Radio romances (July-Dec 1945)

Record Details:

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taught in terms adolescents can understand and really appreciate. Example: Swing and Sway with Sammy Kaye. 'With Sammy Kaye' is the adverbial phrase answering the grammatical question 'how.' Amusing as all this may seem to you, it's a simple device which really works." * * + We're offering Art Ford as radio's endurance champion and we'll be perfectly willing to take a back seat if anyone in radio can top it. To begin, Art is a disc jockey for WNEW's Milkman's Matinee, which keeps him in the studio every night of the week from midnight until 6:30 A.M. On Thursdays, the routine changes slightly. After he's rested up from his Thursday stint at WNEW, he goes to an NBC studio at two in the afternoon on Friday, for rehearsals on the Teen Timers show. These rehearsals last until 10 P.M. Friday night. Two hours later, Art starts his midnight hitch and spins discs until 6:30 A.M. Saturday. At 8 A.M. Saturday, Ford shuffles over to NBC for the Teen Timers dress rehearsal. At 10 A.M. Saturday the Teen Timers show goes on the air. This makes a total of about 23 studio hours out of 36. Which is pretty steady work — if you can last. • • • We'd be inclined to say that Max Marcin is in a bit of a rut. He not only clings to the old typewriter on which he has written some 260 of the scripts for his Crime Doctor, but he does all his writing on the same desk, in the same room, of the same apartment he occupied when he was writing Broadway shows five years ago. • • • Danny O'Neil likes to know where he's at and that he's going to stay there awhile! It all goes back to the days when Danny was a kid. Danny's father was a hotel auditor and his job took him from place to place constantly. And the family always went along. So — ranging from his kindergarten days to his high school diploma, Danny has report cards from 53 different places. Think of all the friends he must have made! * * • Reports have it that Tommy Dorsey is still shaking his head about his Victory Garden. Like all other patriotic The man behind the throne — Jack Bailey M.C.'s Queen For A Day, each weekday, MBS. The answer is YES — there's an easier way to clean pots and pans Food burned-on? Then reach for the one cleanser — the right cleanser to whisk burned-on foodiaway. Reach for S.O.S. No other cleanser just like it. Sturdy, long-lasting, easy to use. It works like magic. Yes, dip, rub, rinse — burned-on food goes, shine comes! Sick and tired of greasy pans? Then here's the cleanser that does a complete job— S.O.S. ! The one cleanser you need to cut through greasy and sticky food. No bother with extra soaps, powders, rags or scouring aids. Try S.O.S.— grease goes, shine comes! What makes it, shine? The answer's S.O.S. — with soap in the pad, it's the best and easiest way to clean, scour and polish dull pans. Try S.O.S. — dullness goes, shine comes! i 4 r *\ The S. O. S. Company, Chicago, Illinois, U. S. A. S. O. S. Mfg. Co. of Canada, Ltd., Toronto, Ont. 11