Radio mirror (Jan-June 1948)

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im©M C©A§T t® COASI Ginny Simms's very young son David is an eager interviewee when Paul Whiteman comes around with his portable recorder, "Junior" to make one of his on-thespot recorded programs. The dog's in the act, too. With this calliope, orchestra leader Bernie Green creates the mighty non-musical arrangements that help comedian Henry Morgan (left) to disrupt the quiet of the night, Wednesdays at 10:30 on ABC. easy for her to get the right mood of low-down into her voice. But husband Andre Baruch solved that problem by putting a candid snapshot on her music rack. It got her in the right mood. It was a shot of Andre and Dinah Shore taken before he and Bea were married. Olan Soule, after thirteen years on the Chicago radio scene, has moved into a new home in North Hollywood. He's co-starring with Barbara Luddy in the First Nighter show, which originates in Hollywood now. Willie Bryant, who m.c.'s the Harlem Hospitality Club show, has a new role. He's been called in by the New York Police to act as peacemaker between a couple of Harlem kid gangs. Willie, who organized the successful Willie Bryant Youth Club in Harlem, is highly respected in that overcrowded section of New York; but you can't do much to repair the products of poverty, overcrowding, lack of opportunity, with words and advice. What Willie needs, probably, is some active citizens to start for Harlem the kind of program operating on the Southside of Chicago — a community plan for cleaning up the whole neighborhood and giving the kids a break. Ran into Artie Shaw, looking dapper and better than he's looked in years. This fellow's a pretty happy, goingsomewhere guy, now. He and his wife, Kay Winsor, the Forever Amber author, are living in Norwalk, Conn., and very busy with their writing. Artie is working on a novel and trying his hand at some short stories. Hobby-minded Cliff Arquette, of the Dick Haymes Show (he's "Mrs. Wilson"!), with one of his paintings. 13