anaheim-bulletin 1959-04-23
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TV in Review
By WILLIAM EWALD
United Press International
NEW YORK (UPI)—"Little Tin God," the U.S. Steel Hour's diversion on CBS - TV Wednesday night, was a moderately absorbing entry, timbered handsomely by two of its players, Richard Boone and Fritz Weaver.
Joe Palmer Jr.'s script—I believe it was his first TV effort—was set in a tuberculosis sanitarium and dealt principally with the efforts of one of its patients to coax a withdrawn member into the fold.
The lines of its plot were solid and Palmer's characterizations were deft — a nurse and several minor characters were penciled in with swift, clean strokes. Much of its dialog worked well, too — it rang true and Palmer wisely side-stepped stiff speechmaking.
But despite all this, "Little Tin God" was not completely satisfying. For one thing, it was a little too pat. For another, it had an occasional thinness — there was a feeling of padding, of repetition about some of its parts. Palmer had two striking major characters going for him, but when they were not grappling with each other, the wires of the play went a trifle slack.
Richard Boone as the affirmative patient turned in a nicely chiseled performance — made up of equal parts of physical debility and spiritual strength — that contributed hugely to the evening's maneuvers. It was a difficult party to assay, bordering as it did upon the edge of Little Orphan Annie cheer.
And Fritz Weaver as the social troglodyte proved again he is one of the fine young talents in our theatre — knowing in his grasp of a role's profile, skillful in coloring in its innards.
Short Shots: NBC-TV's Wagon Train Wednesday night was an improbable serving of squash h, acted in a curiously gasping manner by Angie Dickinson. The fellow who played the newspaperman was William Reynolds, who plays the title role in NBC-TV's new series, Pete Kelly's Blues.
The Milton Berle-Martha Raye skit on NBC-TV Wednesday night had some funny moments...the brief demonstration on CBS-TV's I've Got A Secret Wednesday night of how a TV director calls his shots was I'm sure, pretty interesting to most TV viewers. It's rather strange that TV rarely explores its own inner workings for TV fans.
The Channel Swim: Ernie Kovacs will do a one-hour special for NBC-TV May 22. The Broadway play, "My Three Angels," will be seen as a Friday night special on NBC-TV next fall. A new half-hour show, Troubleshooters, will take over the Thursday night spot of Masquerade party on NBC-TV in the autumn.
NBC-TV's Dragnet is pulling a switch — it'll present nine reruns during May and June, then present new shows during the hot
tion about some of its parts.
Palmer had two striking major characters going for him, but when they were not grappling with each other, the wires of the play went a trifle slack.
Richard Boone as the affirmative patient turned in a nicely chiseled performance — made up of equal parts of physical debility and spiritual strength — that contributed hugely to the evening's maneuvers. It was a difficult part to assay, bordering as it did upon
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The Channel Swim: Ernie Koacs will do a one-hour special for NBC-TV May 22. The Broadway play, "My Three Angels," will be seen as a Friday night special on NBC-TV next fall. A new half-hour show, Troubleshooters, will take over the Thursday night spot of Masquerade party on NBC-TV in the autumn.
NBC-TV's Dragnet is pulling a switch — it'll present nine reruns during May and June, then present new shows during the hot weather months of July and August. NBC-TV's Oldsmobile Music Theater will ditch its regular drama-with-music format April 30 to present a half-hour of songs with Florence Henderson and Bill Hayes.
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OC Reserve Office Association To M
Captain R. W. Dobson and a meeting of the Orange Chapter of the Reserve Association of the United States be held at the El Toro Mall Station Thursday evening.
A program staged by part of the air station will be presented according to Chapter So Dobson, following a social 6:30 and a dinner at 7. The gram will commence at 8:00.
"Uniform of the day for fair will be civilian clothing members of the chapter attend, and all officers grant officers of all the Forces are Invited," Caption said.
Current ID cards or ROBership cards will be required admission to the station, so Captain Dobson.
Plant Trip Sponsored By Shipkey And P
Anaheim Goodyear di Shipkey and Pearson, sponsored a trip to the Angeles plant of the Goodyear pany. The tour was made ous local businessmen with the trip to Los Angeles tered bus. Included in were men engaged in construction, and repre sent from the post office and
The tour of the plant was exclusive, showing the visi Goodyear tires are sha the raw material into the product. The trip also included Inspection of Goodyear' department.
Anaheim men in the t Joe Jacobs, Selly Hoens
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HERTER SWORN IN — Christian A. Herter (left) is sworn in as U.S. Secretary of State in a White House ceremony attended by President Eisenhower, who proclaimed that Herter was the "best person" for the job. Frank K. Sanderson, White House Administrative Officer, administers the oath.
Brown Wins Test Of Agency Bill
By JAMES C. ANDERSON
United Press International
SACRAMENTO (UPI) — Gov. Edmund G. Brown was the winner and the Chamber of Commerce the loser in a key test of an ad-
Harrison to Succeed Southland Chief Judge
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Judge Ben Harrison will succeed retiring Judge Leon R. Yankwich as chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the Southern California District, it was announced today.
Yankwich, 70, said Chief Justice Earl Warren had agreed to his request to be permitted to step down, effective April 30.
Yankwich has been chief judge
Nixon's Vote Makes Him Key Issue in '60
By WILLIAM THEIS
United Press International
WASHINGTON (UPI) — President Richard M. Nixon breaks Senate vote for a "bill of rights" placed him singly on record today on issue of the 1960 presidential His associates called it politically a "lucky break."
It enabled Nixon as the presidential front-runner to a defeat to Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.), the current leader Democratic presidential polls.
It gave Nixon a chance to show his stand on general problem of controlling bor union abuse. Vice presidents may only vote in the Senate there is a tie.
It lined up the vice president with his own party on the Thirty-two of the 34 Reps senators voted for the "rights" amendment of Sen. L. McClellan (D-Ark.).
Nixon's vote putting over McClellan amendment is due to incur the wrath of laborers. But the vice president's ers expect any labor supply gets to come from rank-and- members rather than unions in any event.
On balance, it appears scarcely could have voted wisely.
Before the 45-45 tie vote oped, the Senate had reg its will in favor of the Mc amendment by a roll call v 47 to 46. The tie came on cedural followup motion迫下 the original
Brown Wins Test Of Agency Bill
By JAMES C. ANDERSON
United Press International
SACRAMENTO (UPI) — Gov. Edmund G. Brown was the winner and the Chamber of Commerce the loser in a key test of an administration bill to create a new state agency to lure business to California.
The governor's measure to set up an economic development agency won a 2-1 vote of approval Wednesday in a subcommittee of the Senate Finance Committee despite some strong objections from the chamber.
However, the subcommittee pared the governor's request for $350,000 to run the agency for the next nine months down to $175,000.
Republican Sen. John F. McCarthy of San Rafael made the key motion to keep the governor's bill alive. Privately, some administration sources had predicted the measure might be killed by the subcommittee.
"Let's start the agency on a modest scale and see what happens two years from now," McCarthy said.
Sen. James A. Colby (D-Married), author of the governor's bill, said the proposed agency would help provide some of the 280,000 new jobs needed every year in the state by promoting new business.
The agency would collect information on such things as taxes, land values, water and power supplies, transportation availability and other data and provide "one stop" information service to any business or industry interested in locating in California.
The agency also would help existing business to expand, Cobey said. However, the agency would do no tourist promotion or national advertising or engage in loans to business concerns.
Representatives of the Chamber of Commerce opposed the bill on grounds that it "would duplicate at the taxpayers' expense work already being done by the chamber and other trade groups."
Sen. Charles Brown (D-Sho-shone) joined McCarthy in support of the bill while Sen. Nelson Dilworth (R-Hemet) voted against it.
Other developments:
Quacks: An Assembly committee sent to the lower house floor with a "do pass" recommendation a bill designed to curb cancer quacks and to create a cancer advisory council in the Department of Health.
Southland Chief Judge
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Judge Ben Harrison will succeed retiring Judge Leon R. Yankwich as chief judge of the U.S. District Court for the Southern California District, it was announced today.
Yankwich, 70, said Chief Justice Earl Warren had agreed to his request to be permitted to step down, effective April 30.
Yankwich has been chief judge since 1951. He will continue to perform the regular duties of a district court judge, he said, "as long as God gives me the strength to do my work."
Pet Lion Cub Mauls Two-Year-Old Boy
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) — A baby lion severely mauled a two-year-old boy Wednesday. A laborer pried open the cub's jaws and rescued the child.
The pet six-month-old lion cub, chained to a fence pot in an open area, clawed little John Alvin Cox when the boy wandered too close. John Alvin suffered fang and claw wounds on the head, right ear, face and stomach.
He was rescued by George Templeton, 28, an employee of a trailer firm that owned the animal. He said he forced open the lion's jaws with his hands and kicked the lion away.
TV Actor to Aid SC In Parents' Commitment
LOS ANGELES (UPI) — Robert Young, the "father envisioning" "Father Knows Bees," has been appointed to real-life father role.
Young was named chair of the University of Southern California's new parents committee established to create "closer between SC and the parent students." The actor's day Barbara, is an SC coed.
ARTICLES FOR SALE
LONDON (UPI) — Persons in the London Times today sale — 12-bore shotgun, spiked wedding ring.”
the trip to Los Angeles in a chartered bus. Included in the tour were men engaged in trucking, construction, and representatives from the post office and schools.
The tour of the plant was all inclusive, showing the visitors how Goodyear tires are shaped from the raw material into the finished product. The trip also included an inspection of Goodyear's Airfoam department.
Anaheim men in the tour were: Joe Jacobs, Selly Hoenshell, Fred Crum, Verne Gilliam and Floyd Githens.
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Nixon’s Vote Makes Him Key Issue in ’60
By WILLIAM THEIS
United Press International
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Vice President Richard M. Nixon’s tie-breaking Senate vote for a labor bill of rights” placed him willingly on record today on a key issue of the 1960 presidential race. His associates called it political “lucky break.”
—It enabled Nixon as the GOP presidential front-runner to hand defeat to Sen. John F. Kennedy —Mass.), the current leader in democratic presidential polls.
—It gave Nixon a dramatic chance to show his stand on the general problem of controlling labor union abuse. Vice presidents may only vote in the Senate when there is a tie.
—It lined up the vice president with his own party on the issue. thirty-two of the 34 Republican senators voted for the “bill of rights” amendment of Sen. John McClellan (D-Ark.).
Nixon’s vote putting over the McClellan amendment is certain incur the wrath of labor leaders. But the vice president’s backs expect any labor support he gets to come from rank-and-file members rather than union leaders in any event.
On balance, it appeared, he barely could have voted otherwise.
Before the 45-45 tie vote developed, the Senate had registered a will in favor of the McClellan amendment by a roll call vote of to 46. The tie came on a procedural followup motion designed nail down the original vote.
Add ‘Rights’ Tag To Labor Bill
By ALVIN SPIVAK
United Press International
WASHINGTON (UPI)—Surprise Senate approval of a “bill of rights” amendment to its labor reform bill aroused union opposition today and brought a warning that final passage may be jeopardized.
Sen. John F. Kennedy (D-Mass.), chief sponsor of the bill, said ultimate approval was made “more difficult” by the Senate’s 47-46 acceptance Wednesday of the “rights” proposal of Sen. John L. McClellan (D-Ark.).
Vice President Richard M. Nixon sealed McClellan’s victory by casting a tie-breaking vote against reconsidering the action.
McClellan was backed on his amendment by an almost-solid lineup of Republicans and southern Democrats, plus three Democrats from other areas.
Other Amendments
Similar support, give or take a few crucial votes, was expected on his other amendments, including bans on:
—Secondary boycotts, by which unions apply indirect pressure on employers through others not involved in labor disputes.
—Picketing aimed at forcing employers to sign union contracts by strikes in which their own workers are not involved.
Kennedy, who suffered his first setback on the bill, said the “rights” amendment “was poorly drafted and adds little to the protections already available under state law.”
The McClellan amendment would provide for fines of up to $10,000, prison terms of up to two years, or both for labor leaders convicted of depriving unions members of their rights.
Labor Fears Harm
These would include equal voting rights, equal protection under union rules and regulations, freedom of assembly, freedom against arbitrary dues hikes and excessive initiation fees, freedom to sue the unions or their officers, protection against improper disciplinary action and the right to inspect membership lists when running for office.
AFL-CIO spokesmen said the amendment could subject unions to a flood of lawsuits by dissident members. They said the disciplinary provision could open the
But the vice president's backs expect any labor support he gets to come from rank-and-file members rather than union leaders in any event.
On balance, it appeared, he rarely could have voted otherwise.
Before the 45-45 tie vote developed, the Senate had registered will in favor of the McClellan amendment by a roll call vote of 46. The tie came on a procedural followup motion designed to nail down the original vote. Thus Nixon's action could be rationalized as one of mere confirmation.
SACRAMENTO (UPI)—The state has awarded a $332,290 contract to install air conditioning in 18 new residence halls at five state colleges in Southern California.
The work will be undertaken by Pierce Engineering Co., Inglewood, at Cal Poly of Pomona and San Luis Obispo, at San Fernando Valley State, Long Beach State and San Diego State.
Insurance Group Sets Von Zell as Speaker
Richard R. Harris, District Eight Publicity Chairman for the Travelers Insurance Company, has announced the District Eight meeting will be held Thursday, April 23, at 7 p.m. in the Santa Ana Elks Club at 514 W. Sycamore St.
Radio and television celebrity Harry VonZell will be guest speaker at the annual election night meeting.
Candidates running for office of State Vice - President will be: Felix S. LeMorinel, Anaheim; Richard Olsen, Westminster, and Charles Wells, Fullerton.
Prohibition Party OK'd As Senate Passes Bill
SACRAMENTO (UPI)—A bill to keep the Prohibition Party alive in California has received final passage in the Senate.
The bill was introduced by Assemblyman George Brown (D-Monterey Park) and reduces the number of votes a party must receive to qualify for a place on the ballot from 3 to 2 per cent.
ARTICLES FOR SALE
LONDON (UPI) — Personal ad on the London Times today: "For sale — 12-bore shotgun, spade and wedding ring."
Ramon Hair Fashion
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