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Show BY INEZ GERHARD WENDELL COREY, "hotter than a two-dollar pistol" at the moment, can have just about anything any-thing he wants in Hollywood, but is so experienced an actor and so wise a young man that he knows how to take only what's best for him. Currently seen in Paramount's WENDELL COREY "Thelma Jordan," he was lent out for "No Sad Songs for Me," soon to be released. He was lent again for the coveted role opposite Lana Turner in her comeback, "A Life of Her Own," but turned it down. After his recent visit to New York he and Mrs. Corey planned going home via New Orleans. "But I hear my son asked, 'When's Daddy coming com-ing home?' he said. "So I guess I'll skip it." Ray Milland inherits the role Corey turned down in M-G-M's "A Life of Her Own," right back wnere he made "Payment Deferred" De-ferred" 19 years ago and was fired immediately afterward. He says it took him six days to make scenes he should have done in two. His new Paramount deal calls for six pictures in six years, giving him time to make outside films like this one. "Father of the Bride" was finished fin-ished at Metro a few weeks ago and work on a sequel, "Now I'm a Grandfather" was begun immediately. immedi-ately. "Father," in which Elizabeth Eliza-beth Taylor stars, will be released soon after her marriage. "Operation. Good Samaritan, Samari-tan, a series of programs produced pro-duced by Church World Service, Serv-ice, Inc., is being aired by radw stations throughout the country. The programs dramatic dramat-ic y describe the work of this religious overseas relief agency 1 aiding those m other countries who are still hungry, hopeless or homeless in the w,t l' War- They are weU worth hearing. Bw" Ca.ry n7Ttarred as "Mr. such HnffS' ,Wh0 buUt 8 h"se with thb . Ty-he Uttle toew hat one o, - w h6 WUld be "-building evervtv,- iettlng him supervise Z7 , incIudinS re-decora- Pertn e'he 'hat 811 the ex" the nip? 6 gained whi'e making reat" qualifi" "im this |