'Aa.GE 6 *— THE BATTALION TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 15, 1944 W T A W Batt Chat Jive rears its not-so-ugly head on the WTAW broadcast of Farm and Home Makers, Thursday, Au gust 17, at 11:30 a.m., CWT, when the Harmonizers, instrumental sex tet, swings out with special ar rangements of “Exactly Like You” and “Royal Garden Blues.” A medley of “All Alone,” “Everybody’s Doin’ It” and “Par son Trombone,” will be played by the orchestra, which is under the direction of Harry Kogen. Bari tone Curley Bradley, m.c. of the LISTEN TO WTAW 1150 kc — B (Blue Network) WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 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 7:16 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 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 12:46 Piano Playhouse BN 1:00 Kiernan’s Corner ' BN 1:16 The Mystery Chef BN 1:30 Ladies Be Seated BN 2:00 Songs by Morton Downey BN 2:16 Hollywood Star Time—RKO BN 2:30 Appointment with Life BN 3:00 Ethel and Albert BN 3:16 Music for Moderns WTAW 3 :30 Time Views the News - BN 3 :45 Our Neighbor Mexico— Dr. A. B. Nelson WTAW 4:00 Rev. Hartmann (Lutheran)..WTAW 4 :16 The Vagabonds .... BN 4:30 Marie Baldwin, Organist BN 4:45 Dick Tracy BN 6:00 Terry and the Pirates BN 6:15 Hop Harrigan BN 6:30 Jack Armstrong BN 6:00 Scramby Amby BN 6:80 The Lone Ranger BN 7:00 Watch the World Go By BN 7:15 Lum 'n' Abner BN 7:80 My Best Girls BN 7:46 Andrini Continentales BN 8:00 Speaking of Sports WTAW 8:15 Sign off. THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1944 A.M. 6:00 Sign on. C:0* Texas Farm & Home Prog. WTAW 6 :15 Sunup Club WTAW 7:00 Martin Agronsky— Daily War Journal BN 7:16 Toast and Coffee. WTAW 7:80 Blue Correspondents BN 7 :45 The Hunr\bard 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 11:16 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 __WTA W 12 :40 Bunhouse Roundup _....WTAW 1:00 Kiernan’s Corner 3N 1:16 The Mystery Chef_ - BN 1:80 Ladies Be Seated BN 2:00 Songs by Morton Downey BN 2:16 Hollywood Star Time—RKO BN 2:30 Appointment with Life BN 8:00 Ethel and Albert BN 3:16 Music for Moderns WTAW 1:80 Time Views the News BN 3 :46 Something to Read— Dr. T. F. Mayo WTAW 4:00 Student Personnell—George Wilcox WTAW 4:16 Three Romeos BN 4:30 Something for the Girls WTAW 4:45 Dick Tracy BN 6 :00 Terry and the Pirates BN 6:15 Hop Harrigan BN 6:30 Jack Armstrong . BN 5:45 Sea Hound BN 6:00 Musical Mysteries BN 6:30 It’s Murder BN 6:45 Chester Bowles BN 7:00 Watch the World Go By BN 7:15 The Parker Family BN 7:80 America’s Town Meeting of the Air BN 8:00 Speaking of Sports WTAW 8:30 Sign Off. program, will sing “Cocktails For Two,” “Bugles in the Sky” and “No Night There.” Bill Krenz will contribute a special piano solo of “Star Dust.” A last-minute summary of farm news will be provided by Bradley, and Kay Baxter will give helpful household hints. * * '* The Three Romeos, who are real ly hardworking lads, will have someone else in mind when they sing “Three Shif’less Skonks” on their WTAW program of songs, Thursday, August 17, at 3:45-4:00 p.m. CWT. The trio also will trill “Louise,” “Kentucky” and “So Little Time.” * * * In mood both quizzical and per turbed, the Four Vagabonds will chant “Is You Is or Is You Ain’t My Baby?” on their WTAW pro gram of songs, Wednesday, August 16, at 4:15-4:30 p.m., CWT. The mellow foursome also will sing “Sweet Eloise,” “Besame Mucho,” ‘^lender, Tender and Tall,” and “Aintcha Got. No Time for Love?” * * * Cliff Arquette will play nurse maid to twin boys, Richard and Prichard, during the Wednesday, August 16 edition of Glamour Man or heard at 11:00 a.m., CWT over WTAW. Everything goes well un til the boys’ identification brace lets become mixed up. In the musical portion of the program, Charlie Hale’s orchestra will offer the new hit “Night Must Fall,” and Hal Stevens will sing “I Dream of You.” * * * Men turn murderous in their lust for gold, and genial Gunpow der oJe is in imminent danger of losing his life when the Masked Horseman intervenes, during the WTAW broadcast of the Lone Ranger drama titled “Gunpowder Joe,” Wednesday, August 16, at 6:30-7:00 p.m., .CWT. The action-packed Lone Ranger dramas are broadcast over WTAW each Monday, Wednesday and Fri day at 6:30 p.m., CWT. * ¥ ¥ That most insidious of all house hold nuisances, the telephone call which occurs while you’re in the bathtub, will be considered by “edge” Ransom Sherman during the broadcast of Nitwit Court, Tuesday, August 15, over WTAW at 7:30 p.m., CWT. Hizzoner will wax irate over the menace of the misdirected tele phone call. Aiding in the crusade will be jerky Jurors Bubbles Low- bridge, Bigelow Hornblower, and Waymond Wadcliffe. Jimmy Dodd will give his ver sion of a popular tune, accompa nied by the Jack Rose trio. —SYMPHONY— (Continued froiL page 1) “Clock Symphony”—so called be cause the composer attempted to reproduce the ticking of the clock Big Ben, in the Tower of London. Then the orchestra will present two polkas; the “Perpetual Mo tion’ polka by Strauss, so called because it has no ending and may be repeated as many times as de sired, and the “Golden Age” polka, by Shostakovitch, famed Russian composer of the “Fifth Symphony” that has received so much acclaim in the past two years. The concert will close with Enesco’s “Rouman ian Rhapsody.” The series of summer park con- FEATURED ON WTAW Singing sweetheart of the BLUE'S new “Scramby Amby" program is pretty Lynn Martin. Lynn is the gal who furnishes musical clues In the scrambled word game played on this show. certs, in Houston, was inaugurat ed as an experiment in the summer of 1940. Seven concerts were pre sented in Hermann Park that year. In this, its fifth summer season, the original series of seven con certs has been expanded to 30 con certs : 24 in Hermann Park and twelve neighborhood parks of the City, and six out-of-town. Response to music under the stars has been such that the city of Houston appropritted $10,000 to-wards the expenses of the cur rent summer concerts. Despite war-time travel restrictions, atten dance at the concerts has been greater than had been anticipated. Summer music has become a feature of American civic activity. Attendance at concerts, summer operas, and like ventures, indicates a growing interest in the better grade of music. Aside from the cultural value of summer concerts, the series has a practical side for the sponsors of the Houston Symphony. With the twelve-week summer season added to the winter season of 26 weeks, Conductor Ernst Hoffmann is in a position to offer competent musicians a minimum of 38 to 40 weeks of regular employment; an inducement for highly-trained mu sicians to become members of the Southwest’s oldest symphony or chestra. The summer Symphony conclud ed one of its best tours during the month of July. During four days, the group appeared in San Marcos for the Army Navigation School and Teachers College, played two concerts in one evening at the beautiful new music hall of the School of Fine Arts of the Uni versity of Texas, played a concert at Mcdoskey Hospital, in Temple, and entertained more the 3500 members of the service personnel of Waco Army Flying Field and civilians of Waco. The concert at A. and M. will be the final out of town concert of the summer season which will close in Houston on August 29th. DO YOUR PAKl—BUY BONDS LOUPOT’S Where You Always Get a Fair Trade Governor Calls For Waste Paper Drive In a proclamation issued Fri day, Gov. Coke Stevenson called on Texans to put forth their effort to collect at least 20 pounds of waste paper per capita during* paper salvage month, August 20 to September 20, it was announced at headquarters of the Texas newspapers’ waste paper drive in Fort Worth. The governor specifically asked the co-operation of the American Legion, the Boy Scouts, salvage committees and newspapers in all communities, pointing out that waste paper now is the No. 1 crit ical war material. Many mills which convert waste paper into war products now are shut down or operating on a part-time basis because of the shortage of sup plies. On the campus the center point for waste paper collections is in the southwest corner of the Ani mal Husbandry Pavilion. Aggies who wish to participate in this salvage of waste paper are urged to take their collection to this central point. Dr. Luther Jones, chairman of the waste paper drive in the college area, urged that, if possible, the paper be tied in bun dles. The building will be open daily so that any who wish to make contributions may have an op portunity to do so at their con venience. It’s easy to waste time— Listening to small talk. Waiting for luck to break your way. Dreaming of chances that are gone. Looking for a pull. Envying another’s success. Complaining about hardships. Hunting some way to save. “Listen ” He prefaces each remark. “Listen - - - ” He ought to be tossed to a shark, Along with the e- Qually sibilant gee Who helpfully ends every sen tence with “See?” It may be too petty, too carp ing of me, But, Listen, It’s driving me nutty, See? Edgar A. Guest has written more than 13,000 poems. If You Have Bonds, Don’t Sell Them ★ ★ ★ It’s just as important to hold on to them as it is to buy them. ★ ★ ★ Buy Bonds Keep Them ★ ★ ★ : and | You Back the Attack i KEEP COOL - - - On a hot day drop in for a refreshing drink that’s really cooling — at — GEORGE’S STORAGE HATTERS OlT'iCQIl 214 SOUTH MAIN BRYAN, TEXAS