Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 50, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1936 — Page 38
PAGE 38
PROTESTS WILDERNESS ROAD AWARD
Singing Lady Manager Points to Heavier Balloting Received by Miss Ireene Wicker's Broadcasts Women’s National Radio Committee Cited for Failure to Acknowledge Program’s Popularity; Lacks Adult Appeal, Is Defense. BY RALPH NORMAN BECAUSE the Women’s National Radio Committee named Wilderness Road the best children's program despite voters’ choice of * Singing Lady (Ireene Wicker), Miss Wicker’s manager protests in what we think righteous indignation.
“We feel,” he declares in a letter to this department, “that we have a right to be indignant at the unfairness of the Women’s National Radio Committee in not even mentioning, when making the awards, that Irene Wicker’s Singing Lady received the highest number of votes. “We know that the omission of Miss Wicker’s program will not in any way affect the millions who have been listening to her consistently for so many years,
but ve think it unfair to them that after they were asked to give their opinions of various programs, no recognition was made of their opinions. “In other words, we feel that r.n injustice was done to both Miss Wicker and her lis-
n
Ireene Wicker
teners when the committee adhered to the votes of its members on all programs, excepting the juvenile, and in addition failed to even announce that Miss Wicker's Singing Lady had been chosen the leading juvenile program by its members. “We can’t help wondering how the committee would feel were any one of them to have worked for years, as Miss Wicker has done to win her present position in broadcasting, and then be denied an honestly earned recognition.” Let Miss Wicker and her manager be solaced a little by the fact that when the awards were announced, this column expressed surprise that Wilderness Road, a new program, could win over such established favorites as Singing Lady, the Damrosch Music Hour and other popular children’s programs. n tt Readers will recall that we later explained the children’s program award was made, not on the na-tion-wide poll which Miss Wicker won, but by the committee itself which stated at the time it wanted to cite a model program which would appeal to both parents and children. Wilderness Road has been aired since January, Singing Lady for several years. a a tt AN emissary from Maj. Bowes and a letter regarding the Major, expressing considerable difference of opinion on the value and popularity of amateur hours, arrived almost simultaneously at this office yesterday. It suffices to say that the Major's emissary wants it known in every local home that Sunday night is Indianapolis night and that listeners are to have the telephone voting privilege. Now for the letter from a good friend and reader at Crawfordsville. Writes she: “I simply want to show you the ignominy of
Music BY JAMES THRASHER A “FIRST performance anywhere" tonight is to bring listeners the quintet for piano and strings which won for Kent Kennan this year’s Prix de Rome Fellowship in Music. The NBC Music Guild is presenting the program at 7 on the NBC Blue network, and the work is to be performed by the Kraeuter String Quartet and Vladimir Brenner. Mr. Brenner, incidentally, was once court pianist to the last Russian czar. Mr. Kennan, a native of Milwaukee, switchced from architecture to music while a student at the University of Michigan. His creative talent won him a fellowship at the Eastern School of Musue, from which he was graduated and where he now teaches. The 23-year-old composer is the third Eastman graduate to receive the Prix de Rome, Hunter Johnson and Herbert Inch having preceded him. Another former winner is Dr. Howard Hanson, Eastman school director, who conducted the second movement of Mr. Kennan’s First Symphony on April 30, following Demms Taylor’s announcement of the prize winner. 000 000 Another prize winning composition, a string quartet, is to be heard in a special recital tomorrow from New York at 1:30 on the NBC Blue network. The work is one of three amateur quartets (composers unannounced) recently awarded prizes by the MacDowell Club. Mrs. Lillian Barth, club's secretary, is to discuss the contest and introduce the quartet. 000 000 Three numbers by American composers are slated for performance on the weekly Cincinnati Conservatory of Music program at 9 tomorrow morning, over the CBS network and WFBM. This series, scheduled to end tomorrow, has been extended through June 13. Once more the program is to be presented by conservatory faculty members, and is to include the following works: The “Fantasy" Sonata. Op. 3, by Burnet Tuthill, played by Emil Scmachtenberg, clarinetist, and Miriam Otto, pianist: John Hausserman’s "Suite Rustique," Op. 13, to be performed by Alfred Fenboque, flute, Karl Kirksmith, 'cello, and Karin Dayas; and Edgar Stillman-Kelly’s Piano Quintet, with Karin Dayas at the piano, and a quartet composed of Howard Coif and Julian Pulikowski, violins; Mihail Stolarevsky, viola, and Karl Kirksmith, ’cello. Though the music of these three programs remains to be heard, significance of the composers' efforts already is apparent. Not only does the “transparency” of chamber music tax their technical resources, but the unspectacular quality of such music testifies to their sincerity of purpose.
Local Man Joins Navy Clifford Truxton Loos, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Loos, 4125 Spannav, who enlisted in the United States Navy this week, is on his way to the naval training station in Norfolk, Va.
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Crawfc.dsville. After all my wrathful ravings about cities’ idiots’ Bowes-worship, Crawfordsviile, of all places, has to succumb. Maj. Bowes Day indeed! I could have bitten the Mayor’s ears off—what does Crawfordsville owe a vaudeville unit? We’ve had many of them in the last 50 years, and they never did that before. “I had been proud that Indianapolis hadn’t got into the lunatic circle, and now I see Sunday is Indianapolis night. If they make him Governor, I’ll scream—so that he can hear me. "Since I hold you and your ilk more or less responsible for such hysteria, I’ll register my protest—and if I knew other places to do it, I’d do it again.” There, Major, is what one listener thinks of you and your ilk, as well as of radio editors and their ilk. n tt This is another Friday which will not mark Dick Powell’s return to Hollywood Hotel. “Refuting rumors that he would never sing again, Dick Powell will return to his regular role of singing star and master-of-ceremonies of Hollywood Hotel Friday,” CBS wrote us the first of the week. Then came the “pink slip” the —the correction notice that a change is necessary. We don’t want to spread rumors about the star’s condition. We know that he is recuperating from a throat operation, now is resting at Palm Springs, Cal., but why his return to radio is postponed time after time, we don’t know. tt tt tt Radio Footnotes—ls your taste runs to snakes, there’s a program emanating from the International Snake Exposition on NBC-WJZ at 3 this afternoon which may interest you. Personally, where snakes are concerned, we wouldn’t trust even a radio. “Death for Dinner” is the inviting title of Irene Rich’s NBCWJZ (WIRE) drama at 6 tonight. Ingenious Bea Lillie will do. things backward during the CBS (WFBM) Flying Red Horse Tavern program at 6, telling a story backward. “It’s so much more original,” says Bea. “After all, anybody can start at the beginning of a story!” “I’m Grateful to You,” newest song by Benny Davis and Fred Coots, will get its first airing tonight when Fred Waring’s entertainers feature is on their NBCWJZ (WLW) broadcast at 7:30. Before Phil Regan, Irish-Ameri-can tenor, could take up a musical career, he had to resign from the New York police department. He will guest star for Richard Himber at 8. NBC-WEAF (WLW). “The Mad Tea Party,” a skit based on “Alice in Wonderland,” is to be presented by four children in costume on WFBM’s Children Hour at 10 tomorrow morning. The program, to which the public is invited, will originate in Block’s auditorium.
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Ready to Handle Amateur Hour Votes
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For Major Bowes’ amateurs 150 telephones, part of which are pictured above, will ring Sunday night when local listeners dial or call Market 2211 to‘vote for their favorites on the Indianapolis Night amateur program, NBC-WEAF (WLW) at 6. But only the 150 special operators, through their receivers, will hear the ringing, the receiversignal replacing the regular bell. Installed in a large room at the Indiana Bell Telephone building, the special exchange will be a busy place Sunday night when the 150 operators, assisted by 16 counters, messen-
LOCAL AND NETWORK DIALS
Abbreviations: N—National Broadcasting Co.i C—Columbia Broadcasting System; M—Mutual Broadcasting Cos.; Or— Orchestra. Member stations and killocycles ot the network are: NBC-WEAF—WEAF (760), WIRE 1400), WLW (700), WTAM (1070). WMAQ (G7O) and WSM (650). NBC-WJZ—WJZ (660). WIRE (1400), WLW (700). WENR (870), WLS (878), WMAQ (670), and WSM (650). CBS-W ABC—WABC (860), WFBM (1230). WOWO (1160). and WBBM (770). When there la no iisting for a station at quarter and half-hours, its preceding listed program is on the air. The Times Is not responsible for inaccuracies caused by last-minute program changes by stations. FRIDAY P. M. A —Chicagoans (C) WFBM. Flying Time iN) WEAF, WIRE. Animal New Ciub (N) WJZ. Women's C'iubs WLW. 4:ls—Tea Time Tunes WFBM. Helen Hughes iC). M WIRE Contreras ° r - (N) WEAF, Mary Small <N) WJZ. Edith Karen WLW. 4:3o—News <N> WEAF. WJZ, WIRE. Nolan’s Toy Band WLW. 4:35 —Blue Flames (C). Dorothy Page (N) WEAF. WIRE. Have You Heard? (N) WJZ. 4:4s—Renfrew (C) WFBM. George Hall’s Or. (N) WEAF WIRE Lowell Thomas (N) WJZ. WLW. 5— Butler Forum WFBM. Virginia Verrill (C). Console Capers (Ni WJZ, WIRE. Amos ’n' Andy <N WEAF. Johnson Family WLW. s:ls—Bohemians WFBM To Be Announced (C). Ezra's Station tN) WEAF, Mario Cozzi (N) WJZ. Jimmy Mattern WLW. 5:30 —Paris Night Life (C). Black Magic WIRE. Tom Howard's Jamboree (N> WEAF, Lum and Abner iN) WJZ, WLW. s:4s—News WFBM. Boake Carter (C>. Andre Carlon WIRE. Dorothv Lamour (N) WJZ. Lilac Time WLW
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
gers and others start relaying votes to the Major. A telephone connection will be opened to New York when the first votes are in, and L. G. Shields, the Major Bowes’ representative here, will telephone him the tabulations. Officials estimate a maximum of 45,000 calls can be handled by the special exchange, the second largest to be used for a Major Bowes program. Two hundred telephones were installed at Newark, N. J„ to handle voting there. For two months, Bell Telephone Company employes have planned and worked on the installation of the elaborate system here.
Best Short Waves FRIDAY BERLIN—S p. m.—The IXth Symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven with Choral Finale or Schiller’s “Ode to Joy.” DJC, 49.8 m. ROME —5 p. m.—News. Opera “L'Amore Del Tre Re” (Three King's Love”) by Italo Montemezzi. 2 R O, 31 m. LONDON —8 p. m. Alabamy Bound.” GSD, 25.5 m. BERLIN—B:IS p. m.—The 1938 Olympiad (English). DJC, 49.8 m. SCHENECTADY— B:3O p. m.— Marion Talley and Orchestra. W2XAF, 31.4 m. 6— Red Horse Tavern (C) WFBM. Irene Rich (N) WJZ. WIRE. Jessica Dragonette (Ni WEAF. Greenamyer’s Or. WLW. 6:ls—Mello Fellos WIRE. Drowsy Rhythm iNi WJZ. Bob Nolan’s Or. WLW. 6:3o—Broadway Varieties (C) WFBM. Baltimore Music Club tN) WJZ, WIRE. Frank Gannett WLW. H —Hollywood Hotel (C) WFBM. Barn Dance WIRB. Waltz Time (N) WEAF. Music Guild <N) WJZ. Clyde Trask's Or. WLW. 7:15 —Singing Sam WLW. 7:30 —Court of Human Relations (N) WEAF. Fred Waring’s Or. (N) WJZ, WLW. 7:ss—Dramatic Skit WIRE. Q —Kostelanetz’ Or. (C) WFBM. ° Opportunity Night WIRE. Richard Himber’s Or. (N) WEAF. “The Death Orchid” (N) WJZ. B:ls—Diary of Jimmy Mattern WIRE. B:3o—March of Time (C) WFBM, Marion Talley (N> WEAF, WIRE. Smoke Dreams WLW. Roy Shield’s Or. (Ni WJZ. B:4s—Musical Moments WFBM. To Be Annoanced (Cl. Jimmie Mattern WIRE. Dates in History WLW. Only 15c a Day Buys a New KELVINATOR Pearson l:
Q Len Riley's Sportslight WFBM? Don Redman’s Or. (C). News WIRE. Phil Levant's Or. (N) WJZ. Amos ’n Andy (N) ’WEAK. WLW. B:ls—Don Redman's Or. iC). Basonology WIRB. King's Jesters (Ni WEAF. Ink Spots (Ni WJZ. News Room WLW State Probation Society WFBM. 9:3o—King's Jesters WEAF. Baseball WIRE. 9:3o—Paris Night Lite (C) WFBM. Jesse Crawford (Ni WEAF. Eddy Duchin’s Or. iN) WJZ. Water Front Waysides WLW. 9:4s—Clyde Lucas' Or. (Ct WFBM. Dates in History WLW. -i r\ —News WFBM. Frank Master’s Or. (C). Henry Busse’s Or. <N) WBAF, Baseball (continued) WIRE. Snandor (N) WJZ. Old-Fashioned Girl WLW. 10:08—Ranny Weeks’ Or. (N) WJZ. 10:15 —Frank Master's Or. (C) WFBM. Bob Nolan's Or. WLW. 10:30 —Louie Lowe’s Or. WFBM. Don Bestor's Or. (C). Ted Lewis’ Or. (N) WEAF. WIRE. Earl Hines’ Or. (Ni WJZ. Teo Weems’ Or. (Mi WLW. 11 —Atop Indiana Roof WFBM. To Be Announced (C). Phil Levant’s Or. (N) WEAF, WIRE. Clvde Trask’s Or. WLW. 11:30—XaVier Cugnt’s Or. (C) WFBM. Jimmie Grier’s Or. (N) WEAF. WIRE. Joe Sander’s Or. WLW. 11:45—Nocturne (C) WFBM. 2 9 —Moon River WLW.
SATURDAY A. M. g —Family Prayer Period (M) WLW. 6:ls—Morning Devotions WLW. 6:3o—Chuck Wagon WFBM. Richard Maxwell tC*. Morning Devotions WIRE. Cheerio (Ni WEAF. WLW. Organ Rhapsody (N) WJZ. 6:4s—Waltz Time (C). News WIRE. Landt Trio and White (N) WJZ. n —Early Birds WFBM. • As You Like It (C). Robert Rissling iNi WEAF. Musical Clock WIRE. Breakfast Club (N) WJZ. News WLW. 7:ls—Streamliners <N) WEAF. Lee Erwin WLW. 7:3o—Dance Rhythm WLW. 7:4s—Academy of Medicine WLW. 8— News WFBM. News (C) (N> WEAF, WIRE. Wife Saver iN) WJZ. WLW. B:os—Martha and Hal (N) WEAF. WIRE Fred Feibel (C). B:ls—Woman’s Place (C) WFBM. Vass Family (Ni WEAF, WIRE. Edward Mac Hugh cN) WJZ. Virginians (Ml WLW. B:3o—Let’s Pretend (C) WFBM. Lucius Metz (N) WEAF. WIRE. Marie Le Ville (Ni WJZ. Elinor Sherry WLW. B:3s—Lucins Metz iN) WEAF. WIRE. B:4s—Originalities (N) WJZ. Clark Dennis WLW. Q —Cincinnati Conservatory (C) WFBM. *7 Our American Schools (N) WEAF WIRE. ' Honeymooners (N) WJZ. Ohio Music Clubs WLW. 9:ls—Charioteers Quartet (N) WEAF WIRE. American Family Robinson WLW. 9:3o—Tuneful Topics WIRE. Jerry Sears’ Or. (N) WEAF. Radio Journal (N) WJZ, 9:45—8i1l Krenz’ Or. (N) WJZ. Livestock Reports WLW. —Block Juniors WFBM. Pennsylvania Glee Club (C). Concert Miniature (N) WEAF, WIRE. Genia Fonariova (N) WJZ. WLW. 10:15—Musical Reveries (C). Old Fashioned Girl WLW. 10:30—George Hall’s Or. <C). Merry Madcaps (Nl WEAF. WIRE Words and Music (N) WJZ. WLW. 1 1 —Mary Baker’s Album WFBM. - LJ - Jack Shannon (C). Ho-Po-Ne Safety Club WIRE. Maurice Spitalny’s Or. (N) WEAF Branscombe Choral (N) WJZ Old Skipper WLW. 11:15—Poetic Strings (C) WFBM. 11:30—Buffalo Presents (C) WFBM Farm and Home Hour WIRE. Philatelic Exposition (N) WEAF. N wlw l Farm Hour < N > WJZ,
| | lllllllllll!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIHII!IHflRliilllllllllHllillHiililli4Hlill]iH{illllllil)li(1HllliilliiI1i1)ltHRIIIIIIIIIIflHllilllliHlliHIIIIIIHIIIIIIItini)illllllilillllllllllllli!Ililllllllllllillllllinilllllj^ ,B S3 == | Extra Special! Up to $35 I | Trade-In Allowance on Your Old Radio! I | "FIVER" World-Wide Crosley Radios up io $89.50 1 | Delivers the New 1936 WORLD WIDE American and Foreign m I mHßriih philco I SRHmotL console radio Aim Precision dial. =j i wmS£m A IN I —— tures. ( JEWELRY CO • and Delaware St*.** H I j jiiiiiiniHiiiiiiiiiniiininiitiwimiiiiiiiiiii, \46 e Washington St.
P. M. 19 —AI Roth’s Or. (C) WFBM. *“ Farm Hour (Continued) WIRE. Olivet Choir <N) WEAF. National Farm Hour (Continued) iN) WJZ. WLW. 12:15—Hoosier Farm Circle WFBM. News WIRE. 12:30—Three Stars (C). Olivet College Choir (N) 'WEAF, WIRE. May Day Program INI WEAF. WLW 12:45—Downtown Chatter WFBM. Clyde Barrie (C>. 1— Middy Meditations WFBM. Down by Herman's (C). Let's Have Rhythm (N) WEAF. WIRE. Walter Blaufuss’ Or. <N) WJZ Stumpus WLW. I:ls—News WFBM. I:3o—Tours in Tone (C). Week-End Revue (Ni WEAF. WIRE. McDowell Quartet (N) WJZ. WLW. Bohemians WFBM. I:4s—Zeppelin s Arrival (C) WFBM. 9 —Frank Dailey's Or. (C) WFBM. <Contlnu * d) ,N > WEAF, A Capella Choir (N) WJZ. WLW. 2:3o—lsle of Dreams (C> WFBM. RWlßE* eWman ' S ° r <N> WEAP - Men 0: the West <N) WJZ, WLW. —Captivators (C) WLW’. Blue Room Echoes (N) WEAF, Jackie Heller (N> WJZ. WLW. Flanner House Glee Club WFBM. Baseball WIRE. 3:ls—Tommy Broadhurst (C) WFBM. Musical Adventures (Ni WJZ. WLW. 3:3o—Motor City Melodies (C> WFBM. Treasure Trails (Ni WJZ. Kaltenmeyer's Kindergarten (N) WEAF. WLW. 3:4s—Ruth and Ross (N) WJZ. 4— Frederick William Wile (C) WFBM. Otto Thurn’s Or. (N) WEAF. Jesse Crawford 1 N * W’JZ. To Be Announced WLW. Baseball (continued) WIRE. 4:15—’Tea Time Tunes WFBM. Otto Thurn's Or. INI WBAF. WIRE. Capt. Tim’s Adventures (Nl WJZ. University of Cincinnati WLW. 4:3o—News <Nt WEAF, WJZ. Vincent Lopez’ Or. (C). Biltmore Bovs WLW. 4:3s—Alma Kitchell INi WEAF. Jamboree (N) WJZ. 4:4s—Religion in the News (N) WEAF. A1 Roth's Or. <Ci WFBM. Alfred Gus Karger WLW. 49 POSITIONS OPEN ON C.M.T.C. ROLLS Applications Still Accepted From Marion County. Forty-nine vacancies remain in Marion County’s quota of applications for the Citizens’ Military Training Camp to be held in August at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Lieut. Col. J. H. Davidson, assistant chief of staff of the Indianapolis military area, announced today. Candidates must be 17 to 24 years old, of good moral character and able to read and write English. Previous military training is not necessary and service following the encampment period is net required, Lieut. Col. Davidson said. Instruction is to be given in athletics, drill, rifle marksmanship, first aid, camp sanitation, personal hygiene and citizenship. Returns $2.50 to City VANCOUVER, B. C., May 8.-A Vancouver man has returned $2.50 which he said the city overpaid him 20 years ago while he was working for the Park Board. REPAIRING m Prompt Service on Guaranteed Watch and Clock Repairing. Gus Meister, Jeweler 24 Pembroke Arcade 133 East Washington Street
I. U. ANNOUNCES LECTURE BOARD ON SOCIAL LAWS Speakers to Be Available for Groups Seeking Data on Welfare Acts. Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 8 —A lecture bureau to provide speakers on public welfare and social security matters has been established by the Indiana University extension division and the State Department of Public Welfare, it was announced today. “The interest of people throughout the state in the recent public welfare and unemployment compensation laws made it advisable to find a way to supply informed speakers to groups which might request such a service,” Prof. R. E. Cavanaugh said. As director of the university extension bureau, Prof. Cavanaugh is to co-operate with Dr. R. Clyde White, director of the school’s training course for social work. Requests for speakers, officials said, are to be made to Mrs. Dorothy McMahan and Mrs. Mavoureen Harris, who. as associates in the extension office at Indianapolis, will have charge of bookings. The bureau’s staff includes William A. Hacker, social service director of the Indianapolis public schools; Virgil Sheppard, official of the Department of Public Welfare; Charles B. Marshall, WPA finance director; Mrs. Blythe Francis, Indianapolis Family Welfare secretary, and Miss Leona E. Massoth, I. U. assistant professor. Wreck Injuries Are Fatal LOGANSPORT, Ind., May 8. John C. Kieckner died last night from injuries suffered April 11 when a train struck his automobile. He was 71.
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LASH VICTIMS WEATHER STIFF DEFENSE GRILLING Two Questioned Sharply on Grand Jury Testimony. By United Press BARTOW. Fla., May B—Two lash-scarred victims of a Tampa mob withstood cross-examination today with defense attorneys apparently making little headway in the attempt to impeach their testimony. E. F. Poulnot, one of the flogged Socialist-Labor organizers, answered repeatedly, “I don’t remember the questions or the answers,” as Pat Whitaker, chief defense attorney, read a transcript of the testimony given by Mr. Poulnot before the grand jury which Indicted seven former Tampa policemen for the floggings. The grand jury testimony was similar to that given by Mr. Poulnot before the trial jury. KISS FATAL TO COUPLE Embrace Causes Explosion of Dynamite, Police Report. By United Press KIMBERLEY, B. C„ May B.—Police attributed the death of Fred Wilkinsoq, 45, and Della Kretlow, 23, killed by a dynamite explosion, to a kiss. Wilkinson had a stick of dynamite in his pocket. It exploded when he took Miss Kretlow into his arms to embrace her.
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