t., h Monday, April 27, 1953 THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, Salem, Oregon PI 15 Tele - ? Radio-Television By DAVE SPORT TELE-BIT: Negotiations were conpleted today to present the great sports classic, the annual Shrine East-West football game, on the largest coast to coast video hook-up in the game's 28-year history. The scene of the collegiate all-star game will be Kezar Stadium, in San Francisco and on January 2, 1954. Mutual System will cover the radio broadcasting facili ties for the East-West YOURS FOR THE TELE-VIEWING MONDAY Wild Bill Hickok, 4. "A Close Shave for the Marshalls." Disguised as an outlaw, Bill joins a band which has been looting the town of Payrock. , Ken Murray, 6. Eve Arden, Joe Besser, comic, and "Sharkey," the seal as guests. .. .. " Voice of Firestone, 7:30. George London of the Met, and Dorothy Warenekjold as guest stars. I Love Lucy, 8. Lucy hires a maid, who is so domineer ing she kicks up a rumpus in the Ricardo household. Robert Montgomery Presents, 9. "The Glass Cage." Lee Bowman and Matjilyn Erskine in the story of a "hu man clock'' whose well-planned regimen is shattered when he is suspected of embezzlement. Nite Owl Theater, 10:30. "Mystery Broadcast." Frank Albertson, Ruth Terry. . YOURS FOR THE TELE-VIEWING TUESDAY Newscast, 10:45. Local, live newscast originating in the KPTV studios. , Kate Smith Show, 12. Teen-age panel of college edi tors ; Kateds, Katydids, Marshall Izen, impressionist and puppeteer. Texaco Star Theater, 7. Gertrude Berg (Mrs. Gold berg) and Peggy Lee as guests of Milton Berle. Fireside Theater, 8. "The Pemberton Boy," David Stollery. Story of a boy and his aunt who conspireto defeat the lad's father who intends to send him to a boarding school. Circle Theater, 8:30. "The Straight and Narrow." Glenda Farrell. A domestic comedy in which a'n untidy kitchen becomes the symbol of lost youth. My Little Margie, 10. Margie and her father find themselves embroiled with a pair of wrangling "Newly weds." . NUe Owl Theater, 10:30. "House of Secrets" with Leslie Fen ton, Muriel Evans. On Television KPTV (Channel 27) (Only proirfttn ichNSuleil 1o advance MARR RADIO and TELEVISION INC Salem's Most Complete Television Center 2140 S, Com'l Phone Day or Night 2-1611 or 2-4728 Motorola TV MONDAY 1:00 1:1ft 1:30 4:00 4:30 6:30 S: :O0 :30 6:46 7:00 1:30 1:00 8:30 9:00 10:30 i. Ma tin et Theater , Search for Tomorrow , Love of Life .Wild BiU Hickok i. Hopaloni Caeildy Telenewa ..Time for Beany i. Ken Murray Show .Sportsman Club Newa Caravan .Chevron Theater voice of Pirutont . I Love Lucy . Red Buttom . Robert Montgomery Nite Owl Theater CALL 4-2271 HEIDER'S 428 COURT 1 120 CENTER Jt cot no trior to watch 7V m'triout I TROUBLES? f: Can be salved If -$ year location li h1 b bad. Call 1 1 we'll da aar best . S : te f ft load pie- tur. ,-, -. w wxixmi-:-. : CUmh. I'.'. 1 iJJ HI "f II ff olliiian EASY-VISION' ttllviliM ONLY Per Day Model 21 Ml 5 'Uradtmark Views BLACKMEB TUESDAY 10:00 .m. Freedom Rlnn 11:00 p.m. The Els Payoff . 11:30 a.m. Welcome Traveler 12:oo noon Kate Smith 1:00 p.m. Betty Furneu 1:1ft p.m. Arthur Oodfrey 1:30 p.m. strike It Rich 3:00 p.m. Matinee Theater 3:15 p.m. Search for Tomorrow 3:30 p.m. Love of Lift 4:00 p.m. Howdy Doody 4:30 p.m. Vacatfonland 8:00 p.m. Nanie'i the Sam 6:S0 p.m. Dour Edward 5:45 p.m. Time for Beany too p.m. Two for the Money . 6:30 p.m. Dinah Shore . A:& p.m. News Caravan 7:00 p.m. Texaco Theater 8:00 p.m. Fireside Theater . 1:39 p.m.-rClrcie Theater 9:00 p.m. Life of Riley 9:30 p.m. American Forum of Air 10:00 P.m M Little Margie 10:30 p.m. Nite Owl Theater CAP Pilots at ioosa Hurt Mariposa, Calif. UR) Two Civil Air patrol members were treated today at Fremont hos pital here for serious Injuries received wh :i their light plane crashed on a take-off. Henry Ingle, the pilot, a Merced County deputy sheriff, suffered a multiple fracture of the right leg in the crash yes terday. His observer, William Stark, received back injuries and severe cuts and lacera tions. Both men were members of the Merced Squadron 58 of the Civil Aair Patrol. They had been taking part in a simulat ed search and rescue mission. The plane, which had been rented from George Allen of Merced, was described by Mar iposa county , Sheriff M. O. Whitley as a total loss. v(rori. 39 Karris Tells of Levant Incident (Ed. Note: Irwin Harris, Department of Educational Activities at Oregon State College and promoter of the concerts held at Oregon State, tells about the trouble he had with Oscar Levant in secur ing his services for the con cert recently.) Few of the 3377 persons at the Oscar Levant concert here last Saturday night probably realized how close they came to not hearing him at all. His actual appearance followed two weeks of uncertainty and even after arriving in town Saturday evening, he undoubtedly would not have appeared had he re ceived news earlier of Petrlllo's action in booting him out of the American Federation , of Musicians. - It all started the day tickets went on sale throughout the valley, Tuesday, April 7. That day, right after I got back to the office from putting out the tickets,, Walter P. Brown of Columbia Artists Management, Inc., of New York City, called me and said that Levant had cancelled out five engagements in Canada on his tour and might not appear here, suggest ing I call Levant in Beverly Hills to find out what he was going to do. I called Levant and got no where. He said he didn't know what he would do. Something about Columbia getting union to bar him from stage must have been in the wind at that time, because he. suggested I check with the union in Port land to see if they would let him appear here. Next, I called David Fergu son,. Pacific coast manager for Columbia, and he said at least that he hadn't heard anything about the trouble but would look into it immediately. Two days later I got a wire from Walter Brown saying Levant would appear in Portland and Corvallis after all, and told me to send the fee directly to him in New York the day of the concert. Levant then called me on Saturday, April 11, and said he would appear here if I agreed to pay him directly and he would tell me how much to send Columbia as its commis sion. Early the week of the concert I got another wire from Brown saying it was OK to follow Le vant's wishes and pay him di rectly and send on Columbia's share to him, Brown. . Nothing more happened un til the wire services and news papers phoned down the news on Levant's suspension during the concert Saturday and I in formed him of it afterwards. He said he would not have ap peared here had he known about it. ... Middle Grove Middle Grove The Wom an's Society for World Service held their April meeting in the home of Mrs. Harry Wil son. Devotions were led by the new president, Mrs. Roy Sco field. A business meeting is held in the mornng with a cov ered dish dinner at noon. The year's study book will be re viewed by Mrs, Wilbur Wilson. Attending were Mrs. Sco field, Mrs. Wilbur Wilson, Mrs. George Plane, Mrs. Allen Mc Lain, Mrs. Anna Wirshing, Mrs. Bertha Woods, Mrs. Lewis Patterson, Mrs. Dale Van Laanen, Mrs. J. Irving Wagers, Mrs. Cleo Keppinger, Mrs. Lawrence Hammer, Mrs. Wal ter Fisher, Mrs. John Van Lannen and the hostess. NEW LOWER PRICE -NEW BIGGER in HOFFMAN 21-Inch EASY-VISION 432 State St. BETTER THAN MEDICINE 1 v;Y? o : $ if L.v Injuries forgotten under the magic spell of the circus, , a child patient plants a kiss on the sad-faced clown Em ' mett Kelly. The Ringling Brothers-Barnum and Bailey cir cus was staging its annual performance for the ailing youngsters at Bellevue Hospital in New York City. Follow ing usual practice the name of the child is withheld by , hospital authorities. (AP Wirephoto.) ' ' Poetry Vies with Science In Study of Starry Skies By J. HUGH PRUETT Aitronomcr, Extension Division, Oregon Hither Education ayitem Although this writer usually I days of the ever-mighty dol tries to flavor his column with ' lar . . . Very especially I love enough scientific astronomy to j make it true to name, yet when he occasionally touches on the aesthetic aspects of the starry skies, he always finds delightful reader response. A noted Yale scientist said over 100 years ago that child ren should avoid all attempts at astronomical study since this requires mature and rea soning minds. But why deprive them of the artistic and liter ary sides, which many young children delight in? Dp the out lining of the constellations, the study of the ancient stories that go with them, and the con templation of the beauty and majesty of the skies require mature minds? . : The ancient Greeks were sure there was actual music produced by the movements of the heavenly bodies. "Music of the spheres," they called it. The noted Pythagoras (6th century B. C.) taught that as the planets "in order bright" swung through the firmament, they emitted clear and pure tones d e p e n d i ng upon the speed of the body. The combi nation of all the'se produces splendid harmony, unnoticed fc' human ears since it is so constantly operating. Let me quote part of a re cent letter from a Portland reader: - "I cannot tell you how much I enjoyed your recent story on the value of astronomical re search aside from its cold scientific and utilitarian values. You have stated very accurate ly and beautifully some of the ideas that are surely in the minds of many, even In these FOR EXPERT TV & RADIO SERVICE See Television Serv. Co. 1410 8. 12th Phone 4-5512 FREE ANTENNA, Installation and Home Demonstration FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY Imagine Hoffman Easy-Vision' with the oversize 21 inch cylindrical picture tube priced no more than tele vision that doesn't protect your eyes from strain ! All-area reception assured with exclusive features of Hoffman Super Mark V Chassis, and it's ready for UHF I See it here today. Let your eyes decide WILLS MUSIC '4? i ' h the thought that there is music and art and poetry in the heay. ens. I have seen the art, the rhythm of poetry, and I know beyond any doubt that I have 'heard' the silent music. "A few evenings ago as I was coming home from work on a city bus, a terrific rain shower came up. The entire eastern sky was a solid blue-! black cloud. Then just as the sun was about to set, the clouds broke in the west. At that moment our bus was climbing "a "hill toward the east. The en tire eastern - sky was visible from my viewpoint. There the most magnificent rainbow that I have, ever seen appeared! Even the secondary bow was almost as bright as many or dinary rainbows. 'Still far from home, I got ,H the bus at the hilltop so that I could let the unspeak able beauty of that sight flood my soul. All the harmony and beauty of music and art and poetry were standing out there before me. Since the sun was on the western horizon, the rainbow reached i t s greatest possible height in the east. Please picture that entire color ful bow without a break against the blue-black sky! I dare" anyone to produce with dollars its equal!" MITCHELL'S Factory Trained Service and Imtallation 18M State St. Phone 1-7577 Journal Want Ads Pay PICTURE STORE Ph. 34959 JJ MakesUseofTV Bishop Fulton J. Sheen, edu cator, lecturer, writer and one of the nation's foremost relig ious leaders, has successfully carried over to radio and tele vision his ability to attract and hold the attention of an audience.-. . : i . . ' . i ' Bishop Sheen can be both seen and heard locally. . On radio he appears on KSLM at 8:30 p.m. Monday nights, and on television he appears on KPTV at 3:30 p.m. each Sat urday. A veteran of 'only one year on television, Bishop Sheen has amassed some of the top TV awards and citations for his stimulating discussions on "Life Is Worth Living." . ' . We would be here all night listing ' the various awards which the Blsjiop has won since starting his TV program. Now that he is also on radio, no doubt he will win additional awards in that media also. Twelve years ago, when tele vision was still in more or less an experimental stage, Bishop 'Sheen conducted the first re ligious service ever to be tele cast. Bishop Sheen was born in El Paso, Illinois, in 1899 and was educated at St. Viator col lege, Kankakee, 111., and St Paul's Seminary, St. Paul, Minn. ' He did graduate work in the United States, Belgium and Italy and Is the recipient of the A.B., J.C.B., Ph.D., D.D., and He has been described by the London : Universe as the "most popular of American preach ers who have come to England." NOW LEE Availablt with Built-in ALL-CHANNEL UHF Don't nflttle for 1ms! For the now UHF stations, Philco ' offer fullcovenw, not partial, plus pccluaive Bcam-of'Liirht Station Selrolor for oaaimt tuning of all 70 UHF channels. 3380 N. Lancaster Drive at Silverton Rd. Stayton Women Hold Missionary Meeting Stayton The Women's Soci ety of the Methodist church held a spring missionary tea at the home of Mrs. H. J. Rowe, Thursday afternoon: ' Guest speaker was Mrs. C. W. "Stacey of Salem, who Is president of the Leslie Metho dist WSCS. She spoke on the different projects of the church throughout the United States, most of which she has visited. She was presented si plant by Mrs. Taylor Cooper. . Guests were: Mrs. Irvin Par berry, Mrs. Harold Wodtly, Don't Put Off Your MOTOR REPAIRING Hove us chick that motor and iptt It ready for the hard job ahead when minutes art .worth dollars. Present this ad with your repair job before May 29 and SAVE 10 Discounts Alio on Pump Panels , .. . WALTON-BROWN . ELECTRIC CO. v Ford I Simpson Stt., Salem, Or. Phone 2-4156 SHOWING AT ELECTRIC America's Most Advanced Television Set With Exclusive Directional Built-in Aerial for Both UHF and VHF n noetic Mrs. H. C. Ron, Mrs. Alex Har old, Mrs. George Cole, Mrs. Ray Nye, Mrs. Taylor Cooper and daughter, Marilyn, Mrs. Al bert Julian, Mrs, H. J. Rowe and Mrs. Ross Hughes, i3EffE MM l Jusf Like a Boost in Station Power! I Immediate delivery new famous "Golden Grid" 21-inch Philco with full 245 sq. Inch screen or new law prices. if Amarica's first H I j h Fidelity picture raprof duction. '; Unmatched perform a nee on All-Channel Built-in Aerial Greatest of all TV sets for noise-free recep tion. Wida selection of cab inets. Phone 2-6553 p !