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Eastern Standard Time NBC-Red: Gene and Glenn
Ray Perkins NBC-Blue: BREAKFAST CLUB CBS: School of the Air
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CBS: Bachelor's Children NBC-Red: Edward MacHugh
CBS: By Kathleen Morris NBC-Red: This Small Town
CBS: Myrt and Marge NBC-Blue: Vic and Sade
CBS: Stepmother NBC-Blue: Mary Marlin NBC-Red: Ellen Randolph
CBS: Woman of Courage NBC-Blue: Pepper Young's Family NBC-Red: The Guiding Light
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CBS: Martha Webster NBC-Red: Against the Storm
CBS: Big Sister NBC-Blue: The Wife Saver NBC-Red: The Road of Life
CBS: Aunt Jenny's Stories NBC-Blue: Thunder Over Paradise NBC-Red: David Harum
CBS: KATE SMITH SPEAKS NBC-Red: Words and Music
CBS: When a Girl Marries NBC-Red: The O'Neills
CBS: Romance of Helen Trent NBC-Blue: Farm and Home Hour
CBS: Our Gal Sunday
CBS: Life Can be Beautiful
CBS: Woman In White NBC-Blue: Ted Malone
CBS: CBS:
I Love Linda Dale The Man I Married
Right to Happiness Road of Life
CBS: Young Dr. Malone NBC-Red: Betty Crocker
CBS: Girl Interne
NBC-Red: Arnold Grimm's Daughter
CBS: Fletcher Wiley NBC-Red: Valiant Lady
CBS: Home of the Brave NBCRed: Light of the World
CBS: Mary Margaret McBride NBC-Blue: Orphans of Divorce NBC-Red: Mary Marlin
CBS: Jan Peerce NBC-Blue: Honeymoon Hill NBC-Red: Ma Perkins
CBS: A Friend in Deed NBC-Blue: John's Other Wife NBC-Red: Pepper Young's Family
CBS: Lecture Hall NBC-Blue: Just Plain Bill NBC-Red: Vic and Sade
CBS: Portia Faces Life NBC-Blue: Mother of Mine NBC-Red: Backstage Wife
CBS: We, the Abbotts NBC-Blue: Club Matinee NBC-Red: Stella Dallas
CBS: Hilltop House NBC-Red: Lorenzo Jones
CBS: Kate Hopkins NBC-Blue: Edgar A. Guest NBC-Red: Young Widder Brown
CBS: The Goldbergs NBC-Blue: Children's Hour NBC-Red: Girl Alone
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9:30 NBC-Blue: John B. Kennedy 9:30 NBC-Red: Mr. District Attorney
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■ Joan Blaine's beauty is enhanced by her taste in clothes. TuneIn Bulletin for February 26, March 5, 12 and 19!
February 26: Today and every Wednesday for a few weeks you can hear a special program presented by the National Federation of Music Clubs. It's on CBS from 5:30 to 5:45 this afternoon. . . . Horace Heidt's band opens tonight at its old stampingground, the New York Biltmore Hotel. NBC carries the remote-control programs.
March 5: High point of romantic song tonight is Tony Martin's fifteen-minute program on NBC-Red at 8:00.
March 12: Del Casino and his band open at the Netherland Plaia Hotel in Cincinnati tonight, with NBC broadcasting the music.
March 19: Don't miss Gabriel Heatter's exciting news broadcast at 9:00 tonight over the Mutual network.
ON THE AIR TODAY: Joan Blaine in Valiant Lady, on NBC-Red at 2:30 P.M., E.S.T., sponsored by Bisquick.
Round almost any corner in NBC's Radio City and you'll see a beautiful and well-dressed girl; but one of the most beautiful and best-dressed of them all is the star of Valiant Lady. The funny thing about Joan is that she isn't particularly vain of her good looks and she doesn't spend a great deal of money on her clothes. On the other hand, she does give them a lot of thought.
Joan's rules for being well dressed are simple. She loves color, line and fabrics, and believes that you have to love them to study them intelligently. She scorns frills, but knows how to be feminine without them. She hates to shop, but would rather shop than not look attractive. She says that the test of a becoming frock or hat is that you must be able to put it on — and forget all about it.
Joan designs her own dresses, sketching them out very carefully and taking the sketches to her own couturier, where she explains carefully exactly what she wants. Sometimes she takes along the material which she wants used, sometimes not. For shoes, she has had a mold of her foot made by a good New York shoemaker. Now, whenever she needs a new pair she simply calls him up and says, "Make me a pair of walking shoes in — " whatever leather she prefers. Her evening shoes, contrary to style, are all made with closed toes — she dislikes open-toed shoes.
She designs all of her hats, and makes most of them herself. Hats are an important part of her wardrobe, because the lights in radio studios are none too good, and she always wears one when broadcasting. Although she loves off-the-face hats, they're no protection to the eyes from the overhead lights, so she only possesses one.
Joan's desire to dress attractively isn't vanity. She says, "I've always felt that acting was only part of my job. Being friendly to the people I work with, and keeping up the spirit of the whole company— that's part of my job, too. And I couldn't do that if I came to the studio
looking sloppy or put together any-old
ii way.
Besides her program, Joan's main interests in life just now are a country home and her dog, Cricket. The country home hasn't been chosen yet, but for some time she has been visiting farms not too far from New York, trying to find one she wants to buy. The dog — and probably he is one reason she wants a place in the country so fervently — is a black cocker spaniel, not quite two years old. Joan tries to make up to him for apartment life by donning slacks and romping strenuously with him for thirty minutes or so, night and morning. She says it keeps the dog in condition, but wears her out. Cricket is also responsible for a bad fall Joan took on the icy sidewalk one recent winter night. She was running with him, she confessed after the doctor had discovered that no bones were broken.
EDGAR A. GUEST — the famous American poet whom you can hear over NBC-Blue this afternoon at 4:45, E.S.T., if you live in or near any of these cities: Pittsburgh, Albany, Baltimore, Boston, Springfield, Mass., Fargo, N. D., Providence, Buffalo, Chicago, Philadelphia, Lancaster, Cleveland, Bridgeport or New Britain, Conn., Poughkeepsie, Washington, Plattsburgh, N. Y.. York, Pa.. Syracuse. Minneapolis or Detroit. It's nice to hear the familiar, homely Guest philosophy again — too bad the network isn't bigger so more people could enjoy him. He's almost sixty years old, lives in Detroit and commutes to Chicago for his program.
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