Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1948 — Page 27
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By Earl
NEW YORK, Nov. 19—Fresh-air fiend Ingrid Bergman| BY RICHARD D. McMILLAN had her windows so high when I called that her room was colder than a fjord (not a ’49 fjord, either). I shivered and finally kindled a small fire in the middle| pata. Too ob Socialist
of the floor (which she didn’t
est Swede told me, “I do NOT read my fan mail,” and added; {20 Per cent from a peak of 50.-
“I've. quit : signing autographs except for people I know. It ‘must end somewhere.” Ingrid. with these sertions had ges hurled an atomic #& bomb into the movie industry. (I hope columnists who are still hurling “bombshells” wil! take notice that I am far ahead of them.) While I quaked from the cold air and she = ¢ a merely got: red- Miss Bergman der-cheeked, she said, “Those movie critics. What are you going to do with them?” + “All night long I was walking
candid as-
up and down talking to them.”|
It seems a few of them didn’t 80 crazy over “Joan of Arc.” The attitude of some stars would be that they were already crazy, but Miss Bergman, in her
gentle, laughing, let’s-find-out |
manner, said, “Tell them to call me up. I'd like to talk to them. But maybe they'll think I'm trying to charm them.” ” ” =
“IT'S AWFUL to say that you don’t care what the critics write,” she said. “I wanted to call for the papers at 5 o'clock in the morning. It's so embarrassing to call so early, so I waited till 7. “Then I had to call California and cry a little. “One critic said ‘Arch of Triumph’ was a pretentious bore. “Now one says this picture is a ‘pretentious disappointment.’ “I've gone from ‘bore’ to ‘disappointment.’ I guess I'm going forward. “It's true,” she continued, “that people who stand in line at theaters don't read them, but I do care what they say.” (By the way, some 'critics— and my B, W.—adored it.) ” » EJ
No More Autographs
I PUT ON overcoat, muffler gloves (which made it a little difficult to write) as Ingrid told me she decided in Sweden to quit autographing. “I used to tell them to send their books to my hotel,” she said. “Then you do nothing all day but sign your name. “I will not let anybody else sign for me. I tried using a rubber stamp. They didn’t like that. “So I'm going to try to sign none at all. They stand outside and freeze and love you so—but it must end somewhere.” » ” ”
MISS BERGMAN told me she had fan mail two years old she hasn't had time to look at. For a while she turned her weekly thousands of letters over to Enterprise Studios which finally said, “You can have them back. It takes four people to handle them.” “They want your picture,” she said. “Then they put it in a drawer and never look at it. “Cary Grant said to me, ‘I take a wastebasket and throw them all into it.’ I think maybe Cary ‘Grant had the right idea. : “Anyway,” she said, “I DON’T read’ them. I wish I could. I. ish I could do the autographs, 00. “~an “Zaid my ‘daughter Pia, who's ten, will become ‘a movie fan and pester some actress to death—or actor, probably. Probably Van Johnson.” Miss Bergman shivered at the thought. Me, I shivered from the cold.
The Midnight Earl . . .
WHAT'S HOT: Jane Wyman turned down a big radio assignment here—and it’s everybody's hunch that it was because she'll marry Lew Ayres very, very soon +. « Softest job on B’'way now fis John Brophy’s in Mike Todd’s hit show, “As the Girls Go.” At the line, “There’s ‘a man here who always wanted to see in the inside of the White House,” he steps in stage looking like Tom Dewey and wearing a fake Dewey mustache. ‘And that's his day's work! + « « Artie Shaw and Joey Adams attended the wedding of Bunnie Anzelowitz and Melvin Gopin. “Imagine me,” said Shaw, “attending a wedding that's not mine”. Gypsy Rose Lee brought her slightly-delayed gal show into La Martinique last night. Gypsy was understandably nervous as she did her famous peel to new new lyrics and as she put clothes on the pretty babes. While not the greatest show on earth, it was pretty, clever, and pleasant, considering all the difficulties. Gypsy is still mad at Monte Gardner. They ain't speakin’. -
Cellarbrities
HENRY FONDA’S brand-new Mercury was lifted from his parking lot. . . . Red Buttons clipped his head six stitches worth when he entered a taxi fast and too : . . Sophie Tucker, a bit leery of this year’s night club business, bet Lou Walters she wouldn't equal’ her last year’s record at the Latin Quarter and lost when the club’s first week's receipts hit $50,028. . . . California Rams'- Bob Waterfield and Ray Nagurski celebrated their victory over the Giants by digging the bop session at the Royal Roost. . . . Peggy Maley
—
FRIDAY, NOV. 19, 1948
I Reds Fightin Bergman Plays |, Siting
~ Columnist Chilled by Interview By Open Window, Not Star
\Losing Battle InBritain
Membership Drops 20% In Three Years
Outdoors
Wilson
United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, Nov. .19—The Communist Party is fighting a losing
seem to notice) as the Sweet-| Its membership is down nearly 000 at the end of the war, Its ; x |{influence in trade unions is on the Earl's Pearls ee wane under the pressure of a deBOBBY CLARK, the great |termined anti-Communist cam-
comedian starring in Mike [paign. It has only two members Todd's ‘‘As in Parliament. The Girls Go,” And its every attempt to inadmon ishes filtrate or merge with the Labor his son this Party—the Socialist party which way: “Why, governs Britaifi—has been re-
when I was 19, ‘I was old enough to
buffed. * The Communist Party's only success in the last few years has
vote. In fact, been with its newspaper, the I did, several Daily Worker. It has been extimes”, . panded, has increased its cir-
Betty Broadbeam, my witty [culation to 120,000 and boasts secretary, hears Wrong Way among its regular contributors, Roper will limit himself in the |p Hewlett Johnson, the “Red future to predicting the date of | pean” of Canterbury. Thanksgiving and Christmas. | Funds a Mystery
| {makes her TV debut Nov. 21 as| The SUntce of tne Dally Work! { messenger on Ford ors funds is a mystery. é party on Sr roduction of “Joy To contends that $1 million has been Ty £5 (CBS). . . . Frankie Subscribed voluntarily by sym[Laine canceled $225,000 worth of|Dathizers. I hints Hai page Inight club bookings which would|Utiors boug OCHS of -suares. | | The Daily Worker's emphasis | on trade union news to a greater UE he nex: 1s MoBtns, 25 2 extent even then labor's own Broadwayites including Henny|DP2ily Herald and an excellent
| ts section are credited with Youngman believe Tom Dewey|SPOr {may do a vaudeville act. Doubt- | extending gs Whig beyond less he will open with: “A funny I as: ot in.) ning hahpelied io me om ay fluence in Britain dates mainly | Earl, brother. from the Communists’ bloodless) Ye coup in Czechoslovakia. This . Curb Infection {Moscow’s aims for world domina- { tion. a . ._ They began to doubt British { pat itamin leaders’ reassurances that the British brand of Communism is
. : strictly a home product free of Scientists Test
domination from Moscow. . . . Communists among leaders of Discovery With Mice |British trade unions also were By Science Service rebuffed at the recent meeting BOSTON, Nov. 19—Discovery of the powerful British Trades of a new vitamin in wheat which|Union Congress, reprseenting 8 increases’ natural resistance to million trade unionists. = | infection, or germ-caused disease,| Over left-wing opposition, the! was announced by Dr. Howard A. congress endorsed the Labor! Schneider of the Rockefeller In- government's policy of freezing: stitute for Medical Research, New wages as well as prices and deYork, at the meeting here of the/cided to break away from the American Public Health Associa- Communist-dominated World tion. Federation of Trade Wnions. Existence of this vitamin and] Out of 190 unions affiliated its proved relation to disease re-/with the BTUC, only three have sistance in miee goes far toward|Communists among their top establishing the idea that being|officers. These are the miners’, well nourished is a protection ihe foundry workers’ and the against germ-caused diseases. firemen’s unions. Well nourished takes on a Communist policy in Britain is special meaning in this connec-|gjrected by six men headed by tion, that of eating regularly a py. ,ry Pollitt, the party secrediet including the new vitamin. tary. He has been a professional Only for Mice |agitator since he left the cotton The evidence so far is only for Mills as a boy and became sec-| mice and their resistance to a etary of a boiler makers’ union. |
naturally occuring disease ofl... T= oo oo | these animals, mouse typhoid, or| | salmonellosis as scientists term = Pigmy Bone [Casts But Dr. Schneider thinks it likely that what is true for mice will
- = : also in this case prove true for| man. ¥ ¥ <
The vitamin is believed to be a new one since tests showed none By Science Service {of the other known vitamins or] WASHINGTON, Nov. 19 — {other nutrients can replace it in|Casts of bones of a pre-human {the house diet with the same race of pygmies — natives of effect on disease resistance. {South Africa a million years ago | It occurs generally throughout|—have just been added to the col{the cereals and grasses as well/lection of the Smithsonian Insti|as in wheat germ. Alfalfa con-jtution here, : {tains it. Rockefeller scientists are| These fire-making, weapon-car-now trying to isolate and identify ring “ape-men,” who may repreit chemically. {sent the earliest known of man’s { meee |ancestors, were discovered in the | . |Transvaal by Prof. Raymond A. Mrs. Kasenkina Ready part of the University of Wit-
i : watersrand in Johannesburg. To Leave Hospital Prof. Dart had the casts speNEW’ YORK, Nov. 19 (UP)— cially made for Dr. T. D. Stewart, Mrs. Oksana Stepanova Kasen-|Smithsonian curator of physical kina, the little Russian schoollanthropology. They represent the teacher who escaped from thelfirst casts to reach this’ country. Russian consulate, planned a| The long-extinct creature, who
shook many mild party sympajthizers into a realization of
{strawberry shértcake party for weighed from 80 to 100 pounds, |
{her friends today before leaving had a brain comparable in ize to | Roosevelt Hospital. {that of a gorilla, and showed She has been recovering from near-human physical traits, has |injuries suffered in her leap from |been given the name of Australthe consulate’s third story last opithecus prometheus.
Aug. 12. | Although it is not known if the| She wants to resume her teach-|Australopithecus is directly relat | ing profession soon as an Amer-ed to man, Prof. Dart believes ican izen, she said. Thg 53-that his researches show a closer] year01 eacher said she ould relationship between ourselves | liv iends “somewhere out-/and the pygmies than was previ- | side the city.” ously supposed. CROSSWORD PUZZLE Answer to Previous Punsle Track Star TIAINE] FY TATH ERs TR) HORIZONTAL 3 Roll BlolSIEls] CIE ICS] 1,7 Pictured 4 Tank LEME JANE 2 in track star $ Pronoun , Te TAS [WYMAN [nlc MIE 13 Narcotic 6 Bird's home 0 [LE [SINJAIRIE] 14 Walken Be [RICE RBIo Elo Alc 15 Misplated 20a Mears N[o[olSIEPYLIA[TIE 1 B 10 Mohammedan 18 Pedant 11Willqws © 30Go astray 47 That girl's 20 Likely 12 Nu 32 He was born 48 Average .(ab,) 21 Indolent 17 Mixed type SI) esi 49 Yes (Sp.) 28 ot 18 Artificial Angeles 50 Italian island 24 Concerning language 35 Traps 51Black (poet.) 25Not (prefix) ,, competed 36 Harangue 53 Greek letter 26 Defends ot in the —— 38 Ability 55 Era the Faith (ab.) Games 39 He was an 57 Chemical ZB Right (aby) 22 Wipes out entry for the suffix 20 Shabby Dialect United — 59 Exempli 3) Utiirue 27 Pedestal parts 45 Journey gratia (ab,) 34 Bustle 35 Sharpen 37 Prices 40 Nickel (symbol) 41 Note of scale 42 Plural ending 43 Near 44 Facility 46 Pursues 51 Note of Guido’s scale 52 Unusual 54 Wicked 55 Aid 56 Reviser 58 Depart 60 Calyx leaves 61 Deputies VERTICAL { Teeth 2 Epic poetry
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