert St. John. fro'" "fIich"d c,,'1',''''~;~;'m'''.\'t'i\rli.o7~:',;;. r.~.'r Prophetic Voice \IS'> Lo"<1 .. ,, ••,,"It- L~k·UI'" f.{t'" olhu 'T, ...... 'OO p.nI ""... , ,",M p.m. Juk Stlrr Hunt. ne ..·• r~rl~r Watch for. ,''''''T' __'" I. M.... " ..'" ...... Fifteen years ago when Upton war Iro<\ I" XIl(' from \luOco Cily ~IBS The Star of Stars Winners Close came home from wandering nl';:'';:-,\' ~~",~·K;.l".. T~, "~'~ r..;, - <..-"~~';';.,t·;;.;::-~,,~~~,! ~"-j Bob Carred. n,.... rrl"'.If": ('1''-0 Bi~ I.~~.'JJ pn=·';"~~I=,',;,. ~.~ John B. HI/lhu. nc"'S .nal)·" ..... ,. ".,,~ '·Om ... ,." p.oI. ,.,," b...... "" 1\111:' w~., .::"""' on'y Ed ... in C. H,II. Th 11,,,,,.,, Sid~ < Elmer Davis. ne ... s In"lyst: ('liS of L~~ Nt"" CBS ,,:<;.'!":"J,0:.%. ':,,'U,.,~;:r~, ~'.'o!:~ /:;.<",: c",\!:";1'~ ",,~_~·=-w,.':"~~~~ 7~~~. r.,.·, T .. -..O ...... ~ .." _,."", Eoo< Albert Wa.n.r. ""'$ In.I)' p .... M"'-' p."'. "".. h"<-'''~) ",m, ""'T, ~'U II·"'. .".Ort,,r: ArLhu. M~"". Radio ~~ .. ~re-el ~" COS lo' BS C,I Tinney. Sui", Up tht Nt",: -n-o.'10 a."'. I."·~ ",00 .... MRS O:-"'T, _ ...... 'n,,' ,,' ,n _ ,. ( ...T~~~,' ~~.".. "',;,-~';"'~'~ J!>,'; T'--',OO p.". r"'T: ,,00 p.m. ('".,., 'O'U ,.",...... ' ",,~ p.", "' ..... I''''T Mtrritt- Ruddock. ne'" '~rl .. : Tlludo.,. Glbriel HuLlt', "e"" repor! .. r: ~IBS RichJrd Elton, "~"'I anll),.L: rh __ ' ,,"'-' •. m. "". ., 10,,,,-, a,.~. MUS nv-r, "'~ """.. h' ... ""'",. """ , .. ' \IllS 'T,,_.oo p.'" ",,'T, ~,OO p.",. Y, ...... ,"" p,'" " ... ~. a,OO p.". O:-"''T, 7:00 p.",... "'T, .. ,00 ".,"" ."T "-- . ('W'T, .... -...... a _ "". Ed... "d Tomhnl-Gn. 'Pf"iali,1 on ...... Sitgloie<\ Wltentr. an.lysis of SouLh A",~.i

    WLW-Aunt JeoulY. Slo"el \\MC-Mu.lule (15) C~~,laln J,m. U. S. A.: IIlme; I" th Groo\t (15) IMPORTANT NOTICE (15) 1I01'11'enona[ Sloop, ,' WALA WAPO WROL .. 1II:W1,;OA\ .... ; Ju.t Befort *WIoIC·Ne"" (lS) (15) (lw·215) (15) r;oon; HIJ!I: Marktts (15) * Every protram IlstH on thtSe l"itS Is ~roa~(ln A.M. II'llOO .\b I'trkins (15) .WMPS-News (15) ":IIEe·Belly " Bob (15) KLRA Li( ht of th World lin times weekly. Monday throll," Fr"ay. *W,",OX·New.; GOld \\S:IIShoppe,.· SlftlUd. * \\~'AA Il~"d of tht Day: (15) - Wor~s " MUSIC: KTUS '"'ril:bbor (15) (15) Sc.. , (15) * All Othff ntlwork and local ,rotralns not kstH In KTBS ·To IN 10~OI1nced WAPO IIMC (15) WOf'l.Caro!iD.a Pals (IS) WROL·Orj:,niot (\5) WTJS-Morninl o.tvotiOnal (15) thue ,ag.es-.an' all "OIl11ms ~rN'cul alter 15 ,.m. *WSJoIB·,",e". (15) (15) *Kall Smlln Spuks; N,." 1I1l0L.llillbillin (15) -may be 1000nd In Ihe "'IuLar ,rogl1lm $Klion on tht KTIIS·Devotional (IS) WWL.II",I nf Life (IS) WTIS-Slamp, Redio fin *WWL· N"" (15) * wnscs-. (15) KMOX KRLD KTRH day II lilt .edl Ind .t til, time 'f thl ~ay broadu.s!. O(ll W.\IJ>S..Singin· Sam (IS) KWKII WAPI WOT * If tht sLilion In .hle" Ylu IntfftSt" b HOT .WWL-New.; l>awn 8uSl· WOOl> I\'GST 1\ liAS i,. ers (30) WLAC WNOX II'IIEC Ibted In thUl pages II tht completion of tile specified IIWL (15) 12 protfOlm time (notd In parentheses after each list· 1'100. In,). Its Ilstln, .ill b. lound In tht regular 'rotrtm .:t5 9 .Boake Cuur. ne.,: 10 WMPS (15) $Kllon. Programs not found in tile rquLar section are . Breakfast Club : WAPO .... M. *H. R. Baukhlgt; Nt'II's: listtd on thH41 "il1 III • Mon.ay throu,1I Friday WCOA I\J80 WMPS .... M. KARK,N~nrtne Ch. (30) KTIIS WALA WDSU Story at Bf\,S Jollnson; KLRA,Strfn~,l e (15) (lw-15.33) (is) ~,sls. KTiiS (15) KARK KPnC KVOO The Barlon,: KARK KPRC KVOO WBAP WBRC *KTIIS·N t w,: 5J WBIIC WJDX (l(1) I\MOX 11'-\1'1 WBT Ihe Ro.d: WOPI 1V5ltIU \\'LW II'MC WOPI WSIl WJPX WLW WMC WOI'I WSB WS~I W5MB (15) KVOO U,hl of Ihf IYorld WCST WIIAS WLAC (lS) WS~I W~MB (15) (15) KUOA·Fnd McClelkey. Inr O,pha~1 of Oivor,,: KTIIS WIIEC WWL (15) 1 (15) School of the Air of the Valiant Lad),: KMOX (15) WDSU WJBO II'MPS KWTO-Ourk Farm lIou. *hLllA-Ntws; Farm Ntw. .... 104. .KWKIf·Ntwl; T.. nlCribtd Amencas: WBT WWNC KUIA-Guidilll LiJlht (15) (15) (15) J>\oim. (30) (30) .KTIIS-NewI: lIan(b Girl, .KTllS·Tr3nscriNd PllIm.; *WALA·N.w. (15) *KI'IlC·Ne ... (IS) C:EHTUL WAR TlMI *KWTO.Ne",," (15) (30) N.ws (60) WBRC·Lalnl"" in MUlle KRLD·Mulicale (15) WALA·Rtv. Barker (15) Missing Persons: KPRC KTlIH·Lilhl of the World (15) K'fUII 1';111&' 80rs (15) .Wond Ne.s R,undup: WFAA (15) *KtTOA-N.ws (li) WAPI·Mulical Notebook (15) WAI'O·A Morning Thou,bt *II'COA:>irwl (IS) KUOA·~liddl,. }hlod;.. KPRC KTBS KTIIS (15) KUOA God'i Ihll llour IIFAA·Guidi"I Li(ht (IS) (IS) WAIA WAPO WooA IURK·Jlne Ad'llIl Speak· (30) *WAP().N~ I (15) WJBOlI ymo. of All WDSU WJ8Q WJDX inc- (I') "0) W(OA·\lowing DeYolional *KlOONt.. , (15) WooD.Break-fnt Club (IS) KMOX.Mqic Kitd!en (15) *K\\KIl·New.. Rt(ord. (15) Churche, (15) KWTO·~j"&ln' Sam (15) WMPS WOPI WROL *WDSU.New, (15) WLW·£ d; tor' , Olughl., *WAI'O-Ntw, (15) WSMB (1.·21.5) (15) KUQA·Story Book C"tlt *WROL-Ntws; Here ComH (15) *1'mST·N e.,; Mut.icll (15) KWTOWhat',"(" Ne. (15) Band (15) WBnC·To"n T.lk (IS) I\·OPI·N_ Tunu (15) .He'll'lof Ihe World: KMOX Sw,di.1 (15) KWro·Rtv. W. E. Dow,1I WJIl().Lilht af Ihe World WTJS·lh~e You Got It! WooD-Prll.lt Rbj1bms WAPI WBT WOOD WIIAS-Asher " Uttle J;'. CIS) (IS) (15) *WROL N.. ,; Music (is) (15) WGST WREe WWN( m,. (Il) WALA·Lwianne Serenade WLAC-Curbdooe Collqt *W SB·N~ (15) IWAASi",in' San! (IS) WJDX ·Ju",le Time (15) ",\S .WS;\l8.New, (IS) *WJIKl ~Iu';c; /Ii.ws (\5) (15) (15) Vic" Sdt: KAttlLKPRC WLAC.coI.. Cumqu.1t (15) WAPI'Pot o· Chltler (15l *WMPS-New,; Womm·. *WMPS-NeW$; M1.lSic (15) .Cliflan Utley. nun: K\'OO Wo.1d (15) K\'OO WBAP ---WIlRC 11:15 WMCBob Kni!l:ht (IS) "·BRCScrttn Parade tI ) "'" WJDX WLW WMC WSB *\IMCSe". (15) (15) WIlECTime to Shint (15) WooD·Radio Revinl (30) .WNOX Ne.l: Vilialf *lItoiOX ·/Ii ..I: hrm Re Ws)f WS~IB (IS) Wor's & MUlie: KPRC .KARK ·N~w. (15) WROL-Sonp of tht South .WGST·Cln.cbason: N,1" "MPS (15) Bi,i SIsI,,: KLRA KMO,\ *WS)I·N..-. (IS) WLW·Lindl·. Fillt Lo ... Talk (IS) .WTJS-Ntw. (15) Down Brush Crm Way: KRLD KTRII WAPI \\'S.\I-Univtrtily of Tenntt­ KTRII·Mw.lcaI"'I) CIodt (Ill (15) ':15 WBT WGST \\'IIA5 .KLTOA·NfWl (15) WWI.-nme 10 Shine (IS) WMC·O~.il Bra"nt (15) K.\lOX KRLD KTRII Itt (IS) *Htltn Hlelt, ntws; WALA K\\KII WBT IVDOD WLAC WREC WWL WTJSThrH Sllr Revue .KWKII New., Trlntcnbftl W,",OX·Homt Folh Mu , i. WAPO IVCOA WDSU (15) (15) WG~T WIIAS WRE( I'in"" Woman in White: KMOX WLW·Till1t to Shine (15) KARK.Timt 10 Shine (15) WSM.Jatk & Hi ~ llu,jd,tI W(:!>T WLAC WIIEC KUOt\'\\OnJan's Oub of th. WAPI WBT (IS) (15) WGST *WMC·Ne1RC KVOO WUilP WJBO·Guidilll Ll&ht (IS) [''II'IT' MacHugh: KTHS .WSB·Good Mornln .. Ne ... KRLDHit PUlde (lSl Rhythmic Mtlodll1: WSMB WORC II'JDX II\.W WAPI·Down Melody Lane (15) WLW·Lont Journey (15) WAPO WMP:' (,w.15.33) (30) KTIlS·Ooc Warren (1 ) (15) WMC WOPI WSB WSM .WOPI-Ntws: Tunts (15) ( 15) (15) KTRIl.Musk.1 CIGCk (~5) WS.\IB (15) WLA{'-Old Dirt Dobber WSM-V anel ~, B~aHast C I u b: KTIIS WSB·Musicale (15) KAlIK-lial Hurn,' Vanetles KUOA.Jerry Sea~ (\5) (15) WTJS-Jam lor Ilrnkfut WJSO WMPS WROL KHLP Mu.i ..]!: (15) WSM·IV i ado.. ~hoppin, (15) KWKII·Flrll Baptist Churd! KTHS·Tr.nltribtd PrOVIrn W\OXGuiding ~bt (15) (15) "0) (15) (15) *WOPIStws; Curly Kin,. KLItA.Oilrie JamborH (30) II'WI._ Olwn Bu.tul (30) (15) WSMB·BeU,. & Bob (15) *hltLD·/lie... (15) KWTO·SUm .. TI.DJ' (15) KARK·)f,lodits (30) KWTOAulb.odero (15) lOngs (15) KMOX·Editor', Pau,httr WTJS-Jamt. Alitn. pi.nl,1 .KTAII·New, (15) WAPI ·"'lnle to Shi ... (15) WIlTTht Goldbtr" (15) WTJ!>Mulic for You (15) (15) *KUOA.Ne". (15) 7:15 WBT-lirmn. 01 AU Cburd! (15) WooD·lnvitation 10 lIIe KII'KU-Ual Burnl' Vlti"i" II (15) *KPRC·Radio Speci.ls: Do Vou Remtmber1: KTIIS W alt~ (15) 10:30 11:30 (15) II'SM8 (15) .WOOD·N~ ..,.; BruUnl News (15) WtoiOXLicht of the World L. n t 30urney: KAIIK Romance 01 Helen Trent' KWTO·MllIQuti Farmt~ Club (IS) KRLD·Silhou.tttl (30) ( 15) Plln 01 Melo')': WDSU *KTRII·Ne•• (15) KVOO KPRC WUA (15) KMOX WGST WIIAS (15) *WFAA·New, (15) WALA·Sin!in· Sam (IS) , ...·21.5) (15) WGST·10-2-4 Ranch (15) KVOO·Or. T. My!on Webb; Road of Ult: WBRC WJDX WLAC WNOX (15) ':30 WCOA·Sin~in· s..m (15) WLAC·Mulic for Breakfut Pqoo Gr£7 (30) WLW WlolC WOPI WSB N.t·1 Farm & Homl Hour: "AIIK·Sunrin Sertllidt WSM WSMB (IS) .WooD·Music; New. (IS) (15) (3(1) KWKH·U,ht of Iht World " House In tht Country: IITBS KTIIS WDSU (15) KTBS KntS WAPO Brltllt Horizon: KLRA WJBOLinda Let·, Social KLRAlluo,b,;ord FIII1117 WLW·Consumen' Found, IVJDO IVJDX WMC WSB olun,n (IS) (15) lion (15) Kwro·N~tte.; Schafftr WCOA WDSU (s•• 21.S) KMOX KRU> KTRJI WSJoI (lw.15.33) (IS) <:;j.le," (15) (15) KWKII WAPI WBT .WJDX.Nt.. , (\5) KMOX.Ourk Vlr;ttitl (30) WlolPS-Palriotic Pf'!D1. (15) *KAItK·NtwS; Musiul M... WMC-IIII I\I>ml' Varieties KTHS-Smoby Bunn,. ..,d *WREC·lol u.\ c. I CIodo; WAPI·NonltiH; Pot 0' StepmDther: KMOX KRLD WDOD WGST WIIAS WREe "'1fI1, (15) (1S) Ganl (30) N"" (~5) Chatttr (15) KTRIl KWKII WAPI \VLAC WNOX \,,-APO.MnmiD.a: o.tvot;OfI' WWL (15) KLRA·Arkonil' D t f. n I. WROL-MatinH (15) KUOA Tnod~ Winds (15) WSB .Qn tbe Air; loltJodi" \~IlT WGST WIIAS KH)()~lorninl Witch (30) (15) WREC WWL (15) (>" WBRCDiao,('" Dulin, (15) John's Other Wife: KTHS KUO.-\·M'$1u Buildefl of KWKH L((ht (;""SI OoUJb· WT1S-PoplIl.. Strtllade *KAnKlhst Ie Found; WALA WAPO WDSU Ammu (30) 12:30 be}·. (15) (15) WFAA·Your Morninl Pickup K\,()().WOIIIIil \a Wblt, (15) New. (15) WJBO WMPS (15) Vic" Sade: KMOX WAPI WALA,Fla,h", of Lif~ (15) WWL.Da..-n Buslen (IS) KPUCWomLil In White (15) WHAS-Ptppt. Youn", ram WCQA.U.ten. Ladies (15) WGST WREC (15) WAPIRu.hi'I Rbythm, (15) ":WKII.Lif. Cao Be Beautl­ iIy (IS) In (15) K\,OOV lit I h n DeLIlIh. WOPI·OiuTch the Wild fltl (15) L I, h t crUlt Dou.hboys: WJDX·!o tbe ..... olllao·. wood (15) \\,\1'0 IIrukl~01 Club (30, ... n~, (15) KW'fO.M'rktb (15) KARK KPRC WBM World (15) *WTJS·Ne.u CIS) (IS) II'IlR(;·lAt .r-.lorn Rinll KWTO . M~rket': ,\\ornia, WAPJ.1Ja:hl of Iht World (15) 8 WLW·Woman il W h I I. (15) (15) Mood. (30) 10:4, KRLD·Pulltt Mill: MUlle II (;OA.Ili11bi1l~ Roundup .... M. *WBAP·N e w.; M.rket. WAJ'O.Lund! wilb (15) (30) IYMC·Sill"Il( s..ltID.\an (15) Ju,l Plain Bllt: 'oKTHS (15) WNOX·Top Notch Tunll (15) *KTBS-New l; A Son, II'GST-HII Burn, VlrittiH .Nnrs: KLRA KRLD WBT WALA WAPO WCOA WORC·Weloolllt. N'ipbor (15) WDOD·SoIllI Ie Thoulht.. WOSU WJBO WMPS Thou~bl; Tra~l~ribtd PI'O> (15) WREC WWNC (,•• 17.83) (15) (15) ,ran, (15) *IIIlAS Ntw. (15) (15) *WOPI·Nt.l; DeYotional. (15) (15) *WJIlOO f~otjon.l: Newt *WBT·New,; Swlnl Tlml KTIIS·DIllce Orch. (15) II JBO Fu~iIi~t. from JUl· Aunt Jenny's Stories: (15) Brukfast Club; Don Mc. 1II:WSM·New. (15) "0) KMOX KRLD KTRH KVOO·8ob Will. " Boy. tice; Milkman'l Matin" & WDOD·Tun nonIen (15) (30) Neill, m.C.: WAPO WooA *WTJS·N~ . (15) WJDX·Bttly Bob (15) WBT WGST WHAS (15) WDSU WJSO WS:.l (s... WLAC·M~stttJ' Min (IS) WFAA·To be onl>oun~td .KWKII·To be .nnounced; IIJOX·Mu.ical fI..,k (30) w\\'L-H.I Burnl' Varielies WLAC (15) (15) 21.5) (15) (15) WMps·lJiht of Iht World Odd Qulrkl in th. Nt... : WLAC,Chuck Wa,,,, Ganl Andy Jacobson's On:htstra: *WLW·N e WI; LivulGCk Ne .., (IS) (15) W51X (15) ( 15) H.", Jack Turner: WSB ':45 IYNOX Sonl' Thlt Lin M.rket.; Everybody'. *KIVTO-Ne •• (15) *WI.W-N~w . (15) (15) (IS) Dnid Harltm: KPRC KVOO Firm (60) WBIIC·S,.nlN.chr (15) IBIC-lIome To ... n Fralin Music ROOfII: WJDX WSB WFAA WLW (15) WMps·Women', Club (30) *WCOA.Ne ... ; Studio Briel *KAIIK.New, (15) WSMB (15) *WOPIShoppert' Guidt: (15) KMOX.Musical CIodt; Mu· New. (45) KLRA· W 0 mao', llapzinf WREe·Swett RiveT (IS) (15) WMPS-Top 0' ,b. Mominl • ic; You May Not Be. Brukfut Cfub: KTIIS .W51l·N ..... , (15) (15) WROL-Tuh Rlnler, (IS) WtlODC.. ndpappy " HI • (IS) ~.ve It (15) WJBO WMPS (15) WSM,As YOIt Uke It (l5) KWKH.P. J' per You",', WWI.-Sinlin· <:;3m ,IS) ChiJIun (15) IIQPIBrnkfa,t Club (15) KPHC-lIelpful lIomn (15) KTRII·The My,tlfy ~ILII W5.\IIl·SlrirII; Ensemble (30) Family (15) 11:45 *WDSU·Ncws (15) *IHlOL-N .... (IS) .KTlIS·New, (15) (15) *WTJS·Ncws (15) WAPJ·Cuidin., I..i&bl (15) Nat'l Farm" Homt Hour: .WIlAS-Ne .... ; SI"'_I' II'S\lTimt to Sbille (15) *KUOA-Nt\O'1; Millie (15) KWKH·To be Innounucl *WIlRC·Ne... (15) KTBS KTIIS WDSU Talk (IS) Kroo·Morninl Weteb (30) (15) ':45 WOOD·To be announced WJ8Q WJDX W~IC WSB *wu.r-N~, (15) 7:30 KWKII·Cuidinr ~ht (15) KWTQ·H ..'nt Ib.nd. (IS) Wom.n of Coura,t; JOfOX (15) WSJof (ow.I533) (IS) *WLW·N....., (15) KWTOThe Gohblers tiS) WAPI.Hollywood In the KRLD KTRI{ KWKH WMC·No'll~ (15) Our Cal Sund.y: KMOOC \HIPS-Dlnce Muoic (15) TulS Jim Rokrbon. hr.: *WALA·N'twS; Sports (15) New.; Rhjthmic 1oI00d0; WAPI WBT WOOD \H"OX·)Ja Perkins (15) WGST WIIAS WLAe WROL M.ilitte (15) I\'JBO WMPS (1.. ·21.5) *WAPI·News (\5) TIli. ~orni", (15) WGST WilAS WLAC WOPI Film" Home HOIl. WNOX (15) .WS~·N"" (IS) (15) *WBIH;·Nc", (IS) *W8RI:-Ntw, (15) WNOX WRt::: WWL (IS) KARK-Orpn Mfiodln (15) .WSMO-Ncws (15) 00 Vou Remtmb.,,: W.·AA-Muslc 80x (15) WBT·Carotin in the '10m WWNC (15) WREe·:\I.rktll; Melody k.RLDTuas Roundup (15) .WTJS-News (15) WBRC WS~1B (15) WGST.Ju,t 1I0illt Follu ing; Alltn PrescoU (Il) Cllftr U, Ganl: WTJS (IS) Time (15) KWKH.The GoId~1I' (15) 12:45 KARK-M.lody 60)', (15) (15) WHAS-Mu,iclle (~S) Story 01 Mar~ Marlin: WROL-Ridin' the Ranct KWTQ.!OI~n It tht SI..,k- .KLlIA-World Today (15) WHAS·c...n CrHk Girl...... LACN ••• of the World KARK KPRC KVOO (15) Yl-rd, (15) Ro.ad 01 Lif.: WBT (IS) *KMOX·N~. (15) (15) (15) WBAP WBRC WlDX WT1S-R.dio Bible CIIII WALA.Ru ..1 Rhylhm, (IS) .John W. Vandercook: *KRLD·Nt... (15) *WJDX·N ,w.; Thnln WLW·Life Can Bt BeautI· WLW WMC WSB WSM WAPI·Ou. Puhlic (15) KTHS WAPO WOPI .KTRII.New, (15) N.... (\5) ful (15) (15) WWI."" ~b Perkins (15) WAPQ.llil!billin (IS) WROL WSS WSM8 (15) 5--11/21 THE EHTERTAINIo4ENT WEEK : A.RIL 18-24 hgt 19 Broadcast Mondays Through Fridays-7 a.m. to 6 p.m.

    Vour Crny Prim.: "PRC \\,~IC 1:; d, I D r' I Dausbl.. WliOX_Yo"". Or. )laloll' WUT Lone J .. ur",,> (15) WAI'I.TlLt futy·SilitT. 3:45 Secret Clt~: \\.\1'0 WCOA IIU\!' (15) (15) (15) *\I'lhU-\"~, (15) (15) (15) WOPI.Bulltlin Bo:iord (15) *Club MatlnH: Hun: "KAnK·~ t"W"O (l5) WSOX·Lile C.n Be Beauti· WIIA!).ltisbl 10 Ihppintf. \I'IIT Vie " Side (15) KPRCDoIi Willslow (15) rul 115) WROloA to Z ;n NovellY (IS) *WGST·N"ew'j Hitl '" i:.- ""ALA WAPO WCOA KUOA Vic" Sadt (1S) *":"OXX~ ~ (15) II'DSU WJBO (IS) KIILD SII'''P' Quartet (15) WS)t ~I.,.,. FOItc:. (1S) (1" .. \\"JDX·Stwl. ~btktt. tOrn (30) ":WTO ".d ,be Band (IS) *"TlIS·Ne.. ·~ (15) ( 15) \\·HAo,;·r.!a I' ..kins 115) *New$: "Ln~ KRLD 1\'BItt" Lalnt in Music (15) *W.\L<\ 'l:t",: Sloort'lIIu "WX()X Xt... , "u,ic liS) WOPI·Tn Time (15) KWKII WAPI WUC WDSU·Opporlunity Tome ( 15) WOPI·Bullotln BoNro. (IS) \lWL·\!artha Adam, Kitch WREC WWL ..... WNC (15) II'API.Flrm " Family fo· 2 3 II"S\I·Won1O" looks 11th. en (30) (15) WLW.\'k '" Sad~ (15) N.... ' (30) rum (15) 3:3D Voun~ Widder Brown: InU'S-K.y '" B~rl (15) IIIUlClbl Burn. V.rietln p,M, '_M. "pRC KTBS KVOO IY~" ~hrkft. (lSI (15) Agalnu tht SIOrm: KARK Club Malinn: WALA WAPO WBRC WfAA WJOX WTJ-S·T"" Tu~" (15) "Pile K"OO WALA Ba~kstage Wife: KPRC 3:15 WCOA WDSU WJBO IVCO.\·Se...,nade (15) WBRC \\'fAA WLW \YLW WMC WSB WS~I WBAP "Bile WCOA Sttll. Oalln: KI'RC KTRS WMPS II"ROL (IS) WSMB (15) WOOD.v.nty " Bill (15) WMC WSB \\'S"B (15) \\'GST·Snooj)Cn (15) WJDX WLW WMC WOP I KI"OO WBllC WFAA lortnlO JonH: KPRC *KARK.NtWI (15) 1\"IIASLivHtoo:k, Collt •• WSB \V~M (IS) KARK.H.ans in Unmony WJDX WLW WMC \\'SB KTBS K\'OO WBRC KMOX·Ma Pork in, (15) 5 (15) \\'SM WSMB (IS) ~f A~ricullure (15) Prescott Presenll: KTHS WFAA WJDX WLW KIVTO·Harnst Hands (15) '.M, WJBO·Serenade (IS) KMOX· H.. rt~ In tlannonr KARK-Lind.'. Fint Lo". W,\IC WSB WSM WS~IB IYGST·Sinsjn' Sam (15) IIAI'O WUSU WHOL *B. S. Bercovlcr, nows: I\"LAC·Cen!r~1 Church 01 (15) (IS) ( 15) nS) WIIAS-Road of Lift (15) Chri'l (15) KRLD·Markd.; Mu.lt (IS) Club Malin": KTIIS WALA The Johnson family: WSIX *WOPI·StrumlLntr: Now, WMPS (15) IVLW·llratt, In /larmon., David Huum: KMOX (15) * KTBS·N..w., Transtril;>ed WAI'O WeOA \\,DSU WTJS (15) (15) KUIATunt in Tonight (15) KRLD·Car.I • ..:! Clinic (30) Prl(m. (1S) WJBO WMPS WHOL KARK.Editor'. Oa",hle' WnOloA '0 Z i. Novelly (15) *WMPS·N"ew.: MUlic (15) *KTBS·NcWlj Transcribed *«'[HS·NewI: Raoe Re· (15) (15) (15) *h.\IOX Nt,.. (15) *IVIIEC-1tIusicj r.twl (15) Pr~m. (1S) sulU (15) KMOX·Llnda'. fiflt 1.0", KMOX·Lont Journe, (1S1 *KT/lS·New.: tlit Tune. I\,SM·Oepl. 01 A,ricultu •• *Kt·OA·S.wl: GUNte (30) KUOA·Southern Btllt (15) (15) KUOA·Popular Music (15) (IS) (15) KWTO·Lont Journoy (15) KVQO.Sketch (15) KRLDR.dlo Rniul (30) WAPI·Carter farnil-, (15) *KUOA NtWI, \Iolody Tim. *WS)IB.New. (15) *WUT·Ne". (15) WAI..t\·The G

    8:45 .... 104. WBT.Arthur Godfrey WDOD·Bible Class TUESDAY, APRIL 21 *WOPI·For the Farmer'. Wife; WI.AC·Caml>'" Ech""s MORNING H~r~ey " DeU: KMOX New, Songs I~ the Wind: WWNC WWl,.Mrdical Talk; Call 01 Dt· KlRA WREC WSB·Treasury Star Parade mocracy 7:00 A.M. MUjic RQ(lm: KPRC KTBS 1:45 P.M. 3:15 P.M. 10:45 .... M. KPRCMarket Basket LI~lng History: WnEe KTHII CENTRAL W ... R TIME IWOA·Jan Hubat; School of tile Air: WSIX WCOA·Mu.ic Room KARK·Mu.ical Grah B.q: K VOO·~lerr}'m3kers WII'NC KI.R,\ \liLAC WOOD WBRC,SHinr the Americas Hymn. 01 AU Churc/tes; WLW K WTO·Goodwili Family WOOD·Sincerely Yours KWTO·Hayloft Froli. KUO.\Mi!itary Band WFAA·Cousin Harold In Care 01 Aggie Horn: K'mS WBRC·Jimmy Brown WFAA·Modern Homemakers WJDX.Mary Lee Taylor WAPO WCOA WROL WJBO II'~OX·N'ltiol\"1 Defense Parade WlW·Curly " Ruby II'TJS·Sin~ It WNOX·Mu.ical Vari~lie, WSB·Carnation Bouquet WDSU KTlIS (.w·1533) 7:15 .... 104. WROL·Forbidden Diary WSB·Market N..... ; Freddy M.r. WSM·Betty " Dixie Dons lin's Or(h. KLRABringin.~ Mu,ic 3:30 P.M. .. 11:00 A.M. KRLD·Composers Birthday Prgm. Joey Kt;lrn~' Orcheslrl: WDOl) Swing Your Partners: WWRC 9 00 • WSM·lum " Abner WAPI WREC : ..... Children in Wu Time: WJBO KUOA·B. J. Faosler KlilA KTllH KWKJ{ WHEC 12:30 P.M. *WALA.Pelite Music.l; News KPRC·Louise Massey .. n.e Clar1( Dennis, tnr.: WAPO WALA WDSU WWNC WCOA Or. George S. S(oYe.".on M~sic for Everyone: WMC WOPI WJDX·Public Senice Weslerners .or WNOX.Nation.1 Ddcn.e Parade KRLD.Cradle Club ~:nl.l~.~Oy~i~neCo!'t't:II~~h WSB WMPS-Patriotic Music WOI'I.D03r Mom KWTO·Mornin,;: Ser~nade t'l r:! *WSB·New,; Musit WST·Ch.ekerbo.ard Time KTBS-Tr.nscribed Prgm. "WbJ" Pia, In W.,llme." Inner Drami of life: WAPO KTRH·Melodin WSMS·A to Z in Novelty 3:45 P.M. WooD·Cbeckerboard Tillu WAI'I·Carnalion Bouquet Words" Music: KPRC Rhythmettcs: WSIX WTJS WOOD·Clmation Bouquet KUOA.Fayetteville Broadcut WDSU.Meny Melodies WJDX·Markel.; ,Iusic 2:00 P.M. *News: WOOD 7:30 .... 104. WALA·Noonday Melodi •• Tunes from the Tropics: WWNC WGST.LeFevre Trio ... WSM·Music Hour WBT·Carnation Bouquet K"fllll TCXd" CQ"hOH WGST KLRA WAPI (ow. KUOA .Ameriu" l<11;"ion f'r~m 8ruklut Rendezvous: WAPI WJBO·luncheon Serenade WWNC WOPI·Carur of Alice Blair "I 11:15 .... 104. 11.83) WBTTo be .''''OIIIIC<,<1 WIlOL-Church In the Wildwood Words &. M~sle: WJDX WJDX·Theat.r News; Musi. I\PRC·Sammy Kaye's Orch.. Prescott Presents: WMPS WJBO WWL.Lifc of Peggy Hill Muted Music: WSIX WOPI·Tropical Moods Mutual Goes Calling: WSIX 4:00 P.M. KVOO·Wiggins lIollow Folk Jimmy Bl~ir, songs: WDSU *WWL·Nell's; Oddities in !be Walter Grosj Presents: Kl.lIA WBT·The Rangers KTRH·Serenaders 9:15 .... 104 . WMC WMPS New, KWKU·Food for Frerdam David Cheskin's Gan~: WTJ" WCOA.Yawn P.trol KUOA·Masle" of Music Son9~ by Sonia: WAI'O WMPS WLW·Girl. of the Gold.n Welt IntermezzD for Strings: WGST 12;45 ".114. WAl'IAlabam. College WWL KLRA WNOX ·Carnation Bouquet Army 8ind; WDSU WI.AC·llatmony Home * I\BU)·;':e'H: ~ket~hn i" Me' WAPI·Parade of SlaTS WROL·Mu.ie for Moden" KLRA·S!ockmu', Traib WHECPopuiar Music 00, 7:45 .... 104. I'TBS·To he a"no"n~ed WROl-Lovel Ave. ChurclJ KWKH·Chc~kerboard Time WTJS-For Deffilse fr~nkl~n Sttwart Enttriains: 11:30 .... 104. 1\TIIS·SmokeJ'. ll""ney and 'he KWTO·Lum~rjacks .2:15 Gall,. WWNC Vi & Vilma: WSMB WJDX·Cheekerboud Tin!e P.M. 9:30 .... 104. *News: WREC WNOX KTIUI K1JlIl·Tune T;m~ Elwyn Owen. ollanist: WDSU KPRC·Work for Victory; Mulic KLRA·Organ Fandes KRlD·Muskale 1:00 P.M. WAPI WPA Prgm. KWKII·Cotlon Markets: Tra,,· *Newo: KPRC KVOO KUOA.Voiees In Solll KTRH.Publlc Features Evenll Army Band: KTBS WAPO WJBO *WGST.News; Dr. Felton WiI· sc.ibed Prgm. KT8S·To be announced WAlA·From Ihe Record Shell WALA·Farm Buruu WSM. WROL WALA (.".15.33) liams: Musie IV ALA· V e"!K'r! WALA·W.ke Up '" Live *W81lCNews WCOA·Farm Fai. KARK·Treasury Star Parade WROL·Pleanntdale Folk. WB"r·].,u" ,~ Abner WAPO·Breakfut Club WLW·Sweet River WOPI·Tropical Mood, WIlAI'·Songs <>f a Dreamer IVWL·Ju " Jill Jack,on WOOD·S.lut~ WBRC·Your Banke. WMC·Noveliy Time WCOA·Something About Every· 2:30 ".104. WDSU·I"fu"na\;on Boo,h *WJ1l0,lnlerlude; New. WROL.Ted Steele 11:45 .... M. thing: AAA Spkr. *News: Men of the Sea: WJBO WJBO·Woman 01 lh~ We,'~ WJDX·L~ibert at the 0".0 Mirin! Band: WSIX WJDX.Toler Trail Ride .. WMPS WWL.Mu.k Apptl:cialion WMC·Mu.ie; Martha Til •• 9:45 .... M. KARK·Lum " Abner WOPIPublic Service Calendar EUeen Farrell " Robt. NIchOl. 4:1S P.M. WOPI Brtakfast Club KPRC·Novatime WSB·Gl'OrPa JubUK I\ROL.Morning Music KUOA·Paul Baron's O.d,. &(Inl $Oog.: WWNC WREC Watter Gross Presents: IVIlE4· WCOA.Mary Lee Taylo. KTRH.Musical Menu WS~lB·CI3.sical Favorile, New England Conservatary 01 WSM·G""",,1 Songs *WBT.News lo!'u,,;e: WSIX WTJS WIIAS I\WKII 1\'1\"1. \r'~"'T II'S'1B·Okk Lo:ibert. orpalst WREC·Little Show 1:15 P.M. KlRA·Swj!lg Ti me 10:00 A.M. KTBS KUOA.Your Weallh This W«k MirY Lee Taylnr: WOOD KTRH WSM8·F .. hion Fu... Between the 8ookend$: WIlT.\'ar;~lj" 8:00 .... M. WNOX·D.no~ Orch. WNOX WLAC KlRA WREC WTJS·Penny .•.Day WAPO WDSU WROL WMPS 2:45 P.M. 8(ukfilst Club; Don McNeill. KWKH KMOX WBAS WBT (lw.15.33) Andrin; ContinentalS: KTHS 4:30 ".M. m.t,: KTBS WSM. WWL WAPI KRLD WGST Teuj Schaol of the AIr: WBAP WALA WAPO WCOA WDSU Llndt Trio: WaST K"fllll 1\1.11.\ *WMPS·N... s KWTQ.Poultry Topic,; Harvest I. AFTERN9QN I KLRA·S.nliment in Sonc WMPS (5w·9.53) WAPI KMOX \ICOA·Melodie. WOPI·CarHl' of AGee 81a1r Hands KUOA·Bomertown Barb"'lu~ *W8T'>cw,: \",.ielv WJBO·Pan·Al1Ieriean Pr ~ WALA·Mary Lee Taylor 12:00 Hooa WlBO·Vuieties WDOD·MeloCharlH M.,nante'. Orth. WSUN ·~hjor RoblnlOn WfLfI 11'01'1 WSOC WPTF WLW WeOA WBnC \VMC II' IlT I'uhlir Mia'", K\lOX (sw·6.12) WALA WJDX \VSM WSMB WAI.A-POj.ulu Mu.;. \\"DOIl U. S. TU3'Ut)' 11'.11'0-,\111510 lor D.ntinl *H tw~: Roy Shield &- Co.: News: 5:15 '.M. 6:15 ",M. WOAI KVOO KAftK KTBS WGST-03n~o Orrh. Orak, Uni1. Ban~: WSIX WTJS WCOAMuoi( Bo~ flulew WJDX II'S~18 KT8S II'II,\Q KDKA WliAS· "e)'board,Consolo WUIIC WtMI WS\I 11'1101 WMPS io M announ,": WSIX WTJS * I',G_\ l or~'.n Mla,,< * \\,,,,p~.\"'''; Mu~i( Cu,n Rumb, RIYIII: Ma.go, II'ROL-You. Ikmnry 11011' IIFA\ 1I'\lC JOM Bllh,neollrl', 8,nd: KTII~ Mr. KINO, T.ner of lost Per· WR~X-Gov. COOJN'r. talk Carmen C.,tillo & MiI:: ...Lilo W"UX """'hine JM Eddy Oijchin'1 O r~hn'fI: W1"JS WOsU fOnl. d .. p,": WOSU WJBO Valde., YOI'ali1tl; 8ert Park .. \'iTJ:; plt3o.IItd.lt f\ll~, Wf,,, WEXU WMPS KTII S *Mu.ic b~ Shrtilnlk; NtW!i : m.e.: 11'1.5 WJ80 WMPS ':15 " .104 . *Ntws: Danct Orch_ IIAlI'!i WAPO weOA *News of tht World: WOPI WS8 WSUN Kl'O,\ KTIIS WDSU *John SllIle, news; Spofu: 10:00 ".M . W!)!.U WJBQ Voiu ,I BroadwlOY : WIlEe WBY KAIIK KTBS W,\IAQ W5.'18 Whil'1 My N'me:? A'le"1 fr.n· IVTJS IISI.\ Fn4 Warln,'s Ollh.: IYMAQ *N..... : W("O.\ WEl''iIl KWKII WIIAS WAPI WGST 11'''\1 KPRC KDKA (sw·9.53) c~: IIGS .II'G:' Xc ... *NfW1: II'I'U WOP I (1w-9.53) KDKA-Tropi..,.1 M,,,,,I, KRLI) \vLAC WWL KMOX * 1\\"OO·Xc",: :'IOa!;""al IJ~I~,,_ u nny Ross, tnr.: WBT \VilAS Are You a Mining Htlr?: WLAC WSt\·P",>ul1r II".", CI,do LU Cl1' Orchnt,,: WSU~ KlIOA-lhlS & Ento,et II(:~T IILlC WAPI WIIEC Kl.R" KTHIl II'IIAS WWL KTBs 1\1'11:; *" _\P I ·X~,,,: 1110,·,10,,, IIh,,'''<)Ih KWTOM~rfhjnt AloDI KWKII "RI.D WBIl" KMOX WIII'I KIlLD W(;ST KMOX 1:3 0 " .104. '. *" liT I)anti,,~ 1'3rl,', '1;.", WALA-Dnn Tim. WWL (a]..:o II 10:]5 p_m.) WRB" KI\I\II \\111:;(" WWNC .williim Shirer. new,; WA PI VIllAS Ma't~ ...-ork. Summel Symphony Co~cert: 11'000 \I'll Xl "LilA KIILD WooD·Captain D~n~tr Spo.h: wex KII"TO wsOX \l'mx WALA IIMC *1I'1.,1(".\r",: \idl1 Owl Club. I\}';\ I: \1',.,\11\' \IJBO low hTIIl! 1'11"11 \\~O.\ WBT *\\'JIM).II'."t Ad (-"I", .. n; Dane. * N.",: II'RRC II"COA "'ROL WBT 6_19) \0'" louis P'im.'s Oreh.: IV:,LX *II'I.W \"r,,·.; l):o"r .. Orrh Mu.ie; Ne". II'JIlX WNOX IWOA-.I".I M",ie Fibber McG ee & Molly ; Jim & WLW Jimmie "idler JU4. Vlra Birton, son,s: KWKII Kl'OA,( Ia ••i( floor KpRe IIIl\P \V~'LA WOPI \\'ALA·Goud Eve,,;,,'. Ju,lt:~ 7:15 ".M. * KDKA·" ~"S; I.Ic",;, Arn,· * Roy Shi.l~ '" Co,: Now.: W/l:O:< \\'I--\.C KTIlH WAPI WfOA WALA KUKA WAPO KflK,\ K\"OO Kt'O.\ .;""i". V.roe.) WROL .I .... n~'. Orch, T" SUI~'S Stud,os: WSB WOPI II A 1'0 """rll * I\'IK)!) \t.,,: Sport­ KWTQ.JII'I Rtlu I\\lOX·OO S,~~~ Frankie Muters' Orch.: KI:LD W~\IB \1 BIIC KTBS KPRC \1',\1'01.e-( \It hr." Repo rt 10 the NitlOn: KTRH . WIlIHI Li'I""""~ Plir~ Hid •• lhe Ra .. ~c 11:)0 " . 104. WLW KI'U( W~\I WGST Truo"r. 11,,"1 Ameriun Melody Hou r: WIlAS * WIl:'U·N .... 11'1101. Bel"er" ,l,t I. i"e\ *Bob B u.n~ Show: Elmer Davis. \l'G"'Te~'.r~l~ T •• II 1"!I,n. ';"Oon Butor's Orell_. WJIJX-A 10 Z i" !'Jonll) 1\'11".\(" liTi11! KIII.O KWKII *WS." Wo.~1 i" JI~"i.w Ht"'s- IVT.IS II",,,· Miller. Inr 110""' I,UIA WB'! liLAC IHIAS t'ott K"n~ Ihl\ \\"J80 I\\II'S II'XOX \\"(;~T KllO.\ II'LI( WWL-Ju'lic. l!i,I., lI.n~. WI'!l ... Spottl II'AI'I \\RRI, KLi tA II'\\'L K\lOX WUUM 1\ lI~:C WIIAS WI.A'-G3I3x .• 01 Stau R'1mond S(OIl's Orrh.: \\[lOf) II \OX WGST WWL 5:45 ".104. Will::(' WBT 8:45 10:15 " .104. 11'_\0\ KLIl.I II'I!I':<" KTIlH ihrH Rln9 Time: IIIWL WSUN ".1>4 . 1\.\\'1\11 KIlU) IIUT {,,...6_121 ne EHortS. songs: WDSU WJBO Burns &- Allen: Pllll Whiltmaft's Wt:.\U K\'O.I \I'AI'(} KTIfS M,u MUdt'$ Chiklno: WTJ-. Olmsted's Slory Oflmu: 1101'1 "1.lt,l-fivdi~n lief.... Or~h, .....n"r 1.N": Jim"'), Cash: wost wJno In,I'S IISIX WJn\ 11'0,11 W"'.III.I II"::oS Ramon Ramos' Orch.: K\IO\ *I\TBS ".".; Sport. Inns "1'00 KAIIK \HIC U,,, .. h I'.r"· KII'I\II WIHP (ow-9.53) WIlBI, Kl'OA Am.riun Offense IID:;l··'iI><>rlf"U<:.>I \lJIIO 110.\1 J\.\ltK Shp F'elds' Orc~.: KI.II_I WAPI * R01 Shiold &- Co,. Ht~ : II'G"·Tal~ I", Jnh" ~1 .... le Wa.\P S"i"JI: fo. \'"". SuPPt'r: * Se.. ., \\"I.~ WTJ5 W8AP KIlUl Tru'".) S,,. Par.ct. 1\;.;0:>, 1\I)(lD II'II'XC KTRII K\-OO IDI(" 1\1l1\.\ WII III Jin(l. Man WI~ll' I'.IoJ~' Tio,t WG" 1\,\11"'; KTB~ (.;00(1 Enninl, l"die \\-WL K\IKII II'S\l1l KTIIS Kf \ \ WOAI \ITO I ~b~1 .h 'hod * WIII'S-Xe,.. KOJ\.\ Tal' T""e KTllIll'oitr 01 Dro;rodw., Clyde Lucas' Orchestra: WAPO WBne WOPI-Shet. Fiel,!" 0 ..... I\"OSU W,IL I II'lDA WJBO KI'I:( An,,~ St,vir~ toit"I:!'tIlI Kt'OIl Il,,·e.ie 11"" 9:00 ".1>4 . *BBC Hews : She~ Fitldl' Oreh. : \1'1101, n ..... ~ n,~h Loui. Prim.·s Orch.: WTJs .it K\·OO·Tre"."r~ n,t,t To be InnouMed: 1\111.0 WBI.I\' WTJS II"SIX 11(;" KTII!; Ibtl' llou'f A>s'" KII'TO-Tru." .. (100" II I1T KLiIA WII'XC \\ II.\S *\."" h"OX \I'Lli' WREe SI~'''': KI'I:t II'lI1n, I\'IIAS * \I'D<'U·N~ ... .K\19A ~IIOr1': O;'Wet MII,ie: *I\.\I.A \e"'; " w"lar Mu,it II"GST KTrIIl WHI:\C WOOD NIGHT I>AI\I\ ~1~"I<; Mu>o( *WESR 1I ~"ry I\i n~·. Orrh_. N~\\'s WM'lll,,1l l'p ,I,,· H,,~ & I>,nof 11 ,83) "t,,·s KII'TO J"k~ 110_ h",loo,.... 1V1I1IC'·Q"'·"i"" Il l)~ "W KJ)KA-I'u.ic~le Bob Hupt Variety Show: franrlS KI~I.I) \\',,,,lIi"lI Matchu II'II.\S-Dr~aon "errn.", Wh.r. flt.r. " no Ibfll'9 *\\'AI.II Xr"~: lI :Oi"lool<' T.io IITOA ~lu,it~lc t.a"~lo,,J: Jorry <:~IOn"": Skin· *1\'1,1\'.",,,,,,, niHr: \,..... *II'AI'O·.\t",: tl,~attr Ne .... 1 WOOl) n.. ""I,1 l'lpl,io. or~ani", * KTIl~ "~,,.: To loe: an"o",,(td 'or a Ifaflolt 1#1 pr.r:.d1Itfl nay ~;n"i.' Orelo.: KAlIK WSa·S... i,,~ So<1,. (;0 Ih"",,1 6:00 ".M. KTIl:; II'UI!(.· 11'0.\1 WfL\ 11:45 ".M. WYI, \ <;,,,,rlo: Ib,d'all ~wc. II"IlOI. "".iul Tru'ur~ the.1 \l'BUC·Trea·ut)- Sur I'at:ade CENTRAL WAR TIIo4E WIl.\P I\ I'II( IITOA W.\I.A *Oon B"IOt', O .. h.; \\'JO\ I·"i.id" I 'H~'" WSH Ulln,' .t _11I~n WilT 'b.'c("\lr~~ of \I""t KI)K,I I'" 9,53) WllSU £1$' A(lS: \I\II'S I\nsu WJOO 1 \~I\t./ ""mal En.re \\~"" Hu",' & All." II~'A.\ """"lilth. & S,uff 11'[\11 h'fll:- \1(1,\1 II~. Anal) ... * \lUS \,,,. Summer S,mphofty Connrl: * "'FLI \0"'; Slr;"It E" ..mbl~ 12:00 ~Id. \\JIIO 1I1.\U Ihl''' I\I)~U WG.\ t·"'r.'t" no \,~I" ------, *John B. Huthn, \\·GST·\I"'it \'ou Wa,,' KM(l\-~h,.io Ahtt \li,h,,{h! ftews: W\'J'S KII LO-\l"'iral. 1\'(;\ WT,I:;o \l'L-\l··"ok~h Alh"", InlC,!;h_.1I II. W"IU' KII'hli T" 1><> ,"""" .. ,..,1 TUESDAY'S BEST LISTENING Fa ll Oul lor Fu": KIIKII II.IIAQ II'h31', \"w '" ,h, "rwsl WIlIl\l·8a.ty Winl"n', Orth KMOX Whal', Il~Ioi",1 110. N~." WHOL·(;,,'·NIU.r ('001><" In:\I: \'"" Piano .110011. s •• 11',11'1 Itll~ .<. )-;,,,,or., Or4 . Ffl:EQU£NCIES 12:00 H. R. Baukhage. 7:00 What's My Name? II~IX To be annouocta: II\OX KIIKII St. L oui~ Suenade: WOI'] w~'" KARK 920 WFLA 910 12:45 John W. Vandercook. 7:00 Johnny Presentt. KOK)\· 1020 WCN-720 .W. A. O·C, ..oll, newS: Inll'S I\TIIS I\SIIB \WI.A WIlOL KLRA 1420 WCST-no 1:00 Ced.lc Foster. 7:30 Horace Heidt's Tre ..ure Chelt. IIslX IITJ:, \\'11(" KI'lt(- 11,\1'0 10,,-9.53) KMOX-I120 WIIAS-I40 6:00 Fulton Lew;s. Jr. 7:30 Bob Burn. Show. Symphony Coocert : \\.\1'0 *\ew.: WI1EC we;" KWKII KPRC·9JO WiBO , 1$0 6:15 News of the World. 7:30 Three Ring Time. *KTIIS-X.,,'s SIIOrl. h'IOX 1\1\11 KRLD·IOto W DX-1300 6:30 News Here and Abroad. KAIlK-We're ;n .10. Army No .. KTBS·14to W AC' UIO 8:00 Duffy's T.:IIvtrn. \\AI'll'"iv, of Al~h~u,a KTHS 1090 WLS-UO 6:45 H. V. K.:IIltenborn. 8:30 F ibber McGee and Molly. \I GN Hill S~"dtrs .<. Guy ~avagt KOKA :'.r~"ad~ in Iht Nilht KTIIS·Dallool 01 Ille Air: WS IX ".M. wwe ""y; Westemu", WMC WCOA Mett Your Neighbor: IVDSU Hymn, 01 All ChurchH: WlW Landt Trio: K\VKH KLRA Your Hollywooll News Girl : To be annount": \\,SIX II'TJS \VJOX \VALA KTBS WAPO KI'lleJaek Btr~h KLRA·Popular Music KTSS KBRC KPRC WAPO WBRC WROL WSMB WJDX-Markeu; Music KMOX-Tru.ury SIU Parade WROt Mr. Kno. Tractr 01 Lost Per. KRLDSoulhern Methodist Un;". WAt'l·Trulury Star Parade WSM·Jane Granl " Orch. Fr1Inlt Puker, tnr.: KMOX SOIll, drama: WDSU WMPS Grunlield Village napel: WWNC *WALA ,I'.til~ Melodin; New. *WST.Newl; Twilight in Dixie WENR WJBO KTHS WJDX·Cofl~ Club "WKII KTRH WGST WWL Elwyn Owen, organist: WDSU 11 :15 .... 101 . WooO.Melodies from H... aii *Hews of tht World: WSB WSM WMPS·Palriotic Pl"lm. WS".Romance in Sludio " B" Wl.Ae *\'t'''': K\,oo KPRC Words" Music: WJDX *WSB-Ne ..s; Music KARK WMAQ KDKA KI'I{C WSMB-MUler Sinsers Four Polka Dots: hw-9.53) KTBS WOPI WSMO *WJ80·lftlerlude; New. WS~\S·A 10 Z in NovellJ I\OPI,Breakfait Club Sharron Torrtns, sonis: wosu WTJS·Jan,u Allen. piani,t 10·2·4 Ranch: Kl'oo WSRC WMPS (sw·15.33) *\,,,", KTRII WBRC WCOA I\SM-l024 Ranch KARK-Sports; Smiles Pren>. IVJDX WIlGL II.UOA JOU Cha~1 2:00 ".M. 4:45 ".M. KTIIS·Sfrtnade KUOA.Little Show Sports' WGN KWTO WMC·Mu.j~ale ClUing; WSIX Three Suns Trio: WSMS KLRA·Goldcrest five 8:00 .... M. 11'I'iOX,Tin Pan Alley Mutu.1 KWTO·IA.t Wf Fo"tl IVTJS KTHS-Popular Muoie WBT·Ea.y Aus *KTRH-Open Forum; New. II'ROL-Chick Marlin 1\t'OA Cb,.i~ 1I0ur Brukfast Club; Vontists; Oon Musil: Willlout Words: KLRA WFAAllulh Waddill *WJSO-Mu.i~; Sows Mel'ieill. m.e.; Orch.: KTBS WWNC WLAC WJBO·M"". ,n a !itnlimtIltal WJDX.Lislen to leibert KVoo·Ju.licc Rid ... Ihe Ranse 11 :3 0 .... t.! . )Iood WALA·Good Evenin'. Judge (5" 21.5) Prescott Prtlentl: WMrs WJBO WLW.Squeakin' Ducon WJDX·Colln;e Hour WI'iOX·Superman WAPOSporl. HIPPY Jack Turner, SOngl: WOPI KPH t·La-..nnce Welk'. Orda. Jack Str<:h, ",n,s: KWKH WOAP.Julliu Ridel lhe Ranle WGST \\'OPI·SU~tfllan WOPI-('hulie Barnet's O.d•. *IIAPI\,c"" Ridin' High; Si ...· Kkl.D·Jack Btrch WSB.Youth " Ihe lIudlinn *WOOD·Ntw.: Sporl~ in( Strinl"S KTHII.Tune Time KTRH ·Strenaders WSB-M.n of M.lody WFLA·VioL. Todd; NoveLlie. \1'I)QO·lIob Jone.' Colle" WALA·Musiul Mom.nl. WAPI-Alabama ColI~ge WS)fS·JiII Jackson WTJS·T.u.u.e Chut WLW·G.tlor Ziem". Rhyme ~ *w\IPSl\e,,,; Inlulude WCOAFarm Fair WREC·Popular Music 5:00 ".M. Line WOI'I·l\n~allme *Edwln C. Hil!. comm.; Store 5:45 ".M. *\\MC·Mu.lc; New. 2:15 P. t.! . Board: WBT WOAI-Jullice Rides the Range 8:15 .... M. 11:45 .... M. Vag.bonds: WDSU WJBO IVSUN-To be ..,nounm Prescott Prennt!: WROL *NIYY Bind; New,: KTBS Songs in the Wind: KRLD WOOD Wayne West. songs: WMPS *Ne.. s: WIlEe KTRII WMC W~a KARK 10.2.4 Ranch: KLRA WC04 6 :3 0 P.M. (.",-17.83) WSIX IVJOX WIIOL KT8S·Transc.ibed Pt~m *B. S. BercoYici, news: WSOX Caribbean HlghlS: WALA WOP[ KAIIK·Midday "Orson Mtlodie. (sw·9.53) KUOA.To be announced KLHA·Jfllel Cowboys WAPI·Army Pr~m. WBAP·Dance Time; Find tbe WS~'B WAPO wCOA KARK wJDX-Timt to Shine Kl'nC·Lisl~II 10 L.i .... rl *WGST·News ; MUli( Jon Beth. ncollrt'l Orch.: WJBO WAPO Hillbilliel WAU Woman Th lt Bre"sler Boy: WREC WLAC·Je"fi Co",boy. WWL·Jaok Buch *WOI'\·No," I\'BEC-towboYI 1I'1IT.Zestaqui.r: 1..:>", Ranger' WAI'l WSMS WGST KWKH KTRH WAM WnEC·Ch""kerhoard Time WGST WIIAS KIlLO WLAC KLRA WTJS-Challenrff Jambotft 2:]0 ".104. WWNC WWl KMOX WBBM 8:]0 .... 1-4 . 10·24 R.noh: KPRC WOOD NIGHT Keyboard ConCHts: WWNC KRLD WTJS WBT (sw.11.83) Son.~ In the Wind: KTRH KWKH WREC KTRII.Mulicalt *Ne.. , Here" Abroad: WSUN n lbtill. WJBO 8.uklast Club: WA1.A WCOA Thr« for Tu: IVSIX KII'TO-Trnlury Stir Puad. w.... . t"", ,. *WJOX.Jimmy Davi.· Orch.; for cr . fofloll Its pr. c . d lll. *Ntw.; Men of Ihe Suo WMPS *News: WLS WTJS WFAA WGN KUOA·J.jllle Conttrt Sews p ro!iJrlult ,. 0 11 f •• • lr. KDKA'The Gteat Gildtrsleev, IVSBEniti nay KUO.\·Your Home WI.... C-Music; Scoreboard 12:00 Hoo/l KI'RC·Armed S4'rvictl New.; Mu WJBORad;o Kmhen WRI:;C·SoutbweSltm on the Air 6:00 WTJS·for Ddon"" ".M. sic 8:45 .... M. CENTRAL W"'R TIMI 5:15 " ,M. CENTR",L W ... R TIM I KTBSGood EYf-nini. Jud,e KTlIS·Balh lIou"" Glnl Hedda Hopper', Hollywood: EllY Aca: WMPS WENR WJBO Blue Streak Rhythm: WWNC Buerly Mlhr, sonts: WSMB 2:45 ".M. IVWX KTBS KMOX KIVKIf KRLD WDSU KTIIS (Continued on Nut Plttl KLRA WREC Lowry Kohler. songs: WMPS , ______*KII'KlIl\e-... Melody Souvenirs: KPIIC wFAA WCOA·Noon Tunn WSIX po~tihl Southtma!rH: KTIIS WALA Harvey & Dell: K\lOX WMAQ Warrtn IVri,hl. IJI~ "I WAPO WDSU WMPS (lw·9.53) WEDNESDAY'S BEST LISTENING KUOA.Three·Quarltr Time *WSB·New. KUOA A.kanAI TraveLers WooD.Momln, runu K\VT().Womln of Cot.. ap s •• pro!iJram Ilsflllg' tor 1II0re dllfo l/ a lld addlt lo ll a l II ...... progrom. W~OX.~lu,ia.1 Vaneli ... WCOA.UncroWlled Htro WnOLForblddtn Diary 12:15 ".M. Sktlcht1 In Melody: KTBS WOPI 3:00 ".M. WSMS WSM 9:00 .... M. Music Without Word" WWNC News and Discussion Drama Checkerboard Time: KPRC WDSU WREC W1.AC KTRII KLRA Cluk Oennis. tnr.: WAI'OWCOA KVOO·Flrm Prolit Burtall A.M. P . M, WBRC-Mulic From Paradise *Rkhard Eiton, comm.: WTJS 6:30 T hat Brew.ter Boy. Blue SUlik Rhylhm: WREC WMPS 11;00 BOike Gart er. II'.·AA Mrs. Tutku'l Smile P"m. 7:00 Adventures of the ThIn Man. KIlLD,C ••dle Club WSB.MarktU; Orch. KWKH·W. BelieH in America P.M. KTBS·Women In tbe Ne ... KW'fO.Sonl1 01 a Drumer 7:80 D r. Chrl.tlan. 12:00 H. A. Baukhage. IIALA·Melody Tim. 12:30 1' .1-4 . WAPO·Musiule 7:30 Manhattan at MidnIght. WAPICo/fu Time WCOA·Dance T~mpOl 12;45 John W. Vanderco ok. WDOD·Organ Rtllcttlonl Homespun: WAPO WSB WDOD·Salute 1:00 Cedric Foster. 8:30 M r. DIstrict Attorney. WDSU·lnterlude on Hecordl Checkerboard Tim e, WA1.A WGST_You Can't Do Busin"' 6:00 Fulton lewis. Jr. 10:30 Author's Playhouse. WGST·LtF,vre Trio WJBO wilh Hiller 6;115 News of the Wor ld. IYII0LLi5itn. LaJiu KTIUI-Muucal Quiz W.I80 Varieties 6:30 NowII Haro Ind Abrold. WWL-Suzanno Javuu KUOA· lllItr·State Qui~ WRO{"A 10 Z in Novelty 7:55 Elmer DavIs. Classical Music WBT·Jaek Btrd>. II(lnp WW[",Civilian DtfenK: Call of IYMC-Novtlty Revue 8;15 Frank Cuhel. Demotracy III Dotall o~ PO!iJ.' n and fl, 9:15 .... M. *WWI.·!"t-.; Roundup 9:00 John B. Hughe.. ] :1 5 ". M. 9:30 Morg,n Beatty. SymphoneltH: WWL WBIG 12:45 ".1-4. KLRA WGST WREC *Club Mltlnee; Ourward Kirby, WTJSPtnny-aO~y Vlnetnt Lopu' Oreh.: WDSU m.e.; News: hw·9.53·15.33) {ow 15.33) Childr..,.. Are Also PfO~I" KLRA Variefy 9:]0 .... 1-4. Classics In Tempo: KTRH KWKH KWKH WREe WWNC KTRH A.M . KtRA W1.AC Melod1 Strings: WSIX 8;00 Brellkfast Club. KWTO·Boot. " Bobby KUOA Pleuantdalt Follrs Jack Btrda: WBRC IVMC *"ALA·Se"" Sporll WS-OX·Sc;entt for lIomemaker P.M. KLRA-$nowdrift Sinsn WJOX·Ttiil Ridtn \\-"~S-Swinl It 6:00 Amo. 'n' Andy. KUOA·Gems of Melody 6:00 Fred Warlng'l Ol'1:helltr., WALA-Jim Dandy TIm. 3:]0 " , 104 . 1:00 ". 1-4 , 6:15 Lanny Aoss. WlW·S.... etl River 7;00 Quiz Kid •• WROL·Happy Medinl Golden G.tt QUJrltl: KTRH nm. Vincent Lopez' Orch.: KTBS KLRA KWKH WREe WWNC 7:30 Uncle Wllter's Dog Houso. WAPO WROl WALA WSM WOOD 8;00 Eddie Cllntor Show. hw.1SJl) ':45 "',M. WNOX·Biblt Hour 8:00 Baarn Street Chamber MUllc So. WMPS WDSU KARK.Matie MtlodIH WOPI·Book Rnltw clety. Cheer Up Gang: WS IX KWTO·Carl. WilU., Cliff WHMA WJ80 WBAP·Ch«kerboatd Time B:OO Shirley T emple 'n Junior M J-. 7:00 P.M. Chaplain Jim, U, S. A.~ IVCOA WCOA·Som.thilli About Eyu,.· 3:45 " .t.! . 8:30 Alln,om Sherman Show. KUOA.Mu: Condon thinl; Melodi ... *Ntws: KTRH WOOD 9:00 Kay Ky.er', Orchest ra. by..tLIt'..t - SELTIfI! P a~e 28 11/28-5 *Gabriel Hutttr. ntWI: WGN Plncho's Orchnlr.: II'SIX WTJS Programs not listed here may be KLRA-l.ut Ih Fo"rt WMI'S KTRII·To bt announCK Kl.RAArmy I-ttcrultin, found in our new Monday·through. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22 KWKIiJimmy Davit' Gant WOOO-Vi~itini Our Amtriul Friday Section on Pages 18·19 \1 API Your Town" Oun WGXHill S~ndt ... '" Cur Sava,e WOOO.c,,·,li~n OHeoN WIIAS·To bt annountK TIle f,aterlcrhrmenf ,t w.. WGST Glf. nub \I UC -Sophi,l;utt. Frankle Maslers' Orch.: KTRH 11:00 P.M. wur I'i";on in M.. IIC \\')I;OX·Navy ChUltr WWNC KWKH WOOD Kl.RA *News; Tommy Tucker's Orch.: WMI'S·\luoinle WII'l. (6:30 p.m. ConUnutd) WALA.Jot Scull, 110"1' 11'",0:\·1' of Tpo,", Ilound Table 9 :]0 P.M. WDSU WSUN WJaQ WMI'S *KUOA-Sport.; Dinner Music; WAI'O.Th~ Soulhla"d Sinl' WRECl'op Conctrtl *MII.giln Butty, news: KTIIS Clyde lucas' Orch.; WJBO hw. *New~; Hal Mcinlyre'l Orch.: N.,... WCOA-Telel'ho"t Quiz W~l':\ rt> I... ~"''',unced WSUN WMPS 9.53) W)I;OX WOOD WREC WIJT KVOO-Evcl~n L~n"r, son,s WItOl.-~lu.i,'~1 Fa,hion, WW .... Pirate. of Tril>oli Kl.RA·You Can'l 00 Businto. *1'(~",", WSI-tC KMOX WMAQ WHOM KTRIl K[.IlA KMOX I(II'TO .!uk~ Bux J.mboru WSUN-:;un,hi"t Joe with Ilitler Wl.W (,w-Q.12) *II'AI'O-l\cws; Theater News; 8:15 P.M. SpOrts: KAIIK I\I'IIC 7:15 P.t.!. Kl'HS·Arh,,~ton Orch. *News; Paul M~rt[n'5 My,lc: CariblJ(:Jn Sightl *Fr~nk Cuhel, ntWI, Spor1$: *WOSU·Ntw. KDKA \lu,i,.le Carmen Caullno's Orch.: WSIX KTBS WMAQ K\"OO IIIlAP 11'lmr-l'~I"Y Trail. 11Th 11':.1.\ WMJ'S WENRH.nry Kinl'. Orch. * 1\.\IOX\"i."in~ tht Ntws WMe WS\I WOAI WBRC IHX)O Oill".' \!u,ic KL'OA .:vtn",~ \'ariel)' \I'G:->·n.dio l'llyhou't KRI-D·Gol,l.n Trnoury or Son~ KWTO-Thi1 IIh)lh,,,;c Afr I\l.IlACal. & Canary Orrin Tucker's Orch.: WTJS WDSU·l'i. Du.-(IU' II' ,IP[ Sih",ore Boy, WHAS-:».Iute from "htlb7 K\"OO B ••chall 5 .... ; Sin!in, COny". \\.ltC-Th. Grut Gild.",I('tcn 8 :30 P.M. WBRC·"'ilht 0,,1 Rtv... 110n; New, *wm's·".w.; ;,poru 7 ;30 P. t.!. Mr. Djtlritt Attorney, drama: 9;45 P.M. WIH·"a'ttrwOrkl * KWKII-:-> .... ; Club Coron .. d .. II'XOX·T.r~.u~' Slar I'aradr InlAQ KARK II:>\I~ WF'l.A Jean Cavall, ,ongl: WSUN * II'DSr n'e Wit Toda~ * WAI'I:->~".; IIh)'lhon Rh,psody Un c I e W,lter's Dog Hou~e: II'GS'("hiu~o al I\,~ht WOAI-Jimmir Fidltr II'FAA WIJIIC \\'JOX KI'OO *Hews 01 the World: WWl. *WHAS-1'(~w.; MasttrwoTkI KI'IlC I\'FA_\ \lJOX KAKK II'G>;T .11\l'io \'ou Want 1\IIOLSI",rlt \\'UI'I II-OAt \I'l.l\' KI'RC II'IIEC I\'.~OX I\\\,KII Kl.RA * 1I'l.AC·N."s: N'Sln Owl Club; KTIl~ WlJllt II"S'1B WALA WSB ntHlllt in Dixie II'~IJ \I'~IC II~" KTIJS WCOA llDOD IIAI'I hw-I1.83J WIlA"\\"~1 h L .... " WDS!.' WS\1S *11'GST.Th, World Toda7 *WAPI'[u,it You Want; Jun He~hult; £hller Da"i", Neon KAIIK.t;. !:>. M.rine (or~ KLK,I ~,. To ... n II U(' TrU'Ul}' ~IU Paradt Aulhor's Playhouse: KI'RC WSS WEXlllludd)' F.anklin·, Orcb. "tw", WIIIJ~I WG"T \\'AI'I KRI.n II,~~ Iborunr. *II'~II'S-:->e ... ; Mu". KTlI" 1021 R.llrh WF'LA 11"01'1 IHUQ KARK WIIOl.~lu.ic You Want WilE(: II UC \l1Il. WIJT KWKH·Tru,ury "Iar Parade W~\IIJ KHXl "I",.IS WAI>(J 111I0l. KTBS WTJS·Oanirt Woody Herman·s Or(h.: KTIIIl .\a' WTJ!:i XIVler Cuglt's Orch.! W!;IX (;",·,1 Ii,,!!, \\,"I~r~". who I\"JDX,At,il~ 1l0)'N KWTO-Trf",urt ('h.t wG", TrN""Y SI~r I'oradr Clyde lucu' Or~ht~lra: I'I'SUN ,I,"'.'" "orhl",', r"r \1', ·Ih,~­ WHEf KJ.flA WOOD KWKII *1I'l.A(" <;I~""; :->ew. Wt\l>(J-Mu,ic for Ua,«illg * W.III'<.; 'ie .... I\'\IPS too"", f:I«·trk. \\':\OX \5",6,12) 11'1.<; ~",ile \larktt 111)00 Orlan foItlodiu *New,; 1101'1 \\,FI..\ \1,,-9.53) Teddy POWtll's Orch.; KVOO 9;00 P.M. * ""'~"" KII'I\II 11111111 WG\ *\I\lAQ)I;ews *11'\O\-S"i"~'ltr Ti,,,.; Elmer *"'."s; KAIlK \i.\()0 1I'l.,I( l\'ItEC w~'-'Q KIlKA \\'<.;'IB KTBS *IDII'~·Fuhon l.r"i .. Jr. Oa<'il Kay Kyser', Prgm.; mU'Siul 1I_\l>(J \IIU~ IIJI)X WIlIHI Dance Oreh. I\TII'> II'JD:\ WFL\ 11'01'1 11'1,\,\1' \\"014.1 WIIOl. ,,,,,Uri lbl! of tht Ait *\\",OX 1I"0rid Ev"nts qui.; It~rr)- Bahblll " Sully WL\\ 11_\1( \l1i,IP IIOAI We,\1 11'",[ WlJlle Inl( WOI'I- \'iN{inia Gor. to War \I'~t''''·To I, "n(H'"rN ~I~",",. ",x.li.l. WFL\ \l'l.W WROl. KpllC WTJS IVSB 1\1)1\.-1 ~r"''':t'I~ in Iht '>;lhl *Henry Kin,'s OrCh.: Hewli: WHOL 0" Ihe lIou ... *IITJ~ \t" \\11'0 KTIJ~ IIJ[)X IISIIC *"orld al La",e: \IAt.A II~\IB 1\110_\ Franc. I.~u~, 'poru W<;l-\' WJBO WE.\R WMPS II'TJS·At Yuur Ihqunt I\Rl.D 7:45 P.t.!. K\'(lI) KA\l1\ Ill'OA WI-tOL I\TII,.. hak>p n,~h N.i] Bondshu'$ Drch.: WBBM 11;,~1IJ II'O,I[ KPIlC "AU hom. Rich: wallC II'\UQ W.\P() ~Iu,j( Buulilul 1\\-00 _".,,-illt Troller K'lOX 7:00 P.t.4. * "])K.~·\ lJ~n"e W~~l I\~IJ InAA \\OAI r" I, Arm * W.\I'I.\~ ... ,; <;I~'rt. *Wll~t \~w. Quiz Kids (Alk~·Se!tzu): Jot *1\1)(l1l·~ .. "... 1 "" :'''U'I; Elmer stron'!". O,~h. Il~,'i. WII.\Q "\1f KOK,\ ( .... ·9.53) ,,'RAI' I'r"un IJroadc ... \';I1.\"·D'.. m "Ntnada Kelly. nM.; Wl.S InlP.-; *John B, Hughn. ~ews: WTJS KMOX 0" :;l~.f WI.W \loon l\iHc WllSU WJHQ KTHS WSG:-: *W~l'\·I\".lu Ti",~; "'t"" WBRC Elite Club Ih['\ \\'\1J>S W(;,,' KTas·To b~ .nnoun.1'd \\'SB·S"'i,,~ X~ct"rnt IITJS ~ank N'lh: 1\"('0,1 Jol"",~' "ack'. Orch. (1360 kc) WmlA (l4SO kc) *](TII~ "'0'''; J)~II«: Or.h, To be annoc.ottd; II))SU KTHS 111,.\1: 1""cII "II ~I"'rh *WWL,Ord", )\N' ;~., !~~'""''' c __., .. ."...... 8:00 P.M. IIJIIO IIL"1l Inll'S *I\'("()'\ "'".... ; ~h"ic II'IIA" Gr.,,1 'h.m~"h ito Music II'O<;\.:- The \'tr~.lili,,,s PowerhOUH, with Raymo~d Eddie C.nlor Show; D'nah Shore; Glenn Miller', OrCh.; Ray Ebtrle II'L.I{ .lIdod)- Ti",. 11:45 P.t.!. & 11'1-'\1\·'1,"1 110110,,,01 \I\I.it *HtMY Kings' Orch., News : :;cott: \\''''OX WDOD WAPI Btrt (.II~,I llo",i,n) c"rdon; I'aula Kflk. \,oeoli>l,: II'LII' Charlic ("'x' Oreh WOO[) WI.At KTIlIl WIl,\S IH;\-Tht An"'.r ~Ian WD5U W~lnl KIILO WGST WL\C Edur hjrrhi~r. Oreh.: KTBS WIIEC Kl.RA KTRIl KWKI/ In1 \Q I\AIII\ \\,<.;\1 WUfle WIl"C KnUl K\\I\II WAPI * II'CST,Dancf 'lu"t; Xe .... 10:45 P.M. 12:00 Mid. I\W"",/" "LilA II'(~Sl' w'>OX IIJllOA't.e,-" 01 a World al *Fiule WnA WSB \\,FA\ W\lAQ 1I'0p[ II'F',\'\ II API Inle 1<" 11.83) *W".\t lI'"rld ,n n.v,." * KOK.\ \'e.. , KWI\II·To I.., announnd 101(" WS'l WI.W WOAI lITO" 1\'1101 KDI\A IIAPO WSI'\ nall,r \luoi( 1\_\10.\ "oonli.ht Ser,,, ,,\t WWl.·Ju'lin Hid.. R,,, ~t \I'BB\I Saron Elliutt'~ O.~h \I<.;\lH K\OO KPRe WBRC 1114.1.14. KTIlS-~lu. "kin 9 :15 " . M. WF:\II-\tu' I'"" \\'anl KTIlS II'JOX K.\RK KDK" Shirlry Ttmplt in Junior M,n: 10:15 P.M. K\·OO-.\ .. na Ibri. Tr"lInoW * II'G\ \ .... \1 Chutk Fo.t«" WOI>J KIlU) WlI,l" 11'lllnl K\lOX Great MomtM5 ,n Muslc; Jan Thr('tc RomlOi: I\'J[}X ,,'S'18 II 1'_1111 \l,~ d_ ""I \lu " P.nee- WIJIJ\I 11',1.1'1 KRl.O O~h *Cal Tinney: weN II liT 10 ... 1183\ II(lPI F 1111\ II(},II "-fl.A *II'E\I\ Sr.... orr H,. ilt' End or Wtdntsda, Progrlmli

    \\'In:\·Slim ~tOl:~i".· Cowboy. W~1l 'I"rh'~; liud,l, ('ole II'.ID:\ ,Ii",,,,}· Da.o-i.· Orcb. MORNING \I'!...\f·-Mu,ie IJu. THURSDAY, APRIL 23 WS\I·I.um '" Aim'" 11'01'1 \,irgi"ia !li~h School 8:]0 .... t.!. 1:30 P.t.!. R~ylhmic Mflodiu: KTB<; WALA 12:30 P. t.! . 7 :00 .... t.! . The RIddle of Life: \\.11'0 WSS *Hrw$: II'\PO \\,,014. WAIA (, ... 215) WIIOl. WJOO II'[)SU KTBS GOldtn Glle Quarttt: KLRA II \1(" \''''ril,' Tin •• Kl·O.\ '1a.I ... of \1uo. CEMTRAl W ... R TIt.4E Sketchn ,n Mtlod,: Inlt 1101'1 W\lP~ (",15.13) \\IIEe WROL \i.. II." 11)1;0.\ Carnati" B"UI'[ For ,h. Farmer'l Wile Burl Ivn. tongs; l\flEC Kl.RA 10:00 .... t.! . 11'.\1 .1 Ih«h,,,. AI"nl n'Kkerboard Ti'H: \l'IlT WOOl) . II'\\'l. "'.w,; Qd,hlieo. ito thr WSB·Trt3s,,~· Slu I'.",de WI\,XC Mary lu Taylor liLAC KTRH \\,("OAF'o"n Fair II'TJS-P.'U\l·a-U.y KI'I!(".l.uui,. Mao.t), " West­ Thus We live: K\lOX KIIK/I 1I11.\~ Ii.\lOX WCST 11'01'1 X.vie. ("u,at'o Orth N~". 1:45 P.t.!. erne... Mus,c Room: KPIlC WIJT 11,\1'1 wnOD IVNOX 12:45 P.t.!. KWTO-SNtnadrr, KI.HA II'III-:e KIIl.D WlllIl. 11:45 A.M. Vintt"t Loptl' O"h.: \\'DSU In Cue 01 Aggie HDrn: WAI'O Kl'OA·Jln lIubali \l11'L Navy BInd: II~IX II'TJS II'JIlO KTUS WHOL WCOA 7:30 .... M. IITW1])-!:ih,ctr.ly \'ours (h"ck ..boud Th"" KI\'KH Colrce Club: IIW\{" KAIIK L,,,,, & Abner Wf)<;l' KTIlS (>"'15.33) W\OX·'ltmory Lanr KIITO Poult" Tupic. Kplle Xov3tim. WJOX KI'II(-\"""enl t .... [>fz· Orch.. WIIOl.I·url",M.II Oiar)' W\I,A\la,,' !.roo T'~'lor Kl.ltA·Varietin Hym"s 01 AU Church": Wl.W * 11 lJT )\e"l KTR I/-Enlertaillftl hl'OO \I',g~in. 110110,," Folk 10:15 .... M. WIlEC-Tr.J'urC'd 1I)'nll" 5thool 01 the AIr: WTJS WSIX II'UT Ihntt<5 QUUld 9;00 .... M. KIITO Lumbtrjatk. Organ Moo6s; WH],;(" K'IOX To b. allllu"n~td W~_lllI \\' .. 'Ur ('ol"n" \\'('O,I·\·~"n I'alrol KR!.D-rradl. n\lb WCO,\ "'0' tli.,· Or~h. ';00 P.M. FREQUENCIES 7:45 .... M. \\'ROl.·Kn,,~,<1!. Ih~h 5thool V'ncent lo~z' Orch.; KTBS KARK-020 WPLA-070 k Xe". KPRC K\"OO KTBS T""",ribtd Pr~on. AFTERNOON IIALA·Salon Ut~h 10:30 .... t.!. \IROL II'APO WD~l' \I'JBO KDKA·I020 WC;N·nO KTBS-To be aOllo .. ,,~NI Kl.RAIUO WC;ST.no II' ,\1'1 e.r"~"un \.II,uquet K \RK Thi- nh~'lh ,.\~t II-I!.A ..",1533) W,\l.A Wah tTl> " l.i"t KNOX-lllO WHAS·140 ILll'O·Gold~n Gal~ Quo"" KWTO "~~' t .. T,.,·!Qr 1\ Af'O Brukfa of a ])rt;untr KRl.D·loao W OX-llOO WOOD ("afll~lioll a""I)"CI CENTR ... L W ... R TIME KTBS·IUO W AC·I$IO I\D<;\: Ihcordtd Rh\lhm I\MII\llu .cal Cr~b nit. II'(OA s.,m.lhin( About Evrry· WDst· 'Ir.n "tl,.,h" Brad Rrynold" Inr,; WS~lB KTHS 1090 Wl.S-S90 * WJIJO \lu.,.; N.WI 1\ II'TO·IIa.1 luI! Froli, WJOX 1V0p[ Ihin,; \lek>dic> KTRII·IHO Wl.W·700 \IG~l .\Iot";n~ Strt" .... WJDX-Tolcr Tra,1 l-ti,I ... WJnX Li,l.n to ~ibtrl 1\.If)\ \1~" I.~r Tl)lnt K\I'KU-Su",hillt ~O) XUOA·1200 WMAO·670 II'OI'I-( ...... r of Alice IJla;r 1I'0pl·Bouquc," 10 You KVOO-1110 WMC·190 WM, \lu'it~l( 1I'1I()l,·thuf(h ito Ihr lI'ild"ood WSII·C."'~liu" IInuqu" Wl'O,\-Cheekcrboard Tim. 11'1101, \lorni"~ 1I11"it \\'SM Or.a" Mol",li" WSB(:""fllia dubHc' KWKH 1130 WMPS.14dO WWl._I.ife 01 I'",~y Hill WSB-U. S. Gov.r",n."t Heporll KWTO·560 WNOX-oOO \\,<';~1 (;U'I>('I SOngs 11:00 .... M. WS'I·Stump the An"ouneer 9:15 .... M. 12:15 ".M. WALA·1410 WOAl-1200 W~\tBlliok l.fibert. organisl Traveling Cook: \\'[hli WS\IS-C1a"ical Fuoriltl Invitalion 10 thi Wallz: WWl. Edward MlcHugh. songs: WD5U WAPI-1170 WOI'I·1490 8;00 .... t.4. Word5'" Music: I\I'Re Sktlches [n Mrlody: WS~IB WAPO-1150 WR£C'600 wlnx I\U\.\ II'(,ST II'J))X 113Th" \louie 1:15 P.M. WBAP·nO WROL·6?O Bruklill Club; Con McNeill, WAI'll'ar;tyt WROl. Trd .... !~ •. KI'RC \lark.t S., k't KTBS WROl. IVAPO WDSU WBRC-960 WSIX-1240 * W_IIP~-NeW'l; Interludt 11:15 .... M. ':)0 .... M. ,,\-(j() "err~'nlakt'" WAtA (tw.15.33) WBT-lll0 WSM·UO 1101'1 Carffr of Alitt Blair Sharron Torrtns. !oOn95: II'JBO weOA-IHO WSMBIHO KUlA 0, ~a" Fan"in II"B1t(·"«irrl th. Ammcu IIIII'~ 1\f)~I' 1",1533) School Df Uti AIr: WBAP WOOD·IlIO WSUN·UO 8:15 "',M. Kl'O,\ \"0"" i SoOI Wt"AACou>ln Ilal WOSO-12l0 WTJSUOO Four Clubmen: KI.RA KRl.O *"BRC "'t Words'" My,;c: I\'fWl. \\"JDX II'I.W·(·u.I.,' & n"l,y Kl.RA-GovcrnmC!lI Iteport. WENR·no WWl.-'70 WHEe II'LI\ :; Ili 01 Int.. mruo for Str'n9" 1\ \\""'C 1\01'1-1;"11"'. H'lh S,hool WJBO-Paa.Amuican I'fl1II. WPAA-SlO WWNC-S7D *Fru itr Hllnt, ntwS: \\!.i,.,1 J" ""'" Il d~. lh Hause: KVOO 5-11/ 28 Non.V/riting Writer W'T \\8,\1' WOAI J immy Hllllud's Orell,; "RUJ "I'"rl>: KWTO lYe:.> Although she turns out the equivalent of KTRH "UU Gol,l4 . Pnr:m, ny Briot; lIanlty Stafford; WAPO,Undt, II'tsttra SI ... quences as her two secretaries alternate taking WhJt Art Wt Fightin!l For?: frank MOl'!ao; John Conte, * WDOD·Swet:t '" Swine:; Elmer down the dialog. Of course, a lot of intensive WREI WLAC KRLD WIIAS 6:)0 r . I>4 , m.~.; Mt.edilh Will"",,'. Orth.: Dav;s WBT WAPI WWL lL'IOX WMAQ WBAI' WS~I KDKA WGl';·Eddy Du &. En~ore, liWTO-Jullice Ride. Ih. "Dear John," is only thirteen years old, but * N~ws: IVS,\1 WTJS WLS WIlAP WAP I· Your Town & Our. Maid.: Jt"y Le.ter: ViNO' KWKll·\\'e a.lieve in A'nui~a her life has been an eventful one, Born in KWTO \1.rOO·Rhythm '" Rhyme Tim. \\'S~! WMC \\'fOA WMAQ at the age or five in Shanghai. Her dramatic • • \vJBO·D."ct Muoic: Ntws KTBS Good E"e"i"~, Judgt WDSU·i\!errr Melodies WROL \I'S~IB II'OA I " \'OO WGN·Americans af lhe Rampart. \IS8 KOKA WALA WLW WLW.Ev' ])tpt. I'rts.nll WLS·To b.. ~nnollnftd llou" KW"l1 KI.RA KMOX ~I"it: W~'lX·Soulh A,ne.inn Way I\'BT "RLO WLAC WWL 1\'S~IR.dio Palrol * KUOA Sporn; News range much of the tragedy brought to China K\ITOJuh »Ox Jambor.., WS(JNSun,hin~ J .... II'Al'f WGST WBUM KTI!ll by the Japs. As the threat to Hong Kong * WAPO·Nt .... : Thellt. New. WW L·Uoi"trsily TImt \VilAS WREe (5w.IL83) II UBM OUt Ulock itself became more Imminent, Dellie's mother 5;30 ' , 101 , *Gabritl Hutttr, comm.: WGN \',IHU:G,~,y Trail. WAPOAbou\ Ikw>k. brought her to America. In Hollywood her \HITOixit Jambortf 7:15 P.t.I , Patti Chapin, song" KTBS WCOA Rh)'lh,n Renld.le Folk, WJBQ.Ea.1 Baton ROUlt Doftn.. * \\'GN-Ntw. WOOl) KlOA·Ga.lighl Harmo""•• I\NOXSuPl'er Mtlt,diH WJOX-Dim,nuli,·t Cb"iu Counoll h.\,OOBiU Wri~ht'. 0",". * WOAl W.r Anal ...i, 8:30 P.M , WLAC.Otpl. of A~.i(ulture \I' ,\0'\ Bibl. 1I 0lir \\'01'1 F..<:ho.:. of 'i·e.ttrd.y WXOX -SlH'ak Sp,ani.h 1\'\lPS.Palriotic Mu.i. 11'01'1 Amha Land KI\TO·Lu,n '" Abntr * I\',\PI Spo.U: !'it... WnOL Spllrh WTJS·CoU .. 1"01 Big Town, ",ith EdwJrd G, Rob, n. * WO I' I· ~ llIsic S.lo,,: Se .... WIlT. T "ili~ht in Dixie WWI.-Csmp Polk $(In '" Ona i\lulI$(ln; WOO]) * W:;II.:-':."" llook Nt"'1 3:45 ' ,101 . \IJ I):\ A to Z in Novelly "WK" WNOX hRll) WU C WS ~ IB A 10 Z in Nonlty WBT WAPI WGST II' II BM J ohnny Rithudl' O'ch,: II':\IPS ~n.AC.\\'a"derin_ Tunt!llnith 6:45 P, IoI . 7 :10 '.t.I. WSIX II TJS \\'01'1, Rh)lhm Rall)' "TII II KMOX WII AS WltE(' 2:00 P.M. WSn.llymn, ror 1I 0me In$ide of Sporn; WCN Sur Lt, Boultvuds: WMP~ W\\'l h" 11.83) * Ntw1; \\000 WSUN WDSU Spotlight 8and,: WSIX WTJS Tun", from tht TropTu; KLAA 11'1'1111 Ttxu 'o"boy. W'TJS- In.piralional HOUT *H. v. Kaltenborn, n,ws: WSM WWL-Spo.l. WGN \\'~Il)S II'WXC II'G~T WLAC IVAl'f K\lOA 1.f1> E.d,'IIy I\'JOX IVl.lltC 11',11'0 WIIO I, For Your Infolmn ion: WSIX KLIlA·M .. ltrwo.ks of Mu". (sw·I1.83) * IITO,\ [)~UCt ~lllsi(; S.,..s IVeOA IVOI' I K \'00 WM AQ *Ptoplt', Plnform: El m t r 8:45 P,M, Plneoll P.esen ts: WM I'S WJ IlO 5:45 "t.4. IWI.A WALA KT US WMC D.. ' j., ne..... WBBM WREC Mutual Goes Ca lli ng: 4:00 '.101. WI,\\' Min Mudt', Chil dren: "SIX WSIX Bill St..-n, sports: ( ..... 9.53) WW~C KIlI.D KTIH I KII'''H WTJS WTJS Swett &. M ~Uo w : WJHO II' ALA WGST KMOX WAPI WIl AS *Ht,dITnn &. Highlights: Kp RC WG~·Tr .. surv Slar I'a·rad. 11,\1'0 WMPS (1,,·9.53) Cadtls QUlrttl: WDSU WJBO WOAI WWL KLRA WNOX " TRll-S.,.""sdu. E d~lt May thoU's Requnt 8 u. * WCST Ntw.; ~UI>I ..r 0." •• KWh H T.~"...,rib ... 1 Prem, TUIl. KUlA WAI'I KLItA·Civiloan Dden" Ink Spob: KOKA Ald.ich Famify: WOAI Wi\lAQ M~lotli~. w1.AI· Ih""ony Hume Ou. Che •• ,n s Ging: WTJS * KTB;;·Sporll; 1'.,.. Ta lot ilnnounced; \\'R~~C IVlW Wi\lC WBIlC WJDX * W~lPS,Nt",s WREC·Popular Mu ..< * "RI.IJ·St.... ; Sktlcbn In Mtl· KUOA·American Offe" .. KARK \10.1 lIonorw Mllsif KVOO WOPI KTIIS WROL od,· II'BAP·S"inl for \'our Supptr: KTRII "u_i.al, KARK WFLA KPRC WSMB ' :00 P,t.I , 2:15 r .M, KHIS To W an"ounew Jin~le "an KWTO-Coeds Th .... t KDKA WBAP WSB WSM (.w. Glenn M,ller', O.ch,; RJY Ebuff KTllS,S",ohy, aUnn)' &. Cang WCOA.~ltd Ibt Bsnd 11.83) '" I'.ula"tlly, vouli.lI: WAPI *Nt ws: WREC WUAP·II.arllint.. KlUII '!""cal 101."" WOPI·Vintent Lopt.' Oroh. WOOD 1I)'m" Time KTII S-Ptnle.:osul Chur.h WREe KI(U) KUlA WGST 1\·ROI.-O."e. WOOD WW L WI'\O>': WW.\C KTas Ja",e. Slant, b.... KWKH ('otton ~brkeu; To bt \1,,-,. * WDSUTh~ War Today KUOA·Reverit TImt KTRII-li. S. Xa ..y In"ouncw 1\'UCShow Girl KWT().Trt",u.e Ct.t.t KWKII I\LAC K'IOX WBB'l KTRII \\'IIAS waT WAPII'n;,' of Alabama II'IH I. .. ", & Allnt. WLS·Smilt Muktl * WALA;oit .. ' Bob C.ooby * WCST·X ....,~; Tunt T"ut WOOD Tta Da"et NIGHT * II'MI'~ .·ulton I.ewl .. Jr.. comm WAp()..~)·.ltry Melodlts * John Gunthtr, nt.. l'1: WTJS WDSr l"fo,,,,"I;"n Bootb WilL Ju &. Jill J,.rkson WSOX'\\'Ot!d .:".nl. \H·OA·Cone~fI MUlti's WCl'i InlPS WWL-Musi, Ap,ruiation Wh . ,.. th.r. Is .0 11II1It g WOpl-YTMtnl Lot~' Dtfh. WOOD "iddie PrJ1II. Staltnt Rudy V"lIn Show; John 2:30 P. I>4 . *\\'S\IB ."r ... WGN ,Sbort Slori •• fbrrymott; JOin DIVIS W.,II Cam, Grant in Review: II'SIX 4:15 P.M. tor 0 Ilaf/oll Its pr.c.dl •• progrom Is 011 the aIr, \\TJS-AI YOllr R~uut WJRO.J. Y Sandt.. , Jr. WMC WLW WnOL WAN W,\ll"S Eddie Maythoff's Rtquut Bu· WWL·Old Corral * WLAC-Melody Tim.; ELmt. WBllC \\'S~1B tiDKA WFIA Ameri~an S~IIool 01 til. Atr; 'tau WIlAS WREC II'CST 6:00 P.M, Davit. nt.. ·• WSM WooA InlAQ WOpl WREC SWetl '" MtUow: WJDX 7:00 P.M. WLS· Prairit Fumt' DiseuI ..on (1,,9.53) *NfWS; M.n 01 til_ Su: WJBO CENTRAL WAR TIME Club KLRANLR lIilh * Fullon Lewis, J •., ntws; WTJS KTBS·To bt .nnouucW IHiT I'ariel)" Tommy Tutkt.', O.ch.: WMPS * WTJS·r; ..... (Continued on Nut Pagt ) KCOA You Can'l Do all.intl. WSIX 1I'1.,\(' To bf: a"n..,uncW FrH WuinQ in Pltuurt Tim.: "itll lIiller 1\ \OX O.ne. Orcb. r------­ I\'TJS For Otl.not WOPI WSB WCOA wSM WLW WWL ~ I edi4, 4:]0 P.M, KAnK WAPO WItO L \vBAl" Eul Wrightson, bar.: KTItS WOAI WFt.A " I'nc s •• progrom IIsll"gs 'or mort detail alld oddltlonal " . ws programs WAI'O \\U1A II'OSU WALA Lindt Trio: KTRII WAPI WREe WMPS (ow 9.53) K\lO>.: EJsy Ac.s; JJne Ate: II'M I'S I\'OSU WJIIO WEN R KTII S KUO,\·Bordt.lo\ln U•• btqllt KLllACollu" Carl WJ BO V~ri"lit. * \\'I11'I\e".; Vsritly Amo, 'n' Andy; \\'BT WII AS P. M, WMC·~tu,icalt \~ 1 )()]) \Itlodi~, fro,,, II n.... ii WLAC II'GST WAP I WRE(' News and Discussion A.M, 6:00 A mol 'n' An dy. II ~~ ! Oaude Sharpt: Kay Ptl· WBBM KTRII KMOX WAPI 6:00 a nd 10:00 F red Warl ng'a Orche.· 3:00 r .IoI, I"ltt,i KWKII KIILD WlI'l (III' 11:00 S oake Carter. tra, W!'\lll·Li.etn 10 Leibf:.1 11.83) (also at 10 p.m.) P,M. 6:15 Lanny R Olli, * Club MUlnt,; NtW$; WJUO II'TJS Ju"~lt Jim * \cw. hL'OA K\\'TO 11'(0,\ (." ,9.53, 15.33) * KU1ATht Wo,ld TodJY 12:00 H, R. BJukhage, 6: 30 a n d 9:00 Al Pearce'a Gang. 12;45 J ohn W, Van dercook, 7:00 Maxwell Houae Coff ee T ime, W"lttr Gross' O.(h.: KLRA 4:45 P.M, IVooD-S ... in(in' on Air KTUII WHEC WWSC WG~-o.." Win.I"", 1;00 Cedr ic FOlter, 8:00 Major Bowea' Amattur Hour, * Rithud Elton. ntWi: WT/S To be ~nnouneH; IHIPS WSlX WMAQ·S"~rl '" S~.ni." 6:00 Fulton Lew!., Jr, 8:00 Kraft Music Hall, \nlPS WTJS 1\ \0.\ ,"w'''"''t. I un. 6:Hi New. of t he World , 9:00 Rudy Va llee Show, "lIb-.' f. A_ Forum WSt:N.~1a;o. Robin ... ~ KWKH-To b. ..,n'"""..-.I 6:30 New. Here a nd Abr oad. 9:15 The Flrlt Line. \l'Ur~flltu~ood Baints K\I'TO-B'",I' .t !lobby 6:15 ,t.I, 6:45 H, V, Kalte n born, \\'F,\,\ Wt Who Art \'ounC W[J()tl·l!~dio B,I,I,· Oa .. To bt Innounced: \\TJS IVSIX 7:30 Ptople'l Pla tform, \\'J llO Tht l.illl~ Sho .. WGST-C<'U_ ~:4, Llnny Ron. In •• : WBT I\'LAC 8:15 Jack Starr Hunt, 6:30 Ma udle'. Dia ry. WIIAS WCST WAPI KIILD 9:00 J ohn G unthtr, 7:00 Deat h Valley Day.. 3:15 r , loI , *Indiln" I nd;~; NItW$; KTBS KWKII WREC KMOX WBB\! 9:30 Mo rga n Beatty, 7:30 Aldrich Fam ily, HighwJY5 Ia Hullh: II'WSC KARK WS~B WMC KPRC WWL (also al 10:15 p.m.) 8:30 Big T own. 1\ llEe "II KII "TIUI KLRA WSB (lw-9.53) *Mr. Ktfn, Trnlr 01 Lo51 Per· WLAe WOOD *B. S. 8tr(ovlci, n,WI: WSIX $(Int. dr.ms, WMPS WDSU To be inno u n~td: WTJS I~TJS "TIIS WE~R WJ BO Variety Classical Music Kl'OA Drlln. of Food Jo. Gililicchio's Orth.: WooA * ~e ..' WBRC II'COA WROl A .M, \\TJS-Swinr It II'Joo WALA WJOX 8:00 8 reakfalt Cl u b. f. D. 'IIII 011 'ag. s 12 lind 1l, P',I 30 11 12&-5 *Albert Wimer. n'Wi: WNOX WI.IIC·M.lody ALbulD WOB\I-Mood. "nd Musk 11:30 P.M. WOO~ KIYKII I\LI-IA Wfl.T WLWGr.«o, 7.iuI~r *WENR-N~W!; Rhythm It Rln· WWNC K1HII WAPI II'SURevorit dom *BBC New$; Milch.1I Ayrh' Or. WGN-Llwrenu Wolk'. Orch. ~he.tra: WG.'1 WSI.\ \\"rJ,; THURSDAY, APRIL 23 Fred Wlring-' Orch.: w~'''Q IISM Jimmi~ ~;dltr Ju.t're Rid ... the lIange; \\'IH.e WREC·Dance Orch, *Moon River: News: I\~' ,\ \ WWL 10:10 P.M. KTIlS w.lle IHIAQ Ilf'LI 11 :0 0 P. hoI . K\"oo WS'lB KOKA 110M ~Wo,ld at L.'ll't: WALA "'TI' 0 Bob Armstrong's Orch.; WSMB \blIB \\'SM WBRC KARK KPItC KTBS WfLA *NoVls: Buddy Fn.nklin·s Orch.: * KllKA·\"t",; B",n,e A,,,,. WROL "'APO WOAI WOPI l\\tI'S WOSU WJBO *RIY Klnney's Orch.: News: (9:00 "m. Continued) *\\'OT ~" .. " \'it"s Siron,'· Orch. W~1l WALA WlIIC WNOX WnEC WOOD KTHII AI Purce'S G~ng: "TBS K\'OO Wfl.kTo ~ announoed K\Un. 0 .. ~I .. U *News: Geor9t 01~n's Orch.: Raymond Sb Will, !. I'll,\'boy. 9 :10 P.M. w'UX,Puriotic Parad. WSM Sportl; i'hyllis unto Orlan KARKSPOrll; MlI.ic KWKII To be announced KDKA·Mu.ical. 11:15 P.M. Lum " Abntr: WEIHI ...... II·S 10:45 P. M. WUll\l lbrry lI'inlon', Orclo, KTIIS WOSU WJBO 10:00 P. M. * KRLO-N,".; Golf Sc:hool Buddy Frlnklin's Orch.: WENR KTIlS·Bath 1I0u •• A

    WGST·S.renade Moods for Modtrn$: \\ALA WIIAS .\I~"'hJU Robtrts WOPI·tarttr of Alic. BI"'r FRIDAY, APRIL' 24 WJBO WAPO WMPS WJIJO Ik P~pptr Ranch MORNING WROL-!..i.\ell, Ladies * KRLD·S",,: Marth. n'on: WLII'-E.:\'~ni"· \"ei.hbor; On th. II WL·S...... nnt JIVUU \'~tOf)' Ride« nn r,,,bbe. IInn,~ fron. 1 :00 .... M. 9:15 .... M. KTOS-Tr:an..,rlbed PtpI. WOI'I R.dio !:lank CENTRAL WAR TIME Console Melodlls: WAPI WREC KHLDCompoHfS Birthday KTUS.~'al~.m /lour * I\'WL-\\'ar Commenli!,),; Sports hLRA WG~T KTIIS·S.rfuden KTRII Bar X Co"boys K I"TO·HIr~ul IIlnds AFTERNOON S:10 P. M. WBRC-Chtclcerbolrd Tim. * Newl: \l'SIX WTJS Kl·OA·S,uu ~nnad. KWKH-Colton Markots; Trill' Symphonettes: WWL WJDX·CoftH Club 'cribed P,"!;m. Ted Stecl,'!i Studio Club: KPRC 7 :1S .... M. WLAC·l1appl· MHtinl Time WOT·Lone Ranltr WSB KTBS (lw-9.53) Oft.n Moods: WWNC WAPI 9:10 .... M. 12:00 Nooll Au~iliary 2:00 P.M. WE)Sl'·\'FW Soul~trn Serlnlde: Kl.PM WOOD J.ck B.r<:b: WBRC WMC CENTR ... L W ... R TIME II'WL Music AppreciatiOD KWKH KTRII \\'BT KI'nCGive U. S. Slr01lllb P ~llld.lphil Orch.: WSIX WTJS Ii.I.RA-Sno ... drifr Sinker Bnerly Mlhr, IIOnllS: KTIlS \\'MPS FrInk Pltk". tnr.: KMOX WGST Ii.WTO IIll'pln.'1 lIuolers I\UOA G.m, of Melody WS.I18 WOI'I WJUX 4:1S P.M. \,UT·Soulhern Sonl Wt.WS... rtt River Eilun FArrell. lOp.: WWNC T,me Ou, for Olncing: WUAS Lum & Abner: WLIV II'ROL * Nrws: KWKH WSB KUtA WAPI \\'REc.Mor"i"~ Matin.e \VUOL·IIapp)' MNtiog TUlle KAIlK·Chukorboard Time WREe KWKII WCST 10·2·4 Ranch: K\'OO WWL 7:10 .... M. Jack Berch. .onlS: KWKU WBnc 1\'COA·Noon lune. WGST KLRASwinl TIme 00 You Remember?: II"IC 9 :45 .... 104. KRLO Musiule KDKATt~h Trio 12:15 P.I>4 . KTR lI lVrtlll.n l "lu~iews Rtyeille Roundup; Loul$! Mu· Chlpll,n J Im. U. S, A.: WCOA WNOX·Danoe Oroh. KTiIS N.vy Rrcruiti", Prim Cheer Up G,ng: WSIX Sktlchn In Melody: WOPI KTBS WJUO lI nrdin~ Fi~ld Band Con· Hr & The Wutern~r~: WOI'1 WSMB WW I. -lIalph Shaw I\UOA Pop Concect DiUld Shoop'$ Orch.: \\"WNC I\UOA·Mu LOlldon ctrl KII'TOLum & Ablltr ChlOChrboard TI",. KPIIC WDSU WLAC- Happy 1oI«lioll Time KPRC·~lu.icale * WAI' I !>poru' New, 10 :00 .... M. KVOO-hrm Profit Burnu \vIIEC-To he announced 4:10 P.M. KVOO·Morning Witch VtCIOr, Bell·n ..., Home: WBT WBRC·Mu";ule Landt Trio: WLAC KI.IlA KWKH * 1\'JBOMu~io: \~".. WBT,Ar\hur Godfr~y, JOo,' WAPI W(,;ST WREC KRLD WFAA·Mr.:Tucku·1 Smilt Prlm_ 2 :1S P.M. WREC WJDX·Nova!ime WCOA.Tim. " Tun" KTRH KWKII WHAS KLRA W:.~ Macko .. ; Orch * NtVl$: KTRII Tre".ur\" Star Parade: KMOX WLAC-Song l1itl 7 :45 .... M. WWNC WS.\I· L"m '" Ab'ltr WAPI-Edward K. Au"in WAPI Wr.:OX S"I>~rman Rueillt Roundup; Louis. Mas· KMOXGlad R.~" *\\'CST-News; Mu.ic * \I'IJT,"e.. ,; Twili,ht in Dixie WOl'llIoracf lIeidt'l Ordl. 1\ \\'LJack Ilorch WS~18 Jill Jack.on K)' & Wesl.rners: WeOA KI'fTO-Mike Do. L.n. ClASSics in Ttmpo: KLRA K r RIl * WNOX·Serenade; N."" ' :15 .... M. WJIlX·Jack 1:Itrch KWKH 5:00 P. M. NIGHT Brukful Club: KTIlS II <;1\ rrochr Ihr-.l 1: 00 ' .M. Strittly from Di... ie: KTBS WMC Son, s in the Wind: KLRA KRLD KWTO·BooIs " Bobby Waltet Gross' Orch.: WREe )(ARK WS B (.w-9.53) I\ISM·Stri(~ly PerllOnal WJDX·Trail IIld~ .. (lw·17.83) WIVNC KWK Il KLRA WLAC Russ Bro Vl n. song1: Scoreboard: Wh,.. there Is no IIltl"g WfAAMinin, PefJOnl 11 :00 .... M. 1:00 P. M. KTRII WOOD KTRIl for 0 Ifatlon Its pr.cedl"g WJDX·TIme 10 Shine • BOike CU ler. ntw"s : II'SIX Music Appreciation Hour: WSM To be Innounced: (1 .... 9.53) Rtlt Maupin's Orch.: WCOA program I, o. the .1,. WLAC·Mu.ic Bo" \1'011 WDSU KTBS WAPO WSMB K\I·TO·T.usur)' Slar Parsd, ',., WJOO 6:00 P.M. WREe·Mu.ical V.rielin Me~' You r Noighbor: IVOSU WJBO WII OL WOI'T WSO IVCOA·Tu Tlm~ Tun ... rtdwin C. HllI. neVIS; Sco re CENTR ... L W ... R TIME 8:10 .... M. II"~M KA R K·M~gic Melodies WGST-CIUint the Co.' Boud: I\'BT KI'I{(·Jack lI ~rth I\T II S·Di~le MounUinHn Rhythmic Melodies: WALA KT Il S II'JnO Vari~ticJ *Fulto n L. Vl ll, Jr., neVl$: WTJS I\IJ OX·ViClory Clinic KlI'TO·Carl. Willie. Cliff *B. S. Bercoyici . new,: WTJ S ( 1... ·21.5) WROL-A to Z In Novelty \\"SIX WSIX Son9S in the Wind: KTIIII WREC 1t:t5 .... hoI . WALAMatin« Melodl .. WWL-Call 01 Democrac)'; MarkUS Amos 'n' Andy: WGST WBB M KUOA-l.iule Concerl WB"P Ch<~crboard '''''' Lon. Ranger: WA PI WGST Words &: Mu,ic: WNOX WS)tB KMOX WAPI WLAC WIl AS WSO·Enid Day WCOA.Ma,Lnee Melodiu 1:1S P.M. wn ~:c KIVKIl KRI.D WWL D I~ne courtner' lOngs: \\'MPS * WGST -Xewl: Prl"'. Ruitw * Club Mltineo; NeVIS: WALA 10-24 Ranch: KPRC WOOD B:45 .... M. WDSU (.w- 5.33) WBT KTlt11 (.w.ll.83\ BrUkfut Clu b: (.",·21.5) WJDX .. limmy Davil' Orc\]. WMPS KRLD KUOA.World Opera RlIY Hubeck'$ Orch.: WTJS KWTO·Tru.,ury Star Par.de FREQUENCI ES MU ilt Room: KTOS WALA WNOX.Tin Pan Alles 1:15 Poeli( Strings: WWNC KLRA ' .1>4 . WALA-C.d,t, KARK·no WFLA-g70 WHOL·Chick Martin TullS Schuol 01 Iho AIr: WBAP Elp'orln, SPlICt: II'REC \\"WNC * wJDX·Jimmy Dav;s' Orcb.; KOKA-1020 WGN.120 WRE< KWKIt KUlA WLAC KTR II KLRA·1420 WGST -g20 Songs to Remember: KPRC 11 :10 .... M. To be announc~d: WS'X News WOOD h ... -9.53) WLAC·Mu.lc: Scouhoard KMOX-1120 WHAS.S40 WFAA Nlt'I Fum & Home Hour: II'JBO KLRA·S.ntiment in s,,1\~ Kt;OA lest We FOl'1:el KPRC·UO WiSO-IISO WMPS-Or !:len CO~ WREC-Romance with Girl from Thus We Lin: IOIOX KPRC·La"rcnce Welk·. Orch. KRLD·'OIO W DX·uOO KI: OA.Jan lIub.al; ] : ]0 P. M. Gr:aY5<>n'l KTBS·HIO W AC'1510 "IU.O-Ja.k ~reh ' :]0 P. M. WCOA·M",.;c Room Joey ... urns· Orch.: KTRU KTHS'090 WLS'IgO KTRII,Navy F~uurt Phildtlphi. Orch.: WTJS WMPS S:15 P.M. KTRIl-U20 WLW-100 wooO,~tor"inl T",~es WALA \lusiul Moments WSIX KWKH "".RA II'REC WWNC KUOA1200 WMAQ610 WDOllRo,s~IUt 03)' * WGST-Georle Wesl. talk; Nnl'S \\'C'OAFarm Fair Musk Apprtcilti be announced KTltll.\I ... ". "ulun ;0 2 4 Ra"ch WIlEC WBT WRRC·960 WS JX 124(0 \\',\LA·"I.lo,h'Tim. KPRC-l.i"en to .... iben KtiOA,Blair & lIulb IIAPI·ColfH - T"lIe KTI!It·\lII" ... I~ WAI.II Fa.hion ...... KTRIt-Tnu Ranttr, WBT·II'O WSM·(lSO 4 :00 P. hoI . WCOA·1HO WSMB IHO I\-AI'O Golden G~t~ Qu~rtel WAPO Hillbilliel WJDXAcru" Ih~ footli~ht. KI-O.\ \ltter & "olody Time Out for Ollncinll: KLRA WDODtJl0 WSUN620 WCOATin Pan Al!ey Tun.. \I' BT -Z~'!3'tui~ 1:45 P.M. KWTO To Ihe Coin .. WDSU-1280 WTJS 1390 WOOD-I"lerior 1)ec>,utml WIlEC·Chtchrboard Time Bnty Crocker: II"LIV 11"1)00 W.-\L_\·l'nrl~ Tom Pwplo'. WF.NR 100 WW L·I70 WIlSU·IMtrluM on llf(:ord. II ~\IB f. hio. rOle) KLR.-I·lIci \l'.(! Trotter \I'JDX IVMC WFLA WS\18 II Ii.\~ .Iia,(erllork; Gucst.: WMC WMAQ KAHK 80b Hawk Quiz; How'm I ooin?: KTSS (sw,9.53) Round-Up Time WJI)X WOM weOA WBRC WAPI \111,\S KTIlIl KlRA *WLAC·l\'ignt Owl Club; N.w, ~ Dan'e Orch.: \\,SIX WTJS *WLlI'·Ne,,·~; (,harhe Cox' Oroh, ~ i K \'00 KTBS \\lSB KI'IIC K~IOX \\'001) WDlm KWKH Producers of the "Kraft Music Hall" found W.'>,llB \\'01'1 WllOl WFAA KIlLD IVWL Shep f ields' Orch.: KIlLD KUlA W"B.Men of Melody out how fast and Car artists can wander dur­ 1\,11'0 \1'FlA W.'>M KDKA Lum & Abner: W,!DO KTIIS KII'KII IVWNC WOOl) II"NOX *IVWL·News; Orcb, ing a ten-minute rest period. Following a WALA Wl\I' W~II'S WDSli II'E"'R * Newg: K~IOX W~1AQ \I'Ll\' break during the KMH rehearsal in NBC's Songs for Marching Men: KTHS The Nighl of April 24th: WFLII WREC WWL 11:15 P.t.!. Studio B in Hollywood, the director sent out 1I'J).'>1I W_IIPS W"UN WLS \\'01'1 Spotts: KPHt WBBM WDSli Duk Fantasy: WS~1B KPItt: a call for the cast. Pages rounded them up II",,[X Grand Cen1r~1 St;ttion: IVMAQ K,I]{K,Sporls; ~Iusic \VOAI as follows: Bing Crosby and comedian Victor Lone Ranger, drama: WGN Il'mx WOAI K\,OO KI'III: KI)K,I-~!",icalc Dante Orch.: WDSU Kl'O,I·Be'·eri'" Time W£lAI' KAllK WBBC WS~IB KTHH·Wr~Slling ~Iat(h., * Ncw.: KMOX WWL Borge were at a piano harmonizing in Studio IIMC H. Mary Martin was in another studio taking KWTO,Trea,,,re Chesl K\'OO-Ba'~Lall Scores; Mu,ie; *11-M'1-~lu,ie You lI'an\; Ne", WIlOD I!a""~nr Quartot Billy Kealon's Variety Show: Van'llir~ WDSU-Far Ea.t News lessons in Elmer Blurt salesmanship from Al W.IBO-Jax Fishing hx IVSIX WTJS 1V,IPI·Meoldl' Go Round WE:->H·Uuddy Franklin's Orch. Pearce., John Scott Trotter was across Vine *WTJ.'>-~ .." Olga CO.lho " Burl Ives, songs: II'BAI' Hhylh", ,. 1I0ma"ce *\\'IlOL·~lu,ic You Want; N~II' Street in a music store listening to records. 7:45 P,M, IVWNC (""-11_83) WBRC· Your lla"hr \\TJS·Dance Mu.ie Guest star Robert Preston was lounging in a Songs lor Marching Men: WSIX *Newl' WBT IVSI ' N II Uf ('olumbia Ma-Cbica~o \;~j" 11:30 control room laughing at Baby Snooks re­ *WI)OI),S'Hel '" S"'in~; EI"'ec .1 '.M. KTHS_ To I>(! an"ou"~ed II'GST-'I",io Yo" Wa"t hearsing, Baseball umpire Berlns Reardon, an­ Davis \\'ALA-Abe LYman', Orch, *Sonny OUnhi""S Orch.: News: II'JHO·DaJOo. ~Iusi< WI!AS-Ji"'mi. Fidlo, other guest, was in a corner talking sports WAI'O·To be announced II'SUN \\',\lA KTHS W~II'S \l'OI'I-Te,,, .. Hi~h Speech Cluh WLIC·\lelody 11110"", with announcer Ken Carpenter. Comedian IVCQA You ,.,,'j Do Busine" WJBO WTJS-Bank Nigh! WO,\[-Onla",o Sh"w *Jerry Wild's Orchestra; News: Jerry Lester was in Rudy Vallee's studio ,,·ith Ilitler WSM·'\",eric"" Fanface 8:00 P.M. *WGSTTho Worl(1 To I\JBO WAl.A WS~I 11[){I1l II' BT WL,\C WHEC WIIEC-tel's Da"ce Ramen Ramos' Orch.: KIILU Wiltz Time; Frank MUnn, tnr.; W\IPS I\'BB~I K'IOX fred Waring in Pleasure Time: KII'KII·Rice II HOl. Ted SI.~le Brolher'. G.n~ (borus; Orch. W~IAQ IVJOX Sammy Kayt's Orth.: II'II'),'C *Teddy Powelt's Orch,; 'Hews: WOPI II".'>B WCOA IVS\! W~!C I\'SB Ily"m. from 'h Fireside Ii.WTOJukc Box Jamhor.e KTUS II-S\1U K\,OO I\BH(, II',OX II'DOl) WLAC KHLD KTBS K\,OO WFLA WS'IB WJDX WHOt I\'AI.A II(mC I\'S~I·Am.rica in IIclion WAPI-Joh" ,"ell",,,,,"; \1.Jodie KI'IlC \\'0111 KDK.~ WFAA II'W I. (sw6.12) \','LW K\'OO WS\IB K'I'l\S '11:45 P.t.!. WBAP W~'AQ KOKA WOAI 'Iouten,. WSU IVM( WLW I\'S~I ReHections in Rhythm: II'SB Shuron Torrenl. songs: KTIIS KMlK WMC WBRC WS~I KIIRK Kl)KA \\',\1'0 \\'00\1 *IVAI'O·~.".; Theal.r .'\e". 1V01'1 WilLA KTBS WFLA 11'01'1 *WDSlI-News WBAP KPl!C WH.,\ (lIl.., M 11'131.1\1 f,e'Jr I'elrlllo', Orch. IVSUN WilLI 11'('0.1 WIIM Mirch of Tim.: WDSU \\'SllN WAM II'S~!B KI'IIC IVRO L \1'11 I" 1)rN'" S~fenade 10 p.m,) WIlHCGl'I"l Trails KTIIS WJBO WENIt \IAPO *News of Ihe World: (sw-11.83) KAnK II'MAQ I\'MC (s,.-,9.53) WLW,Moon Hi"er Onl.l.rio S~ow; Col. Sioopnagle, II'COA "Ierli,,~ Silvor eoJOtesl 11.111'.'> *N.W5: W.IBO IIDSli Your Songs: WSIX I\'TJS *1\'SB,News; Sleepy Hollow WDOD.Dinner \Tusio m.c.: WEN!! W~ll'" IIJBO *Gibritl Hutter, news: WGlol Tr.asury Star I'a,.do: WHEC *~ ""'" W"N WIlEC WBB\1 *WWL·Joe Rekhman', Oreh: KTHS WDSU \1'DSU-I'It' Ouf"", Burn. & Allen; \\,AI.II WCOA \VIIOL KWKI/ KLRA News WFLA·Sports; Da;OX KWKH WDOI) *New,: WREC IVROL WIVL (a15O at 10:15 1'.",,) 8:30 P.M . 6:45 P,M, FirSI Ni9hter: 8ar~Ui Luddy &: Le<> Reisman's Orch,: KTBS 10:45 P,M . .. K'IOX,llu,io Aftn Midnigbt *Hew. of Ihe World: I,AIlK Kl'ilC Los Tre,na;-ne; Ginny Simm.: WDSU KTlIS IVJBO WSU1'O KHLD·Mu,ical. KI'I\C WMIIQ KTBS W5\!B *Hudlinel & HighIi9h!S: IVMP<; Sammy Kaye's Orch,: KWKH t KTIl!1 K~IOX WWI. WHEC KWKII To be announced WOPI WS.\I WSB KDKA WfAA II"OM WAPI WBT KTBS I KWKH WI/AS WGST KIlLD Wally Johnson's arch,: WMP" WIlBM,Ralph Sarlow'. Oreh. To be announced: WSUN Rhylhm Takes a Holiday: W,I],[ WBB" wLAC WT.JS I\'SIX *KDI'A·Ne"'s I", III lJanei"g I'.rty KMO~·Moo"tio:tot Ser~nade To be announced: WTJS Jimmy Dorsey's Orch.: WSUN Spotlight 8ands: IITJS W~II'S Fred Wiring in Pleuur. Tim.: WENll·Mu.ic You Want * News: II'UUC I\'COII \\'JO}' 1\<",\ II'G" KTIIS-Blue Skie. *WGN·News; Lawrence lVelk'$ * Ncws: 11:;i\IB WhiC IVSR WMAQ I{VOO-,lluC \1-LW·La,,~ Thompson', Orch. KI.UAl)r. IV. It. ~lurphy; ~h.sic II'HRC \VilAS WLAC IVBAP WBT·Sammy Kaye', Orch WBAI' KTlb 10-2-~ llanch Celebrity Thealer: II'DSli Wst:\ W\tAQ~laI1Y ~Ia~,eck's Orch. .... 1\1 II'\W \I'JDX WOIII *\\,E~Il·),'e''''. I(hythm SlIOrlS: IVG~ KWTO KWKII,Ji,,'n,ie Fidlel hTII" \l.li\O II'E,"1I Wolf"· WMC,Dance Juhiln 1I'1l1'1 \ITOA II'UU~1 KI'HC \\'G:,\·1'roduclion for Def."... KLRAGolderest Five KIVTO,SUP1"'C \1.lodies John W \·a"'t""..... )~. r"~I" II'<;B End of Friday Programs *KTRH-Ol"" Forum; lolews co""" .. "!.I,,r. In ·'Th. )t .. ,t WLWBilty S"ioler', Ortcrworh \VOAl-Burns & Allcn \\'G~·Meloovachordia II'JBO Good £w"in'. Judge WAI'O-Bufn. '" Allen 6:30 P.M. WI.A('-('ol""'al Quarlel II'HH\I·'!"" tn~clha"lt·. Orcll 6:15 Lanny Ross. *News Here" Abroad: WDSU ,.. \\",0,\·11""" Fla>he,; Ji,.. S~"· News and Discussion 6:30 and 9:30 Bob Hawk QuIz. WSlW WJBO WSB \\·L.'>·S",ile "arke! 'ion A,M. 7:00 H erbert Marshall, 80b Hawk Quiz: How'm I Ooin'?: *W'IP,,·rul!on L."i", Jr. WDOO-Salut, 10 the Schools 11:00 Boake Carter. 7:00 Kate Smith Hour, WBT InlNe (al.o al 9:30 IVOP] T ..w, Hid, SI>eech Club WNOX-I'm an American P.M, \\IROL·Piano F.,),ion, 7:30 1nformatlon, Please, p,m,) WRIX-'rene Rich 12:00 H, A, Baukhage, II·'WL·O" 'h H"u,e 1:30 Meet Your Navy. Grind Central Station: WS_II 8:45 P.M. 12:45 John W. Vandercook. IVTJ" ill Y~\Ir Requ~

    WAR restrictions prevented usual throng from UTILE Rosie (Roslyn Silber) of "The Gold­ WYLLIS COOPER, author of the War Depart_ attending Hollywood Bowl service this Easter, bergs" has grown up. She now has a boy friend, ment's new "Army Hour," heard on NBC Sun­ but listeners heo!rd Bette Davis, other celebri. Walter (played by Edward Trevor, left), as well days, knows what he's writing about. The for· ties in the impressive morning ceremonies as an unwanted suitor, Seymour (Arnold Stang) mer "Lights Out" scripter is an A. E. F. veteran 32 LI/IS I' liThe National Barn Dance" (Continued from Page Z) "I was a \Vlfe lit Jtflme ()Jtfy" LEFT: Modern note is added to "National Barn Dance" by the in­ A NEGlKTED WIfE REGAINS candescent hllrmon:r of the Dinning HER HAPPINESS IY OVERCOMING sisters-Lou Ie.) an twins Jean lind HER "ONE NEGLECT" Ginger. The trio is just back from picture assignment in Hollywood

    BELOW: Ann, Pat and Judy do a regular singing stunt in the chorus, contribute occasional feature num· bers. Among other semi-regulars are harmonica virtuoso Bob Btillantine and singer C!f Irish songs Billy Murray

    1. Mrs. M."ptMIIII in one morning and caught 3. " Ov, h.... physician !let me !ltraight," eon· me Cl'yin,K. She dl'llggoed the whole sad story tilU!ed .\Ir•. :\1 . "He ad"i!!ed his ""omen I,.tients out of me. ":\Iy dell.," ~he !IIIid, "don't mind to 1L'II: I.YIiOI fo. intimate pet"'OR&l OIre. Ly.'lOl, my frank"eSll-You,-, I u;oed to loe a Regil-­ 'yoll -. ;1 a JIO"'erful germicide; II~I accord· tere<.l Nurse, and I understand your trouble. ingtol:luydirections. it kill ~ a ll '-AICinal germ· lift' &> 1I1Imy wi"e>! Io,oe their husoonds' lo\'e be­ on i'1.~tant eonlAct ... yet can't harm sensi­ call,oe of ca~Ie."",,,es>< about Feminine hygiell e.~ ti,'/: tiS!lue.oI. It cleanses a"d deoduriu.... too." SQUARE.DANCE caller Arkie VOCAL'. soloist Jane Kaye (a {luther Ossenbrinkl and quavery­ touch of sophistication in the voiced comedian Pat Buttram (r.) Hayloft) and musical director indulge in by-play on the stage Glenn Welty engage in gabfest Why you CO" depend 0" lYall'

    GI!.STLI!. ¥I!.T I'OWI!.K ..UL-U....cl JU "i •.-eIM, 1,,'.01 i. lfClllle to deli(1lte Ii. ",," (llot RII acid-no r~ alkali), ..-1 I~" i.''''_. liI~ i .. ,,,~ ...."ifO(fll .... cI Iltot Lllool Ie/II "01 kill o~ ;".,,,"1 roll­ ,,,.,,. SJ'K I!. A III NO-Nn nlher "'idely ~d"ertik'd dnueht 11"'''''' .... ';011 h... th" wide >I)I'",,,lInl< IIOwtr L)'1I01 lI~_L~",,1 ..""t IOl' vir'mdl~ oeard.... out «.m·llre in tiny (nld. olh". li',IIid. n,ay never rtM.. h. IU· ONO~IICAL.-Sm,,1t boUle ma ke. "Imnll 4· .... 1IOlls s"lull" ... CLI!.ANt.¥ ODOK-Soon 01' ... _ .... IIO['IlS 8TKJl.SGTB 10 III", "'011-111 .. 1' ... r~ ",jlh 1.1'0<>1.

    ... I' ... "' ... lysol for femilline hYJ.,oiene e"t!1' sillCe-,,'ith n/:ve. the ~l i~ht e>;t worry IIbout its elfecti\'ene.lll '"l a J.,I 110 economical to woe - il llC\'er IIe"ts my l>ueI') "bout Fem;nin" lIygieue, "",,,,I I_totnl banjo on the "National Barn augmented in theater by several ur It'lier fur U••• klet :\I.IU; ...H~ . ,\ ,1,'""",_: l.elm &: "·i"k. Illoum/iel.t, X. J. Dance," "Meet YOllr Navy" shows hours of local "WLS Barn Dance" 33 N TIMES of crisis, Further, in this rela"ed when great issues are state our body is better I being decided and gi­ able to digest the foods gantic tasks face us, there that will restore energy is sometimes comfort and to our blood. Nutrition is new courage to be found futile thing if your nerves in counting our bJessinp. are tense and the diges­ The present is one ot tive organs are incapable those times. And, believe of doing their job prop­ it or not, the common erly. cake of soap is one of The home that is clean those blessings. and bright is the home So many items that we where folks are strong thought were necessities and morale is high. Many are now becoming scarce, a man has noticed that a and, surprisingly enough, clean shirt makes the we hardly miss them. stew taste better. It We're finding substitutes sounds silly, we know, that serve our needs very but it's true! well. But there is no sub­ So is it true that a sim_ stitute for cleanliness! It's ple nutritious meal seems next to Godliness in the like a feast when set upon inventory of virtues, you clean cloths, gayly col­ know, and we're one na­ ored or gleaming white. tion in the world today They may be of the that isn't rationing vir- cheapest cottOn, but if tues. There's no priority on soap, so they're laundered crisp and fresh, your help yourself to cleanliness. table will be fit for kings! The day has It's good for the soul to stop and FEMININE FORUM a happy ending that finds the family consider, now and then, how {ar­ in good spirits at the dinner-table. reaching arc the works of a little By ALBER TA NO RTH And happy {amities are the backbone blessing. Let's imagine, for instance, of our united national spirit! that you've just brought home a dozen Think, too, that an unclean home is bars of soap and some fiakes or pow­ Sing a Song for Soap! an unsanitary one, where illness can der, too, from your grocer. Did you easily pay a call. Illness is a national " ~ realize that your purchase contributed enemy. It robs us of working days and to our nation's war effort? Well, it did. weakens our will to win. Glycerin, a by-product of soap, is the been such a demand for human energy energy. We help answer that cry the So, you see, soap is the housewives' stuff of which e"plosives are made. The and spirit. Each day we go forth­ moment we lake up a bar of soap and sword. With it she wages war on the more soap we use the more glycerin some to factories, some to canteens, wash away the grime of labor, the home front against enemies that might there is to meet the needs of war. some to Red Cross stations--and give sweat, and the tears. Aching muscles, weaken us from within. Her banners, Soap is the one item on which con­ ourselves to the tremendous task ot weary feet and worn-out nerves are long may they wave, fly from the servation goes into reverse. reconstructing the kind of world we soothed and relaxed in a warm bath clothes-lines in back yards all over 'But the patriotic uses of soap do not want to live in. And each night we when our shift is done. The pores of America! stop there. There are intangible re­ return home weary but determined our body are cleansed, better able to sults that ate almost as important. not to give up. Our bodies and our perform their functions. We are re­ Never before in our lives has there souls cry out for renewed strength and newed, able to rest. Buy a Defense Bond-Now QUESTION SERVICE

    MT. Masao Aoki, SummeTland, B. c., David Post is played by CARLTON Canada.-lf you wish to hear MJl.RTHA BRJCKERT-the only original member TILTON, she is on the Ransom Sherman . of the cast-in the "Story of Mary show at 8: 30 CWT on Wednesday Marlin" ... Michael Kent in "Bache­ (Join radio's quiz game! Try your 4. Lake Erie is the smallest of the evenings. lor's Children" is played by ClL\RLES skill at answerina these radio brain­ Great Lakes. FLYNN, son of Bess Flynn, who writes bmteTs. FOT cOTTect an.swcs see page 5. The Erie Canal connects Lake MTS. George Oakes, LaPorte, Ind. the story. Charlie has attended Loyola 36.) Huron and the Niagara River. _KJl.TE SMITH was born in Greenville, University and has received his de­ 6. Molecules are motionJess. Virginia, on May 1, 1909. She made gree. He likes to read and bowl, but From "Take It or Leave It" 7. The Canadian River flows through her debut as a singer in war days he hates "buying hats and women who (CBS, Sun., 10 p.m. EWT) the U. S. singing "Rose of No Man's Land" and wear slacks!" .. Otherwise he likes 1. Each of the following identifies a 8. An ark is part of a circle. other ballads for soldiers encamped almost everything, particularly the famous man named Henry: (a) Be­ near the capital. To please her family, color red, Shelley Ma"wel1 Anderson, headed two of his si" wives, (b) wrote From " D r. I. Q." Kathryn Elizabeth Irving Berlin, Cesar Franck and Edgar ''Hiawatha,'' (c) appeared opposite (NBC, Mon., 9:30 p.m. EWT) :Kate) studied Allan Poe .. Charlie enjoys playing Barbara Stanwyck in "The Lady 1. Which weighs more, a brick or a 1urSing, but gave it the piano and eating steak with mush­ Eve," (d) was Secretary of Agricul­ brickbat? up when she re­ rooms ... He is si" feet one, weighs ture during Franklin D. Roosevelt's 2. What is the modern name of each ceived her first of­ about 165 pounds, has brown hair and first administration, (e) was known of the following countries: (a) Cathay, fer to go on the gray eyes. as "The Great Compromiser." (b) Muscovy, (e) Persia, (d) Iberia? stage in "Honey­ 2. To which kingdom - animal, 3. Is a phosphate drink phosphores­ moon Land" ... MTS. C. D. Renn, DetToH, Mich.­ vegetable or mineral-does each of cent, effervescent or iridescent? 1931 tsaw Kate A man whose business is trouble is the following belong: (a) Ivory, (b) 4. Do giraffes have horns? Smith on'" the air­ JOHN J. ANTHONY. His legal studies chamois, (c) batiste, (d) asbestos, (e) 5. The words north, south and west KATE SM ITH' : Vottd waves for the first showed him that there were what he mahogany, «() lava? may be found in the names of what O~t 01 Ihree ",O~I time. Fan mail considered inequalities in the marital S. On what continent is the Orinoco states? • popular women in poured in and made laws of our country, due to a misun­ River located? 6. What was the relationship be­ the United Stiles her a star overnight. derstanding between married couples 4. What is the longest river in South tween the monarch for whom Prince She was recruited and those who framed the marriage America? Edward VII Land was named and the to the airwaves from Broadway musi­ laws of the nation ... Anthony then 5. What river forms the boundary present King of Eongland? cal comedies, where her vocal talents made a deep study of this problem between the U. S. and Me"ico? 7. Which one of the following tiUes were considered secondary to her an­ here and abroad. He began touring 6. Johann Strauss wrote his most did John J. Pershing hold before he tics as a comedienne. Later, Ted Col­ the entire country, lecturing and writ­ famous waltz about what river? was made a general: Captain, major lins, her present manager, discovered ing, and now he has the satisfaction 7. Into what body of water does the or colonel? her for radio stardom ... The "Song­ of seeing more than a dozen states Mississippi empty? 8. What was the first name of the bird of the South" made her picture changing and improving their laws ~amous Dutch painter whose last name debut in "Hello Everybody," and at­ governing marriage and divorce ... From "True or False" was Van Rijn? tended her first and only big theatrical Even some universities are now giving (eN, Mon., 8:30 p.m. EWT) 9. Two white flags on a railroad party when the film colony staged a courses in marital relations. 1. A baby's· sleeping-bag is called a engine indicates which of the follow­ special reception for her at the Cocoa­ layette. ing: That it is a special train, that the nut Grove ... Kate has her own pro­ Mrs. Donald Ryan, Columbtl.!, Ohio. 2. Transatlantic television is im­ President is on board or that it is gram over the radiO now ... She is -PATRICIA. RYAN plays Myra Lee in possible. carrying explosives? not married. "Joyce Jordan," and ALLAN DEVITT is 3. The Mississippi River forms the 10. How many states border on the William Walton in the same serial. geographical center of the U. S. Gulf of California? MTS. L. Schmeltz, Westwood, N. J.- (Continued on Page 36) 34 WHAT'S COOKING!

    By GEORGIA SCOTT Livening Up Leftovers

    NYBODY can cook superlative meals if they can spend as A much money as they want to; there's no special art involved in pre­ paring a luscious porterhouse steak. But the woman on a limited budget who is able to make superlative meals using thrift cuts of meat and leftovers is a real artist. She'll never win any fancy medals, but she'll have the un­ dying devotion of her husband and children. It's more than ever important now to conserve foods, and the smart housewiie daily is learning new tricks for old foods. It takes imagination and considerable culinary skill to convert a day-before-yesterday roast-end into a new and savory dish, and it's one of the most-J:;ewarding experiences a cook can have. That old roast, that ham­ Year bone, that chicken skeleton, the water you cooked the vegetables in, leftover TO START vegetables-all of these are finding Men-Women ------second lives in soup-pots. Meat loaves, , FRANXlIN IM5TITun ragouts, croquettes, casseroles - these Ylctory Prog.o", I D.pt. xu, are the second- or third-day havens 101.0". Thou... "b I Rochest... H. Y. .f..ppol.t .... nl'$ ,:t> lIulb va.:.: Un 0{ U. S. 00<.,..,. for leftovers. 12 " ..,e Clyn R .... 1 bt& PU lOBS. n·n•• • 1>00II. Take a look at the S.I'YI~. Book o~ dootTlblnc ••lorle .. _ft. "01"11. Fl:EE (.0 Tell "'e hOw to Qualify r",. ..,. 01 ham - and - veal pie . I 11>0.. JoI». (right); any member of your family who turns up his nose at that de­ serves to go to bed without any supper for a week. The ingredients are simple and you can RISE STEVENS, whose voice has been heard substitute other meats and vegetables if you in the Met, over the radio and on the screen, don't happen to have says she's not going to sing in her next the ones on hand called M·G-M film-she wants to act . Turning out a for in this recipe: succulent dish is one of Rise's lesser talents

    , CIiPI diced cooked veal Cook the parsley in butter and mix , cup diced cooked ham Yo cup diced cooked pOtatoes with the meat, potato, gravy and other Cook.of-the_Month Club! Yo cup COOked peu seasonings thoroughly. Mold into CliP diced celeey croquette shapes. Dip into the egg' "What's Cooking!" offers five dol- l'i CliP COOked Iliced carrou '"1." le£tover rravy mixture, roll in bread crumbs, and let lars for the best recipe submitted 'Yo la I and scaSOn 10 lalle bilcuil dOllrh stand afllorohour or longer to dry the each month which uses the basic coating. Heat the fat in a deep vessel ingredi€nt suggested by this cot- Combine meat, vegetables and gravy to 350 or until a cube of bread browns umn. Recently this department an- in a kettle and season to taste, as Rise in forty seconds. Place two or three nouTiced the new basic ingredient Stevens is doing above. She adds bay croquettes at a time in a frying-basket fOT the month of May-tapioca. leaf, a sprig or SO of parsley, and some and lower into the hot fat until they Prize-winniTl{j' recipe fOT May must herb seasonings to this dish. Heat to are golden brown. Drain on a sheet of use tapioca as its prime ingredient. boiling and turn into a casserole. brown paper. Serve hot with parsley All en~ies for May must be post- Meanwhile cut your biscuit dough into garnish and tomato sauce. marked no later than May 1 and whatever fancy shapes that please Don't throw out stale bread. It addressed to "What's Cooking!" Ed· you. Bak~ in a hot oven (450) until comes in handy Cor so many uses, like itor, 551 Fifth Avenue, New York, the biscuits are thoroughly done. that above, or in meat loaves, or for N. Y. (About twenty minutes.) This will sprinkling on top of a baked dish. Look for the name of the April serve about four or five. Crosby Gaige, one of our honorary kernel corn winner in the issue of Another delicious casserole dish for judges, suggests this use: "Cube your April 25-May I. leftover ham or other roast meat is to arrange in layers in a baking-dish 2 stale bread and try it in drippings or All recipes .rnbmitted beco7JU? the cups diced potatoes, 'h cup diced car­ other fat. Drain on brown paper. property of "What's Cooking!" and rots, 1 cup diced cooked ham. Then Serve warm on French spinach will not be returned. pour over this 1 can condensed cream­ (cooked spinach put through a grinder, If you wish to receive a copy of of-mushroom soup with Ih cup milk. a little stock and nutmeg added and Readers' Rice Recipes, send ten the whole thing slightly thickened in cents to "What's Cooking!" Editor. Season to taste and bake in a moderate the reheating)." Mr. Gaige says also oven (350). And here is an appetizing beet­ odds and ends of cooked vegetables croquette recipe prepared by the U. S. bythat blending you can them give withnew sauces.life to Currywaste r:5~5:I~F=i!:':h~A="=':n:U='~'=N:'~W~Y:"'::::k~':N:'=Y~' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~~ Department of Agriculture: sauce for one. Or pink a white sauce 2 Clip. (tOllnd lean cooked beef with plenty of paprika and toss in the STOPS RADIO STATIC Caused by Electric Appliances I CliP muhed pOtatoes 3 tablespoons rravy or siock green vegetables. SEND NO MONEY I tablespoon onion juke These are just a few suggestions for rv;M-":;;;;';:-":".;o;;;;;y:;,;;:;:;:;:-;,;;,;;:;:;,;,'1 I tablespoon chopped parsley making good, tempting dishes out of .. I ublupoon butler :10 <:t>_~=':.·~.!!.'.!;~.:"' ...... Itc. o. D. plu ~~:.':.'!;.~1 ...... _ ...... ·1 Tabuco sauce leftovers. You probably have a lot I Con ...."" .."" """'''7 _.... I salt more ideas; if you want to pass them I NO_...... ··1 ~~~pe~aled bread crumbs along to me, and they're really good, : ...... _. eU: fUlon liP w;,h I ublupoon water ···········1 fal for dup fryinl I'll pass them along to other readers. LC.!.."'..::.;.::..:.:..:.:..:.:..:.:::..:.:.:.:.:..::..:.!.~"...:.:..:.::..:.:..:.:.:.:..J 35 MOVIE-RADIO GUIDE'S PUZZLE QUESTION SERVICE Free for Asthma (Continued jrom Page 34) If you sulrer with attackl of Asthma"" ter­ rible YOII ~hoke and gup for breath, if restful • Iccp is impos.ible beca"s. of Ihe IIrun:1. to Mrs. R. Rivett, Sequim, Wash.-Dr . breathe, if you lecl the disuse is slowly wur­ Loring in ''Young Widder Brown" is in&" YOIl' Iif. away, don't fail to ...,nd at once la the Frontie. Asthma Co. for .. ".•• trial of played by NED WEVER ...KARL SW"£N­ a umarkablc method. No matte. whe.e yOIl SON is Lord Henry in "Our Gal Sun­ live or whether you have any faith in any day" . . . Larry and Mary Noble in remedy under th. Sun. .end for this frc. trial. If you have sufferod • lifetime and tried eYer),­ "Backstage Wife" are KEN GRIFFIN and thine yOIl could lnrn of without relief; tvC" VIVIAN FRIDELL. if yOIl arc utterly discouraged, do nol abandon hope bUI send today for this fr •• ni.!. It will coU you nothin,.. Addeou Mrs. T. J. Kirkpatrick, Sp1"ingjield, Front;... Asth",,, Co. 176J Ft'oatl... lid,. Ohio.-BoAKE CARTER is now heard at 462 Nl09'.... St., Ilrffalo, N. Y. 12:00 noon EWT ... RAYMOND GRAM SWING broadcasts Mondays, Thursdays, 3 in 1 RADIO TUNER Saturdays, Sundays at 10 p.m. EWT Only $1.00 Postpaid Shirley Kohout, Berwyn, III.-HuGH "A"'"Elimln .. to. RoWLANDS liked to act, even as a 2. An .....o Tun ... young kid in Racine, Wisconsin. He used to give magic shows for the chil­ ~ 1. Wou Trap ~1t dren in his neighborhood . . . After graduating from high school, he went to the Goodman Theater i..D. Chicago, did stock in summers, went to Holly­ wood in 1934. He had a job at M-G-M and worked with the Pasadena Play­ ers till 1936 ... Returning to Chicago, Rowlands tried for a place in radio without success, so went to work in the luggage department of a store in Chicago. One day Betty Lou Gerson recognized him and suggested that he try for a part in the show "Flying HORIZONTAL 69. Join al "nglt 01 45 dt1l:feu' 9. -- Edwards, M.C. ''Truth 1. 5. Star in the portrait, Met· 70. Ole --, in "Helllapop­ or ConHqueoces Time." He won the role he sought. ropolitan soprano pin" 10. Mi>ttic) 29 by Purchase" 40. Thin,glittering metallic plate 38. Put of a cirde (pI.) ." ~o'''"" wi" onow.. ' ...ui,.; ...... _ ...... -- Olsen, screen star ...... "._ ...... on.. '_ ~9. Performed by Gne vocalist SolutIon to Puzzle 45. Mitchell --, handleader 41. Wild OX of Tibet ... -- Crawford, organis! 42. Humor Given Last Week 47. Te