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Bob1370
Guest
Source; New York Times. 3/24/40
W2XBS, Channel 1 (44-50 mHz) (experimentally licensed predecessor of present-day WNBC channel 4)
Sunday, March 24th
11:30AM – Protestant Easter service, Dr. Samuel McCrea Cavert, officiating; Westminster Choir, directed by Dr. John Finley Williamson.
12:00PM – Fifth Avenue Easter parade, at Fiftieth Street.
12:30PM – Roman Catholic Easter service, the Rt. Rev. Mgr. Fulton J. Sheen, officiating; Paulist Choristers, directed by Father William J. Finn.
3:00-3:30PM – Rockefeller Center Choristers, directed by John R. Jones, in an Easter concert at Rockefeller Center Plaza.
3:30-5:00PM – Film, “King of Kings.” Cecil B. DeMille’s production.
8:30-9:30PM – Pages and guides on Broadway, a minstrel show; also televues picture contest.
Monday, March 25th
No programming scheduled
Tuesday, March 26th
No programming scheduled
Wednesday, March 27th
3:30-4:30PM – Films, “Aesop’s Fables”; “Fighting Trooper,” with Kermit Maynard.
6:45-7:00PM – News, Lowell Thomas (simulcast with NBC Red radio network)
8:30-9:30PM – Digest of news events in March.
9:30-9:45PM – Television reporter.
Thursday, March 28th
3:30-4:30PM – Films, “Florida’s Golden Harvest,” an industrial short; “Yankee Doodle Goes to Town”; “Natchez,” a travelogue.
6:45-7:00PM – News, Lowell Thomas (simulcast with NBC Red radio network)
8:30-9:30PM – To be announced.
Friday, March 29th
3:30-4:30PM – Film, “Thanks for Listening,” with Pinky Tomlin.
6:45-7:00PM – News, Lowell Thomas (simulcast with NBC Red radio network)
8:30-9:30PM – “A Good Place to Visit,” documentary program on the history of a furniture dealer.
Saturday, March 30th
3:00-5:00PM – Baseball: Fordham University vs. St. Peter’s College, at Fordham Field.
7:30-8:00PM – “Art for Your Sake,” Dr. Bernard Myers.
8:30-9:00PM – Carveth Wells, explorer and lecturer, on “Tamest Africa, or Debunking Big Game Hunting.”
9:00-9:30PM – Variety show (hosts, guests not listed)
Sidebars;
The Easter Mass celebrant on March 24, Msgr. Fulton Sheen, becarme one of America's most famous and most admired religious broadcasters after World War II. He was host of the weekly series "Life is Worth Living" on the DuMont and ABC networks between 1951 and 1956, and its revival, "The Bishop Sheen Program," taped at WPIX New York and WOKR in Rochester, NY and seen in over 100 markets weekly in syndication between 1961 and 1970. (The later syndicated program, many episodes of which were taped in color, is still seen in re-runs on the EWTN Catholic cable/satellite network.)
CBS in 1940 also had a New York experimentally licensed TV station, W2XAB (predecessor of WCBS-TV), on what was then Channel 2 (60-66 mHz, now designated channel 3). Unlike NBC, CBS issued little in the way of a published schedule and offered few programs intended for the public on its New York television facility before the start of full commercial operation the next year. It appears to have had no programs announced in advance for Easter Week of 1940. CBS transmissions on W2XAB were more strictly experimental and designed to give CBS technicians and producers experience in preparation for full commercial operation--which came on July 1 of 1941 for both CBS and NBC.
Allen B. DuMont Laboratories, which were already making and selling TV receivers for home use, were also doing experiments and building facilities which would later become experimental W2XWV and eventually commercial WABD on Channel 4 (ultimately Fox flagship WNYW on channel 5). DuMont experimental programming would begin in 1941.
W2XBS, Channel 1 (44-50 mHz) (experimentally licensed predecessor of present-day WNBC channel 4)
Sunday, March 24th
11:30AM – Protestant Easter service, Dr. Samuel McCrea Cavert, officiating; Westminster Choir, directed by Dr. John Finley Williamson.
12:00PM – Fifth Avenue Easter parade, at Fiftieth Street.
12:30PM – Roman Catholic Easter service, the Rt. Rev. Mgr. Fulton J. Sheen, officiating; Paulist Choristers, directed by Father William J. Finn.
3:00-3:30PM – Rockefeller Center Choristers, directed by John R. Jones, in an Easter concert at Rockefeller Center Plaza.
3:30-5:00PM – Film, “King of Kings.” Cecil B. DeMille’s production.
8:30-9:30PM – Pages and guides on Broadway, a minstrel show; also televues picture contest.
Monday, March 25th
No programming scheduled
Tuesday, March 26th
No programming scheduled
Wednesday, March 27th
3:30-4:30PM – Films, “Aesop’s Fables”; “Fighting Trooper,” with Kermit Maynard.
6:45-7:00PM – News, Lowell Thomas (simulcast with NBC Red radio network)
8:30-9:30PM – Digest of news events in March.
9:30-9:45PM – Television reporter.
Thursday, March 28th
3:30-4:30PM – Films, “Florida’s Golden Harvest,” an industrial short; “Yankee Doodle Goes to Town”; “Natchez,” a travelogue.
6:45-7:00PM – News, Lowell Thomas (simulcast with NBC Red radio network)
8:30-9:30PM – To be announced.
Friday, March 29th
3:30-4:30PM – Film, “Thanks for Listening,” with Pinky Tomlin.
6:45-7:00PM – News, Lowell Thomas (simulcast with NBC Red radio network)
8:30-9:30PM – “A Good Place to Visit,” documentary program on the history of a furniture dealer.
Saturday, March 30th
3:00-5:00PM – Baseball: Fordham University vs. St. Peter’s College, at Fordham Field.
7:30-8:00PM – “Art for Your Sake,” Dr. Bernard Myers.
8:30-9:00PM – Carveth Wells, explorer and lecturer, on “Tamest Africa, or Debunking Big Game Hunting.”
9:00-9:30PM – Variety show (hosts, guests not listed)
Sidebars;
The Easter Mass celebrant on March 24, Msgr. Fulton Sheen, becarme one of America's most famous and most admired religious broadcasters after World War II. He was host of the weekly series "Life is Worth Living" on the DuMont and ABC networks between 1951 and 1956, and its revival, "The Bishop Sheen Program," taped at WPIX New York and WOKR in Rochester, NY and seen in over 100 markets weekly in syndication between 1961 and 1970. (The later syndicated program, many episodes of which were taped in color, is still seen in re-runs on the EWTN Catholic cable/satellite network.)
CBS in 1940 also had a New York experimentally licensed TV station, W2XAB (predecessor of WCBS-TV), on what was then Channel 2 (60-66 mHz, now designated channel 3). Unlike NBC, CBS issued little in the way of a published schedule and offered few programs intended for the public on its New York television facility before the start of full commercial operation the next year. It appears to have had no programs announced in advance for Easter Week of 1940. CBS transmissions on W2XAB were more strictly experimental and designed to give CBS technicians and producers experience in preparation for full commercial operation--which came on July 1 of 1941 for both CBS and NBC.
Allen B. DuMont Laboratories, which were already making and selling TV receivers for home use, were also doing experiments and building facilities which would later become experimental W2XWV and eventually commercial WABD on Channel 4 (ultimately Fox flagship WNYW on channel 5). DuMont experimental programming would begin in 1941.