TV Guide (January 15, 1955)

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Masquerade Party's Ilka Chase, Buff ‘Can you find the product in the house?’ ‘Is it used by both sexes?’ ‘Can it be worn?’” These questions, applied to a cou¬ turier for lamb chops, produced loud yocks. Most of the panel shows have their own sets of rules. On I've Got a Secret, for instance, where there’s alv/ays a secret-harbor¬ ing celebrity guest, the panelists are discreetly advised that it would be mighty nice if the famous face were kept on TV screens a good while. Panelists also are told not to be in a hurry to give what they judge to be the correct answer. For one thing, it’s pointed out, nobody ever remem¬ bers afterward who guessed what, so a fine guessing record has no partic¬ ular value. For another thing, a quickly-guessed correct answer raises charges of “Fix!” That’s why Garry Moore recently asked Henry Morgan to explain how he guessed at breakneck speed that a guest had fainted three times en route to the altar. To prevent touchy situations on the air, panelists are sometimes told what things do not constitute I’ve Got a