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Jill ens PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU Established 1888 SAN FRANCISCO Los Angeles - Portland Las Vegas,. Nevada Review ^Jb^rnal (Cir. 9,662) LAS VEGAS HONEYMOON ?╟÷ Amon C#ter Jr., Fort Worth newspaper executive, and his new brnw, the former George Ann Brown of Ft. Worth are shown atlrhe Sandsswhere they are spending their honeymoon following their recent marriage. $m T&JmW^Xov "Tjjjhss Sadie bSbfi'T^^f^ffi'in^ip id date bears^ligB^Min." . j my ^i&rljlijlett'is on hejftoes for "On M)ur ltoesv at Warn#s. fflMe^rjkrestartsJfhe Blue Godless," wi$h Rgg Skelton, :Wm&-:. iiponth butAdmphe Menjoug^ft ayaUable this round and he'll bere- fSjlaced^^'g 11 The reason Bing Crosby won'?·fj|f for Donald Q'Conor as teammate $a "White Christmas" is that he thinks Don too young to be his wolf mate.... But dapper Dan Dailey's okay. Kirk Douglas wrtes that he feels] better adjusted in Europe-~"but! don?t worry, my peasant blood is too thick and I don't think Europe can thin it." Wonder what he) meant. , Fred MacMurray||Oj|Bnmg nett, in his new *T ?╜|m tile Law" batch of video films. ^ British Screaming The British are screaming-^andi English Equity in particular ?╟÷ at) j Mel Ferrer playing King Arthur in H THE ORIGINAL ^ ?√ß?√ß PRESS CLIPPINGS ?√ß?√ß Tel. CHelsea 3-8860 Cir. (D 280,77*} (S 499,081) j This CUppvngFrom PITTSBURGH, PA. PRESS Jtolltfwood * * * De Mille Honored With Griffith Award * * * By HEDDA HOPPER kor was given a dinnerTfe^JS **"' and AdolP* Zu Mille came into his own H?7 t &g??' Now Ce<* D< ceive the D. w. GrS Wf the first dire^or to re- kh-eh Wellman directs.MSJ .Brasselle is motoring ^thw3 t^S? f?dle Cantor Story.'11 Ja>vt^S^e00KkSVS &e Mille's pictures eluding wSamsPo?╟? and'DelL^ a?╜n attendance was 144a mo ?╟≤?╟≤?╟≤ making ?? tetof ?╟?i ?????╟≤?√ß S p1?Sce?╜o?e "^'S Nowttth"! my.con?╜b?╜tion. : fry. Sa^^i/in Las is put^go?╜ the dog *& Woo *thJ^mti,AiKSFkI?╜.?,}????**5? II. *"?╜ks iiKe -r.at the local editor ushers dinner at the I -otel next Friday nitrht f?╜ttn-s band,ySe I v?╜SMa Mayn, Kay w^et^sf'the*gaLwh6j wants to quit pictures n?Σ≤ feireshmg as a sumifeer h SSfsiS^^^^ ??Kffl,:,thas#??| girls dWt Lv/f^W* t^Hf.hJ ?Σ≤*d for ?? S^ffj her girls did,fay/* ?√ß?╜* <i those U.^ ?Σ≤gj Pto wl Alfalfa Swectzer-Ref raotheraJ*?╜MJd Judy bought herlj RTHE ORJG/AML 1 OMEIKF PRESS CUPPINGS ?√ß?√ß 220 W. 19th St., NEW YORK 11 NY Tel. CHelsea 3-8860 ' ROfttiKp PRESS CLIPPINGS mm 220 W. 19th st?╟? NEW YORK 11, N.Y. Tel. CHelsea 3-8860 Cir. (D 4,107) Cir. (D 62,277) {S 67,682} This Clipping From. CANTON, OHIO REPOSITORY This Clipping From- UPPER SA&USKY, OHIO' CHIEf-UNION FEB *} ~ IvJW fWNOTEBOOK ress and TV star Talflah lead has been engjuggll to Tallulah, who jpver has Splayed a night clujpFbefore, will be getting $2^0 weekly for a three-weekjtm; What kind of act she'll do jtfynot been determined, but iLJTOD probably be somewhat far t<*$aff Video show on "All Star Revue^ Hal Roam Studios which handle many TV-flKaftied shows, estimate that they 4ijb now turning out more footage 1l|m the movie studios, MGM and 20th-Fox, combined. The |company films "My Little Margie," "Trouble With Father," "Racket Squad," "Amos 'n' Andy," "Life ,of Riley," "Abbott and Costello," |"I Am the Law," "Beulah" a n d "Mystery Theater." U NO PRIMROSE PATH FOR PAT Film Star's Stage Doc^B&^vs By MEt HEIMER Central Press Staff Writer Hp^P-%4 jmyV YORK?╟÷To the parents of the nation, who may be upset vyhen their beautiful daughters tell them flatly they are going to*New York to become.ahowg&ls* Patricia Hardy has a message: relax. Thfe lowel^ young dolls are not going to Hades on a sled. These days the fair Patricia, 112 pounds of blue-eyed Irish girl*, is by way of being a movie star, having been given that billing in her first film* Girls in the Night. Howevje^/lt was lesa than, a year ago that she was dancing in the chorus lines at the celebrated Gojaacabangt' on East ??0th streets To hear Pat tell it, she was- S0p& fkom sin there than she was at home. "In the first place," she says with a grin, "th* gjtels\ a*fe< not att strumpets7 ou marijuana addicts; I danced at the Copa for almost three years and thought the other girls in the line were fine. Five of us became very close friends. Of the five, two of us ara in pictures now and the other three are married, two of them being mothers. "We behaved as well as if not better than any young girls of our age. And even if we had been 'wild ones,' we'd never have had a chance to do anvpto^w^^round the Ctopa^fgjjJ--"' iTTER, w^ man* Ihe club during Palp -yearaf ere (he's now head c^JjnWavisft* new Sanda hoteljn Lajfsregas) not only i?epl Ule gTrls^Une but he protected them^^he extent of driving son^^Fthem home at night. ^pN^^lv^sed me safe and sou^^^lny aunt in HqJHsj %$''jjj$ maly-a morning," Pa&dfe^i 4#? Clares. ^^^^ '^JSllp* "You ka^w, we weren't allowed to sit w^i the customers in the club, either unless it was somebody like a mother or father. You had to get permision from Jack to sit with them, too." The eloaest Pat Hardy seems I to have come to leading a, sinful life happened b e f o r e her Copa | days. That was wheiv she told a ! flat lie?╟÷atthoug&eOj#piBtty* pure I wjiite c?╜^-about her age, saying ?╟≤. she was 18 instead of 17, so she could get an elevator operator's job in tMrlioew's New York Thea- | ter bjrf^cngf whjeh is full of people | in show and model business* H'V^'i>. 8k$?║?· ?╟≤* * PAT FIQCREP the r|gkt people i would look at her daily and Wal- j ter Thornton, the model man and 1 definitely one of the right people, j did. He signed her. The next closest approach to sin that Pat has made was in the [advertising for Girls in the Night. "Looking for love in tha shadows!" 'read the lurid ads. "Buying dreams .'with casual kisses!" Actually, Pat Patricia Hardy .. played a good-girl part in the movie, some of whieh was made right, in- her old home town of New: York. BrooklyarboEH Miss? Hardy has a whole slew of beauty-contest vifc- tories behhsd her. She was "Miss Victory" in a Brooklyn movie-house competition, "Miss Coney Island," "Miss Brooklyn" and "Miss Press Photographers Beauty of 1952." .The film critics in New York provfe a little tougher to conquer; afteippiey had seen Girls in the Wi^^#ttieyr?╜amceded Pat's a$EEsteK tiveness but '^ggested mildly that she had a llltle Way to go before qualifying, g&^-.actress. ) She mea^l^%o'that' Uttle way, too. She rdfams m Hollywood with Donna Lee J^%ey,.:one of jher four close Copa girlfriends of several years ago, ananSbre, is working hard dally tofmaster *hw?½|Ea?Θ╝re. "Only thing is," she says sadly, "I'm ter* ribly lonesome for my family."