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Intelligencer Journal from Lancaster, Pennsylvania • 8

Location:
Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
8
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1 8 INTELLIGENCER 'JOURNAL, Lancaster, Saturday, August 10, 1974 Entertainment- ooooq Glad You Asked By Marilyn and Hy Gardner- The King Didnt Use Make-up Is it true that Clark Gable, one of the handsomest men in movies, never wore make-up? True. The "King" always wore a natural tan from the outdoors. He believed he didn't need an artificial complexion and refused to let any make-up artists change his mind or his color. If you need an air-conditioner or air filter for your health, is it tax-deductible? The answer could be like a breath of fresh air. Yes under certain conditions.

Like if your medic says it's a health necessity to combat an allergy or other respiratory condition. Better check first with the tax people to learn the ifs and buts of this ruling. I heard that Henry Kissinger won a medal during World War II. Who for, Germany or the United States? Mrs. Rachel Indianapolis.

For the U.S., of course. Kissinger won the Bronze Star for volunteering to slip through the Nazi lines in civvies. His mission was to interrogate retreating enemy troops about the chances of a suicidal counterattack. It was dangerous, because wearing civilian clothes, a soldier could be shot as a spy. But, as usual, Kissinger brought back some valuable information.

Why is it almost impossible for me to buy President Kennedy postage stamps at the post office? Mrs. Wm. Brandon, Lubbock, Texas. Because they've become collector's items. Only two Kennedy stamps were issued: A 5-cent memorial stamp (in 1964) and a 13-cent in 1968 as part of the "Prominent American" series.

Settle a bet. Was the "Washington Post March" written for the Washington Post? P.L.M., Baltimore. It was. John Philip Sousa composed the martial march in 1889, to honor the 50th anniversary of that famous newspaper. (But his equally stirring "Stars and Stripes Forever" had nothing to do with that other famous newspaper.

The Washington Star!) Wasn't the late Chief Justice Earl Warren long the butt of a bitter campaign to Todays Jim Hartz: Easy To Wake Up To have him impeached? Mr. and Mrs. Gunther Chicago. Yes, indeed. Opponents of Warren's liberal views and decisions even bought billboards on highways screaming "Impeach Earl Warren!" It ironic that he died just when impeachment proceedings against the President were being weighed.

As Tom Dewey's running mate in the 48 Presidential elections, and a former governor' of California. Warren found the Supreme Court soothing after politics. "I don't mind telling my the jurist once observed. But making speeches was never an experience I really enjoyed. Did Bob Eubanks, host of TV's "Newlywed Game," actually meet his wife when she yvas a contestant on his show? A.

No. He won that prize long before he emceed the Are Porter Waggoner and Dolly Parton married? Yes. But not to each other. Only last February Dolly and Porter parted so that she could have a career all her own. Meantime, back in Nashville, Waggoner launched a girl hunt for a successor.

Out of what he claims were thousands of applicants, he chose a blonde songlark named Barbara Lea. Wasn't Jim Connors's Wimbledon triumph spoiled when some souvenir hunter or thief stole his silver trophy while he was celebrating with his fiancee Chris Evert? D.C., Phoenix, Ariz. No, it wasnt Connors cup that was copped but Rumanian star Ilie Nastase trophy that disappeared a golden ball hitting a silver racquet, worth $2,400 and a lot of blood, sweat and tears. It was taken from a bookstall at the tennis courts. Hartz has three children two daughters, 13 and 6, and a son, 11.

His wife, his high school sweetheart, worked until the first child came along. Now she is attending college on Long Island. an extremely happy man," says Mr. Hartz. Tve been very lucky in a lot of ways.

I made the right decisions at almost every point in my life. And much came to me without my having to ask. When I left medical school, I went right to work in TV news in Oklahoma. NBC came to the Tulsa station and asked me to move to New York in the first place. I didn't even have to ask for the Today show.

Does he foresee problems with the commercials on the "Today show? It is rumored that the other candidate objected to doing them. "Listen, they come with the job and everybody knew that. There's a lot of discussion about it but we will continue doing them until we work out some better system. "Commercials were actually the last thing we talked about I was more interested in vacation time. I don't think I have ever had a vacation in the 10 years at NBC which wasnt interrupted or shifted or altered in some way by the job.

I got what 1 wanted plenty of time for my family. "Two years ago I took my two older kids on a vacation. We drove west. Even though they had been born in Oklahoma they had never seen the Grand Canyon, the Rocky Mountains. I wanted to give them a feel of the country.

We drove till we saw something we liked and we talked to everybody. I think I enjoyed it even more than they did. And I came back with the conviction that it's important to re-introduce yourself to this country every once in a while. I'd like to do more of that. Tell Me Why By Arkady Leokum Who U7as Jackson Pollock? history.

There are no precedents really so everybody is going into it cold. But, I tell you, I plan to keep my reporting as accurate as possible." Has Jim Hartz ever lost his cool, been at a loss for words on the air? "Honestly, I can't remember any boners but I suspect that subconsciously I may want to bury them. There's a joke around here that I have one explosion a year and that usually comes around election day when we rehearse interminably. So my one blowup usually comes the first Monday after the first Monday in November. "Wait.

There was one time when I was so stunned I'm still not sure what I said. That was the first time I saw a Saturn liftoff at Cape Kennedy. 1 had seen it on television but I was just not prepared for that 36-story building walking right off the platform into the air. The flame is as bright as the sun and when it takes off, the trailer-studio shakes, the windows vibrate, you hear this tremendous artillery barrage. Somebody wrote a column saying that it was refreshing to see a newsman genuinely excited.

I sure was. PIECE OF CAKE "But, as Frank once said, they don't pay you all that money to go out there and just read. You get paid to ad-lib difficult situations. Reading a broadcast is a piece of cake you only prove yourself when things go wrong and you handle the situation. Right now, Mr.

Hartz is doing both the "Today" show and the local 5-7 p.m. news. That means getting up at 4 a.m leaving his home on Long Island at 5:15 a.m., reaching the office at 6 a.m., doing the morning show, going back home at 9 a.m., taking a nap, coming back at 3 p.m. in time to get ready for the evening news, finishing up at 7 p.m. for the ride back home.

on the "Today" show, rather than Dave Garroway and Hugh Downs, the other previous hosts. WORKED OUT However, Mr. Hartz' role on the show is not quite the same as that of those anchormen he will share the top spot with Barbara Walters. According to Miss Walters: "There is one essential difference in my relationships with Jim when Frank was here, he was the total host of the program and that's the only way it could have been under Frank. 1 don't think the audience ever even knew that I wasn't co-host.

But, now I am the co-host, and Jim and I share many interviews. In the Washington interviews with Frank. 1 used to be careful never to ask a question first, for instance. I felt it was important for him to feel comfortable with me and that was more important than my having the first question. Frank tended to think of me as covering womens things.

With Jim, now, it's different we worked it out almost immediately." Says Jim Hartz about Miss Walters: "I know it makes better copy if there is a rivalry. But there is such a vast amount to do that I can't imagine anyone quarreling over who is going to do what or how. Working with Barbara is a joy we have nothing but the finest relationship. I don't judge her work as a woman she is a totally professional news person. If I had been in her position on the show, I would have made a pitch for the co-host spot, too.

She clearly deserves it. I think if it hadn't come about she would have stood up and screamed. Like I would have." Mr. Hartz regards the late Frank McGee as his mentor. "He was a legend in Tulsa (Oklahoma), from where we both came.

He was the anchorman on the 11 o'clock local news in New York City when I first arrived and he took me under his wing. It was the most important thing that ever happened to me just being close to a man of that caliber. He was a perfectionist to whom accuracy, honesty, and integrity were vital. He would get into arguments over the tiniest of details. And Frank had a great capacity to take complex things and make them simple.

Personally, the thing I remember most about him was the great good humor of the man. He was not so much different off camera there was just more of him. You'd have to see him down on the floor playing with the kids. Will Mr. Hartz' stance on the "Today" show be similar to Mr.

McGee's? Yes. "I believe that a newsman has a right to react, comment, analyze but only, so long as the viewer understands clearly what you are doing. However, I prefer not to give my opinion especially during a time of political conflict. It so important to deliver the news as impartially as possible. After all there are so many people who use television as their sole source of news." NOT SO COOL The cool Mr.

Hartz is beginning to warm up just a little. It's obviously a subject he feels less-than-cool about. "Going into this job is an especially serious matter. It's one of the most serious periods in the nation's By ARTHUR UNGER Th Christian Science Monitor Boyish charming cool bland. Those are some of the words being used to describe 34-year-old Jim Hartz.

new co-host with Barbara Walters on the "Today" show on NBC weekday mornings. Hartz was chosen over an impressive array of contenders (Tom Brokaw, Tom Snyder) for this top TV news job. reputed to pay around $250,000 per year. "Bland?" says Barbara Walters on the telephone from Washington. "I find in him a combination of important qualities the eJse and charm of Hugh Downs -and the newsman qualities of Frank McGee.

Plus great sex appeal. I think both men and women will like that totally disarming grin. It is going to be -easy for people to wake up to 1 Jim Hartz. Certainly it is just a pleasure for me to come to work each morning." Says Jim Hartz, perched cross-legged on the chair in his packed-for-moving office at NBC, waiting for Barbara to vacate the office in the "Today" show headquarters which he will occupy: "There was a time when that supposed boyish charm was of concern to me as a hindrance. But, lately, the lines are starting to creep in and one of these days I may find myself yearning for that old boyish charm.

I was talking to Mr. Hartz just an hour or so after his premier appearance on the show as a regular an appearance which he managed to handle skillfully, except for a missed commercial cue. Mr. Hartz, with his 10-year background in NBC news, is more in the tradition of John Chancellor and Frank McGee, newsmen who preceded Hartz around and over the canvas, he dripped or poured paint on it. Sometimes he added sand or broken glass to the paint.

The result was a painting that expressed a great deal about human emotions. While the pictures contained swirling, violent mazes of color, they also suggested various rhythms and patterns. This technique of painting came to be called action painting. Several years after developing his style. Pollock began to receive recognition from all over the world.

But on August 11, 1956. he was killed in an automobile accident. His work had a great influence on the development of modern art. Answer to yesterday's Puzzle Box: In this game, two girls' teams were playing! After World War II the center of artistic activity shifted from Europe to the United States. One important reason for this shift was the work of Jackson Pollock.

Pollock was born on January 28. 1912 on a farm in. Wyoming. As a young man he studied painting and then moved to New York. During the 1930s, Pollock traveled across the country, sketching American scenes, and then he painted pictures in New York.

In the 1940s Pollock experimented with modern European styles, and he gradually began to work without subject matter. He developed a technique that was at first shocking and then tremendously influential. Pollock believed that an artist should be part of his paintings. He unrolled lengths of canvas on the floor and walking all LIVE MIKE 12:15 to 1:00 WGSA and WIOV 1310 AM or 105.1 FM SATURDAY, AUG. 10 Nuclear Power All Sides DR.

JOSEPH P. KEARNEY, Nuclear Scientist GEORGE BOOMSMA, Chairman Save Solanco Committee SATURDAYrAUG7T7 Is Politics A Low-Down Dirty Business? 3 COUNTY PARTY CHAIRMEN Telephone Questions Invited on Program Area Code 717: 733-222 733-6000; 397-1310 Ask Dr. Joyce Brothers Quiz: Facts On Nudity LOCAL WEATHER 15 and 45 Minutes Past the Hour RADIO 1430 SATUR0AY, AUGUST 10, 1974 (t. 55 NEWS AND WEATHER 7:00 CISCO KID 7:30 SUNSHINE CORNERS 8:00 LIDSVIILE 8:30 THE ADDAMS FAMILY 9:00 EMERGENCY PIUS FOUR 9:30 INCH HIGH PRIVATE EYE 10:00 SIGMUND AND THE SEA MONSTERS 10:30 PINK PANTHER 11:00 STAR TREK 11:30 BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID 12:00 THE JETSONS 12:30 HERE COMES THE SHERIFF 00 CHAMPIONSHIP WRESTLING 2:00 NBC MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL GAME OF THE WEEK Baltimore Orioles at Minnesota Twins. 5: 00 THE WORLD OF SURVIVAL 5:30 PORTER WAGONER SHOW 6:006 O'CLOCK REPORT News, Sports, Weather r.

30 NBC NIGHTLY NEWS 7: 00 LET MAKE A DEAL 7:30 OZZIES GIRLS 8:00 NBC DOUBLE FEATURE NIGHT AT THE MOVIES "Night Gomes" with Barry Newman, Susan Howard, Albert Salmi, Stefanie Powers and Ralph Meeker. "Movin' On" with Claude Akins, Frank Converse, Sondra Blake and Ann Coleman. 11:00 11TH HOUR REPORT News, Sports, Weather 11:30 WGAL-TV LATE MOVIE "Foreign Exchange" with Robert Horton, Sebastian Cabot and Jill St. John. LOO EARLY MORNING NEWS L05 ONE MINUTE WITH YOUR BIBLE Summer is here and nudity, near-nudily and skinnydipping often make the news.

What do you know about the body taboo and what it means? Check your views with this quiz. Corsons Shop Fri. Eve. until 8 CEMENTS MIXES take the work 4. FALSE.

Most nudist camps have rigid rules and regulations that must be adhered to if one is to be allowed to remain. In nudist camps there are formal and informal rules that prohibit staring, sex talk, body contact and alcoholic beverages. Violations of these rules is considered immodest. Sexual expression is rigidly and successfully controlled in most camps. 5.

FALSE. When women do exhibit themselves it is usually to please men and to be admired by them. When men exhibit themselves it is almost always to reassure themselves and others that they still possess the male sex organ which they consciously, or unconsciously, fear will be removed. 6. TRUE.

Psychoanaylst Alexander Lowen points out that enforced nudity can be a shameful and deeply humiliating experience. It has been used as a punishment for both men and women and is almost always a traumatic and damaging experience. 7. TRUE. According to David Friedrichs, a sociologist, the current desexualization or de-emphasis of sex role differences will probably result in an increasingly casual attitude toward body exposure between the sexes and the eventual extinction ol pathological exhibitionists and voyeurs.

8. TRUE. Wanting to look at the nude body is an expression of a normal curiosity, especially in a child. If this curiosity continues into adulthood and is so strong that the adult receives most of his sexual gratification from looking, it is not only a sign of immaturity but it also indicates that the grownup has held on to this childhood instinct and magnified it to a far greater degree that it deserves in the adult world. If you answered six out of eight questions correctly, you are relatively knowledgeable on this particular subject.

out of homework Mixing Box FREE With the purchase of 5 Bags HOME-CRETE 1. Women are more likely than men to be exhibitionists, especially if there are no pressures against nudity. True False 2. Nudity always means a loss of modesty. True False 3.

Nudity within the family should be encouraged, as it promotes emotional and physical health. True False 4. If a person is looking for total freedom, a nudist camp is about the best place to go. True False 5. Men and women exhibit themselves for the same basic reasons.

True False 6. Nudity can be a source of punishment. True () False 7. There probably will be more sexual exposure in the future. True Folse 8.

Wanting to look at the nude body is a natural childish wish, True False ANSWERS 1. FALSE. Women are much less likely than men to be exhibitionists and women would exhibit even less if they were not encouraged by men to shed their clothing publicly. 2. FALSE.

Modesty is more a matter of attitude than of clothing. It is quite possible for a nudist to be modest in his or her sexual behavior. 3. FALSE. According to psychiatrist, Dr.

Sandor Lorand, family nudity can actually be emotionally damaging to the child because a child's natural inclination is to want to touch and investigate whatever he sees. According to many authorities, a parent who parades nude in front of his child is unconsciously seducing that child. I HOME-CRETE MORTAR MIX HOME-CRETE n.ghtwe.ghf CONCRETE MIX HOME CRETE SANO MIX 60-lb. 70 5Q. lb.

5-79 60-lb. I79 Bag Asphalt PAVER SOIb.ftg 3 DAY SALE TEEN HAVEN Reaching Youth in Conflict with the GOSPEL OF JESUS CHRIST Your tax deductible Gift will send an underprivileged child to camp this summer. Mail all contributions to TEEN HAVEN 1811 Willow Street Pike Lancaster, Pa. 17602 Glanfof UNPAINTED FURNITURE d039 Columbia Lancaster.

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Pages Available:
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