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Show WALTER WINCH ELL 1! Notes of a New Yorker I 1 The Argentine ambassador in j I Washington has quite a job to do. jr ;j He has been ordered to see that Mr. 1 , Truman invites the Perons "or !'l l else." Evita's big ambish is to im- :h press Washington sassiety. (That j! will be the day!). ! ' 1 ' '( ' We suspect the White House 'l can see nothing amusing in the : fact that Henry A. Wallace's . initials speU HAW! I Many stickups in some of the i' ! fashionable sections of Brooklyn !; 1: have not been reported because the 'i i victims were picked carefully. Peo- 1 pie who made oodles in the black i market and kept their wealth in : j their homes. Can't squawk now. . . . Communist chief William Z. Foster hides in the phone directory (Bronx) under the listing of William E. Foster. Times Square Vignette: Songwriter Hugh Martin probably will never get any medals from Texas because his new song hit, "Tired of Texas," joshes the Lone Star State. . . . But it was ordered written by Texans, who asked Martin to knock out a "Texas-flavored" tune to be sung at a luncheon honoring some Texas-born army big shots. . . . The lyrics got a lotta "yox" (more than the composer expected) so he worked on the ditty to whip it into commercial commer-cial use. . . . Several producers with musical comedy scripts turned it down. . . . Another producer (almost on the verge of taking it) changed his mmd when the headlines shrieked about Texas City's disaster. . . . Today it's the click song in the show, "Look, Ma, I'm Dancin'.'" |