Subject: [removed] Digest V2012 #6
From: [removed]@[removed]
Date: 1/13/2012 4:18 PM
To: [removed]@[removed]
Reply-to:
[removed]@[removed]

------------------------------


                            The Old-Time Radio Digest!
                              Volume 2012 : Issue 6
                         A Part of the [removed]!
                             [removed]
                                 ISSN: 1533-9289


                                 Today's Topics:

  The Lone Ranger                       [ A Joseph Ross <joe@[removed] ]
  The Lone Ranger                       [ "Martin Grams, Jr." <mmargrajr@hotm ]
  1-12 births/deaths                    [ Ron Sayles <bogusotr@[removed]; ]
  Hugo Gernsback                        [ A Joseph Ross <joe@[removed] ]
  Mystery of the Masked Man's Music Sa  [ mschmid@[removed] ]
  AFRS                                  [ mchone@[removed] ]
  An Era Is About To End                [ jeffrey wolfe <jeffreylwolfe@yahoo. ]
  Commercialization                     [ <radioaz@[removed]; ]
  Children's serials & programs         [ "Ted Kneebone" <tkneebone1@[removed] ]
  Serials, Children's And Otherwise     [ Stephen A Kallis <skallisjr@[removed] ]
  1-13 births/deaths                    [ Ron Sayles <bogusotr@[removed]; ]

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 19:56:41 -0500
From: A Joseph Ross <joe@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject:  The Lone Ranger

Date: Wed, 11 Jan 2012 14:13:34 -0500
From: "Jim Kitchen"<jkitchen@[removed];

Trendle didn't like the Ranger's high spirits and good humor,
and the rest of the staff didn't like the Masked Man's formal, eastern way
of speaking. So they compromised. The Lone Ranger lost his sense of humor
and kept his formal speech."

That doesn't sound like a compromise to me.  George W. Trendle was the
boss.  He liked it one way, the staff liked it another way, and the boss
got things his way.  Where's the compromise?

--
A. Joseph Ross, [removed]                     [removed]
92 State Street, Suite 700          Fax: [removed]
Boston, MA 02109-2004     [removed]

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 19:56:48 -0500
From: "Martin Grams, Jr." <mmargrajr@[removed];
To: <[removed]@[removed];
Subject:  The Lone Ranger

With respect to the late Jim Harmon (who was a friend of mine), he wrote his
books with a romantic fondness of the Golden Age of Radio, but didn't always
get the facts correctly. The Lone Ranger did have an Eastern voice and
laughed at danger (REAL laughs) but it wasn't just the first broadcast. The
character of The Lone Ranger was the laugh-at-danger hardy soul for the first
150 episodes, before they took away his laugh and he became more serious. And
to date, no one knows exactly what the cast at WXYZ thought about the
Western. In fact, I doubt anyone knew it was going to grow into something
big. They were all doing as many as two or three dramas a night and for seven
nights so it was just another Western and another job to them.

Martin

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 19:56:53 -0500
From: Ron Sayles <bogusotr@[removed];
To: Olde Tyme Radio Digest Digest <[removed]@[removed];
Subject:  1-12 births/deaths

January 12th births

01-12-1878 - Ferenc Molnar - Budapest, Austria-Hungary - d. 4-1-1952
playwright: Several of his compositions used as theme music
01-12-1887 - Theresa Helburn - NYC - d. 8-18-1959
producer: Was the guiding light of "Theatre Guild on the Air"
01-12-1892 - Ed McConnell - Atlanta, GA - d. 7-24-1954
host, actor: Smilin' Ed McConnell Show"
01-12-1894 - Georges Carpentier - Lens, France - d. 10-27-1975
boxer: Dempsey vs. Carpentier first boxing match broadcast
01-12-1894 - Tommy Handley - Liverpool, England - d. 1-9-1949
comedian: Minister of Aggravation "It's That Man Again"; "Radio
Radiance"
01-12-1896 - Harry Reser - Piqua, OH - d. 9-27-1965
bandleader: "Cliquot Club Eskimos"
01-12-1902 - Joe E. Lewis - NYC - d. 6-4-1971
comedian: "Midnight to Dawn in New York and London"
01-12-1904 - Eddie De Lange - Long Island City, NY - d. 7-13-1949
musical director: "Honolulu Bound"; "Phil Baker Show"
01-12-1906 - Tex Ritter - Murvaul, TX - d. 1-2-1974
singer: "Lone Star Rangers"; "Grand Ole Opry"
01-12-1908 - Joan Burroughs - Chicago, IL - d. 12-31-1972
actor: (Daughter of Edgar Rice Burroughs) Jane "Tarzan"
01-12-1910 - Luise Rainer - Vienna, Austria or Dusseldorf, Germany
actor: "Linclon Highway"; "Yesterday's Children"
01-12-1910 - Patsy Kelly - Brooklyn, NY - d. 9-24-1981
comedian: "MGM Musical Comedy Theatre"; "Screen Guild Theatre"
01-12-1911 - Lon Clark - Frost, MN - d. 10-4-1998
actor: Nick Carter "Nick Carter, Master Detective"
01-12-1912 - Sara Berner - Albany, NY - d. 12-19-1969
actor: Mable Flapsaddle "Jack Benny Program"
01-12-1915 - Martin Agronsky - Philadelphia, PA - d. 7-25-1999
newscaster: "The ABC Morning News"
01-12-1916 - Jay McShann - Muskogee, OK - d. 12-7-2006
jazz pianist and bandleader: "Jubilee"; "Jazz Alive"
01-12-1920 - Theodor Uppman - San Jose, CA - d. 5-17-2005
operatic baritone: "Bell Telephone Hour"
01-12-1923 - Ira Hayes - Gila River Indian Reservation, AZ - d.
1-24-1955
raiser of second flag on Iwo Jima:: "Interview programs"
01-12-1925 - Don Atlas - d. 12-28-2005
sportscaster: KLOK San Jose, California
01-12-1926 - Ray Price - Perryville, TX
singer: "Grand Ole Opry"; "Galaxy of Stars"
01-12-1930 - Glenn Yarbrough - Milwaukee, WI
singer: "Guest Star"

January 12th deaths

01-17-1899 - Nevil Shute - Ealing, England - d. 1-12-1960
novelist: "Lux Radio Theatre"
01-23-1919 - Ernie Kovacs - Trenton, NJ - d. 1-12-1962
announcer, panelist: Monitor, "Where Have You Been?"
01-31-1887 - Charlies Irwin - Curragh, Ireland - d. 1-12-1969
actor: "Edgar Bergen/Charlie McCarthy Show"
02-05-1901 - Arthur Sheekman - Chicago, IL - d. 1-12-1978
writer: "The Marx Brothers"
02-21-1920 - Shirley Bell - Chicago, IL - d. 1-12-2010
actor: Little Orphan Annie "Little Orphan Annie"; Patsy Donovan
"Captain Midnight"
03-15-1932 - Ray Aparicio - d. 1-12-2006
disk jockey: KBUC Corona, California
03-16-1893 - Isobel Elson - Cambridge, England - d. 1-12-1981
actor: Jessie Hughes "Young Dr. Malone"
04-20-1914 - Betty Lou Gerson - Chattanooga, TN - d. 1-12-1999
actor: Mary Marlin "Story of Mary Marlin"; Charlotte Wilson "The
Guiding Light"
04-21-1923 - Tex Antoine - d. 1-12-1983
announcer: "The Eternal Light"; "Jane Pickens Show"
05-09-1908 - Leonard Sillman - Detroit, MI - d. 1-12-1982
producer: "New Faces of 1948"
05-12-1913 - Ken Peters - d. 1-12-1998
actor: Dan Murray "One Man's Family"; Olsen "Life with Luigi"
06-07-1911 - Stanley Unwin - Pretoria, South Africa - d. 1-12-2002
sound engineer, commentator, actor: "Beyond Our Ken"
06-18-1904 - Keye Luke - Canton, China - d. 1-12-1991
actor: "Lux Radio Theatre"; "Image Minorities"
07-09-1917 - Kay Aldredge - Tallahassee, FL - d. 1-12-1995
actor: "Maxwell House Coffee Time"
07-21-1925 - Anne Meacham - Chicago, IL - d. 1-12-2006
actor: "CBS Radio Mystery Theatre"
08-03-1903 - John S. Young - Springfield, MA - d. 1-12-1976
announcer: Foreign news for NBC in Nyw York
09-15-1890 - Agatha Christie - Torquay, England - d. 1-12-1976
author: Creator of "Hercule Poirot"
09-22-1932 - Allen Actor - d. 1-12-2004
disc jockey: Orlando, Florida
10-17-1922 - Luiz Bonfa - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - d. 1-12-2001
guitarist: "The Quitandinha Serenaders"
10-18-1911 - Helen Claire - Union Springs, AL - d. 1-12-1974
actor: Virginia Lansing "Backstage Wife"; Joyce Jordan "Joyce
Jordan,[removed]"
11-12-1884 - Griff Barnett - Blue Ridge, TX - d. 1-12-1958
actor: Rexall Family Druggist "Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show"
12-21-1917 - Rolly Bester - NYC - d. 1-12-1984
actor: "Tales of Tomorrow"

Ron

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 19:57:29 -0500
From: A Joseph Ross <joe@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject:  Hugo Gernsback

   From Those Were The Days -

1906   Hugh Gernsback of the Electro Importing Company advertised radio
receivers for sale for the low, low price of just $[removed] ($179 in 2010
dollars) in Scientific American magazine. The first ad selling the
gizmos guaranteed reception of about one mile.

That's "Hugo" not "Hugh."  Born in Luxemburg, Gernsback was one of the
early pioneers of radio, mainly through publishing various magazines on
radio experimentation.  Some say he coined the word "television."
Gernsback also used to run fairly primitive science fiction in his
magazines and eventually spun off the first SF magazine, "Amazing
Stories" in 1926.  It lasted, in various forms, until 2005.  The Hugo
Award, given annually by the World Science Fiction Convention, is named
for him.

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 19:57:38 -0500
From: mschmid@[removed]
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject:  Mystery of the Masked Man's Music Saturday
 morning on YUSA

Last week there was some discussion of this book on the Digest.  I had
just finished digitizing a copy of my interview with the author, Reg
Jones, and it will be presented this Saturday morning at 11 am on The
Golden Age of Radio on [removed]. The show will open with
episodes 89-90 of Chandu the Magician, a weekly feature, and #607 of
The Lone Ranger "Remember the Alamo, from Dec 22, 1941. The second
hour of the show is my talk with Reg Jones, with lots of clips of
music from The Lone Ranger. This was originally heard on WBAI in late
1987 when the book came out.

I have set up a new page on Facebook called "Golden Age of Radio
Hosted by Max Schmid" for advance notice of the line-ups for both the
WBAI broadcast (Sundays at 9pm) and for the YUSA show (Sat 11am-1pm).
I will update the page every week as I produce the programs. Like me,
love me, spread the word!  Thanks, Max

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 19:58:41 -0500
From: mchone@[removed]
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject:  AFRS

Chris Holm's posting about AFRS reminded me of something:  A friend of mine
was in the Navy aboard the USS Ranger in the mid to late 60s.  During that same
time I was in the Army overseas.  We were talking about some of the programs we
listened or watched on AFRTVS during that time.  He told me that on board
ship the broadcasts they listened to had commercials in them.  He said that
they took a vote and the sailors chose to leave the ads in the shows.  It
doesn't seem
right, but that's what he said.  Does anyone know anything about this?

Thank You,
Roby McHone
Fairbanks, Alaska

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 22:35:30 -0500
From: jeffrey wolfe <jeffreylwolfe@[removed];
To: <[removed]@[removed];
Subject:  An Era Is About To End
X-Converted-To-Plain-Text: from multipart/alternative
X-Converted-To-Plain-Text: Alternative section used was text/plain

Irna Phillips is the lady credited with creating the genre of soap operas when
painted dreams aired in Chicago. Her next effort, was Bachelor's Children
which jump started the genre. She was the person who brought "The Guiding
Light" from radio to television on June 30, 1952. Three people that worked
with her were Bill Bell who went on to create and write "The Young And The
Restless", Gloria Monty who restored "General Hospital" and made it a daytime
must see and Miss Agnes Nixon.

Agnes Nixon's first creation was "Search For
Tomorrow" which debuted September 3, 1951 and for the next 61 consecutive
years an Agnes Nixon creation or scripts have been on daytime television. But
that all ends on Friday at 2:55 EST when One Life To Live airs it's final
episode. Why? Because Disney who now owns ABC is too cheap to pay actors and
actresses on scripted programming. When Agnes Nixon was at her creative peak,
ABC Daytime had 20 hours of soap operas per week and 15 of those hours
belonged to Agnes Nixon creations. First was "One Life to Live" which debuted
July 15, 1968, All My Children which bowed on January 5, 1970, Loving which
premiered June 26, 1983 and in between she created "As The World Turns" for
CBS and "Another World" for NBC.

In the cast of "Search For Tomorrow" were
radio actors such as Larry Haines, Don Knotts, Karl Weber, Arnold Stand and
Lesley Woods on "All My Children" radio thespians in the cast included
Elizabeth Lawrence who guested on at least 2 Suspenses, Ruth Warrick who was
on the "Lux Radio Theater" adaption of "The Navy Comes Through" (Francis
Heflin (Van's sister) who played the long suffering mother of Erika Kane, Mona
did her fair share of radio and Mary Fickett who won the first Daytime Emmy as
Best Actress. I'm not sure whether or not she has an acting background in
radio, but her father was the producer of the "Theater Guild Of America".
This brings us back to "One Life To Live". Erika Slezak is the undisputed star
of the show and her father, walter appeared on the radio and played her
character's father, Victor Lord. An interesting tidbit, the Character of
Victor Lord was brought back long after Walter Slezak's death in a flashback.
Les Teymane played the character then and at the same time he was subbing for
an ill David Lewis as Edward Quartermaine on "General Hospital".This is the
only time in daytime soap opera history that a male actor has played two
different characters on two different soap opera on the same day. Patricia
Elliot who's on several CBS Mystery Theater's is a long time cast member of
"One Life To Live" as well as Grayson Hall, Lois Kibbee, Nat Polen and Gene
Rayburn among others who worked on both mediums.

Nobody has ever occupied and
dominated 15 of the 20 alloted network hours the way Agnes Nixon has. Fibber
and McGee and Molly was created by Don Quinn who also went on to create "Halls
Of Ivy" But his programming only occupied 1 hour on the radio schedule for
less than 2 full years. Agnes Nixon is responsible for 61 years of continuous
programming and at her peak, 15 of the 20 hours that ABC daytime offered
weekly. One other television comparison would be Norman Lear. At his peak, he
did have 6 sit-coms on simulataneously. They included "All In The Family",
"Maude", "Good Times", "The Jeffersons", "One Day At  Time" and Sanford And
Son. Five of those series' were on CBS and they accounted for a mere 2 and a
half hours of a 22 hour Prime Time schedule. Agnes Nixon has created a legacy
that's in a class buy itself and it all ends Friday at 2:55 EST when the final
credits for "One Live To Live" roll for the final time all because ABC or
should I say Disney
 is too cheap to pay for scripted programming. Come Monday, daytime television
will never be the same because for the first time in 61 years an Agnes Nixon
creation will no longer be airing on network television.

Thank you, Miss
Nixon. You're in a class all by yourself.

Jeff Wolfe

  *** This message was altered by the server, and may not appear ***
  ***                  as the sender intended.                   ***

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 23:45:05 -0500
From: <radioaz@[removed];
To: <[removed]@[removed];
Subject:  Commercialization

Meant to post this a few weeks ago when it was more relevant, but got
busy -- well, you know.  For years we have all heard some people decry the
over-commercialization of Christmas.  To hear them you'd think it was a new
idea.

This past Christmas season I listened to many shows, mostly from the 1940s.
I can't count the number of them where one character or another bemoaned the
commercialization of the holiday.

Just an example of radio teaching (or reminding) us that there may be very
little new under the sun.

Ted

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 23:45:25 -0500
From: "Ted Kneebone" <tkneebone1@[removed];
To: "OTR Digest" <[removed]@[removed];
Subject:  Children's serials & programs

When I responded to the Longs' request for titles of
children's serials, I included one that no one else
has given.  I think it was usually complete in one
episode, but it was a neat show for kids:

House of Mystery

It was hosted by John Griggs/Roger Elliot and usually
dealt with mysterious happenings and superstitions.
By the end of each program, the host had debunked
the superstition.  It was on Mutual from 1945-1949.

I think we could use a show like that again, radio or
television, or both.

Ted Kneebone

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 23:45:54 -0500
From: Stephen  A Kallis <skallisjr@[removed];
To: [removed]@[removed]
Subject:  Serials, Children's And Otherwise

OTR was rife with serials.  Besides programs like "Bobby Benson" and
"Jack Armstrong, The All-American Boy," there were many serials aimed
straight at grownups.  For the most part, these were the soap operas.
But although a lot of children listened to it, one serial was aimed
higher than the average schoolchild.  Captain Midnight.
The show started as a syndicated program   sponsored by Skelly Oil.
Although scheduled in the afternoon, few youngsters would be likely to
nag  their parents for such items as gasoline, motor oil or gas kitchen
ranges, all of which were advertised on the show.
When Ovaltine took over sponsorship, they hired the writers that wrote
the Skelly scripts, and the formation of the Secret Squadron was to fight
espionage and sabotage in the United States (and eventually elsewhere) as
war clouds formed over Europe and Asia.
The late Lyle Bergmann, Ovaltine Marketing Manager, once informed me that
the audience for the 15-minute serial version of the program was evenly
divided  between juveniles and adults.  It was a favorite of military
flight crews during the war, when they were located where they could hear
it.

Stephen A. Kallis, Jr.

------------------------------

Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2012 23:45:59 -0500
From: Ron Sayles <bogusotr@[removed];
To: Olde Tyme Radio Digest Digest <[removed]@[removed];
Subject:  1-13 births/deaths

January 13th births

01-13-1882 - Domenico Savino - Tranto, Italy - d. 8-8-1973
composer/conductor: "Evening in Paris"; "La Palina Smoke Dreams"
01-13-1884 - Sophie Tucker - Minsk, Russian Federation - d. 2-9-1966
singer: (The Last of the Red Hot Mammas) "Sophie Tucker and Her Show"
01-13-1885 - Jimmy Monaco - Genoa, Italy - d. 10-17-1945
orchestra leader: WOR Newark, New Jersey
01-13-1895 - Campbell Arnoux - d. 11-1-1966
announcer: Uncle Billy "Uncle Billy"
01-13-1901 - A. B. Guthrie - Bedford, IN - d. 4-26-1991
author, screenwriter: "NBC University Theatre"; "Lux Radio Theatre"
01-13-1903 - Charles Kullman - New Haven, CT - d. 2-8-1983
singer: "The Palmolive Beauty Box Theatre"
01-13-1903 - Kay Francis - Oklahoma City,  Oklahoma Territory - d.
8-26-1968
actor: "Lux Radio Theatre"
01-13-1909 - Danny Barker - New Orleans, LA - d. 3-13-1994
jazz guitar: "This Is Jazz"
01-13-1910 - Jack Mercer - d. 12-4-1984
actor: Popeye "Popeye the Sailor"
01-13-1913 - Harry Budka - Chicago, IL
composer, arranger, pianist: Hal Kemp, Earl Burnett and Ted Weems bands
01-13-1913 - Jeff Morrow - NYC - d. 12-26-1993
actor: "Electric Theatre"
01-13-1913 - Paul Birch - Alabama - d. 5-24-1969
actor: Radio work in St. Louis under the name of Paul (Lowery) Smith
01-13-1914 - Osa Massen - Copenhagen, Denmark - d. 1-2-2006
actor: "Orson Welles Theatre"; "Columbia Workshop"
01-13-1914 - Stanley Waxman - Ohio - d. 9-27-1998
actor: "Escape"; "Man Called X"; "Tell It Again"; "Presenting Charles
Boyer"
01-13-1915 - Mahlon Aldridge - d. 1-21-1986
sportscaster: Missouri
01-13-1918 - Steve Dunne - Northampton, MA - d. 9-2-1977
actor: Sam Spade "Advs. of Sam Spade"
01-13-1919 - Robert Stack - Los Angeles, CA - d. 5-14-2003
actor: "Family Theatre"; "Lux Radio Theatre"; "Screen Guild Theatre"
01-13-1925 - Gwen Verdon - Culver City, Los Angeles, CA - d. 10-18-2000
actor, singer, dancer: "Stagestruck"; "WOR Diamond Jubilee"
01-13-1927 - Delores Hawkins - Brooklyn, NY - d. 1-15-1987
singer: "Nick Kenny's Children's Follies"
01-13-1930 - Frances Sternhagen - Washington, [removed]
actor: "CBS Radio Mystery Theatre"
01-13-1931 - Charles Nelson Reilly - The Bronx, NY - d. 5-25-2007
actor: "Visual Radio"

January 13th deaths

01-02-1901 - Hugh Ross Williamson - Romsey, England - d. 1-13-1978
author: "Paul, a Bondslave"
02-02-1882 - James Joyce - Dublin, Ireland - d. 1-13-1941
author: "NBC University Theatre"
02-09-1915 - Charlotte Holland - d. 1-13-1997
actor: Nita Bennett "Lone Journey"; Nora Drake "This is Nora Drake"
02-26-1922 - Margaret Leighton - Barnt Green, England - d. 1-13-1976
actor: "Variety Playhouse"; "Pocket Theatre"
03-16-1859 - Alexander Popov - Turinsk District, Russia - d. 1-13-1906
One of three claimants for inventor of radio (along with Marconi and
de Forest)
04-03-1920 - Stan Freeman - Waterbury, CT - d. 1-13-2001
pianist, composer: "Piano Playhouse"; "All Night on NBC"
04-10-1897 - Eric Knight - Menston, England - d. 1-13-1943
writer: "Everyman's Theatre"
04-11-1913 - Bob LeMond - Hale Center, TX - d. 1-13-2008
announcer: "Romance of the Ranchos"; "Sweeny and March Show"
04-21-1914 - Norman Panama - Chicago, IL - d. 1-13-2003
writer: "Pepsodent Show starring Bob Hope"; "Lux Radio Theatre"
04-24-1871 - Blanche Ring - Boston, MA - d. 1-13-1961
actor/singer: "Fight Camp"; "Jumbo"
05-02-1917 - Herman Clebanoff - Chicago, IL - d. 1-13-2004
musician: (Herman Clebanoff and the Ensemble) "Big City Serenade"
05-11-1912 - Doodles (Winstead) Weaver - Los Angeles, CA - d. 1-13-1983
comedian: (Brother of Pat Weaver) Professor Feedlebaum "Spike Jones
Show"
05-27-1911 - Hubert H. Humphrey - Wallace, SD - d. 1-13-1978
politician: "Meet the Press"; "University of Chicago Round Table"
06-24-1924 - Thelma Rogers - Coventry, England - d. 1-13-2000
actor: "The Archers"
07-05-1911 - Richard Newton - Vancouver, Canada - d. 1-13-2006
actor: "Now Hear This"
07-09-1881 - Samuel "Roxy" Rothafel - Stillwater, MN - d. 1-13-1936
emcee: "Roxy's Gang"; "Roxy Revue"
07-13-1934 - Philip Crosby - California - d. 1-13-2004
actor: "Bing Crosby Show"
07-15-1920 - B. H. Anderly - d. 1-13-1998
newscaster, disk jockey: KLIZ Brainerd, Minnesota
07-22-1908 - Shirley Howard - d. 1-13-1988
singer: "Tommy Riggs and Betty Lou"
08-18-1912 - Ralph Hetzel - d. 1-13-1994
labor leader: "Wake Up America"
09-05-1916 - Frank Shuster - Toronto Canada - d. 1-13-2002
writer: (Wayne and Schuster) "The Army Show"; "The March of Time"
09-13-1880 - Jesse L. Lasky - San Francisco, CA - d. 1-13-1958
film producer, host: "Gateway to Hollywood"
09-23-1889 - Don Bestor - Longford, SD - d. 1-13-1970
bandleader: "Nestle Program"; "Jack Benny Program"
11-04-1896 - Harry Woods - North Chelmsford, MA - d. 1-13-1970
compser: "Great Moments to Music"
11-29-1909 - Frank Waldecker - d. 1-13-1995
announcer: "A Date with Judy"; "The Eddie Duchin Show"
12-22-1901 - Andre Kostelanetz - St. Petersburg, Russia - d. 1-13-1980
conductor: "Chesterfield Hour"; "Light Up Time"; "Pause That Refreshes"

Ron

--------------------------------
End of [removed] Digest V2012 Issue #6
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