Evening Star Newspaper, April 7, 1935, Page 63

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DRAWING SPE <« Radio Amateurs Drawing Attention From Regulars Tryouta Developing New Talent and Schedu]es All Over Country Are Featuring Children. By the Radio Editor. HOSE amateur shows now featured so radio networks and stations have their supporters. to & sponsor. The stars of the entertainment world that radio itself has built up during the last dozen years or less have grown into an impressive list. Those who think that amateur tryouts mean noth- ing in the way of new talent development can point to them as evi- dence that studio auditions and air tryouts, rather than the some- times disheartening reactions of studio audiences which rate ama- teur talent by their applause, are sufficient to keep radio’s artistry up to the 17-hour-a-day supply needed. | On the other hand, some leaders of radio, like Maj. Edward Bowes and Chairman Anning S. Prall of the Fed- eral Communications Commission, look with high favor on the amateur | show vogue as affording a real oppor- tunity for the development of juvenile talent. Maj. Bowes, of course, is an old hand at radio showmanship and the introduction of new hopefuls, and even now he is conducting a full hour net- work amateur show every Sunday | night. Mr. Prall, as the former head of | the New York City Board of Education, | counts young people as his particular | hobby. While he was still a member | of Congress, and long before he ever thought of becoming a regulator of | radio, he used to frequent a Washin, ton radio studio to observe the chi dren’s hours. “I have always thought he said over the air the other night, “that among these children might be a Galli-Curci or Barrymore whose opportunities are negligible because of family circumstances. Radio offers an avenue for the development of new artistry and talent never before avail- able. The amateur hours now promi- nent on radio schedules may bring some of this out.” Leaving aside the amateur shows for the moment. for as yet they have not produced any new “big name” talent for radio, it is interesting to review some of the most popular en- tertainers whose names have become household words by reason of their microphone appearances, rather than stage or screen performances. Two stars of the Metropolitan Opera come to mind immediately as being essentially radio buildups—Nina Martini and Helen Jepson. Among the better singers also there are, of course, <ames Melton, the Countess Albani, Jessica Dragonnette, Virginia Rea, Willard Robison, the Revellers and the King’s Men—all of whom grew to &tardom via radio. Among the crooners and popular | singers there are Rudy Vallee. Frank Parker, Lanny Ross, Jane Froman, Morton Downey, Tito Guizar, the Pickins Sisters, Bing Crosby, Kate Smith, Donald Novis, the Boswell Sis- ers, the Mills Brothers and Gertrude Neissen. They were unknown quanti- ties before radio, and it was their radio popularity that won acclaim also on the stage and screen for some of them. Ed Wynn, Jack Benny, Eddie Can- tor and Fred Allen were big stArs be- fore radio, but there is no doubt that | their broadcasts enhanced their fame | considerably. Comedians “made” by radio alone include “Amos 'n’ Andy.” *“Col. Stoopnagle and Bud,” “Molasses and January” and Joe Penner. Edwin | C. Hill, Tony Wons and Gertrude | Berg of “The Goldbergs” (who is starting a new series April 17) are | definitely radio products, and the or- | chestras led by Guy Lombardo, Paul | ‘Whiteman, Fred Waring, Rudy Vallee, Richard Himber and Cap Calloway, | while well known before, won their | widest acclaim via the wave lengths. | NLIKE the “cop” of the past and even the present, whose primary qualifications have been strong arms and perhaps flat feet, the policeman of the near future will have to know his radio. Radio is proving a more valuable ally to the minions of the law than the revolver, blackjack and whistle in the apprehen- sion of criminals and frustrating of | criminal activities. Because of the radio trend in police intelligence, a police radio school has been started in Chicopee Falls, Mass., where Westinghouse maintains its FOREIGN SHORT-WAVE STATIONS CITY. Barranquilla Berlin .HJ1ABB . .DJA Berlin Berlin Berlin Berlin Berlin Brussels Caracas Caracas .. Eindhoven Geneva .. Geneva .. Guayagquil . Havana Hufgen ..............PHI Jeloy Lisbon London Lendon London London Parls ..... Riobamba .. Rio de Janeiro. ROme ......... Rome ...ceee00eee...2RO Sydney ..........VK2ME Valencia .........YV6RV Whether they are merely a passing f: isappear as new fads develop, time alone can tell. In one sense they represent an eager effort on the sarios to produce a new supply of talent for broadcasting, which consumes the popularity of individual stars so swiftly that even a veteran crooner like Vaughn De Leath now finds herself without | higher powers have been the rule | STATION. MEGACYCLES. 15.20 11.76 15.28 1033 15.22 rominently on the etractors as well as | cy, soon | art of the radio impre- radio equipment headquarters. Here | an intensive three-week radio train- | ing school for a special field force of police signal system engineers has been established. The men trained there will go into the field themselves, and ! pass on their newly acquired knowl- | edge to selected members of local po- lice departments. This innovation was conceived by | W. C. Evans, manager of the West- | inghouse radio division, and V. C.| Stanley, president of the Gamewell | Co., which sells, installs and serv- | ices radio equipment especially devel- | oped for police work. The school at | Chicopee Falls gives each field engi- neer of the Gamewell Co. a compre- hensive knowledge of radio applicable | to police work, which he, in turn, can | pass on to the local police radio offi- cers. | Altogether, more than 200 American | communities have installed police | radio systems to aid them in their crime work. It was only four years ago that police departments began to | appreciate the value of such services, [ and since then the idea has spread. | The usual custom is to equip radio | patrol cars with short-wave receivers, tuned to the police department trans- | mitter located at headquarters. When an emergency call is received, head- | quarters orders the car or cars in the precinct to the scene of crime or | trouble. With sirens screaming they arrive in most cases with greater speed | than ever has been possible in the | past. Amazing increases in the num- | ber of criminals apprehended for bur- | glaries and other crimes have been reported since the advent of radio. Provisions have been made by the Federal Communications Commission for sufficient radio channels in the | short-wave band to accommodate every city and town in the country | with a population of 10,000 or more with what the Government believes to be adequate radio facilities for this character of work. France Boosnng Radio. Long the most backward of the big | nations of Europe in the matter of broadcasting development, France has | undertaken to improve radio not only | within its boundaries but in its col- onies, reports Hugh S. Fullerton, | American consul at Paris. The French Government Committee has recom- mended higher powers for the state- | owned stations, which operate parallel to privately owned stations. France has long felt that its stations were not sufficiently powerful compared with those of neighboring countries, par- ticularly Germany and England, where | lately. . | Reports from Paris state that ad- | vertising has been barred from | French radio stations, but this applies only to government-owned stations. It also is reported that a super-tax is to | be levied on French listeners to go to | the state theaters and aid in the dis- | - seminations of news, presumably by | radio. For many years radio sets were | virtually untaxed, but French listeners | now pay license fees ranging from $1 to $3.50, depending on the size of the | set. The recently acquired Radio Paris, operated by the government, and Radio | Toulouse are both to be increased to 120,000 watts in power, ranking them with some of the highest on the conti- nent. Radio Marseille is to go to| 100,000 watts, the Lyon station to 50,- 000 and the Lille and Nice stations to 60,000. | HOURS. 6 to 10 p.m. 8 to 11:30 am.; 5:15 to 9:15 pm. 12:30 to 2 am, 3:45 to 7:15 am. Noon to 4:30 pm., 5:30 to 10:30 p.m. Noon to 4:30 p.m. :45 to 11: 5:15 to 10:30 p.m. 12:30 to 2 am. 6.45 9.57 6.02 9.54 6.11 6.15 7.80 9.59 6.66 pm. Sat. p.m. Sat. p.m. Sun.; 11:15 pm. es. 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and 4 to 7 pm. 11:30 pm, Saturday only. 8 to 10:10 a.m. Mon., Thurs, Fri; 8 to 10:30 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. Noon to 6 p.m. 4:30 to 7 p.m. Tues, Thurs. and Sat. 4:30 to 8 pm. T 9 HE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C. Tl APRIL 17, 1935—PART FOUR. CIAL ATTENTION AMONG BR Versatile Artists Headline Major Network Shows Dorothy Page ( to make her first motion picture. left), exotic N. B. C. singer, who has gone to Hollywood She will continue her regular broadcasts while on the West Coast. In the center is Rochelle, one of the two pianists with Phil Spitalny's All Girl Orchestra on Columbia. Gloria Holden (right), Broadway stage star. in the N. B. C. dramatic thriller, “Black Chamber.” who is now playing a leading role Sunday, April 7. (Copyright, 1935) | Eastern Standard Time. | T WRCO9 0k | 8:00 8:15 8:30 8:45 "9:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 10:00 10:15 10:30 10:45 11:00 11:15 11:30 11:45 Melody Hour e e PR Peerless Trio This n' That Radio Pulpit Marimba Ogghestra News-Vagaries Jack and Loretta Maj. Bowes' Famuly Russian Program s Pictures Moments of Melody The Funnies fealth” Week Music Federation The Listening Post Brown String Quartet Musical Interlude “Your English” WMAL 630k__| WISV 1.460k ‘WOL 1310k | Elder Michaux At Aunt Susan's 0ld Church Songs Church of the Alr | {Labor News Review Between Bookends Jewish Program Tabernacle Choir e | Christian Endeavor Radio Canaries |Frank Crumit's Songs Morning Melodies |Dixie Harmonies Operetta Gems Lonesome Pine Singer The Ridge Runners 'Hilo Melody Boys Popular Hits P.M. 12:00 12:15 12:30 12:45 1:00 Maj. Bowes' Family “What Home Means” Aerial Columnist Rhythm Makers Surprise Party Immortal Dramas Mario Chamlee Pent House Serenade. Lovely Lady—Serenade Columbia Dance Orch. AFTERNOON PROGRAMS Opportunity Matinee Chicago Round Table Music Hall of the Air |Dr. Daniel A. Poling Serenade N. B. C. Revue |Radio Theater Sunday Vespers Tabernacle Choir Garden of Tomorrow K. of C. Radio Guild Lucille P. Perguson Church of the Air Columbia Sales Program The Shepherd Boy Spires of Melody Lazy Dan R |Eddie Dunstedter Philharmonic | Rhythm Symphony Harry Reser’s Crew Dream Drama Sentinels’ Serenade Tony Wons | The Triolians /Morton Downey Roses and Drums | = e | | Travelogue Becker's Dog Chats TN Y. l |Open House EVENING National Catholic Hour Continental Varieties |Three Maids |Fireside Recitals |Wendall Hall |{Amateur Hour 7:18 7:30 7:45 8:00 8:15 8:30 8:45 79:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 ~ Merry-Go-Round Musical Revue 10:00 |The Gibson Family 11:00 Romance and Melody 11:15 |George Duffy's Orch. Music—Sports Review Evening Album Sports Parade—Music “Grand Hotel” PROGRAMS, Philharmonic Catholic Radio Hour |Crumit and Sanderson | " Carolina Tenor_ 7 Irving Harris' Orchestra 12:15 12:30 _12:45 1:00 1:15 | Police Flashes Homer Rodeheaver _ |Concert Gems Church of the Air ;Joe Brown's Kiddies | € R Melody Moments Father Coughlin Amateur Show Smilin’ Ed” |Arch McDonald Jack Benny ‘f.}ne Penner " |Symphony Concert | Silken Strings Walter Winchell Sherlock Holmes |Sherlock Holmes |{True Ghost Stories |Senator Thomas of Okla News Buiieuns Jesse Crawford 11:30 /News—Temple of Song Slum_ber t:iusic 11:45 | | Will Rogers “« . Beauty That Endures Fray and Braggiotti Rep. Gassaway Vivian Della Ciesa McConnel} e Roadways of Romance Eddie Cantor Sunday Evening Hour Wayne King's Orch. {Madriguera’s_Orchestra ! The Watch Tower Episcopal Choir “Old Tolerable” Salon Music |Goodwell Choir Spanish Quartet Rudy Vallee Hits |Ray Noble's Music Violin Recital Moods in Rhythm Dorsey Brothers' Hits Dorsey Brothers' Hits |Piano Interlude |Rudolf Friml Selections | e b | DD B MDD, ©Cowo ®enm Washington Musicale | 1 Casa Loma Hits ‘The F}xmi}y Circle § The Family Circle Dance Parade 12:00 Ralph Bennett's Orch. 1215 S 12:45 Sign off |Madriguera's Orchestra Keith Beecher’s Orch. Freddie Bergen's Orch. Sign_off Sign Off 12:30 [Jimmy Carrigan's Orch. ! EARLY PROGRAMS TOMORROW. |Sign Off 9:15 am. to noon; 1 - ome age S ol P 8 ©p .m. Sunday. [ S e -0 UI". P a8 o 8 ©»88% = g 5-; o - - = m. .m. Thursday. :15 :15 p.m. 5t09:15 p.m. Mon., Wed. and Friday 6 to 7:30 p.m. Mon., Wed. and Friday 5 to 9 am, 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Sunday. 6 to 10 p.m. S S‘U @ oo ) | Elder Michaux Your Timekeeper \Morning Glories The Getter Upper The Grenadiers |Sun Dial - ) | Your Timekeeper W Bi45 Morning Devotions Don Hall Trio Cheerio Sun Dial* |Your Timekeeper Dick Leibert, organist Sick-a-bed children Caroline Baker 9:00 9:15 9:30 9:45 ~ [News Bulletins Breakfast Club Sun Dial Jean Abbey. 'Woman's Hour Musical Clock Musical Clock “- . Radio Canaries Police Flashes ‘Words and Music Johnny Marvin. Clara. Lu 'n’ Em Breen and de Rose |Red Cross Convention 10:00 10:15 10:30 10:45 News—Smackout Holman Sisters Today's Children Pure Food Forum 11:00 |Red Cross Convention O Kolish Quartet | 00 |Masquerade 12:15 12:30 !Merry-Go-Round 12:45 'Merry Madcaps Honeyboy and Sassafras |Kolish Quartet Farm and Home Hour Merry Madceps (oo AFTERNOON The Listening Post = . News—Music Bill and Ginger Rolling Stones Better Homes Varieties ‘Washboard Blues Varieties Land o’ Dreams ‘Mary Marlin Rhythm Bandbox Radio Oracle. Varieties |Voice of Experience The Gumps Afternoon Rhythms Orientale PROGRAMS |Luncheon Concert Popular Voices lJohn_Slaughter's Orch. Two Hearts in Song M. and M. Progran Rex Battle's Ensemble Farm and Home Hour Al and Lee Reiser ‘Words and Music Bluebirds Radio Interview Jan Savitt's Orch. Slaughter’s Ensemble. Organ Music Accordion Music Musical Program ‘Waltz Time 'Revulv!n‘ Stage Mario Cossl Vic and Sade Ma Perkins |Dreams Come True |Haughton Choir Music Guild Vaughan de Leath The French Princess School of the Air Helen Trent Romances Tune Tinkers Violin Recital Military Band Radio Guild “Your nogltcu" “« w ‘Concert Gems Light Opers Gems 8858|2858 |Songtellows ;Wolmn‘l Radio Review |Rep. Sumners of Texas |Tes Betty and Bob Dog Stories Time | “a |Chicago Varieties Patterns in Harmony |Sundown Revue Grandpa Burton |Chasin’ the Blues coo sesnwe 858 Evening Star Flashes Aunt Sue and Polly Singing Lady Evening Rhythms Dark K-Nights | Jack Armstrong | America’s Little House Today’s Winners “ John Slaughter's Orch. 'Radio Voices NGW Columbia SCI‘;GI. screen star, and Al A new series of musical broadcasts, | Ted Husing will mnmummu.‘mn and | ceremonies. Goodman's Orches- tra, will begin on Columbia May &.|fcs, now on vacation in the South, serve as master of ew.fl‘l‘ rejoin 4 “Molasses 'n’ January,” radio com- | the N. B. C. Show Boat [} ‘Radio Features and Notes F—7 OADCASTS Itty Bitty Kiddies Charm Fame for Maj. B By Peter his now famous Amateur Hour. who must be honored, or blame in radio. [ | [ ing style in programs. Hour isn’t heard by many listene: | famous before | must hope that the fame of the I | scend the limitations of WHN's po i The Itty Bitty Kiddie Hour, appar- |ently the work of Perry Charles and | Ward Wilson, the mimic, is a fast, |funny and gorgeous burlesque of commercial radio programs. I hap- [pened to hear it immediately after hearing Jack Benny's program. I've |always thought Benny and his troupe about the funniest ensemble on the | air but I think I laughed more often |and more heartily at the Itty Bitty Kiddies. i Six or seven months ago the Maj. Bowes program was the chief topic | of conversation among folks who fol- |low radio seriously. Today in New | | York one hears almost as much com- {ment on the Kiddie Hour. I believe \th! some smart sponsor will buy the = P 2 The New York Philharmonic Sym- | phony Society Or stra with Arturo Toscanini directing, will present the final concert of the special Brahms cycle on WISV from 3 to 5. The progzram includes the “Serenade No. 1 in D Major.” and the “Fourth Sym- phony in E Minor.” Rose Bampton, contralto star of the Metropolitan Opera Co.. will be the guest artist with Victor Kolar's Sym- phony Orchestra on WJSV at 9. Her principal selections will be “Amour Viens Aider.” from “Sampson and Delilah,” and Tschai- kowsky's “None But the Lonely Heart.” The orchestra will play “Aspiration,” “The Bronze Horse.” by Auber, and Kreisler’s “Liebesfreud.” George Gershwin, Sophie Braslau, Ernest Schelling, Henry Hadley and Howard Barlow will take part in the symphony concert on WMAL at 8. Gershwin and Schelling will contribute their own compositions. Miss Braslau will sing “Cry of Rachel” and “My Old Kentucky Home.” Gary Cool n star, will play the leading role in “The Prince Chap,” to be presented by the Radio Theater on WMAL at 2:30 WJSV will introduce a new musical comedy scrial, “Roadways of Ro- mance,” at 7. Jerry Cooper, Roger Kinne, baritone: Evelyn MacGregor, soprano, and Freddie Rich and his orchestra will take part A program originating in Moscow, Russia, will be broadcast by WRC at 9 am. It will be made up chiefly of Russ‘an music played on ancient Rus- sian instruments, 2 Will Rogers will be heard on WJSV at 8:20. an hour later than usual. He will share time with Helen Gleason, soprano of the Metropolitan Opera Co., and Frank Tours' Orchestra. e Nl B Msusiion: Assurances have gone out to Brit- ish radio listeners that the projected inauguration of a public television service this vear, as recently recom- mended by the special British tele- vision investigating committee which visited America, will not displace the existing system of audible broadcast- in g. To allay the fears of the public, the postmaster general has made statements to the press and has gone on the air to “make it clear that radio receiving sets of the types now in use will not any way be rendered obso- lete by the introduction of a television | television | service.” He added that will be an adjunct to sound broad- casting, operating on ultra short wave lengths, and asserted that “the nor- mal sound servi will continue as at present, and the public can confidently buy new sets of the existing types.” Music for New Serial. Billy Artzt's Orchestra will provide the music for Gertrude Berg's new radio serial, 17. This program will replace Lanny Log Cabin broadcast. « OIL BURNER DISTRIBUTED BY ELECTRIC SUPPLY COMPANY Cordially Invites Comparison WITH ANY OIL BURNER AT ANY PRICE The only burner with a five-year guarantee against defective parts and ten-year ervice guarante EASY TERMS We will install your burner mow. with payments starting next Fall— ffivllll you the advantages of very low fuel cost during Spring and Fall months. SHOW ROOM OPEN EVENINGS. “See oil burn as gas burns at half the cost” LOUGHBOROUGH OIL CO. 1703 L St. N.W. National 2648 Saint-Saens’ | e, which is operated | on medium and long wave lengths, | “The House of Glass," | | scheduled to start on N. B. C. April program just as it is and put it on a network where it belongs—and then, [ think. we’ll enter that phase wheie radio will really make fun of itself! And it'll be real funl HIL SPITALNY, it would seem, has started something with his all- girl orchestra. The full effect of the experiment in. shall we say, sex may not be realized until next Hall —but reports are that there will be other programs in which the per- sonnel is skirted. And Spitalny and his musical ladies can be expected oack, too . . . Wonder if Earle Sande, now singing at the Stork Club. will be heard regularly on the air. His voice is very pleasant . .. Norman Cordin, Southern-veiced baritone. starts a se- ries on C. B. S. April 10. He'll be heard with Howard Barlow's orches- tra . . . Max Baer reported to have received $3.000 for his scheduled ap- pearance on the Jolson program. You could buy an awful lot of good plays and good actors for that amount of money . . . When Vera Van lost her | voice during a recent vaudeville ap- | pearance, she went into her dance | and stopped the show ... Enoch Light due back from Florida soon. His band will breadcast from that Riverside Drive spot where he played last year . . . Fats Waller will be seen as well as heard in a movie. Waller now on the coast . . . Sophie Tucker will be Ben Bernie's guest Tuesday night. INCENT LOPEZ is back in New | York after a swell season in Florida. Lopez's plans haven't been made public, but it is known that RENOVIZE . .. your home Painting that is Painting | EBERLY’S | SONS 1108 K N w. DISTRICT ¢ Dionify your home. Phone “Eberl RADIO TALENT WANTED! Your Big Chancel Tune in TASTYEAST OPPORTUNITY MATINEE WMALNoon Tooar * and Every Sunday * % % % % FREE INSPECTIONS ON ANY MAKF RADIO BY OUR RADIO EXPERTS SPECIAI PRICES ON ALL-WAVE AERIALS TN © 938 F ST. N.W. | th Sunday Night Listeners New Feature on WHN Taking Path That Led to owes Amateur HO“P- Dixon. T WAS on station WHN in Manhattan that Maj. Bowes started And it was Maj. Bowes d, for the present amateur trend Therefore, one must wonder if WHN’s latest attention-arrest- | ing program isn’t the forerunner of a mad and completely fascinat- The reference is to the Itty Bitty Kiddie Hour, broadcast by WHN Sunday nights at 7:30. Unfortunately the Itty Bitty Kiddie rs outside the New York area— but neither was Maj. Bowes’ amateur hour, and it was nationally it got a national network. Therefore, one tty Bitty Kiddie Hour will tran- wer. he has ambitious ones. He has his orchestra in rehearsal and is audition- ing a lot of new talent . . . Famous Door, a West Fifty-second street res- taurant, is the place the best known radio musicians go before going home. these nights . . . Hits of the week will be featured in that cigarette program which will star Lennie Hayton and his music. REPORT reached me that slumber music was back on the air from WLIT in Philadelphia. But it isn't slumber music made famous by Ludwig Laurier, nor is it available on the networks. And why N. B. C. hasn't restored that never-forgotten program, is still one of the major mys- teries of the air ... Borrah Minevitch is going right into the classics for music for his harmonica group. And e's nothing sacrilegious about his treatment of good music, either. ARIO BRAGIOTTI moving back to New York after a Winter in Connecticut. He can't take com- muting . . . Nelson Eddy used to be & sports editor in Philadelphia . . . Vera Van has allotted July to a vacation on a Virginia farm .. . Isham Jones is teaching his son, David, to play the piano. David is 4 years old , , , It's not dollars to doughnuts for Jerry Cooper. but from doughnuts to dollars or something like that. A year ago last Thanksgiving, Cooper, who at that time had yet to get his first break, had coffee and two doughnuts for Thanksgiving dinner . . . Irene Castle McLaughlin to be interviewed by Bob Trout Friday over C.B.S. . .. George Givot copyrighting all his stage and radio material . . . Bert Swor’s and Lou Lubin's collection of minstrel jokes includes a major portion of the library that once belonged to Lew Dockstader . . . Instead of featuring numbers on the air after they have tecome hits. Sigmund Romberg has written more than 65 original compo- sitions for his current radio series, and music publishers have made offers for the rights to 26 of them. TUNE IN TOMORROW 7:45 A.M.—12:30 P.M. 5:10 PM.— 7:10 P.M. WRC = = CHANGE TO SUMMER WEIGHT OIL Spring! Your car needs this invigorating tonic. There's a quality Quaker State Motor Oil and Superfine Grease for every moving part. We'll apply it for you, and do it right. Minute Service Station No. 1 17th & L Sts. N.W. “THE GIBSON FAMILY” Has Moved 1o Sunday LISTEN TONIGHT TO ONE FULL HOUR OF NEW Music . HEART THROBS . LAUGHS presented by Ivory Soap (> STARS OF STAGE ¢ Ieaturing RADI0 CONRAD THIBAULT, Lois BENNETT J ‘“‘k and Lorettq rnest All Under the Musical Direction of LISTEN IN 10to 1 P.M. AND ON OTHER STATIONS—COAST.: Clemens hitman . [y Tvory Quartette . ory Chorus Ivory Orchestra Don Voorhees EVERY SUNDAY NIGHT WRC RED NETW( TO-COAST e l C. (WEAF)

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