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CHASE WEBSTER
Chase Webster was born at the age of 22 when, in the spring of 19ol, Gary Bruce, songwriter, used the name Chase Webster to record his own hit tune "Moody River." His explanation: "I thought it would be confusing to have my name appear as both the artist and the composer."
When that recording was node, on a small independent record label (Southern Sound), neither Webster nor his manager, Noel Ball, imagined it would catch the ears of Dot Records president and founder, Randy Wood; or that Pat Boone would re-record the song on the , Dot label, thereby making it one of the year's biggest song hits.
It did not end there, however. Randy Wood was so impressed with Webster's talents as a singer and composer that he asked if the youngster was available to sign a contract with Dot Records.
In October of 1961, Chase Webster was launched world-wide as a recording star with his first Dot Records release: "Sweethearts in Heaven" b/w "Could This Be Magic."
NEWS OF THE DIVISIONS OF PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION AUTOMETRIC
CORPORAT ION; DOT RECORDS; K.T.L. A. -PARAMOUNT TELEVISION PRODUCTIONS; TALENT ASSOCI ATES-PARAMOUNT LTD. ; FAMOUS MUSIC CORP.
KTLA HIGHLY COMMENDED
Edmund G* Brown, Governor of California, Samuel Yorty, Mayor of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Board of Supervisors, and the Los Angeles City Council joined the press and public of Southern California in praising television station KTLA for its tireless on-the-spot coverage of the worst fire in the history of Los Angeles.
Governor Brown called station manager S. L. Adler to congratulate him for the station's outstanding example of television journalism and to notify him that an official letter of commendation was on its way.
Mayor Yorty, in a letter dated November 7, stated "Station KTLA and its entire staff are to be commended for the unparalleled coverage. The coverage constitutes a public service of the highest order, deserving the highest praise."
N.v«d*f 13, 1961
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Dot Records, a wholly-owned Paramour subsidiary, was front-page news in Billboard Music Week, issue of November 13th It is interesting to note from this news story that by the end of October last, Do had already passed the company's I960 figure for the entire year.
HOLLYWOOD In addition to visiting the sets where Paramount's theatrical films were being made, India's Prims Minister Nehru also visited some of the sets of Paramount Television Productions' activities. At left he is on the set of "The Outlaws," a filmed television production. L to R: Don Collier, Slim Pickens. Prime Minister Nehru, Mrs. Indira Gandhi, the Prime Minister's daughter, Rodd Redwing,