Radio television mirror (July-Dec 1951)

Record Details:

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Living BY EVELYN FIORE When a woman loses all that is most dear., when she faces life without the one cherished person — where does she find courage to continue? EDITOR'S NOTE: These are the harrowing events which led up to the death of Meta White's son, Chuckie, and the ordeal which Meta went through before she was cleared, on the grounds of temporary insanity, of the murder of her husband, Ted. Throughout it all, Meta was able to maintain the inner strength that helped her find a reason for living. WHEN Meta White went on trial for her life, charged with the murder of her husband, every paper in the country was ready to offer a fortune for her bylined story. Classically, dramatically beautiful, retaining still the aura of her successful modeling career and her brilliant marriage, and shadowed now by tragedy which had culminated in shattering horror . . . the public went wild with curiosity about her. Editors bit their nails and sent frantic long-distance calls to their Los Angeles correspondents. Wily reporters wheedled or bribed or blustered, until Meta's lawyer and friend, Ray Brandon, threatened to take special steps to protect her. The sensation-seekers did their best, but their best was not nearly good enough. Gradually it became clear that Meta White wasn't going to talk. What the public never learned was that Meta couldn't talk. For a long time she couldn't even try, not even for the shaken little group of family and friends who banded {Continued on page 96) The Guiding Light is heard M-F, 1:45 P.M. EDT, CBS. Sponsored by P & G's Duz. Radio Television Mirror onus Novel