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1968 Guest is Henry Ringling North – 1968

They keep it light and lively— 1968 Guest is Henry Ringling North in their own words. Oh, well, I won’t start being reminiscent But the other night Joe and I took our youngsters and we went down to the opening of the circus Ringling brothers Barnum and Bailey down at the amphitheater And you know you just sort of get swept up in nostalgia and watching these kids and very adult people too Who just work themselves to death then afterwards? So we want everybody to join in today My mother used to spend her summers in bearaboo when she was a little girl And so she was rather blasé about circus stuff, you know when I was a kid I had to fight to get to go to the circus because she just sort of thought everybody does But we’re we’re fascinated and have been for so long and we take our children up to bearaboo to the circus world museum Well, probably once a year just to see that and sort of keep in touch Do you ever get to bearaboo anytime the circus is playing near there when we’re in Madison or Well, I generally when we run from Minneapolis to Chicago. I was born here in Chicago But just because mother wanted to have me in the hospital and I was brought up in Baraboo between Baraboo and Sarasota, Florida What was it like?

[Listen / Download](https://www.bellairs.org/wp-content/uploads/OnTheGo/1968/Mal_and_Jo_are_on_the_go_1968_Guest_is_Henry_Ringling_North.mp3)

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1969 Gourmet Society – 1969

Here’s one from the stack—easygoing and chatty: 1969 Gourmet Society in their own words. Joe and I are members of a gourmet society. The name of our society is La Société pour la cuisine international This allows us to eat at all sorts of restaurants, not just French restaurants And I’m going to talk to each member and see what he or she has gotten out of this thing. One thing that I particularly remember is the turbo at the press club That was one of the most outstanding dishes I’ve ever had in my life.

[Listen / Download](https://www.bellairs.org/wp-content/uploads/OnTheGo/1969/Mal_and_Jo_are_on_the_go_1969_Gourmet_Society.mp3)

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1969 Ivanhoe Theatre and The Corn is Green – 1969

Think street‑level and spontaneous— 1969 Ivanhoe Theatre and The Corn is Green in their own words. And now, Mal and Joe are on the go to the theatre, and to the theatre that is giving me little goosebumps these days, because in my opinion, this is the best theatre in the city of Chicago. And George Keithley, I believe, is one of the finest director producers in not only Chicago, but in this country. We went out to Aaron Davies Welsh Presbyterian Church out on the west side of Chicago.

[Listen / Download](https://www.bellairs.org/wp-content/uploads/OnTheGo/1969/Mal_and_Jo_are_on_the_go_1969_Ivanhoe_Theatre_and_The_Corn_is_Green.mp3)

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1969 Cabaret – 1969

Here’s one from the stack—easygoing and chatty: 1969 Cabaret in their own words. We did now It’s only got two three weeks left So we saw it the other night went backstage to say hello to Melissa Hart Who’s an old friend from around these parts lots of friends She went to school here was at Northwestern in second city and we enjoyed the show very much I had not read the book or seen the play before, you know, it’s based on I am a camera and has to do with Germany before Hitler took over this also as a period in history that I never really studied very much about did you I was a little boy And I wasn’t aware of the the great pangs and struggled at Germany was going through well I don’t think any of us here were I don’t think it was ours to study It seemed very unimportant and had anybody realized the importance of it Maybe Hitler wouldn’t have taken over and I think that’s the whole picture that cabaret presents and perhaps it has a sort of message for us Sure, but it is that feeling that life was so gay in Berlin Everybody was having so much fun and if the name Hitler or if a swastika armband appeared people almost tried not to notice They just didn’t want to be bothered because life was a cabaret There’s only one moment of violence and yet being just the one small moment it tremendously symbolic the shop of The Jewish gentleman the middle age to elderly Jewish gentlemen There was a brick thrown through a window and I I got the the tremendous Impact of what was to come in a way you’re in a way looking down on all those little people on that little globe and watching them Struggle and you could get the feeling of the terrible things that were to happen in Germany I like the show I don’t think I would recommend it for the entire family because since it does show Like the rise and fall of the Grecian Empire the Roman Empire when the world gets into a stage where Men are slobs women don’t care about themselves and just a complete mess in the country It doesn’t make for the kind of theater that I would want a small child see do we agree? Yes, I agree I think however that it in this particular show It is in its place that the authors were attempting to show us that the German people The society as a whole was sliding downhill some In contrast to the moment of violence at the end of the first act when they sang tomorrow belongs to me You got the great feeling of this pulling together of the young band of Nazis Who? Invited to a party that was not Nazi still all of a sudden this song drew them together and You saw the power of the youth in that country at that time Yeah, I think the most exciting thing of all for Chicagoans is to see Melissa Hart in the show however and everybody got to go See it just for that reason alone because a Sally Hart as we’ve known her and it’s I think is the name She used at second city is just such a delight to watch on stage.

[Listen / Download](https://www.bellairs.org/wp-content/uploads/OnTheGo/1969/Mal_and_Jo_are_on_the_go_1969_Cabaret.mp3)

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1969 Tip Pyle is guest (9 min) WBBM – 1969

This one drops you right into their day— 1969 Tip Pyle is guest (9 min) WBBM in their own words. But they soon settled down after takeoff, and they became rather playful because we had a row of seats for human beings and people who were accompanying the elephants. Well, we did manage to train one of them for the beginning of her circus career. In the bright sunshine, they appear to glitter and sparkle as if they were covered with neon lighting all over.

[Listen / Download](https://www.bellairs.org/wp-content/uploads/OnTheGo/1969/Mal_and_Jo_are_on_the_go_1969_Tip_Pyle_is_guest_(9_min)_WBBM.mp3)

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1969 Serbian Club in Chicago – 1969

This one drops you right into their day— 1969 Serbian Club in Chicago in their own words. Are you the owner of the Serbian Club? We have a big crowd. Fifteen years we have Serbian club.

[Listen / Download](https://www.bellairs.org/wp-content/uploads/OnTheGo/1969/Mal_and_Jo_are_on_the_go_1969_Serbian_Club_in_Chicago.mp3)

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1969 Guest Stanley Randall of Ontario Canada – 1969

Short, warm, and very much 1969— 1969 Guest Stanley Randall of Ontario Canada in their own words. So Mal and Joe are on the go, and this is not exactly the usual trip to Canada, wherein we look at lakes and trees and maybe go through Toronto and take the Queen’s Highway, maybe over to Quebec City, which is one of our favorite spots. Randall, who is Ontario Minister of Trade and Development. Randall was elected Progressive Conservative Member of the Ontario Legislature in 1963, re-elected in October 1967.

[Listen / Download](https://www.bellairs.org/wp-content/uploads/OnTheGo/1969/Mal_and_Jo_are_on_the_go_1969_Guest_Stanley_Randall_of_Ontario_Canada.mp3)

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Plentywood Farm in Bensenville Illinois – July 21, 1968

They keep it light and lively— Plentywood Farm in Bensenville Illinois in their own words. about a restaurant now it’s called Plentywood Farm it’s in Bensonville this is in my opinion the most under advertised restaurant I’ve ever seen because as you drive down or up church street you almost won’t even see the little road that ducks back into it and yet each year thousands and thousands of people find their way to Plentywood Farm so there has to be a reason and I think we’ve gotten several of those reasons well anchored if we concentrate on it for a minute well I think the biggest reason is probably that it’s still family owned and operated and very carefully supervised by um Mrs. Howell that’s Katie that’s Katie yes this is Catherine Howell you’re speaking formally she opened the restaurant her first restaurant in 1932 right in the midst of a very bad depression and nobody thought it was seed and it did so fantastically well her husband had to quit his job and take over as manager and it was a log cabin and it was a very charming log cabin and we went there before they built a new restaurant oh now they have this great big restaurant but feeling is still the same because they’ve used several rooms instead of one big dining room you still have the sort of cozy friendly feeling and you’re greeted at the door by one of the Howells that would be either Pete or Sandy or their wives yes again the family feeling and Katie Howell stays in the kitchen and supervises all of the food as it goes to the tables I think undoubtedly a word is due to their chef you can’t talk about a restaurant without mentioning a chef he’s the backstage manager who gets not too much of the glory but by golly if he doesn’t have the kitchen well disciplined in a rather fatherly friendly way nothing’s going to happen out front his name is Aragonte he is one of the finest chefs in the whole world and yet he has found his niche his way of life in this atmosphere of the family rather than in a huge hotel or a fancy downtown complex which is an interesting approach to his personality yes and Aragonte spends much of his time training young men to be chefs they have kitchen help there from the nearby high school and I think now also from a junior college who work under Aragonte and learned to be hallowed chefs, vegetable chefs, beef chefs, sauciers and I think this is is a very interesting thing because there are young men who would like to go into this profession and very little opportunity for them to I first met Plentywood Farm it must have been oh 10-12 years ago when I was working for the Bowman Dairy Company and I was with the Bowman people and we were out one day traveling through the dairy farms of western and northwestern Chicago land and we stopped for lunch at this particular restaurant the reason we stopped is that Plentywood Farm was one of the early users of Bowman products and they were all very good friends so we went into this fascinating old log cabin type restaurant with the plank floors and they had a great collection of piggy bank I’m a nut about people who collect things anyway so we met the halls at that time shortly after that we heard the rumor that they were going to enlarge and build a new building and the architectural work of the building is just unbelievable it has a kind of Japanese feel it has a stream that runs all the way through the interior of the restaurant so wherever you sit you are either looking out a window on green grass and trees or you’re looking right into a little stream with fresh water and bubbling waterfalls it’s the most conducive feeling for working up an appetite you’ve ever seen short of being out in the mountain so yes Plentywood is open for both lunch and dinner it’s open every day of the week but Monday and lunch is run about two dollars and that includes everything appetizer and dessert you saw and dinners range a dollar or two higher but again it is a complete dinner with appetizer and fabulous desserts things like apple crisp a la mode with cinnamon ice don’t you dare go to Plentywood farm without trying that for your dessert you’ll do other things in subsequent visits but you’ve got try that apple crisp with cinnamon ice cream one interesting point for parents who like to take children out for dinner there’s a very very good family atmosphere there’s plenty of space the waitresses are all very very polite and there is no cocktail bar you may have a drink at the table but they have never put in a bar as such and this again keeps family feelings the rest they really cater like mad to all the people in the western suburbs many of the companies have their annual dinners get-togethers and since they’re quite close to O’Hare international airport many of the pilots and the pilots associations and the airlines have all kinds of things there so look for the sign very carefully when you come down church street or as I say you’ll miss it but there’s a big parking lot inside and you’ll go away with a very comfortable feeling and oh yes they have my statue right at the front door oh come now what do you mean oh come now so you happen to be Scottish you’re not Robert Burns I still say he looks the way I wish I looked you can check that out and see the statue right at the door as you go in to Plenty Wood Farm

[Listen / Download](https://www.bellairs.org/wp-content/uploads/OnTheGo/1968/Mal_and_Jo_are_on_the_go_072168_Plentywood_Farm_in_Bensenville_Illinois.mp3)

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