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Screen & Radio Weekly

Screen & Radio Weekly was a nationally syndicated Sunday tabloid-newspaper-supplement published by the Detroit Free Press from 1934 to 1940 that covered film, radio, and fashion – and included a short story.

Screen & Radio Weekly
CategoriesEntertainment
Fan magazine
Print syndication
FrequencyWeekly
Circulation1,700,000
     (April 1935) [1]
First issueApril 29, 1934 (1934-04-29)[2]
   Janet Gaynor
     (cover photo)
CompanyDetroit Free Press
CountryU.S.
Based inDetroit
LanguageEnglish
OCLC801245070

History edit

The concept for the publication has been attributed to Dougles DeVeny Martin (1885–1963), one of five 1932 Pulitzer Prize winning journalists from the Detroit Free Press,[3] who, in April 1934, proposed – to Malcolm Wallace Bingay (1884–1953), managing editor – publishing a weekly tabloid supplement in full color, 16 pages covering cinema and radio entertainment "to interest adult-minded readers, with no salacious gossip and a bare minimum of press-agent claptrap."[4] All factual material used, according to promotional material, was staff-written and each issue featured one short story.[5]

The Detroit Free Press first published S&RW April 29, 1934, with a photo of Janet Gaynor on the cover – an era marked by the Great Depression, before television. Full-scale commercial TV broadcasting did not begin in the United States until 1947. Movies and radio, in 1935, according to author Donovan A. Shilling, served as a relief for people living in an era of few jobs.[6]

On the first anniversary of the publication (in 1935), circulation was 1,700,000 – reportedly more than any two other fan magazines combined.[1][7]

Editors, reporters, and contributors edit

A few S&RW columnists who also wrote for the Detroit Free Press used pseudonymous bylines and were identified as Free Press journalists, sans the word "Detroit."

Fashion and beauty

  • Sara Day, pseudonym of Sally Richards (née Sara Lou Dague; 1904–2001), staff reporter, was billed by S&RW as the "Free Press Hollywood fashion authority." After earning a Bachelor of Science in Business from the University of Illinois in 1927, she became a fashion advertising copywriter for the J.L. Hudson Company in Detroit – then fashion editor for the Detroit Free Press, for whom she frequently traveled to Hollywood and New York on assignment. She married – on October 26, 1935, in her hometown, Danville, Ohio – Harold Grieves Richards (1907–1981). Shortly thereafter, they moved to Darien, Connecticut. She continued fashion reporting and freelance writing, traveling to New York, writing for the New York World Telegram. She and her husband moved to West Hartford in 1944.[8]
  • Grace Grandville (pseudonym of Grace Haedke; née Grace Mae Barber; 1890–1980) was staff reporter on beauty, Hollywood Bureau. She had been with the Detroit Free Press since 1918 and began writing for the newspaper in 1919. In the late 1920s, she became editor for "The Sunbeam Club," a popular children's membership oriented special section of the newspaper's Sunday magazine that ran through 1932 where she encouraged young readers to mail-in short stories, verses, and drawings. Around 1934, she began covering beauty for the Detroit Free Press under the byline Grace M. Barber while simultaneously covering beauty for S&RW under the pseudonym Grace Grandville. From 1940 until her retirement in 1961, she continued covering beauty for the Detroit Free Press under the name "Miss Grace." She married, on July 6, 1921, in Detroit, Walter R. Haedke (1892–1986).[9][10][11] She also wrote under the byline, Susan Bartlett. She started out as a teacher in her hometown, Alpena, Michigan, then studied business at Cleary Business College, in Ypsilanti, earning a degree in 1918.
  • Royer (pseudonym of Lewis Royer Hastings; 1904–1988), contributor, costumier designer for 20th Century Fox.
  • Louise Shepard (née Louise Prescott Shepard; 1906–1967), tagged "Sketched by Louise," was a commercial artist who became staff fashion illustrator for the magazine. Before joining the magazine, in 1925, while working as head fashion artist for Frank & Seder's, she began teaching a new class in fashion illustration at Robert Herzberg's[i][12] Detroit School of Applied Arts at 3403 Woodward Avenue. She was married twice, first, from 1932 to 1939, to an airline pilot, Leonard Stanley Flo (1902–1973); then, from 1940 until her death, to a horticulturist, Elliot Bowen Coryell (1903–1986).[13]

Film

  • Douglas W. Churchill (né Douglas Wadleigh Churchill; 1897–1942), film critic. He also was a reporter, fiction writer, and screenplay writer. Churchill co-authored the story for the 1931 film Platinum Blonde, directed by Frank Capra. He married, in 1935, Lillian Templeton (née Lillian Evalyn Smith; 1903–1989), costume designer for 20th Century Fox – and in 1935, the only woman film stylist in Hollywood.[14] When Churchill died, he had been the Hollywood columnist for The New York Times. Earlier, he had written for other publications, including Redbook, and the Los Angeles Times.

Hollywood

  • Mollie Merrick (née Mary Merrick; 1891–1983), staff reporter, Hollywood Bureau. She was a native of Oakland, California. Before working for the Free Press, Merrick had been a newspaper writer since the 1920s and, since about 1931, published nationally syndicated articles copyrighted by N.A.N.A., Inc. (North American Newspaper Alliance, Inc.).[15]
  • Isabella Miller (née Isabella Taves aka Toews; 1905–2005), fashion editor for Screen & Humor Weekly, as well as College Humor, until about 1936, when she joined the copy staff of the ad agency, Anderson, Davis & Platte, New York. Mrs. Miller was formerly with the Butterick Publishing Company. In 1926, she earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Northwestern University, "with highest distinction" and Phi Beta Kappa.[16][17][18] At Northwestern, she was Associate Editor of the Purple Parrot. She was married to William Moscrip Miller (1897–1956) from 1929 to 1944, then to Daniel Danforth Mich (1905–1965) from 1944 until his death. Mich was editor of Look from 1964 until his death and had been a member of the staff since 1947.
  • Grace Wilcox, aka Edith Dietz (née Edith Grace Wilcox; 1883–1978), staff reporter, Hollywood Bureau, was column editor of "The Hollywood Reporter – Personal but not Confidential" and was Director of the magazine's Hollywood bureau. Before writing for S&RW, she had been a writer for the San Diego Union, the Arizona Daily Star, the Los Angeles Tribune, and the Los Angeles Express. In 1944, she wrote copy for J. Walter Thompson.[19] She married – on November 25, 1916, in Los Angeles – mining-engineer-turned-banker, George W. Dietz (1881–1929).

Managing editors

  • James Wilcox Hosking (1912–1952) was for 10 years Sunday editor of the Detroit Free Press.[5] In 1944, he joined the Look magazine staff. His middle name, "Wilcox," was the surname of his mother, Carlotta Belle Wilcox (1879–1963). Hosking was a 1933 graduate of Kalamazoo College. He is not related to Grace Wilcox.
  • Douglas DeVeny Martin (1885–1963), editor.

Radio

  • Bernes Robert, pseudonym of Robert White (né Robert Burns White; 1901–1969) was a staff reporter and column editor of S&RW's "The Radio Reporter."[20] He also wrote under the byline "William White." He married – on October 27, 1937, in Detroit – Betty Sloan (née Elizabeth Mary Sloan; born 1911), also a journalist who also covered radio for the Detroit Free Press.[21] Sloan's father, Patrick J. Sloan (1881–1943) was the financial editor for the Detroit Free Press until his retirement in 1942. Betty Sloan, who also reviewed books for the Detroit Free Press, wrote a satirical review of a 1937 mystery novel by Sidney Clark Williams, The murder of Miss Betty Sloan. She titled it, "Startled Miss Sloan Reads Own 'Murder' – Mystery Tale Reviewer Finds Out How She 'Died.'"[22] Robert White, a graduate of Wayne State University, worked in radio in executive roles with (i) The Ford Sunday Evening Hour (producer) (first two seasons, 1934 & 1935), (ii) CKLW, Windsor, Canada (assistant manager and program director) (before 1936), (iii) WOR, Newark, New Jersey (commercial production manager) (before 1937), (iv) NBC Radio Network, Chicago Studios (production staff) (beginning 1937),[23] (v) U.S. Armed Forces Radio Station at Guam (station manager) (1952–1953),[20] (vi) ABC Radio, Central Division (Public Service Director) (1943–1950), (vii) Progressive Broadcasting System (Executive Vice President, Chicago Office) (beginning 1950),[24] and (viii) WXYZ, Detroit.

Theater

Archival access edit

The issues of Screen & Radio Weekly include neither mastheads nor volumes nor issue numbers – only dates. The Margaret Herrick Library – the main repository of print, graphic and research materials of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences – holds issues of Screen & Radio Weekly. (OCLC 801245070)

Digital archival access edit

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Robert Herzberg (né Robert Albert George Herzberg; 1886–1960) was a German-born American painter and illustrator.
  2. ^ The Dayton Herald carried the supplement on Wednesdays as the Mid-Week Screen & Radio Magazine.
  3. ^ The Daily Times, Chicago, carried the supplement on Sundays as the Screen & Radio Magazine.

References edit

  1. ^ a b ("Screen & Radio Weekly") Time, Vol. 25, Part 2, p. 55 (Retrieved via Google Books; snippet view only)
  2. ^ "Detroit Gives Enthusiastic Welcome to Free Press Screen & Radio Weekly," Detroit Free Press, April 30, 1934, p. 4 (Retrieved via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  3. ^ Complete Biographical Encyclopedia of Pulitzer Prize Winners, 1917–2000, by Heinz-Dietrich Fischer, Erika J. Fischer, K. G. Saur Verlag, (2002); ISBN 3-598-30170-7
    "Martin, Douglas DeVeny", pp. 153–154
  4. ^ On Guard, A History of the 'Detroit Free Press,' by Frank Angelo, Detroit Free Press (1981), p. 158; OCLC 7273946
  5. ^ a b "Screen & Radio Weekly" (review), The Writer, Vol. 52 (issue not known) (1939), p. 384 (Retrieved via Google Books; snippet view only)
  6. ^ Rochester's Movie Mania, by Donovan A. Shilling (born 1933), (self published) (2013), p. 38 (2013); OCLC 856579424
    Note: Shilling is historian, notably on Rochester, New York
  7. ^ ("Screen & Radio Weekly") Printers' Ink, Vol. 171 (issue not known), 1935; ISSN 0196-1160 (Retrieved via Google Books; snippet view only)
  8. ^ "Death Notices – 'Richards, Sara Lou (Dague),'" Hartford Courant, August 18, 2001, p. B4 (Retrieved via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  9. ^ "Miss Grace M. Barber . . . " (marriages), Detroit Free Press, July 10, 1921, part 4, p. 4, col. 7 (of 8, top) (Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  10. ^ "Grace Barber to Get Award" Detroit Free Press, February 7, 1960, p. 10E (Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  11. ^ "A Woman of Words and Fishing Rods," by Kay Savage," p. 1E (accessible via Newspapers.com, subscription required)
    Continued, "Grace Barber, Her 2 Lives," Detroit Free Press, February 7, 1960, p. 10E (Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  12. ^ Jacobsen's Biographical Index of American Artists – Artists native to the United States or working in the United States from 1606 to 2002 (Vol. 2 of 4), Anita Jacobsen (ed.) A.J. Publications (2002); OCLC 956672085
  13. ^ The Coryell Nursery – Growers of High Grade Ornementals (1917)
  14. ^ "A Designing Young Lady – Lillian Templeton, Studio Stylist, Discusses the Art of Garbing the Garbos," by Frank Stanley Nugent, New York Times, May 19, 1935, p. 4X (Retrieved via New York Times, subscription required)
  15. ^ California and Californians (Vol. 4 of 4), Rockwell Dennis Hunt, PhD (ed.), Lewis Publishing Company (1932), p. 533
  16. ^ "Sixty-Eighth Annual Commencement," Northwestern University, June 14, 1926, pp. 13 & 24
  17. ^ "Isabella Taves Miller Joins Look Staff," (re: Look) Nebraska State Journal, May 28, 1942, p. 5 (Retrieved via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  18. ^ ("Mrs. Isabella Miller") Printers' Ink, Vol. 177 (issue not known), 1936, p. 40; ISSN 0196-1160 (Retrieved via Google Books; snippet view only)
  19. ^ "From the Production Centres – In Hollywood . . . " (re: "Grace Wilcox"), Variety, Vol. 155, No. 5, July 12, 1944, p. 26
  20. ^ a b "Deaths: Robert Burns White," The Times Herald (Port Huron, Michigan), August 26, 1969, p. Sec. A, p. 5 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  21. ^ "Radio Editors of Newspapers in the United States and Canada," Broadcasting combined with Broadcast Advertising1936 Year Book Number, Broadcasting Publications, Inc.
  22. ^ "Startled Miss Sloan Reads Own 'Murder' – Mystery Tale Reviewer Finds Out How She 'Died'" (book review), by Betty Sloan, Detroit Free Press, May 12, 1935, part 3 "Arts Section," p. 13 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
    Re: The Murder of Miss Betty Sloan, by Sidney Clark Williams (1878–1949), D Appleton, Century Company (1937); OCLC 20879866
  23. ^ "Joins NBC – Robert White" (with portrait photo), Detroit Free Press, September 19, 1937, p. 19, col. 6 (of 8) (Retrieved via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  24. ^ "Front Office – Robert Burns White," Broadcasting, October 9, 1950, p. 50

screen, radio, weekly, nationally, syndicated, sunday, tabloid, newspaper, supplement, published, detroit, free, press, from, 1934, 1940, that, covered, film, radio, fashion, included, short, story, categoriesentertainmentfan, magazineprint, syndicationfrequen. Screen amp Radio Weekly was a nationally syndicated Sunday tabloid newspaper supplement published by the Detroit Free Press from 1934 to 1940 that covered film radio and fashion and included a short story Screen amp Radio WeeklyCategoriesEntertainmentFan magazinePrint syndicationFrequencyWeeklyCirculation1 700 000 April 1935 1 First issueApril 29 1934 1934 04 29 2 Janet Gaynor cover photo CompanyDetroit Free PressCountryU S Based inDetroitLanguageEnglishOCLC801245070 Contents 1 History 2 Editors reporters and contributors 3 Archival access 3 1 Digital archival access 4 Notes and references 4 1 Notes 4 2 ReferencesHistory editThe concept for the publication has been attributed to Dougles DeVeny Martin 1885 1963 one of five 1932 Pulitzer Prize winning journalists from the Detroit Free Press 3 who in April 1934 proposed to Malcolm Wallace Bingay 1884 1953 managing editor publishing a weekly tabloid supplement in full color 16 pages covering cinema and radio entertainment to interest adult minded readers with no salacious gossip and a bare minimum of press agent claptrap 4 All factual material used according to promotional material was staff written and each issue featured one short story 5 The Detroit Free Press first published S amp RW April 29 1934 with a photo of Janet Gaynor on the cover an era marked by the Great Depression before television Full scale commercial TV broadcasting did not begin in the United States until 1947 Movies and radio in 1935 according to author Donovan A Shilling served as a relief for people living in an era of few jobs 6 On the first anniversary of the publication in 1935 circulation was 1 700 000 reportedly more than any two other fan magazines combined 1 7 Editors reporters and contributors editA few S amp RW columnists who also wrote for the Detroit Free Press used pseudonymous bylines and were identified as Free Press journalists sans the word Detroit Fashion and beauty Sara Day pseudonym of Sally Richards nee Sara Lou Dague 1904 2001 staff reporter was billed by S amp RW as the Free Press Hollywood fashion authority After earning a Bachelor of Science in Business from the University of Illinois in 1927 she became a fashion advertising copywriter for the J L Hudson Company in Detroit then fashion editor for the Detroit Free Press for whom she frequently traveled to Hollywood and New York on assignment She married on October 26 1935 in her hometown Danville Ohio Harold Grieves Richards 1907 1981 Shortly thereafter they moved to Darien Connecticut She continued fashion reporting and freelance writing traveling to New York writing for the New York World Telegram She and her husband moved to West Hartford in 1944 8 Grace Grandville pseudonym of Grace Haedke nee Grace Mae Barber 1890 1980 was staff reporter on beauty Hollywood Bureau She had been with the Detroit Free Press since 1918 and began writing for the newspaper in 1919 In the late 1920s she became editor for The Sunbeam Club a popular children s membership oriented special section of the newspaper s Sunday magazine that ran through 1932 where she encouraged young readers to mail in short stories verses and drawings Around 1934 she began covering beauty for the Detroit Free Press under the byline Grace M Barber while simultaneously covering beauty for S amp RW under the pseudonym Grace Grandville From 1940 until her retirement in 1961 she continued covering beauty for the Detroit Free Press under the name Miss Grace She married on July 6 1921 in Detroit Walter R Haedke 1892 1986 9 10 11 She also wrote under the byline Susan Bartlett She started out as a teacher in her hometown Alpena Michigan then studied business at Cleary Business College in Ypsilanti earning a degree in 1918 Royer pseudonym of Lewis Royer Hastings 1904 1988 contributor costumier designer for 20th Century Fox Louise Shepard nee Louise Prescott Shepard 1906 1967 tagged Sketched by Louise was a commercial artist who became staff fashion illustrator for the magazine Before joining the magazine in 1925 while working as head fashion artist for Frank amp Seder s she began teaching a new class in fashion illustration at Robert Herzberg s i 12 Detroit School of Applied Arts at 3403 Woodward Avenue She was married twice first from 1932 to 1939 to an airline pilot Leonard Stanley Flo 1902 1973 then from 1940 until her death to a horticulturist Elliot Bowen Coryell 1903 1986 13 Film Douglas W Churchill ne Douglas Wadleigh Churchill 1897 1942 film critic He also was a reporter fiction writer and screenplay writer Churchill co authored the story for the 1931 film Platinum Blonde directed by Frank Capra He married in 1935 Lillian Templeton nee Lillian Evalyn Smith 1903 1989 costume designer for 20th Century Fox and in 1935 the only woman film stylist in Hollywood 14 When Churchill died he had been the Hollywood columnist for The New York Times Earlier he had written for other publications including Redbook and the Los Angeles Times Hollywood Mollie Merrick nee Mary Merrick 1891 1983 staff reporter Hollywood Bureau She was a native of Oakland California Before working for the Free Press Merrick had been a newspaper writer since the 1920s and since about 1931 published nationally syndicated articles copyrighted by N A N A Inc North American Newspaper Alliance Inc 15 Isabella Miller nee Isabella Taves aka Toews 1905 2005 fashion editor for Screen amp Humor Weekly as well as College Humor until about 1936 when she joined the copy staff of the ad agency Anderson Davis amp Platte New York Mrs Miller was formerly with the Butterick Publishing Company In 1926 she earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Northwestern University with highest distinction and Phi Beta Kappa 16 17 18 At Northwestern she was Associate Editor of the Purple Parrot She was married to William Moscrip Miller 1897 1956 from 1929 to 1944 then to Daniel Danforth Mich 1905 1965 from 1944 until his death Mich was editor of Look from 1964 until his death and had been a member of the staff since 1947 Grace Wilcox aka Edith Dietz nee Edith Grace Wilcox 1883 1978 staff reporter Hollywood Bureau was column editor of The Hollywood Reporter Personal but not Confidential and was Director of the magazine s Hollywood bureau Before writing for S amp RW she had been a writer for the San Diego Union the Arizona Daily Star the Los Angeles Tribune and the Los Angeles Express In 1944 she wrote copy for J Walter Thompson 19 She married on November 25 1916 in Los Angeles mining engineer turned banker George W Dietz 1881 1929 Managing editors James Wilcox Hosking 1912 1952 was for 10 years Sunday editor of the Detroit Free Press 5 In 1944 he joined the Look magazine staff His middle name Wilcox was the surname of his mother Carlotta Belle Wilcox 1879 1963 Hosking was a 1933 graduate of Kalamazoo College He is not related to Grace Wilcox Douglas DeVeny Martin 1885 1963 editor Radio Bernes Robert pseudonym of Robert White ne Robert Burns White 1901 1969 was a staff reporter and column editor of S amp RW s The Radio Reporter 20 He also wrote under the byline William White He married on October 27 1937 in Detroit Betty Sloan nee Elizabeth Mary Sloan born 1911 also a journalist who also covered radio for the Detroit Free Press 21 Sloan s father Patrick J Sloan 1881 1943 was the financial editor for the Detroit Free Press until his retirement in 1942 Betty Sloan who also reviewed books for the Detroit Free Press wrote a satirical review of a 1937 mystery novel by Sidney Clark Williams The murder of Miss Betty Sloan She titled it Startled Miss Sloan Reads Own Murder Mystery Tale Reviewer Finds Out How She Died 22 Robert White a graduate of Wayne State University worked in radio in executive roles with i The Ford Sunday Evening Hour producer first two seasons 1934 amp 1935 ii CKLW Windsor Canada assistant manager and program director before 1936 iii WOR Newark New Jersey commercial production manager before 1937 iv NBC Radio Network Chicago Studios production staff beginning 1937 23 v U S Armed Forces Radio Station at Guam station manager 1952 1953 20 vi ABC Radio Central Division Public Service Director 1943 1950 vii Progressive Broadcasting System Executive Vice President Chicago Office beginning 1950 24 and viii WXYZ Detroit Theater Jack Sher 1913 1988 New York reporter Main article Jack SherArchival access editThe issues of Screen amp Radio Weekly include neither mastheads nor volumes nor issue numbers only dates The Margaret Herrick Library the main repository of print graphic and research materials of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences holds issues of Screen amp Radio Weekly OCLC 801245070 Digital archival access edit Newspapers com Atlanta Constitution Brooklyn Times Union Dayton Herald ii Denver News Detroit Free Press Des Moines Register Knickerbocker Press Oakland Tribune Sacramento Union South Bend Tribune Star Gazette Elmira New York St Paul Daily News Genealogy com Chicago Daily Times iii The Daily Telegram Adrian Michigan Macon Telegraph Miami Herald Milwaukee Journal New Orleans Item Plain Dealer Cleveland Register Star Rockford Illinois Virginian Pilot Other Long Island Sunday PressNotes and references editNotes edit Robert Herzberg ne Robert Albert George Herzberg 1886 1960 was a German born American painter and illustrator The Dayton Herald carried the supplement on Wednesdays as the Mid Week Screen amp Radio Magazine The Daily Times Chicago carried the supplement on Sundays as the Screen amp Radio Magazine References edit a b Screen amp Radio Weekly Time Vol 25 Part 2 p 55 Retrieved via Google Books snippet view only Detroit Gives Enthusiastic Welcome to Free Press Screen amp Radio Weekly Detroit Free Press April 30 1934 p 4 Retrieved via Newspapers com subscription required Complete Biographical Encyclopedia of Pulitzer Prize Winners 1917 2000 by Heinz Dietrich Fischer Erika J Fischer K G Saur Verlag 2002 ISBN 3 598 30170 7 Martin Douglas DeVeny pp 153 154 On Guard A History of the Detroit Free Press by Frank Angelo Detroit Free Press 1981 p 158 OCLC 7273946 a b Screen amp Radio Weekly review The Writer Vol 52 issue not known 1939 p 384 Retrieved via Google Books snippet view only Rochester s Movie Mania by Donovan A Shilling born 1933 self published 2013 p 38 2013 OCLC 856579424Note Shilling is historian notably on Rochester New York Screen amp Radio Weekly Printers Ink Vol 171 issue not known 1935 ISSN 0196 1160 Retrieved via Google Books snippet view only Death Notices Richards Sara Lou Dague Hartford Courant August 18 2001 p B4 Retrieved via Newspapers com subscription required Miss Grace M Barber marriages Detroit Free Press July 10 1921 part 4 p 4 col 7 of 8 top Newspapers com subscription required Grace Barber to Get Award Detroit Free Press February 7 1960 p 10E Newspapers com subscription required A Woman of Words and Fishing Rods by Kay Savage p 1E accessible via Newspapers com subscription required Continued Grace Barber Her 2 Lives Detroit Free Press February 7 1960 p 10E Newspapers com subscription required Jacobsen s Biographical Index of American Artists Artists native to the United States or working in the United States from 1606 to 2002 Vol 2 of 4 Anita Jacobsen ed A J Publications 2002 OCLC 956672085 The Coryell Nursery Growers of High Grade Ornementals 1917 A Designing Young Lady Lillian Templeton Studio Stylist Discusses the Art of Garbing the Garbos by Frank Stanley Nugent New York Times May 19 1935 p 4X Retrieved via New York Times subscription required California and Californians Vol 4 of 4 Rockwell Dennis Hunt PhD ed Lewis Publishing Company 1932 p 533 Sixty Eighth Annual Commencement Northwestern University June 14 1926 pp 13 amp 24 Isabella Taves Miller Joins Look Staff re Look Nebraska State Journal May 28 1942 p 5 Retrieved via Newspapers com subscription required Mrs Isabella Miller Printers Ink Vol 177 issue not known 1936 p 40 ISSN 0196 1160 Retrieved via Google Books snippet view only From the Production Centres In Hollywood re Grace Wilcox Variety Vol 155 No 5 July 12 1944 p 26 a b Deaths Robert Burns White The Times Herald Port Huron Michigan August 26 1969 p Sec A p 5 accessible via Newspapers com subscription required Radio Editors of Newspapers in the United States and Canada Broadcasting combined with Broadcast Advertising 1936 Year Book Number Broadcasting Publications Inc Startled Miss Sloan Reads Own Murder Mystery Tale Reviewer Finds Out How She Died book review by Betty Sloan Detroit Free Press May 12 1935 part 3 Arts Section p 13 accessible via Newspapers com subscription required Re The Murder of Miss Betty Sloan by Sidney Clark Williams 1878 1949 D Appleton Century Company 1937 OCLC 20879866 Joins NBC Robert White with portrait photo Detroit Free Press September 19 1937 p 19 col 6 of 8 Retrieved via Newspapers com subscription required Front Office Robert Burns White Broadcasting October 9 1950 p 50 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Screen 26 Radio Weekly amp oldid 1136382710, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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