The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, April 27, 1959, Page 8, Image 8

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MARY WORTH
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TELEVISION IN REVIEW
'Meet Me In St. Louis
has 'simpering' charm
By William Ewald
UPI Staff Writer
NEW YORK IUPP Like Ihe
contemporary gilt shop. "Meet
Me In St. Louis'' presented as
a two-hour special Sunday night
on CBS-TV is a tasseled con
tainer for the cute, the cuddly,
tlie cunning.
It stocks on its shelves: A
grandpa who wears a beret, a lit
tle sister who catacombs her life
with dead dolls, a father who
trips on roller skates, a mother
with the patience of Albert
Schweitzer, two souffle romances,
lollipop picnics and parties and a
young beau who looks like Tab
Hunter and behold turns out,
in fact, to be Tab Hunter.
"Meet Me In St. Louis" is. of
course, an urban pastorale an
idyllic treatment of city rustics
and director George Schaefer
wisely decided to play it that way.
Over two hours, it was a terri
hly tough vehicle to keep charged
because it packed no real con
flicts, no tensions r it was mere
ly a flow of incidents held togeth
er by vanilla icing but I would
say Schaefer succeeded fairly well
in pushing its simpering charm
along.
He was helped a good deal by
some amiable Hugh Martin-Ralph
Blaine tunes "The Trolley
Song." "Skip To My Lou" and
"The Boy Next Door" and by
some Duane McKinncy sets that
had a nice sense of wedding cake
done with tongue in check.
He was aided in varying degree
by his cast, none of whom had
much more to do than looks as if
they had been wrapped whole
somely in cellophane. They in
cluded Ed YVynn, Walter Pidgeon,
Hunter, Jane Powell, Reta Shaw,
Patty Duke, Myrna Loy and
Jeanne Crain, in about that order
of effectiveness.
Gene Kelly's one-hour special
for CBS-TV Friday night was a
disappointingly standard exercise:
umnvenlive in its blueprinting, un
ambitious in its execution, tainted
with self-conscious affability.
It was not a bad show. It was
just not a very stimulating one.
echoing as it did scores of other
musical shows. There was one of
those musical beatnik-knacks.
splicing of soft-shoe, and one of
those jazz ballet things in which
everyone hulks around like synco
pated dybbuks. Kelly, who works
well with youngsters, capered
briefly with five-year-old Choryl
ene Lee and 1.1-year-old Liza Min-
elli, who is Judy Garland's daugh
ter. Both segments were moder
ately agreeable, if not precisely
adventurous. One sequence in
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which Kelly postured while Carl
Sandburg crooned was ludicrous.
Kelly had three foreign dancers
on board Claude Bessy, Judith
Dornys and Gerd Andersson and
a fine, leggy set of females they
were. However, like Kelly, their
talents weren't put to much of
a test.
Short Shots: "Professor Tim,"
an Abbey Theater movie offered
by NBC-TV's Omnibus, was a thin
porridge a hackneyed plot,
stock characters and directed far
too stagily. Jean Sheppcrd's Chi
cago White Sox routine on the
NBC-TV Steve Allen Show was the
comedy highlight of the week end.
Poor Dody Goodman has certain
ly had her troubles the past cou
ple of seasons Sunday night the
CBS-TV Ed Sullivan Show went
off the air right in the middle of
her routine.
The Channel Swim: ABC-TV will
ax its daytime quiz. Play Your
Hunch, and replace it on May 11
with a five-a-week version of
Mike Stokey's Pantomime Quiz
the new version of the charade
game will mix celebrity guests
with contestants from the studio
audience.
Joan Bennett landed the lead
opposite Don Ameche in the situ
ation comedy. Too Young To Go
Steady, which debuts on NBC-TV
May 14. Five Fingers, a one-hour
spy series which stars Al Hedi
son, looks like a sure starter for
Saturday nights on NBC-TV next
fall in the spot now held by the
Western, Cimarron City. NBC
TV's Loretta Young will be back
in her present Sunday night spot
next season there had been
some talk of moving the show to
Wednesday night.
For the first time in more than
r00 telecasts, Dinah Shore will
fail to throw a goodnight kiss on
her May 3 NBC-TV hour. The
show, which is on videotape, end
ed rather abruptly when a guest
chimpanzee jumped into Miss
Shore's arms just as she was
about to sign off.
'Wyatt EarpV
home robbed
WEST LOS ANGELES (UPD
Burglars lured the houscboy of
Hugh 0 Brian, television s Marsh
al Wyatt Earp. away from his em
ployer's home Sunday, then broke
in and stole clothes, jewelry, liq
uor, and his shoolin' irons.
The houscboy, Slig lloglund.
said he received a telephone call
ordering him to appear at a police
station to take care of a traffic
ticket. Police told him the call
was a phony, but by the time he
got back to the house he found
it had been ransacked.
RESORT GETS "PRESENT"
LONDON (Uri) Russia has
a May Day surprise in store for
residents of the Black Sea resort
town of Sochi a television sta
tion. A Moscow broadcast heard
here Sunday said the new station
would begin broadcasting May 1
as a "present" to Sochi.
KPTV
8KGW
TV
8 The Bend Bulletin, Monday, April 27, 1959
Carnival
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"Sis has been getting ready for your dinner dats all
day she hasn't eaten a thing!"
Senate will have package
plan before it on Tuesday
By Dick Humphrey
UPI Staff Writer
SALEM (UPD-When the Ore
gon Senate convenes hero Tues
day it will have before it the
complete tax package proposed
by the House. All three bills of
the package passed the House
Saturday.
Fireworks were expected in the
Senate which has vowed to take
a "hard look" at the program
The key bill HB 670) was the
last to be passed with only two
representatives commenting on it
Rep. Clarence Barton D-Co-
quille. chairman of the House Tax
Committee, who favored the bill
and Rep. Douglas Heider (R-Sa-lem,
also a Tax Committee mem
ber, who opposed it.
Vote on the major income tax
measure was 37-23.
Four Republicans crossed party
lines to vote for the bill which
would raise 5.4 million dollars a
year in revenue.
They were Reps. Gust Ander
son (R-Portlandl, Leon Davis (R
Hillsboro), Fred Meek (R-Port-
3-day lecture
series planned
by ex-President
NEW YORK (UPP Former
President Harry S. Truman, who
has "no degrees except those 1
didn't earn," begins a three-day
series of lectures to college stu
dents loday on a subject he knows
better than most professors the
U.S. government.
Truman promised he'd talk
plain language, as usual, to Co
lumbia University students.
"I'm no college professor," he
said on his arrival here Sunday
with Mrs. Truman.
"I'm going to deliver lectures
to these kids as I've been doing
ever since I left the White House.
I'll try to explain what we have
and how to keep it."
Truman, delivering the inau
gural William Radncr Lectures on
public law and government, will
lecture today on "The Presi
dency." Tuesday on "The Consti
tution" and Wednesday on "Hys
teria and Witch Hunting."
The lectureship was established
by the Radner Family Foundation
of Chevy Chase. Md.
William Radner. a graduate of
Columbia and of the university's
Law School, was a government
lawyer who died in 1931 at the
age of 43.
Each of the former President's
lectures w ill begin at 10 a m. and
last 30 minutes. They are to be
followed by question and answer
periods.
SCOTCH MAKING INROADS
TARIS (UPP-Scotch whisky is
going to make inroads in the
wine-drinking habits of French
men during the coming fiscal
year, informed sources said to
day. Under a new agreement,
French imports of scotch are ex
pected to jump to as much as
$!t.0O0 worth this year.
KBND
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land) and William Gallagher ( It
Portland). All Democrats voted (or it.
Barton Carries Bill
Barton carried the bill on the
floor explaining that it was "not
a patchwork but a comprehensive
tax program for the state of Ore
gon." He said the bill provided rates
of from 2 per cent on the first
thousand dollars of taxable in
come to 7 per cent on income
above $10,000.
Present rates are from 3 per
cent to 9.5 per cent
Barton said the new bill pro
vided "the lowest top rate Ore
gon has had for the past decade."
However, the bill excludes ex
emptions for federal income tax
and many other exemptions which
will have the effect of raising
most people's income taxes.
Hardest hit will be those in the
brackets above $4,000.
The bill leaves personal ex
emptions and dependency credits
at the present $600 level. It per
mits medical deductions above S
per cent of income with no upper
limits and deductions for educa
tion, charitable and religious con
tributions from 3 to 2Q per cent
of income.-'
Features Left Out
The split income and standard
deductions are eliminated.
The bill was a revision of a
rate structure proposed by Gov.
Mark Hatfield which would not
have raised as much money as
the House-passed bill.
Earlier Saturday, the House
passed and sent to the Senate two
other bills to complete the pack
age. They were:
A bill putting a 3 cents a pack
tax on cigarettes and a 15 per
cent tax on other tobacco prod
ucts. A bill taxing businesses 1 ' i
per cent on net business income,
repealing inventory taxes above
$25,000 and including a reduction
in capital gains.
Votes Explained
The cigarette measure passed
37-23 and the business bill 50-20.
Opposition to the major income
tax measure was voiced by Heid
er who said it violated proposals
by both Gov. Hatfield and cx
Gov. Robert D. Holmes and also
other experts who have studied
Oregon's tax structure.
Gallagher explained that he
voted for the measure in the ex
pectation that it would he amend
ed by the Senate.
Rep. George Annala D Hood
River), although not talking on
the measure, explained his vote
with the same expectation.
"This bill hits the middle in
come groups hard and is unrealis
tic on seasonal and agricultural
employes." Annala said.
One provision of the bill elimi
nates the necessity for about 400.
Ono Oregonians filing state income
tax returns if Uiey are subject to
withholding.
They would only have lo Me
their withholding slips with the
State Tax Commission. The com
mission would then figure their
tax.
5000
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