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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH BVV COACH . . . Capt. K' j;irni s Hamilton, USN, Xus, Ohio, who had been football coach at the m:iw academy. He will be Kv Edgar E. "Rip" Miller, Hi serve as assistant coach. BOWLING CONQUERED BY WOUNDED VETS . . . For thousands of war wounded, the Red Crosa Insignia Is a badge of merry. Thry give their services and provide facilities to aid while away tedious hours of hospitalization. Here, aided by Mrs. Lucille Carey, Mrs. Marian Lee and Capt. L. J. Stacaffrr, are left to right, Sgt. Paul Jackson, Sgt. Robert Ahajian and Pvt. (ieorge Rodriguez, who are given a chance to continue their bowling in Los Angeles alley. Reports indicate that many of the wounded have be-come expert bowlers, which also aided in their rapid recovery. itir RED CROSS fmntcarn) on! WCIWim:WMHv. m,;., MIIIIIBIlllllllllllllllllgaSBBgK RED CROSS POSTER COMES TO LIFE . . . Pfc. Campbell Gordon Pyle, Lancaster, Calif., the wheel chair patient in the Red Cross 194f poster, and Peggy Neel, Red Cross hospital worker, examine thi winning poster, a photograph made of them at New Caledonia during the war. Peggy Neel is resting at her home in Searcy, Ark., and Private Pyle has in the army. Innocent Bystander The Cinemagiclans: Paved with guffaws, "Road to Utopia" has Bing and Bob performing their whackro-batics- . . . . "Sunbonnet Sue" packs the nostalgic charm of a family al-bum playing a heartful of Gus Ed-ward's lilts. . . . "Open City" (which was produced in Italy) is a slam bang-u- p tribute to the Intrepid Ital-ian Undergrounders. . . . "The Sailor Takes a Wife" is a fluffy little ro-mantic fable with Robert Walker and June Allyson whipping up the froth. . . . "Six Gun Man" is a stenciled plot, repititious as hiccups, . . . Advance reports say that "Jour-ney Together," an importation from Britain by Terrence Rattgan, will be a big click. . . . "Phantom Ex-press" a yawn and a snore. The Radio: The newest man-wif- e combo on the air is Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wilson of Akron. Ohio, and these parts. Via Station WLIB once weekly. . . . Billy Halop's emoting on CBS' "Aftermath" is a welcome addition. He recently returned from the wars. . . . "Duffy's Tavern" Is cooked up by only 11 . . . "Dead End" was loaded with earthy lingo. But the roughest word In the Theatre Guild's version on the networks was "jerk." Bigtown Newsreel: Honorable John Coffee of the House of Repre-sentatives week-endin- g from the Capitol at the Pierre. . . . Anita Colby, the model's model. . . . Ann Sothern, the star, paying an unex-pected visit to the 52nd street joynts and delighting the proprietors of same. . . . Don DeFore (the orches-tra leader In the film, "Stork Club") in town to rehearse with "Judy O'Connor," which opens In Apr. . . Claudette Colbert, whose husband is a specialist on hay-fev- and aller-gies, but she suffers and suffers and suffers all year 'round. . . . Martha Raye carrying her beautiful baby from the St. Moritz to a waiting cab and the choo-cho- o to Chi. Sallies In Our Alley: Jackie Green, the Embassy Club clown, was in a Broadway restaurant and asked a waiter the price of dinner "We have two dinners one for $2 and another for $5," was the reply . . . "What do I get extra on the $5 dinner?" asked Green. . . . "Pres-tige," was the snapper. . . . Har-vey Stone says Sinatra has muscles now from carrying all that money to all those banks. . . . Latin Quarter boss Lou Walters asked an actor If he knew what an atheist was. . . . "Sure," was the retort, "someone who don't believe In Looey B. Mayer!" Novelette: When Harry Tugend (who wrote the film "Wake Up and Live") was an unknown writer, he courted Jean Barkow. ... At the time she was Billy Rose's Girl Fri-day. . . . "Why do you go around with a nobody?" Rose asked her "Hook up with a success or some guy likely to be one!" . . . Jean dis-regarded the counsel and married Tugend. . . . They've been living (happily ever after) in Movietown, where Tugend is now Paramount Studio's executive producer. ... He will soon produce Paramount's film, "The Life of Billy Rose." Three months ago the U. S. Army in Germany discovered the lists of Nazi sympathizers In the U. S. A. Army officials promised the lists would be made public. The State Dep't promised the lists would be made public. A. Cong. Committee promised the lists would be made public. . . And what happened? Absolutely nothing! After all those promises the lists are still a se-cret. And even the reason the lists re being hushed up is a secret. Quotation Marksmanship: K. Roos: Shall we split a kiss? . . . Anon: Rudeness is the reply we can-not think of. . . . J. M. Barrie: I am not young enough to know every-thing. . . . Virginia Faulkner: The decoration was not so much period as exclamation point. . . . Stefan Zweig: The lark whirred upward like a skyrocket of delight. . . . Chris Morley: The extraordinary insect obligato of Summer nights. . . . H. V Morton: Conversation as for-- ! mal as a minuet. . . . C. E. Coe: As naked as a peeled banana. . . . O. W. Holmes: Sin has many tools, but a lie is a handle which fits them all. . . . Sax Rohmer: A smile 30 years her junior. . . Heywood Broun: The ability to make love frivolously is the chief characteris-tic which distinguishes the human beings from the beasts. . . . Gelett Burgess: A secret as fascinating as a loose tooth. Times Square Ticker: Observers report Sec'y of State Byrnes wait-ed (unrecognized) in the Waldorf barber shop until Frank Costello wised up the manager and got him priority. . . . Van Johnson will dine at a 52nd Street spot which barred him five years ago when he was merely an authograph collector. . . . G. B. Shaw told Gabriel Pascal that Irv Hoffman's caricature of him is t.h.e.best of thousands he has seen Ned Sparks reports that he would like to get back to Movietown and do a picture. BilTC i: E D M A N N FRHEIM Bremier Dr. Juho K. Paasi-B- v is slated to succeed Hkl.irsh.il Carl Gustav Man-- t president of Finland, Hcently resigned due to fall-Hll- h Manncrhoim is 78 and H as wartime commander of Hnih armed forces. He has Hm"'1 t"1 resign for some HajaMajM CHURCHILL TALKS WHILE TRUMAN LISTENS . . . Former British prime minister, Winston Churchill, told the audience at Westminster college, Fulton, Mo., that the United States and thd British empire should form a military alliance to police the world and to provide a bulwark against encroachments of Communist ideals and ambitions from the East. He recommended that the atomic bomb be kept secret. . ,. - - FAMOUS FIGHTING FAMILY REUNITED . . . The famous fighting family of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Ostler, Chelsea, Mass., are together for the first time since Pearl Harbor, with the exception of the oldest son, Pfc. Charles, 32, who was killed In action in Italy. The group around their father and mother includes twins, Roland and Robert, twins Richard and Lawrence, George, Donald, Arthur, Howard, Leon-an-sister Marylin at piano. H yvwaBiSBft Is CANDIDATE IN ARMY Ht. Col, Harold G. Hoffman, B governor of New Jersey, a candidate, received Hi when army ordered him H' p lal tor observation. He to run as a Republican. HfljBlfflMm HHIHIIHIllBHIflKlSHaLHSHGR RIOTS DURING STRIKES CONTINUE . . . Representative of other strike the pavement m the act.on-packe- d strikes two pickets and a policeman scene as they clashed in front of the Western Electric com-nanv- 's Kearney. N. J., plant. The police seem to have the situation strikes have been settled, others have been While some bounced to start during April. Violence has been reported ,n various parts of the country. in .in HHkJHp l!j H EGYPTIAN STUDENTS RIOT IN CAIRO . . . With demands that the British leave Egypt, students and sympathizers take possession of part of the city of Cairo without opposition from police. The rioters ter-rorized the capital, many fires were started and considerable damage resulted. Similar riots later broke out in Alexandria, site of a great British naval base. While the riots did not have government backing, little effort was made to prevent or control the demonstrations against the British government. PARIS OBJECTS . . . A; inst Franco executions of 10 s. This mass demonstration was held in Paris demanding an immediate break with Franco. N AND AGAIN . . . This man since 1894 appears in "stun on every occasion to h's opposition to one and leasarea before congress. Ie "s against loan to Britain. "General" Jacob S. Coxey, of Coxey'i army in 1894. w wants to protest against nlted ;(at,.s loaning any ' l anyone in Europe. HIGH - PRICED SPARKPLUGS . . . Harold Newhouser, left, pitch-er, and Hank Greenberg, star slugger of the Detroit Tigers, shown together daring training at Lakeland, Fla. Their combined salaries are said to exceed $100,000. THRTY MILLIONS IN GOLD THEIR GOAL . . . Irwin A. Williamson, famed explorer, is shown, left, with Capt. Edward Eriksen, as they planned expedition to recover a reputed S30.000.000 in gold from the cursed Spanish galleon "Santa Rosa," which has been on the sea's bottom since 1768. Williamson discovered location in 1941 and brought up the ship's bell. Location is somewhere off the coast of Cuba. a Hooting CO-E- D ... A j,n Anni' Oakley is Eugenia ' Vcadon, Philadelphia D' H,'o as a member of the imidefeatW rifle team at of technology, is retain an undefeated record. tM,.j nnviVFS' s a feature of the unique SPRING 'QUEEN OF SwiUerland. cow fights held ir he an V spring celebration onjf l.uh crowed are held to determine organiird battle takes place |