Word: network
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...MARCH OF TIME), a film history of the Second World War in the West, based on General Dwight D. Eisenhower's bestselling book (TIME, Nov. 22), is the most ambitious film yet made for television. Sponsored by TIME & LIFE, it will begin this week over the ABC-TV network, will be seen over stations in 32 cities. Crusade will be released in 26 weekly episodes of 20 minutes each; the whole series may then be repeated twice...
...Lowell House Business Manager of 1951 Freshman Red Book, House Dance Committee. James P. Johnson of Kirkland House Freshman soccer, Varsity soccer. Kirkland House Committee, House athletics, PBH, Outing Club, and the D.P. Drive. Mitchell T. Rabkin of Dunster House--Photography editor, '51 Freshman Red Book, Member, Harvard Radio Network. Bruce LaSaia of Winthrop House--1951 Jubilee Committee, Student Council Fund Drives, World Student Service Fund, Sophomore Nominating Committee. Bradley Richardson of Winthrop House--'51 Class Committee, Outing Club, HYRC. Carl D. Bottenfield of Kirkland House--Freshman Jubilee, Crimson Key, Freshman football, Class Committee. Roy M. Goodman of Eliot House...
...theirs. All died at the hands of "The Creeper," a sinister, unseen character in last week's Suspense play over CBS television. But after the murder of Georgia, the redhead who lived in 4-D, Georgia came back to haunt her scripters and the network...
...Since network television rules forbid any act of violence to be shown (after all, Greek tragedy had the same convention), Georgia was done in just offscreen. A man's voice murmured: "What nice lipstick you use . . ." Georgia shrieked and dropped the phone she was using. The camera panned blankly at the phone while the dirty work was done...
...Manhattan last week, bushy-browed Edward J. Noble, who made a mint out of Life Savers, turned a businessman's hard and appraising eye on network television's prospects. Noble is chairman of American Broadcasting Co. and he was speaking to his company's stockholders. The way he saw it, TV was no way for a broadcaster to get rich quick and his stockholders should get that straight.* He was facing them at the first annual meeting since his privately owned ABC had sold 500,000 shares of stock to the public last year, partly...