Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

Fort Lauderdale News from Fort Lauderdale, Florida • Page 15

Location:
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FT. LAUDERDALE DAILY NEWS, June 14. 58 3-B Kids, Watch For Them Every Week 24 Comics In Full Color In Your Ft. Lauderdale Sunday News CK7 CH. 7 LVPS1 CH.

TO WFTL 1400 KC HWIL 1580 KC i- WTVJ CH.4 mm (Educational) CH. 2 TELEVISION SATURDAY AFTERNOON AND EVENING RADIO Reruns Of Ford Theater At 9 P. M. Boh Crosby, Gretchen Wyler' Begin Variety Show Tonight TELEVISION 7 p.m. WTVJ CHANNEL 4.

BOOTS AND SADDLES. A rookie is given an 17 1 Kit Carson Golf Championship Tent' Bandstand Kit Carson Golf Championship Tens' Bandstand Three Musketeers Golf Championship Lone Wolf Three Musketeers Golf Championship Lone Wolf Crisco Kid Golf Championship 20th Century Fox Criseo Kid Golf Championship 20th Century Fox Sgt. Preston Golf Championship 20th Century Fox Sgt Preston Golf Championship 20th Century Fox News-Weather Golf Championship Ellis' Spts. Pag VYTHS Jack Of Sport Golf Championship News-Weather Death Valley Days Tops In Sports Youth Asks Business TV, Death VaHey Days Tops In Sports Youth Asks Business Boots A Saddle. Jackio Gleaseit Sword Of Freedom CH.

2, Boots 4 Saddle Jackie Gleason Sword Of Freedom Perry Mason People Are Funny Dick Clark DOES Perry Mason People Are Funny Dick Clark Perry Mason Bob Crosby Florian Zabath NOT Perry Mason Bob Crosby Florian Zabach Top Dollar Bob Crosby Man Behind Badge BROADCAST Top Bob Crosby Man Behind Bad 30 Gale Storm Opening Night Lawrence Welk SATURDAY Gale Storm Opening Night Lawrence Welk Have Gun, Will Travel Turning Point Lawrence Welk OR Have Gun, Will Travel Turning Point Lawrence Welk Gunsmoka Amateur Hour Billy Graham SUNDAY Gunsmok Amateur Hour Billy Graham Victory at Sea Joseph Cotton Show Theater Of Stars Victory at Sea Joseph Cotton Show Theater Of Stars News-Weather News Performance Theater Of Stars 4 Star Feature Command Performance Theater Of Stars 4 Star Feature Command Performance Theater Of Stars 4 Star Feature Command Performance Theater Of Stars Feature 1 a.m. 1 Command Performance News Sims Holiday Jimmy Sims Holiday Weather Weather-Sims Holiday Jimmy Sims Hoiidoy News News Sims Holiday Jimmy Sims Holiday Weather Weather Sims Holiday Jimmy Sims Hoiidoy News AP News-lee. New Holiday Dinner, Music Holiday Weather Sports-Kolb Holiday Sunrise Jr. School Holiday News Progressiva Serenade Holiday Progressive Serenade Holiday Weather Progressive Serenade Holiday Progressive Serenade Holiday News Progressive Serenade Holiday Progressive Serenade Holiday Weather Progressive Serenade Holiday Progressive Serenade Holiday News Progressive Serenade Holiday Progressiva Serenade Holiday Weathv Progressive Serenade Holiday Progressive Serenade Holiday Nws News -Sims Holiday Jimmy Sims Holiday Weather Wea'her Sims Holiday Jimmy Sims Holiday News News Sims Holiday Jimmy Sims Holiday Weather Weather Sims Holiday Jimmy Sims Hoiidoy News Sign Off holiday 1 a nt. guests will join them each week.

8:00 pjn. WPST CHANNEL 10. FLORIAN ZABACH Music. 8:30 pjn. WTVJ CHANNEL 4.

TOP DOLLAR. Contest. See story. 8:30 p.m. WPST CHANNEL 10.

MAN BEHIND THE BADGE. A resentful old man is found murdered. 9 pjn. WTVJ CHANNEL 4. OH! SUSANNA.

A little rich girl aboard the ship becomes a problem. Susanna decides she will try to be her friend. 9 p.m. WCKT CHANNEL 7. OPENING NIGHT.

A half -hour dramatic series with Arlene Dahl hostess. The shows consist of reruns of "Ford The- A 'I i photo of a young girl's suicide. 10 pjn. WTVJ CHAN- NEL 4. GUNSMOKE.

A miner claims that he is going to marry Kitty. She does not want to marry him so she asks Matt to help her. 10 pjn. WCKT CHANNEL 7. AMATEUR HOUR.

Station WBZ-TV, Boston is saluted oy Ted Mack. 10:30 p.m. WTVJ CHANNEL 4. VICTORY AT SEA. A roundup of the war in China, Burma and the Indian Ocean is shown.

10:30 p.m. WCKT CHANNEL 7. JOSEPH COTTEN. A famous court trial series in which Joseph Cotton hosts. Tonight he stars in "The Trial of Edward Pritchard." 11 pjn.

WPST CHANNEL 10. MOVIE. "The Toast of New York, a 1937 drama stars Cary Grant and Edward Arnold. 11:05 p.m. WCKT CHANNEL 7.

MOVIE. Clark Gable, William Powell, Myrna Loy, Leo Car-rillo and Nat Pendleton star in "Manhattan Melodrama," a 1934 drama. 11:15 pjn. WTVJ CHANNEL 4. MOVIE.

'This Is My a 1954 drama stars Linda Darnell and Dan Duryea. Ji niW ilir ir irinfiii BOB CROSBY hosts show Big Problems Involved ri 21 vl -Fit assignment to cross hostile Indian country to rescue an old maid. 7 p.m. WCKT CHANNEL 7. HONEYMOONERS.

Norton hopes to be successful in the sewer 7 pjn. WPST CHANNEL 10. SWORD OF FREEDOM. Marco and his friend rescue a young woman from two thugs on a dark back street in Florence. 7:30 pjn.

WTVJ CHANNEL 4. FERRY MASON. A girl enters Mason's office with a black eye wearing a coat and a bathrobe. She has an unusual story to tell. Mason decides to investigate.

7:30 pm. WCKT CHANNEL 7. PEOPLE: ARE FUNNY. Art Linklet-ter hosts. 7:30 p.m.

WPST CHANNEL 10. DICK CLARK. Tonight's guests are Frankie Avalon, Toni Arden, Hugo and Luigi, and Royal Teens and Johnn D. Lautermilk. 8 pjn.

WCKT CHANNEL 7. BOB CROSBY. An hour variety show with Bob Crosby as host and Gretchen Wyler helping. Other Radio-TV Editorial Question Discussed (EDITOR'S NOTE: This column was written by the Americas Broadcasting Co. vice president In charge of news, special events, sports and public affairs.) By JOHN DALY NEW YORK (iB Increasingly, of late, the radio and television broadcasters of the United States are being urged to editorialize.

The right of stations to present editorial stands was affirmed .10 years ago, but only recently has the issue come to the fore in the minds of listeners and broadcasters. A series of statements by industry leaders, culminating in an address by tbe chairman of the Federal Communications Commission to the National Assn. of Broadcasters last April, has urged license holders to make Increased use of the right to editorialize. Chairman Doerfer pointedly remarked that, "having fought and won the battle for the right to editorialize, the broadcasters have failed to follow up this conquest at least to the, extent expected by the commission." These will be some thoughts on how a radio or television station should go about developing an editorial policy. LEARN FROM PRESS The only solid precedent we have here is that of the ANNIVERSARY Garry Moore ond his anniversary of the show with a special "I've Got A Secret" panel, including Bill program at 9:30 p.

m. Wednesday on Cullen, Jayne Meadows, Henry Morgan Channel 4. ond Betsy Palmer celebrate the sixth GRETCHEN WYLER singer-dancer ater." Hugh O'Brian stars in "Ringside Seat," tonight. 9 pjn. WPST CHANNEL 10.

WHENCE WELK. Music. 9:30 p.m. WTVJ CHANNEL 4. HAVE GUN, WILL TRAVEL.

Paladin meets a man who wants to see San-cho Fernandez, a bandit, captured. 9:30 pjn. WCKT CHANNEL 7. TURNING POINT. "The Big Leap." stars Ralph Bellamy.

A once-famous news photographer risks his life for a I TV, Unknown Comedienns, Sister I Three Faces Of 'Schultzr r-A- As mnri. i JOSEPH COTTON drama series Jessica Tandy Has Reasons Stage Struck Actress HOLLYWOOD. tNEAl You've seen or heard about "The Three Faces of Eve," of course. But do you know about the three faces of Ann? Ann B. Davis? Or "Schultzy" to you.

The Emmy winning comedienne of "The Bob Cum-mings" TV show. The sharp-witted, rubber-faced doll who wears her hair in a bun atop her head and a sign, "I Want A Man," in her eyes. There Is Ann's TV face of Schultzy. That you know. But When actress Jessica Tandy appeared, on the set of the "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" drama, "The Canary Sedan," to be seen at 9:30 p.m.

tomorrow on Channel 4, she reflected on a stage career that spans almost three decades. Looking back, Jessica bit weary or frustrated, like some TV series show regulars, about the limitations and the monotony of it all. "Our writer, Paul Henning. is a genius," Ann says. "He keeps throwing challenges at me." The Ann B.

for Bradford! Davis who ditched plans to study medicine at the University of Michigan, switching to drama Iclass of '431. is a native of Schenectady, N.Y., and a member of the "I Live Alone and Like It" Club. She has a Hollywood bungalow, where she chatters to a French poodle and a parakeet and where she cooks, reads science fiction hair raisers and keeps a weight chart "I have to count calories" which is down 30 pound points since 1953. But quite unlike Schultzy, there are nights when Ann hits the night club beat on the arm of some male pal and takes tourists by surprise with a mean rhumba. She's a doll with romantic frustrations on but she's had her chances as Ann, she will tell you.

"I could have married fdr love once and once for money," she told me. "But I would have had to give up acting and that I can't do." even while she is working on a sound stage in Hollywood, there is the face of Ann 3,000 miles away in Lexington, Mass. The face is the same of ANN B. DAVIS Ann's identical twin sister i I 1 if Harriet Norton. When Harriet twists her hair into a bun atop I GEORGE FENNOIAN simmer star her head she can fool J.

Edgar Hoover into believing she's Ann. Or Schultzy. George Fenneman Harriet, in fact, almost lishman In a song she says "made no sense at all. Her early salary didn't make sense either. A couple of dollars or so a night.

But "Typhoid Mary" helped the career of Ann B. Davis far more than all of her six years of little theater, stock companies and touring musicals in the bush leagues. People in Hollywood who knew people who knew other Joined Ann in the cast for one Cummings show during a visit press, and we can learn several important lessons from the newspapers' long experience with editorialization. One thing the better American newspapers have shown us is that it takes an editorial staff to write editorials. This staff may be a young editor behind the roll top desk of a North Texas weekly, or it may be a dozen elder statesmen of journalism meeting around a gleaming conference table on the 30th Hoor of a New York skyscraper.

In any event, the editorial staff worth its salt is marked by four qualities: experience, intelligence, courage and detachment. I venture to suggest that a radio or television station experimenting with the editorial will quickly discover the need for a similar editorial staff, experienced, Intelligent, courageous and detached. One of the radio-TV newsmen's prime responsibilities one which, by and large, we fulfill is to know what we are talking about. A certified public accountant, a mechanic, a real estate broker, a union square haranguer for the corporate state or vegetarianism, is not qualified to express his opinion on world events over the airwaves of the United States. A Quincy Howe, an Edward R.

Murrow, a Hans Kaltenborn is qualified, through years of experience and study, to express such an opinion. By extension only experienced observers of current events are qualified to form an institutional opinion for a newspaper, or for a radio-TV station. LOGICAL PROCESS An editorial, in whatever medium, must be a distillation of facts leading to a conclusion; this is the logical process, in its most, vital form, requiring of its practitioners that rare gift, intelligence. Brains, if you like. And since the conclusion drawn by this intelligence frequently flies in the face of popular opinion in the words of one writer, 50 million Frenchmen can be dead wrong it requires as well the equally rare gift of courage.

Colloquially, guts. There is no reason to suppose that the production of good editorials on radio and television will be any less demanding of brains and guts. Experience, brains, guts; these are the qualities which our editorial staff must embody. And I submit that they are the qualities of the specialist, the detached specialist who has no other responsibility but his specialty. No one now on the payroll of a station in another capacity can be constituted an editorial staff; there can be no easy, "when you're through with those reports, Sam, why don't you knock out an editorial about so and so." The station which decides to exercise its right to editorialize will, I believe, soon discover the need for a new man, perhaps a new department an editorial staff.

to Hollywood. They dressed her like Schultz for a double Quiz Show Gets Emcee Top announcer George Fen vision plot. They made a film test but Harriet, a mother and people passed the word about a housewife, couldn't handle the lines and the idea was neman has earned further rec recalls that her love of the theater developed as a child in her native England, when she used to act, dance and 6ing with her two brothers, Michael and Edward. After grammar school, Miss Tandy attended Dame Owen's Girls School in London. At the age of 15, her parents offered her the choice of going to school in France or attending dramatic school in London.

i Choosing London, she spent three years studying at the Ben Greet Academy of Acting, from 1924 to 1927. Her first professional role was in "The Manderson Girls," with a little theater production company. She spent the nest decade in dozens of different plays as a professional. It was in 1932 that Miss Tandy gained popularity in "Children in Uniform" and became established as one of London's outstanding actresses. Her first stage appearance in the United States was in "The Matriarch," short-lived on Broadway.

ENGAGEMENTS More successful were her subsequent engagements in "Time and the Conway," 1938; "The White Steed," 1939: "Jupiter's Laughs," 1940, and a y's Magic," 1942. Undoubtedly her most memorable success came when she played Blanche DuBois in Tennessee Williams' "A Streetcar ognition as an actor and master of ceremonies in the course of his career. He steps into his own in the latter capacity with John Gue Named Desire." Critic Brooks Atkinson observed, "Jessica Tandy has one of the longest and most exacting parts on record. She plays it with an insight as vibrant, and as pitiless, as Williams' writing." She starred in such notable Hollywood films as "Valley of Decision," "Dragonwyck," "The Green Years," "Forever Amber," "A Woman's Vengeance," "September Affair," "The Desert Fox" and many others. In the "Alfred Hitchcock Presents" drama, "The Canary Sedan," Miss Tandy plays the strange Mrs.

Bow-ley, wife of a Hong Kong banking official who Imagines she hears voices out of the past. As Miss Tandy puts it, "It seems I am always playing the part of an eccentric." Miss Tandy and her husband, Hume Cronyn, appear on successive weeks on the "Hitchcock Presents" series. Hume will be seen Sunday, June 22, in "The Impromptu Murder." Although Miss Tandy's experience spans diversified roles, she contends each is an entirely new experience. "The longer I remain in a role, the more difficult it becomes," she said. BROADWAY Immediately after the Hitchcock presentation, Jessica and her husband will leave Hollywood for New York, where they will star in a Broadway production.

Miss Tandy summed up her reflections with, "I'm afraid I'm stage struck!" "The Canary Sedan" was written for television by Sterling Silliphant from a story by Ann Bridge. Appearing with Miss Tandy are Murray Mathison, Gavin Muir, Patrick Westwood, Barry Harvey, Barry Bernard, Owen Cunningham and Tetesu Ko-mai. Joan Harrison produces the series. del's new audience participation quiz show, "Anybody Can Play," on ABC-TV. Ann's flair for comedy.

One of these people was an agent and after a couple of passes at the movie studios all turned her down Ann auditioned for the role of Schultzy. There was no question about it. She WAS Schultzy. Every now and then on the show Ann comes up with some fourth face to keep the laughs coming. Like when she slipped her head into a blonde wig and her hips into a high gear wiggle for a Marilyn Monroeish character called "Flaming Charmaine." CHALLENGE Charmaine was quite challenge.

But it's why, after three years as Schultzy, Ann isn't a Fenneman's professional life began in 1938 in San Francisco, and his first assignment was ANN B. DAYTS, left, and MRS. HARRIET DAVIS NORTON, twin playing a bandit on the radio show "Golden Days." Subse quent acting and announcing roles led to the Groucho Marx shelved. The third face of Ann is one only a few people have seen. UNKNOWN She used It as an unknown comedienne in a little downstairs beer and wine only bistro at the wrong end of Sunset Blvd.

here. Ann was known as "Typhoid Mary" in those struggling-for-recogni-tion days. She had a bun on her head then, too, but it was pierced by a big chicken bone set at a rakish angle. She wore a sarong, high laced shoes, horn rimmed glasses and a lei around her neck. She came out on the little stage by stages first sticking a bare leg out from behind a curtain.

The other leg and the arms and the rest of her followed, while the customers pounded heavy beer mugs on the red-topped tables. Then Ann sang about having a romance with an Eng- show with which he has been associated 1 continuously since PLASTIC TELE 9x9 SPECIAL 12c Eoch S3 Colors In Stock! Anderson Floe Coverings 2301 Fed. Hwy. JA 2-1213 1947. As a free-lance artist, Fen neman has handled many radio and TV commercials, Other assignments have in I Notes cluded announcing for Abbott ALSTON'S RADIO TV and Costello, Martin and Lewis and the Army's "Sound Off" shows.

He has also had named Phil Erickson asked him to become a partner in a night club act, and Dick was SPECIALS ALL WORK GUARANTEED 791 M.W. 27th Ave. SERVICE CALL Sl.gS ANTENNA FURNISHED AND INSTALLED 513.33 LU 3-7310 LU 3-1541 DATS NIGHTS lead roles in two films, "The Thing" and "Mystery only too glad to forsake busi ness. NEW YORK. turnComedian Dick Van Dyke, who shares the burden with singer Andy Williams of the summer replacement program for Pat Boone on ABC beginning July 3, got into show business out of a failing advertising agency he owned in Danville, 111., following World War U.

A friend The latter was later seen in serial form on ABC-TVs "Mickey Mouse Club." SHOWS FEATURED Two NBC network shows will figure in a movie, "Miss Casey," starring Doris Day, Jack Lemmon and Ernie Ko-vacs, the latter two being no strangers to TV. Miss Day plays a young widow fighting a railroad, and she will be shown with Dave Garroway in a simulated version of "Wide Wide World" and "Youth Wants to Know." MuRT6A6 Fenneman's master of ceremonies duties in TV date back to 1953 when he added to his laurels with "Your Claim to Fame," a panel show on the yow Christian Science Heap El 21 West Coast for ABC. seirvici SAIE AM MAKES iwnwy" Security SEE AND HEAR THIS SUNDAY TV RADIO HI-FI Fully Licensed by State. County, City. Qualified.

Bonded Technicians 24 St A 3-9700 Norlhoast Rsdio-TV 305 N.E. SUNRISE BLVD. Weatlicrloc't IS G0F.1H1G IV and RADIO TUBES 40 OFF Tube Tested FHEE a.m. to RUSSELL ELECTRONICS 2800 S. Federal Hwy.

JA 4-7125 TV WTVJ.TV, Ch. 4 RADIO 7:45 A.M. WYCG 12:45 P.MWSWN 22 West Broward Blvd JA 3-1433 Ft. Lauderdale ompane 224 N. Federal 93 35951 8:15 A.M..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the Fort Lauderdale News
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About Fort Lauderdale News Archive

Pages Available:
1,724,617
Years Available:
1925-1991