TV Radio Mirror (Jul - Dec 1962)

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The combo, in a gesture that spoke louder than words or music, donated the money they earned on the Allen show to Synanon. "People are only starting to get interested in this good cause," Steve points out. "Chuck tells me they are getting requests from all parts of the country, asking for information about the movement and how to help it along. Naturally, every citizen worth his salt wants to wipe out this horror of dope addiction. But how? That's where Synanon comes in. You can help by supporting this organization. Follow its methods and advice. If you're in a position to hire, take a chance on a cured addict and give him or her a job. "But perhaps the most important thing we can do is to surround our kids IMIIIIIIHIIIIiMIIIUI CLINT EASTWOOD (Continued from page 57) contented pussycat. "It was a training thing, yeah," Clint said unabashedly. "The whole marriage relationship consisted of learning about one another. One thing Mag had to learn about me was that I was going to do as I pleased. She had to accept that — because if she didn't, we wouldn't be married. "I'm gonna run the show, you know," he said laconically. "That's pretty well laid out. That's cut and dried. She's stuck with it. A man either runs the show or not. Unless I'm staying home and she's supporting me or something — then I shouldn't be running the show." A case in point, during the tender years of their matrimony, was when Clint airily dismissed Mag's misgivings and went ahead with his acting career. "Everybody recommended against it, including Mag," he recalled. "She didn't want any part of it. She was always reading in the columns about actors and actresses getting divorced. I guess she didn't want her marriage exposed to that kind of thing. I was going to college at the time, and she would rather have had me continue." That was when Clint decided to set up a basic marriage standard — or double standard. Whenever there was a difference of opinion, his would prevail. "I have a very bad temper," Clint acknowledged, "and I do what I want to do — which is another thing a lot of women will never put up with. If I want to go somewhere, I go somewhere. If I want her to go, I want her to go. If I don't want her to go, I don't!" As a redeeming feature, Clint has consistently accorded his wife the same privileges. "There's never been any jealousy in the marriage or anything at home with the security that comes from love, setting a good example by our own behavior, and from careful education on the miserable consequences of taking dope. In this respect, I want to thank TV Radio Mirror for taking such interest in the problem, I hope all its readers look into the subject of addiction, lend their help to stiffen the laws against smuggling and pushing dope, and contribute to the work of Synanon. I hope this will happen especially with the teenagers who are a target for criminals who sell dope and try to make it seem glamorous and thrilling. "Dope is not glamorous, exciting — or even fun. It's not fun to have a toothache. Imagine, then, a toothache multiplied a hundred times over and spread throughout your body, mind and soul! Who in their right mind would want to let this pain go on? Addiction is a hell on earth, and God grant the time will soon come when not even one human being will have to live in that hell. . . ." — Eunice Field "The Steve Allen Show," a Westinghouse live-on-tape production, is seen for 90 minutes nightly over many stations. Check local papers for your area. like that," he said. "She can go anywhere she wants to. If she wants to go away for a weekend to Vegas or Palm Springs, she can go. I trust her. If she feels bugged, if she feels like getting away by herself, I'm not so egotistical that I think I'm the greatest person to be around all the time." When the shoe is on Clint's foot, he takes off without ceremony — or apology. "I throw my golf clubs in the back of my car and I'm off. One time, I was tired of working and tired of anything to do with the job. I jumped in the car, went to Yosemite, down across Monterey and to a jazz festival. I have a nature, when my mind's made up, I just do what I want to do." Recently, Mag found herself a television widow again when Clint embarked on a personal-appearance tour of the Orient with "Rawhide" co-star Eric Fleming and Paul (Wishbone) Brinegar. There was no budget to take Mag along — but Clint bluntly admitted he'd have left her behind, anyway. "To tell you the truth," he said, "I just didn't want her along. I just felt like going myself. We were going to be in parades all the time, and they had a terrifically tight agenda set up, and I just didn't want to be involved with having to look out for somebody else that was going to be touristing around. It might be a pleasure for her, but it wouldn't be a pleasure for me. "A lot of women would feel persecuted if they were excluded from some part of your life," he realized. "You know — they'd get the big persecution deal and go around moping all the time. Maybe Mag does, too. But if she does, she doesn't do it in front of me. I get a lot of one-way about an awful lot of things, I guess." Even in that mood of searingly frank reflection, Clint was not overcome by remorse. He was convinced that Mag I