PAGE 6 THE BATTALION FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 11, 1944 K 1 A M 11:5€ riLCCyLE/ BLUE NETWCEE. FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1944 A. M. 6:00 Sign on. 6:02 Texas Farm & Home Proa:. WTAW 6:15 Sunup Club ..WTAW 7:00 Martin Agronsky— Daily War Journal BN 7:15 Your Life Today BN 7:30 Blue Correspondents BN 7:46 Off the Record ..WTAW 8:00 The Breakfast Club BN 9:00 My True Story BN 9:25 Aunt Jemima BN 9:30 Songs by Kay Armen BN 9:46 Between the Lines ..WTAW 10:00 Breakfast at Sardi’s BN 10:30 Gil Martyn BN 7:15 Your Life Today BN 11:00 Glamour Manor BN 11:15 Meet Your Neighbor BN 11:30 Farm and Home Makers... BN P. M. 12:00 Baukhage Talking BN 12:16 WTAW Noonday News ..WTAW 12:30 Farm Fair ..WTAW 12:45 Little Jack Little BN 1:00 Kiernan’s Corner BN 1:15 The Mystery Chef BN 1:30 Ladies Be Seated. BN 2:00 Songs by Morton Downey. BN 2:15 Hollywood Star Time—RKO BN 2:30 Appointment with Life BN 3:00 Ethel and Albert BN 3:15 Music for Moderns ..WTAW 3:30 Time Views the News BN 3:45 Treasury Star Salute ..WTAW 4:00 Something to Read .1WTAW 4:15 Children’s Story Hour— ..WTAW 4:30 The Sea Hound. BN 4:45 Dick Tracy - BN 6:00 Terry and the Pirates BN 6:15 Hop Harrigan BN 5:30 Jack Armstrong BN 5:45 Captain Midnight. BN 6:00 Kelly’s Courthouse. BN 6:30 Coast Guard Dance Band. BN 7:00 Watch the World Go By.— BN 7:16 Lum ’n’ Abner BN 7:30 Wake Up America BN 8 :00 Wake Up America WTAW 8:30 Sign Off. SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 1944 A. M. 6:00 Sign on. 6 :02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW 6 :15 Sunup Club WTAW 7 :00 News Summary BN 7:15 Arlo at the Organ BN 7:30 United Nations News BN 7:46 Off the Record WTAW 8 :00 The Breakfast Club BN 9:00 Fannie Hurst Presents BN 9:30 Andrini Continentales. BN 9:45 Songs by Jean Tighe BN 10:00 On Stage Everybody BN 10:30 Land of the Lost BN 11:00 News Summary WTAW 11:05 WTAW News WTAW 11:30 National Farm & Home Hr. BN P. M. 12 :00 Report From London BN 12 :15 Trans-Atlantic Quiz BN 12 :30 Swing Shift Frolic BN 12:45 Bunkhouse Roundup BN 1:00 Headline News BN 1:02 Women in Blue BN 1:30 Sez You BN 2:00 Headline News BN 2:02 Twenty One Stars BN 2:30 Eddie Condon’s Jazz Concert BN 3:00 Headline News BN 3:02 Saturday Afternoon Review BN 4:00 Headline News BN 4 :02 Saturday Concert BN 4 :45 Hello, Sweetheart BN 6 :00 Service Serenade BN 6:16 Story land Theatre BN 6 :30 Harry Wismer—Sports BN 6 :45 Leon Henderson BN 6:00 Blue Correspondents Abroad BN 6:16 Leland Stowe—1 BN 6 :30 Music America Loves Best— 7:00 Early Amer. Dance Music.. BN 7:15 Edward Tomlinson BN 7:30 Tanglewood Festival BN 8:15 Sign Off SUNDAY, AUGUST 13, 1944 8:00 Blue Correspondents BN 8:16 Coast to Coast on a Bus BN 9 :00 The Lutheran Hour WTAW 9 :30 The Southernaires — BN 10 :00 Music by Master Composers WTAW 11:00 Weekly War Journal BN 11:80 College Ave. Baptist Church WTAW P. M. 12 :00 John B. Kennedy BN 12:16 Music by Marais— BN 12:30 Sammy Kaye’s Tangee Serenade BN 12:56 News Summary BN 1:00 Old Fash. Revival Hour. WTAW 2:00 Listen, the Women BN 2 :30 Democratic Convention Preview BN 3 :00 Darts for Dough BN 3:30 World of Song BN 4:00 Mary Small Revue BN 4 :30 Hot Copy—O’Cedar BN 5:00 Philco Summer Hour BN 6 :00 Drew Pearson BN 6 :15 Don Gardiner—News....: BN 6:30 Quiz Kids BN 7:00 Greenfield Village Chapel.... BN 7 :15 The Week in Review— Dr. Ralph Steen WTAW 7:30 Keepsakes BN 8:00 Walter Winchell BN 8:15 Sign off. MONDAY, AUGUST 14, 1944 A. M. 6:00 Sign on. 6:02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW 6 :15 Sunup Club WTAW 7 :00 Martin Agronsky— Daily War Journal BN 7:15 Your Life Today BN 7:30 Blue Correspondents BN 7:45 The Humbard Family BN 8:00 The Breakfast Club BN 9 :00 My True Story— 9 :25 Aunt Jemima BN 9 :30 Between the Lines WTAW 9 :45 Air Lane Trio BN 10:00 Breakfast at Sardi’s..... BN 10:30 Gil Martyn BN 10:45 Songs by Cliff Edwards BN 11:00 Glamour Manor BN 11:15 Meet Your Neighbor BN 11:30 Farm and Home Makers BN P. M. 12:00 Baukhage Talking BN 12:15 WTAW Noonday News WTAW 12:30 Farm Fair WTAW 12:45 Little Jack Little BN 1:00 Kiernan’s Corner BN 1:15 Mystery Chef BN 1:30 Ladies, Be Seated BN 2:00 Songs by Morton Downey.... BN 2:15 Hollywood Star Time BN 2:30 Appointment with Life BN 3:00 Ethel and Albert BN 3:15 Music for Moderns WTAW 3:30 Time Views the News BN 3 :45 Economic Problems— Dr. F. B. Clark ;. WTAW 4 :00 Brazos Valley Farm & Home WTAW 4:15 The Vagabonds BN 4:30 Our Singing Stars BN 4 :45 Dick Tracy BN 5:00 Terry and the Pirates....*...... BN 5:15 Hop Harrigan '. BN 5:30 Jack Armstrong BN 5:45 Sea Hound BN 6:00 Horace Heidt BN 6:30 The Lone Ranger BN 7:00 Watch the World Go By BN 7:15 Lum ’n’ Abner BN 7:30 Blind Date BN 8:00 Speaking of Sports WTAW 8:15 Sign off. TUESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1944 A. M. 6:00 Sign on. 6:02 Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW 6:15 Sunup Club .WTAW 7:00 Martin Agronsky— Daily War Journal BN v 7:15 Your Life Today BN 7:30 Blue Correspondents... BN 7:45 The Humbard Family BN 8:00 The Breakfast Club.: BN 9:00 My True Story BN 9:25 Aunt Jemima BN 9:30 Between the Lines ..WTAW 9:45 The Listening Post BN 10:00 Breakfast at Sardi’s BN 10:30 Gil Martyn * BN 10:45 Songs by Cliff Edwards BN 11:00 Glamour Manor BN 11:15 Mid-Morning Melodies ..WTAW 11:30 Farm and Home Makers.... BN P. M. 12:00 Baukhage Talking BN * 12:15 WTAW Noonday News ...WTAW 12:30 Farm Fair ..WTAW 12:40 Bunhouse Roundup ...WTAW 1:00 Kiernan’s Corner BN 1:15 The Mystery Chef BN 1:30 Ladies Be Seated BN 2:00 Songs by Morton Downey.. BN 2:15 Hollywood Star Time—RKO BN 2:30 Appointment with Life BN 3:00 Ethel and Albert BN 3:15 Music for Moderns ...WTAW 3:30 Time Views the News BN 3:45 Know Your State— Dr. Ralph Steen ...WTAW a* 4:00 Brazos Valley F.S.A ...WTAW 4:15 Three Romeos BN 4:30 Something for the Girls... ..WTAW 4:45 Dick Tracy BN 5:00 Terry and the Pirates BN 5:15 Hop Harrigan BN 5:30 Jack Armstrong BN 5:45 Captain Midnight BN 5:46 Sea Hound BN 6:00 Land of the Lost BN 6:30 The Green Hornet BN 7:00 Watch the World Go By... BN 7:16 Lum ’n’ Abner BN W T A W Batt Chat Lingos ladeled out in department stores, steel mills and theatrical booking offices will be translated into proper English by the Savants of Slanguage on WTAW broadcast of the sparkling slang show, Sez You, Saturday, August 12, at 1:30 p. m., CWT. Pitching the patrols of their professions will be Pauline Allen- tuck, department store worker, John Duner, steel mill employee, and Cliff Shaw, theatrical booking agent. The Savants of Slanguage, heard weekly on Sez You, are Clem Lane, Patricia Dougherty and Herb Graf- fis—all of Chicago’s fourth estate. Herb Newcomb is slangmaster of ceremonies and Sam Cowling serves as a punning pundit. The famous Fannie Hurst story, “The Vertical City,” will be drama tized on WTAW broadcast, Fannie Hurst Presents, Saturday, August 12, at 9:00 a. m., CWT. In the drama, a young girl, “Marilyn,” reches for “stars” in the sky and gets them, but not in the way she expected. Marilyn is in love with over-ambitious “Steve Turner,” who sees riches in “The- Vertical City,” while she sees hap piness and beauty. Nancy Douglas will play the role of Marilyn in the drama, which will have Miss Hurst as narrator. The story has been adapted for radio by Sheldon Stark, with ori ginal music by Abe Goldman. Billy Butterfield, the BLUE Network’s trumpet star, will pre sent a sometimes sweet and som- times hot version of “I’m Coming Virginia” on the Philco Summer Hour, with Paul Whiteman and his Radio Hall of Fame orchestra STUDENT CO-OP Bicycle and Radio Repair PHONE 4-4114 and chorus, Sunday, August 13, at 5:00 p. m., CWT, over WTAW. Whiteman’s “Now-andThenner,” in which he plays a tune exactly as he recorded it more than twenty years ago and follows with an up- to-date arrangement, will be Zez Confrey’s “Stumbling,” a hit pa- rader of the F. Scott Fitzgerald- Clara Bow era. Other selections to be presented by the program’s sleepy baritone, Bog Johnstone, its vivacious sing er, Ilene - Woods, and its peppery quartet, Hi, Lo, Jack and the Dame, include “Sweet and Lovely,” “Every Day of My Life,” “Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are,” “Three Cabaleros,” “How Sweet You Are,” “It Had To Be You,” “Forget-Me-Nots In Your Eyes,” “Someday I’ll Meet You Again” and a medley of Johnny Mercer hits. Following her sensational ap pearance on last week’s program, Lee Wiley, George Gershwin’s fav orite songbird, has been made a permanent participant in Eddie Condon’s Jazz Concert beginning with the broadcast of Saturday, August 12, at 2:30 p. m., CWT, over WTAW. Guesting on this week’s jazz riot will be Muggsy Spanies, trum pet burner, as well as that fairly well-known tub thumper, Gene Krupa, who’s been on the last few programs. Nobody knows what he’ll feel like playing yet except that it’s been decided that a new heated tune by Johnny De Vries will be included on the BLUE’s unpredictable program. - When illness recently prevented Songstress Marion Mann from ap pearing on the BLUE Network’s Breakfast Club, Jack Owens, the program’s celebrated Cruising Crooner, offered to sing the ballad that had been scheduled for Ma rion. “But I might have trouble,” said Jack. “The arrangement’s in a girl’s key.” “Don’t try it,” advised Don Mc Neill, m. c. of the Breakfest Club. “A girl’s key will always get you into trouble.” FEATURED ON WTAW Lovely Nancy Martin, velvet voiced songstress on many BLUE Net programs, heads her own show, “Hello, Sweetheart”—a clearing house for melodic mes sages from wives, sweethearts and mothers to men in the armed forces. Nancy was recently hon ored by a nationwide poll of radio listeners by being voted “Best Woman Singer of Popular Sonas.” Anne Rogers, comely newspaper columnist, vows to solve the mys tery enshrouding twelve motorists who have vanished while traveling on the Newville Highway, during the WTAW broadcast of Hot Copy, Sunday, August 13, at 4:30-5:00 p. m., CWT. Accompanied by her secretary Spritely Poole, Anne drives back and forth along the sinister high way, but nothing happens except a smash-up to her car. Going to a near-by house to phone a garage, she and Spritely are trapped by mad Dr. Kleeg, who fancies him self as an excellent surgeon. In a pulse-pounding climax, the insame medico reveals what became of the missing motorists and glee fully prepares the same horrible fate for Anne and Spiritely. Betty Lou Gerson plays the role | of Anne Rogers in the weekly edi tions of Hot Copy, and Virginia Paine portrays Spritely Poole. gied by the boys include “Ama- pola,” “You’re So Good,” “Swing for Sale” and “Somebody Else Is Taking My Place.” Arthur Fiedler will conduct mem bers of the Boston Symphony Or chestra in a concert originating at the Charles River Esplanade, Saturday, August 12, at 7:30-8:30 p. m., CWT, over WTAW. Selections on the program will be the suite from Delibe’s ballet, “Sylvia,” the overture to Thomas’ “Mignon,” the entrance of the guests into the Wartburg from Wagner’s “Tannhauser,” the third movement of Tchaikovsky’s “Pathetique” Symphony, and Strauss’ “Wine, Woman and Song” waltzes. Leon Henderson, a member of the BLUE Networks’s commenta tor corps, will substitute for Bauk hage on the Tatter’s program, Baukhage Talking, from Monday, August 14, through Friday, Au gust 18, at 12:00 p. m., CWT, over WTAW. Baukhage currently on a short vacation, will resume his program on Monday, August 21. “Made In America” is the World of Song’s motto for its guest sing ers, Regina Resnik, soprano, and John Baker, baritone, both featured by the Metropolitan Opera Com pany, who will appear on the pro gram over WTAW, Sunday, Aug., 13, at 3:30 p. m., CWT. Both sing ers were born in the U. S. and re ceived their principal musical edi- cation here. Miss Resniks’ solos are “I Dream Too Much” and “Gianinna Mia”; Baker will sing “Without a Song” and “Picola Zingara.” Wilfred Pel letier’s orchestra will play “Dance Macabre” and the entire company will present the following medley from the “Vagabond King”—“Song of the Vagabonds,” “Someday,” “Valse Huguette,” and “Only a Rose.” Testifying to the skill of their pedagogues, the Four Vagabonds will carol “I Learned a Lesson I’ll Never Forget” on WTAW, Monday, August 14, at 4:15-4:30 p.m., CWT. Other ballads to be boogie-woo- Anyone who’s awakened, after having dreamed of suddenly ac quiring a lot of money, to the dis couraging reality of the sarrie bank balance he had the night be fore, will wish he was the sub ject of one of Keepsakes chorus songs, “The Man Who Broke The Bank at Monte Carlo,” to be heard * on WTAW, Sunday, August 13, at 7:30 p. m., CWT. Accompanied by Tom Jones’ or- - chestra, Dorothy Kirsten, soprano, * and Mack Harrell, baritone, will be heard in two duets, “A Little White House At the End of Honeymoon - Lane” and “Ah, Sweet Mystery of » Life.” Miss Kirsten’s solos will be “Lover” and “The Asra.” and Har- . rell will sing “The Sunshine of Your Smile” and “Song to the Eve ning Star.” Janet Planner is to be featured - as a guest on her own show. Listen The Women, over WTAW on Sun day, August 13, at 2:00 p. m., CWT. This is the second time Miss Planner has reversed her role on the program. The present object being to familiarize listeners with the broadcast, and especially with Miss Flanner, she is participating in the discussions on the show instead familiarize listerners with the mistress of ceremonies. Dr. Margaret Mead will take over as guest mistress of cere- • monies. The council is to include Miss Janet Flanner, Mrs. Thyra^ Sampler Winslow, Dean Thompson of Vassar, and Aunt Daisy Bashan, * top woman entertainer x of the New Zealand radio. —AGGIES— (Continueci from pag6 1) all-Texas meeting of the club were Hauser, Lt. Col. Don C. Sandison, San Antonio; Major Muller, Capt. William B. Bradford, Dallas; Major Stuart Bevan, El Paso; Navy Lt. (jg) Tom Cowan, Pecos; Capt. Jack W. Morris, Dallas; Capt. Rus sell W. Fichtner, San Antonio; Capt. M. Cook, Dallas; Capt. E. F. Fullwood, Hereford; and Major Max Mosesman, Dallas. Used Cars Wanted We pay cash for any make - or model used car. Brazos Motor Co. - STUDEBAKER DEALER At the “Y” - Ph. 2-7009