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This Clipped Fr<m CHICAGO, ILL. V,. HERALD-AMEWCAH Louplhi O. Parsons Jane Russell Sought for'Gibson Girl1 Role BV LQtJELLA 0. PASSONS International News Service Motion Picture Editor. HT)LLi~WOOD, June 11?╟÷At ??cfc80n wttfl Jane Ally- UtttL and Dick Powell at their beautiful new home, I had a chance to talk to Dick about his plans at RKO. He says he's reading scripts like raad to try to find a new story. He's all excited about *"]%e <Gibsoft ^Girl" which RMJalf^edy amns. He said t "I'd like to put Jane Russell in 'Gibson Critt'^-HStt'eM be perfect." 1 "Ye&'d better put me in that pie- tare," June, iratermptedi, "Well, perhaps yon can be in it, tfifb," he told her. Paramount is after June for "Air Foree," a picture soon to start. She's had more o^^s t5lan she can accept, Jbut I believe she'll tU!fft any one of the% down in a minute ii &ick gets a stpsy that's right for her-, Wiife We were at Mnc&eon- June tol4i me that ttftefty Powell, aged 2y2t is going to be in Iter fi&ttate and play Glenn Milter's littte boy. Ife says one w^pa, "baby," and boy, feow he says it. | JUNE AIAYSON *k -fa -fc YESTERDAY I TOLD "StWJ ?Θ╝ary <k*fct was being sought for both "Saferitlit Fair" and Judy Garland's picture, "A Star Is Bc*ft." &a&^" | ISfew f can tell^yoU Judy gets Caryt Remember how . good he was in "Bachelor and tie Bobby-Soxer" witkS^tr- tey temple? Well, t think heanid Judy will be excellent, and I am ^lad for her. A&d that reality ii^Jud^ was at Romanofl^ lor din- iief a few nights ago wilft Sid Lnft and she hasn't been as ?i?║&a. If* ytears nor as WellL ZSA ZSA GABOR may .fee amoisg the missing (she JJMBPt 3e?╜t sh??wn T$b Sa f$^J|prk) but her sister, Eva, ar- Model" for American Pictures Corporation. . Eva isn't volunteering any information about Zsa Zsa aiflt the ruhiors that Zsa Zsa and Por!Kt*o Rubirosa are made for each other, but she has quite??a Mt tff flSSiWs afemit W8E0&L When Eva finishes "Pari% ^Ecxid" she retUJ*ns to New. Yfirk to start rehearsals in "Sailor's Delight" for the ^Theater GuiM. Before it goes into ttew York it will open at Dennis and Westport. BOB MIfCHUM WOULD |???·E to be ofSdjifiy loM ftiat he's to play opposite Marilyn Monrofe in "Rivj^r t>f No Return." fwiP^i He likes the idea of going to A$feria?? Canada* on location hecause there's fishing them, Ikit until p?║*?╜ officially told he refuses to say whethdf *??r not he's going to malte movie leve to Marilyn. J ''Sir T He's net pouting and not objecting to t!toe Monroe pfo> tare?╟÷he just wants to be told.'! 11 EVERYONE AROIIND the Bevesiy Hill's" fifetei is fifing a big kick out of the activities of Father James Keller . of the d&tstopher movement, acting just ftfte a movie director shooting scenes 3er %is coaling TV sho^;??h the terrace. Yesterday Fat^f wasB,^4gng ,?Θ╝iil^lie ITarrell, Harpo Marx and Pat 0*?Σ≤en through^l^r, acting paces for his flayer's the-H^inPI "^ jgot a laugh wfotto WP$||d te Ms actors: ??4t up. We arl||^m church, series called "The J Father Kellerl "Now boys, J y<^y||M)w." MARLENE DlffiR^H IS BACK in Holtywooo%fter having had the time fflSe%*43| helping Tallulah Banl&ead at her closing ishow at^^Saa^fe ?·**"?·s*s VegWs. Tallumn- vited Marlene up, on the ^^^v^th, her a^l^e two glls "sang" a duet ot "La Vie En^fljjjte'/fcis it V^. -never supg before. mhk ?√ß-k&^^^toaa*-. ''"'"Jl__L Good or bad?╟÷Jack Entra?╜*f hasc^iili^^lpi^i a night dub stint at $30,000 per week st^gtinfc. ih October?╟÷ and she's going to accept jf *$$tese Lasf!feegas salaries get higher and higher, .^^^^'^WrW> Meanwhile, glamorous 'w&l$h^??║$8&' to London in August to make a film of Teir^ace J$atftgan's new play> as yet untitled. ^ )fgp^ That's "all today. See you tomorrow! ?╜?╜^^ Hear L^ouella Pttrsona Tuesdays $&JSh!g. in,, on WBBUft*^ i___^_\ Jill _____________________ mS PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU Established 1888 San Francisco Portland - Seattle Chicago, HI. Sun & Times (Cir. 842,547) 19S3 KUP'S COLUMN w HOW SOVIET propaganda behind the Iron Curtain played a role in his "flight for freedom" was related by Lt. Franciszek Jarecki, the Polish jet flier, over a chance dinner meetinsr with Col. Francis Gabreski, America's leading ace with 33 enemy planes shot down during World War II and 6Y2 MIG-15s to his credit in Korea. Lt. Jarecki was dining in Hotel Sherman's Porter House with Charles Rozmarek of the Polish National Alliance and Aid. and Mrs. Joseph S. Gillespie (29th), .when Col. Gabreski happened by. Aid. Gillespie recognized the tf.S. hero and introduced him to Lt. Jarecki. THEN COL. GABRESKI, born of Polish ancestry, and Lt. Jarecki, the native Pole, conversed animatedly in their common tongue. Jarecki, in discussing: his escape, told how he often had seen huge propaganda posters in Poland, depicting a huge U.S?? air base at nearby Bornholm Island off Denmark. The poster showed an American GI, with $ signs in his cap (to depict American imperialism) holding a young girl' under his arm by force (to depict American bestiality.) The caption under this poster was designed to give the impression that the U.S. lias ringed Soviet countries with huge airports and is ready to launch i^Bombing attack at the first sign of war. WHAT IMPRESSED JARECKI was the picture on the propaganda! poster of the huge airport on Denmark's Bornholm Island, only 67J ??sfeteiLii&sL^s& miles, or about 11 minutes in his MIG-15, from the! Polish boundary. Jarecki previously had planned on! making his escape,-but where to land his jet plane] had been a major problem. The poster helped himi make up his mind. But Soviet propaganda, he learnetu to his dismay, almost ruined his "flight for freedom."! For, instead of the huge U.S. airport as shown onj the posters, all Jarecki sighted on Bornholm Island! was a tiny grass-covered, emergency airstrip, hardly I the site on which to land a jet. RACING AT TERRIFIC JET SPEED (he esti- ^^ mated it at 680 m.p.h.), the puzzled Pole had to make a split-second decision. Various thoughts flashed through his mind: He didn't have enough fuel to continue on to another airstrip; he couldn't turn back to Poland, for that would mean certain death. In his jumbled emotions he found one ray of happiness: A huge airstrip, as pictured in the posters, would have meant fighter planes on the base and these conceivably might have intercepted and shot him down before he could land and explain his flight. AS THESE THOUGHTS RACED through his mind, Lt. Jarecki found himself doing automatically what he planned to do originally-scorning in for a landing. Only by dint of what he called luck /l^^t Gabreski termed it "superb skill") was Jarecki able to skid hisM^&^ onto th^ tiny air fieldfand bring it to a halt. As he recalled his^^c^ft- ing experience, Lt. Jajecki couldn't help laughing over how he^d the Soviet propaganda for painting such a false picture of the '%tige U.S. air base on Bornholm Island." { 4112*1 ..THE TWO JiXJGE2B&TAlJ^D_ATifeBaSrGTH about the cpmpa:g|*ge LT. FRANCISZEK JARECKI .'ifteaiq BAipeju? moK 0}.q4q$jr: SuiqsiiHj--'kta sppe jo/vei} juiuiC^K 8ujijsajiaj jo uoijob )uej3eij"L_y ' -S3|3!)jed pooj Suisneo-jopo S3AOU19N -M3M0 (\oK se IU99J ??^J suB9|o uogoe uinS-SiiiMaifo ?·?║ ?√ßSuborns pue aimjuup 'Sujjea o; onp sjopo sioj^uoq -iijeajq ??P^ su9}39ms uoi}oe ||Aijdojo|i|3 {^ ?╟≤3n8uoj pajeoa-eugpeq Xq pasneo lueajq peq S5)03ij3 ' _ -SUJJ38 lunoiu jo %o,6 oi dnVjl jtibs>|3ou>t uoipe 3i;dasi}uy U ijteaia peg sdojs uoj)3v abm ?√ß} wnavao ??do3soJ3iw o Japun uaas Buof Aoq |l\^^pl ^ l|fD3Jg I33MS 'UD9J3 JOB iTCnO'VtfO I "SJU33 z/x \ JOJ 9DU3pgU03-Jj4i qjioAV sxejiop uoifliui b j'alJ ?╟≤J3J39AVS aq }tupjrioD qj^sjq jy ?╟≤JSTOUI Xj}BESB3jd ^BOJqj fl qjnoui jnoX sdas^ KHO#Vb ?╟≤spooj 44Aoids?╟? jaqjo io orlj RTHE ORIGiNal OME-Kf PRESS CtlPPIK^C 220 W. 19*h St., NEW YORE: Tel. CHelsea 3-88601 If. y. Cir. (O 5,219} This Clipping From v fILM DAILY NEW YORK, N. Y. U HOLLVUIOOD-VinE VARD By ETHEL ROSEN ?√ß ?╟≤?╟≤:--^j|BFANf' ,.to if^jimiay next HOY ROWLAND, accompantgo* by his wife, has left via mofwr on across country^trip to New York where he will attend the world premiere of Stanley Kramer's production for Columbia's "5,000 Fingers of Dr. T" which he directed. ... -^ John Wayne heads for Mexico City, as soon as his domestic affairs are cleared away, to join company waiting there to start nrodMetm|i_^'n the Wayne-Fellows picture, "Hondo," igjj^ifarring QJoWi^e Page. John Farrow wil direct. Jf. . -jf jahe \Vyftoan is very seriously 'c^nsidjpng several n|S|ft club offers for the Summer | ^'montffil, sh^Jias been offerid two weeks at the j Sands|_Las Vegas,! and an e/gagement at the Pal- ?√ß ladiilfn in London. Miss Wynnan's latest films soon to be pleased, "So' Brgf^foryWarners, and "Let's Do 1^ AgaftV'- Columbiadf^T y^- June Allyson who starts in abol^s^WQ.)w^^ji<^-rU-ll where she will be co-. starred with -jimmy Stewart in "The Glenn Miller Story," is being wooed by F. Hugh Herbert to retui season for the leadi in his new show "A. Girl Can ^L"^.^|3L', -^Vic Damone goes into the Paramount the first tvtyj weeks, in June; June $5 'he opens at the Chicago TE||ter; and July 15 at the UJJaiMSoo, Las Vegas, accompanied by that young genius, Burt Bachrach, at the piano. i * * ^ A LAN LADD will combine a vacation with his p.a. tour of eight European cities, to plug "Shiafe." He recently completed ^H^lrBelow ^ro" for Warwick Productions, .^i,;. ^ Mel Ferrer will make one stage appearance at the Empire Theater, London, Coronation Eve, with a special showing of "Lili." . . . -fc Edmund O'Brien is doing a series of fotfr lecfflres at the Pasadena Playhouse on "Shakespeare, leaves1 June 26, on raEfca^wur in connection with M-G-M's "Julius Caesar." . ?√ß. .\ i^.Dorrell (Buck) McGowan, now in Rio de Janerio lining up locations and actors for the "Girl From Rio" which he'll produce, has signed Milton Ribeiro, one of South America's top actors, for one of the leads. McGowan returns this week to cast American players for the Technicolor picture which wi^, be shot entirely in Brazil. i_^_k- * I -THIS WEEK'S PERSONALITY: Mel Epstein, educated, 4>hw?· |^L University at Columbus, O., 'where he\studied engi"fer'rt^ feter'^Watching :1.^.,^,..^-J^,M. *o newspaper reporting and advertising. Came tCf^>Ily- /*$^<Fn&^1931, worked as 'a^'&tna^Jbecame^second assistant director,: then first ?╟≤ assistant. Served for three and a half years with Signal Corps in World War II, assigned to produce and direct training films for the Army. Retunpd to Paraniounftii^rt&^paOTy of unit production manager and first assistant director, and directed shorts with second units. Among the pictures he, produced are WWHispefmgi Smith," "Branded" "Copper Canyon" afjv'T,he Savage." h^f ; ffi'reru wiwifhis camera clew where he is doing pre- production work in "Legend of the Inca" which stars Charlton Heston. 1 R4 - ^M*: I IORMAN TAUROG is inNew York to meet with Bean Mar^i and Jerry Lewis on prospective story material" for their next Paramount picture. While in the East, Taurog will also scout Broadway shows for picture possibilities. . . . -fc Yaaijohnson beir^;sought :b^s2^t??*Fbx for "Tifej^e's No Baftie'ss 'Lifce.; Sh<^" R&siness." .mWf ^ 4^i^Un%:'llecSlnfiplinied by his '^^^ctH^|stafft^|P'over the^^k-end ^OK^i[?ji? loca^on site scoutinf^Lone Pine and ttjsj|j>|yareas for "King unii^iriifliiuTiff' " Tyrone Power starrer which he dir^gmnext for 20th. Scouting tfius far has failed to turn up suitable topography and possibility looms that picture, one of biggest on 20th's next year releasing schedule, may be made on location in the Himalayas, India. EPSTEIN