nTGH ARAB T`EAGUE OFFICIALS VISIT

Transcription

nTGH ARAB T`EAGUE OFFICIALS VISIT
V O ~ 8.
NO.
Arabian American Oil Co ? ~ h a h r a n , Saudi Arabia
12
DHAHRAN BEATS
RAS TANURA 1-0
(
Morch 25, 1 9 s
nTGH ARAB T'EAGUE OFFICIALS VISIT
Persian Gulf-Red Sea
Match Friday At Jiddah
Dhahran's All-star soccer
football team managed to slip
a p l past Ras
Tanura's
brilliant goalie Murkaz in the
first period of the finals corn
petition a t the Dhahran Sport.
Center Thursday. This turned
out to be only score
of
the hard-fought game, but it
was enough to earn Dhahran's
champiolu a trip to
Jiddah
for the Persian Gulf-Red Sea
title.
Playing before a large and
enthusiastic crowd. Dhhran's
more experienced
booters
presaed continually apinmt
the desperately-fighting Refinerymen. Time and again.
Dhahran swept down on the
beleaguered
Ran
Tanwa
goalie, only to be turned back
bv
seeminnlv-imws#ible
-.
u v e s . The lone score was
made be Merlo. Dhahran's
right wing. who converted on
l trick D.ss in front of the
a
IL.8 Tanura and
Db.hran
p h y e r s tuasle for the ball in
the filula of the Persian Gulf
&=er Pootball Tourlument
.
ABDUL KHALIQ HASSUNAH. Secretary-General of the Arab Lugue. talk. with Palestinian and
other Arab employees of the company. The Secretary-General is accompanied by Hatim Zdbi
Advocate at the Office of the Ministry of Finance in the Eaatern Province.
star
Dhahran's
defending
Tanura threatened late in the
game, and it took severa 1
good naves
by
Dhahran'lI
goalie, Vicchico. to hold tha
advantage.
A bnnquet was held in t h ~
Intermedirte Dining
HaZ
Thursday evening, and L.T
Weathers prelentedthe Aram
co Soccer FootbaltA#soci.tior
trophy to Dhahran. Dhahra:
will keep it for a year; il
takes three .uccer#ive year1
of championship soccer foot.
retirq
ball for one team to
tha trophy.
The Dhahran team l a v e r
Thursday for Jiddah and thc
Red &a-Permkn Gulf tit11
match with an All-Star tean
from the Hij.5. The p m c
will be ~ h v e din the Jiddal
Sport. & d i m on Friday
Before fhe team returns tc
Dhhran Saturday, The Mum.
lim players will vimit Mecca.
the
.
IN T#l8 ISSUL.
Mwt Reborta S h b b l ~ ,on Pogo 2.
/
Abqolq's chorollm and h l r 1wd.r om on h a 3.
7 h h~ l o n Gulf bJutball T-mt,
a Peg. 6.
L'
Feb. Production Guests of Saudi 6ov't.
Eastern Province
Av. 792,410 bpcd. Tbur
Four high-ranking
Arab
Crude oil production in Saudi
Arabia during the month of
February
amounted
to
ZZ.187.470 barrelm, o r
an
bmrreln
average of 792,410
daily, the Arabian American
Oil Company announced.
Crude processed a t the refinery a t R.s T a n u n amounted to 4.887.546 barrels, o r
a n average of 174.555 barrel. per ca1end.r day.
For the first two montha
of 1953, crude oil production
amounted to 46,395,700 barrels-an average of
786,368
per calendar day. Crude run
in the refinery for the same
d 864,878
o monthm
of
bnrrela. The crude r u m to
atills avenged, in F o b r ~ r y ,
1952, 176,446 barrels daily,
while for the firat two montha
the rot.1 war 10,596,456 barrela.
League official. arrived in
Dhahran Wednenday on a tour
of Saudi Arabia in which they
were guests of His
Majesty,
King Abdul A d z ibn Saud a d
the Saudi Arabian Government.
Their four-day stay in thm
Ewtern Province was the end
of a vimit which atarted
in
Jiddah and included an audience with Him Majesty theKing
in Riyadh.
The visitors were Abdul
-lip
H . D ~ u M ~Secretary,
General of thq L u g u e , Ahmad
Shuqairi. a permanent anmistant secretary; H . u n a1 Ashm a w i , head of the League's
Education and Cultural Committee, and Muhammad
Ali
Namad, who b u d s
the
Economic Committee.
Mr.
Shuqsiri isalso the permanent
Syrian delegate to the United
b t i o n s , and Mr. Ashmauwi
and Mr. b m . 1 a r e formmr
member* ofEgyptha ablneta.
Mr. H a s m u ~ hwas e1ect.d
to tb. secretary-generalmhip
of the h a g w h a t
8eptembar. He relieved Abdul II.h-
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Sun and Flora
AROUND THE 48
Morch 25, 1953
"I Found April. " currently
a t Boston . Janet Blair and
"South Pacific" spun tuneful
melodies at Richmond. Va..
Phil Silvers had them guffawing in "Top Banana"
in
Toledo. Indianapolis,
and
Detroit.
..
Easter Egg rollmg on the
White House lawn will be permittedfor the f i r s t tlme since
1941, when 53.285 children
were on hand.. "John Doe, "
o f s t . Louis. again sent Internal Revenue money, $800 in
$50 bills.
He has done it
every year for about 13 years.
Only written explanation is,
"I amold and want to help my
country. " They have no idea
who'Vohn 0oe"is..
39-yearold Dr. William F. Quillian.
J r . . will be inaugurated a s
fifth and younnest President
of Randolph-Macon Women's
College in Lynchburg.
Va.
His father was President of
Wedeyan College,
Macon,
Ga.. and his wlfe's father was
Deanof Yale Divinity School..
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Patachou, a French singer.
seems to be taking New York
by ntorm. She i s , in photographs, almost a dead ringer
for Gree Garson . Blossom
Seeley h Benny Field revive
their wmnderful singing a c t
for Chicago's Chez Paree..
Lauritz Melchior and a supporting cast filled La. Vegae'
Sahara .
NYC' Bandbox, a
new. big nightclub, was packed when Harry James and his
band returned f o r the first
time in three years.
James
wan lumping. Victor Borgc.
on the night club circuit, is gelting big pay and
drawing
crowdsto hear his piano and
comedy . . The Metropolitan
Opera new has a new
association comoosed of listene r s throughout the country.
The weekly Saturday bsoadc a s t s a r e a s popular asever...
Long not heard regularly on
radio o r television. Phil Spitalny's All-Girl band is still
a big attraction. On a current
trip. the band filled Iianava'a
Montmartre nightly.
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KUEO LIOHTS
Humphrey Bogart and June
Allyson a r e getting nice r e views for "Battle Circus. " the
story of medicine a t the front
linen . . . Walt Disney's "Peter
Pan" i s rated one of his top
works and children a r e lining
up to mee it. They go back two
and three t i m e s . . Van Johnson wants to leave MGM and
worltas a free-lance..
When
"Call Me Madame" had i t s
Hollywood premiere, gossips
noted that of a l l of MGM's
female s t a r s . only
Betty
Grable wasn't there to see the
Ethel Merman picture .
Marilyn Maxwell. once slated
for stardom, istryingto work
again. Thls time she
may
listen to her advisors.. Alan
Young, a s Androcles. is geting good notices in "Androcles
and the Lion, " which includes
JeanSimmona, Victor Mature.
and Maurice Evans.
.
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CUP AND CURTAIN
Charles Laughton will give
a recital in Cleveland in May.
Without props,
he brings
the houme down.. . Bob Hope
and Tony Martin willopen the
Chkland (Cal. )Auto Show with
personal appearances and a
big c a s t . .Betty Hutton's Rew e was SRO a t the Portland.
Ore.. Paramount . . Marsha
Hunt and Otto Kruger in "Affairs of StateUwerea t Kansas
City's Orpheum and
Minneapolis' Lyceum.. U r p r e t
Sullrvln jn "The Deep Blue
Sea"fi1led Baltimore'. Ford.
Screen s t a r Richard Greene
has the Maurice Evans role
in C'Dial M F o r Murder" a t
Chicago'm Harris
Conmtance Bennct i s on tour with
.
.
.
letters
O N THE AIR LANES
Lucille Ball and hubby Desi
Arnez i n "I love Lucy" have
gripped TV audiences almost
a s completely a s Amos and
Andy had radio s e t s tuned to
them nightly 25 y e a r s
ago.
is estimated
nome
It
40,000,000 televiewers watch
Milton
the couple weekly
Berle has changed him personality sopewhat, being
more
subdued. not a s zany,
and
even attempting some songs
and dances without
comic
overtoner. People seem to
like him better that way
Margaret Truman still gets
TV work, seems dutined b
continue there even though
Daddy is back in Independence..
"Truth o r ~ o n s e q u e n c e s " on
radio has toned down a l w .
.. .
.. .
ing gimmicks inatead for s
.
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penses.
...
CURLY FONTAINE
See you next week
Cheery, efficient Roberta Stebbins is secretary to the Abqa~q
District Office, and is a t present rounding out her f i r s t contract
with A r a n ~ c o .Roberta hails from Brattlehoro, Vermont, where
she grew up among some of the finest ski t r a i l s in the country,
and her love for the s p r t drew her to the Alpine slopes of
Switzerland and Austria on h e r short leave. In Saudi Arabia,
bridge and ewin.ming have replaced schussing tempoaarily.
Roberta's many extracurricular interests extend even to h e r
work: she's secretary for Abqaiq's A.E.A.
Dhahran
Editor,
J e f f , Julie and I, having
departed from Arabia, wish
to nay goodbye and thanks to
a l l o u r friends in Dbahran. I
a m s u r e Bill would join m e in
saying thank. and so long f o r
a while. Why not write him at
Ross General Hospital, Ross
Californi+. He would like to
hear from you all.
The Yaegerl
Abqaiq
Editor.
Reading of the plight of the
alleged five hundred tennis
playere in Dhahran in
last
week'. Sun and F l a r e wam a
story that would touch
the
stonielrt of heart..
However,
it makes us in Abqaiq wonder
just how serious your devotion
to tennis is, f o r a s you w i l l
recall, your tennis group has
been invited on severaloecasions recently to come on out
to Abqaiq f o r an enjoyable
day of your favorite
sport.
However,
these invitations
have a l l Been declined, s o p o r
sibly it's the old story about
just wanting to laare ~ m e t h i n g
to bomplain about.
Abqaiq Racqueteer
Dhahran
Editor.
In the name of the people
.
.
the Netherlands we wish to
express o u r sincere gratitude
to a l l those wh, contributed
to the National Disaster Fund
in Holland.
We thank those who offered
their own time and efforts.
and our personal thanks go to
the mail center employees,
who worked overtime during
the f i r s t weeks of the great
disaster in o r d e r t o expedite
the incoming Dutch mail.
Holland Employees
Dhahran
Editor.
"Please remove buttons.
buckles and ornament. from
clothing befoie sending to be
cleaned. We a r e sorry.
but
we cannotaccept responaibility for loss o r damage
to
theme items. "
The fact that buttons, huckles.
m d ornaments a r e l o s t o r
damaged is now to be accepted a0 normal service.
I. not the Ram Tanura
Labdry gulty of using the
word "cleaned" in a rather
broad sen-e?
Shirtless
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Sun a d Flare
March 25, 1953
R.C. Stoner Visits Dhahran
MEET TOMMY THOMPSON....
by Jack Mahoney
Abqaiqihns a r e now delermined to stand on their own
two feet, a s f a r a s a Choral
Group i s concerned. They a r e
happy to say they have their
own Choral Director
he is
Tommy Thompson, assigned
to M.S.
C.S.
Early b s t December about
30 Abqaiqians w e r e grateful
f a r the assibtance given them
by Mrs. Les Biggins of the
Orpheus Group i n Dhahran, to
form a singing group of mixed
voichs. By January everyone
thought (perhapa) "Well, that's
the l a s t of group singing until
nest Christmas I " But they
h d n ' t heard about Thompsom
Singing, directing and a l l
the details that go into building up a good singing group
a r e right down Thempeon's
alley. "Just who is
Tommy
Thompson . . and what is h i s
background?''- you might ask.
On the r e c o r d (murically)
e holds a n M. M. (Master of
Music) issued in 1937 by the
University Canservatory of
Music and Dr*ma;
Vienna,
Austria. Early in the 194Os,
he was with F r e d
Waring'u
Musical Workshop, and sang
with the F r e d Waring Glee
Club for y e a r s , making r e cordings with Waring on the
West Coast.
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a
Tommy Thompson organined
the Golden Gate Q w r t e t t e ,
uld they a r e now on
a
netion-wide tour of the States.
He founded the "Melody Maste r s , " most of whom a r e now
e i t h F r e d Waring. He directed
the 1,000-voice Junior College Choir andappeared in the
Shrine Auditorium in 1941.
And wait. h e r e ' s s o m e m o r e
on Tommy Thompmn:
he
directed the Lockhead E m ployee.' Choir of 160 voice..
and this group made two apH~llywoud
pearance. a t the
Bowl in 1941. And, he
was
one of the c r e a t o r s of
the
famous Hall- Johnson Choir in
1942-1943.
Thompnon has rung
the
leading tenor r o l e s i n the
Mikado.
The
Gondoliers,
P i r a t e s of Penzance,
HMS
Pinafore and other Gilbert &
"-""--- operettas; he a l s o
sang the l e a d h g r o l e s in the
Desertsong and The Red Mill.
The new Choral Group in
Abqaiq,which goes under the
name ofthe "Jebelaires, " held
a businelrs meetins on March
8th. a t which time the following officers were elected:
President, Jim Foody, Vicepresident
and
Business
Manager,
C h a r l ~ e "Ozeie"
Ostdyke;
Sdcretary
and
Treasurer.
Bobby Havet;
Librarian. Mrs. A. H. Richards.
The Jebelaires have placed
a siaeable o r d e r for voice
m u s i c d s c o r e s which should
he is the Field soon
and
shortly a f t e r we can look
f o r some keen comoetition
between choral groups
of
Dhahran (which has been in
the limelight, ao 1ong)and the
Abqaiq ~ e b e l a i r e s .
Meanwhile, r e h e a r s z l s a r e
held every Wednesday at 9
p . m . in the Abqaiq Dining Hall.
Tommy Thompson extends a n
invitation to all who like to
sing to come on around practice night and get in the fun.
Right now there is a &finite
needfor sopranos. Remember,
from new until April 8th you
can join the gromp, h r a f t e r
that definiteIy planned
reh e a r s a l s f o r a spring mueilal
will be under way.
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AUTHOR OF "ARABIA REBORN" EN ROUTE TO RIYADH
Dr. George Kheiralloh, one of
the mrnt-recent wfltem m m&rn
Saudi Ambian history, orrived In
Dhohron lost waak en rwte to
Riyadh. The 74-yeomld naturalized Amoricon is the author of
"Amblo Reborn,'
a handsome
volume obaut the life of Hlr k ~ w ty the Klng and theaoncunsnt unlflcation and growth of SaudT &able.
Dr. Khelrollah has l q beon a
follomr d HIS Majetty the Klng'r
career, and flnt met hlm durins
the Hoii of four years q o . The
307-pop. book wn p u b l i b d In
1952 by the University of New
Mexico Prera.
Dr. Kheirallah is also wallknown in Middle Eastern clrcles fa
his cmnsctions with "The ':Amb
World," o magozlne stqrted &ring
the w r , of which he w s sditoibnd
publisher.
Born In AlexmdrIo, Egypt,
Oeorge Khelmllnh attended the
herloon Unlverslty of Belrut. He
*ports that hL hthu w a the flw
AUB graduate. CT. Khelmlloh I o k
graduated from the mdlcol r h w l
of Norihwsstern Untwrrlty. He
1. Your response to the statemult "SaHHatiy muw zayna"
could be:
a . SaIIWatiy kullish Tayyba.
b. aysh tguwl.
c. ana aasif.
2. "aysh ism&'' msans:
a . minhuw h a a m .
.'
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Tommy Thompwn
hu. r i v ~ t o n e r , f o r m e r Vice President end Director or
Stan,&rd Oilcompany of California, renewed many ~ l acquaintd
anceships a s he took his f i r s t extensive look a t Aramcw's installations. Included in his tour was Dammam Well Number 1.
atop the Jebel Dhahran. He is shown a t the well s ~ t wathsome
e
of the men who figured prominently in the early operations and
helped make Saudi Arabia a major oil producer: left to right;
P.C. McComell, Cal Ross, W . Eltiste. C.C. Dorsey, Francis
Stofae, and Mr. Stoner. F . W . Ohliger was directing oil operataons a t t h e time the e a r l y wells were brought: In.
eply:
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PRONUNCLATIOW KEY: H
a hoarse "h"; T
a "t" p r o
nounced with t o w e tip against upper teeth; D
a heavy "d':
almost a 'W" sod.
(Answers on Page 7.
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practised medicine In the Dokotas,
Including o stht at Deadwood, t k
home of Wild Blll Hickack. Ha has
two chil&en, 0 daughter who Is
head of the art depar-nt
at
Wusleyan College in Macon, Go
and a m, o prohtra of mothemotics at the University of Mawchuuth.
This Is 8 . Khetrollah's second
vlslt to Dhohran, and he sop he Is
much lmprcwed by the changa
rlnce hlr lntroductlon to the Saudi
Amblan oil copltal Fwr ywn ago.
What m a t Inylrorres Mm, h. says,
is the round of nightingales ringing
ouhlde hls Stelneke Hall window..
a site where iust a few yeon ago
the only sound wos t h t of the
.,
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Sun and Flare
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"I HATE CHILDREN..
They
make katoo much noim.. .Why don't
the parents do wmethlng about
their brab I" In defense d children, good and naughty, we must
say the weary "old gent" who exprerrd that barbed denunciation
i s a confirmed bachelor who psrham disllkcatorecall his o m oan-
double thwf of Abqaiq and k Tanura embinad. And there are a
good many who believe lmpllcitly
that no boy who trim to pmhnd to
lm bad cannot be taken -in hand,
given a few tum-ohb. anddevelopeven slowly Into shining .model
of good manners.
amid
to
question PW UP
to keep ywngpts*
whom duty
in line. Trw, strict supervision
held w e r them i n the c l a ~
Can
r-lm It bar a n , but b ~ o n d
canor a tws-uP far the feoch-m
and fhe parents. But i n the h o m
i t dafinl*ly h a m u the JOB for
the pnrenh; there i s a marIrsd distinction betwean trainlng children
and rwrtng them1 We feel h o t
the age i s passing when people
were willing to dt and and have
somoans do something for vhem.
powd
For the &ahran Fnb
MISCHIEF INQUIRY..
purpose of acquainting parents 'at paint months Wo when t h ~
with
of the
connect- "rhd
the Youth Rssreation Proa tide-over of actWties
ed with their children, Pfinclpol gram
for
the
school
vacation p s r l d .
Frank W. O'Connor informed us
three meetings were held at the Those p a m b who gd b e h i d the
suggestion of a school c o w u n i ~
Rhsrwtion
caretok
complimentad. Mr. O'Conof K.R. we&,
V. T.
kmr,
W.H. Ehlenmeyer,
nor slated "It la not alwoys nice to
and &.Robert
Davis. One mee+ be p r o d d h children
be goodcan
good, if Only
Inp, f w porenb of Junior Hfgh
h d d on ~~h~
17, Prank would help them. " And
,m&nh,
that old lsgmnd 'keep little hwds
and
far lntennediatcr an h r c h 16,
parents of prlmary grade studenh bury and they will bs out af misin
on
h n h 1 7 ~ h - i ~ . chref."holh
h.re
i t dMr. OICannor told hlr llrknen i n "ywhem.
no uncertain t e r n lust what was
wrong wlth m e of the childmn.
HINTS FOR PARENTS. .In a
But many of the patentr wllo should measure of helpfulnsu her. am
have beon at them mnetlng were glmn
they warn ptherad #ram
Indeed canpfcwus
by thelr ab- many rower. "My h&nd
and
mcel
mywlf n m r d l u w campany matt
m- tan i n front of our children, hThou pamnh p ~ n were
mlnded that th. hhavlor of child- eouw we nwer knaw haw a young
mn,whm t h y got off on the wrong mind can repeat In q u l h a dramrtfoot, l a emphiked here b m w w d ed way roms w a d af phrwe
the u n a l l n a of the orla. They moy e~p.rs,~d&tareda m -n.
m m told that p a r d rhould not Andonotharstohd "We fully under
curtall their suprvislon over child- sbnd our children are galng to be
ren when h y am not In school; handlwppsd ranrwhnt
our gochildren at t l m s are V ~ F intolor/
Ing an l o q vawtlan, but they can
One
ant af eertoln things, ond many make it up when t k y refurnnrU
h a w no rqard for public property. famlly, fully capnixant of h e fallacy of r-,
admlttad "We
HOWGOOD I S ABAD BOY?.
n m Ifston t o starlm our youngA Stanford alumnus one time toldur stan may bring ham from school.
he and his buddies placed butter And if wr have any school problem
patties an napkin., hurled them to to takm up, m wtll bring f t yp
the dining rmn celllng where they dlnstly d t h th school. They am
stayed until ha heut dropped ham th M.( who can give w q u i d
down1 Dhnlron'a hadoches wlth answers.' On our rcundr a few
chHdren are not too rash, but they dwn wen slammed h t , na daub
am mult$lld by h fact that the feeling h l r ehlld or chlldran a n
school attendmca Is mare than hdo-wmmrs.
w n rnoke plenty, loud and often,
and he 15 not alwayr a p w b l e .
~~d tbnour miswabla bathslor went an with a recital of childish pranks that were pulled on him
by sama ofow upand somins generatton.
Feell~gthere may be something
behind his hrae rarnrnkr about
children in general, we called at
the Uhahmn Senior Stoff School to
l w r n of any unusual behavior by
the young chargr.
.
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March 25, 1933
A view of the Abqaiq Spring Tea.
DHAHRAN
WOMEN'S GROUP
BACHELORETTES-ATTENTION
Did ycu know that we hapa to
make many plotu h u t will include
acttvitleafwyw lnoff-duty hwn?
It's truel Won't y w ioln a?
The kuheloreth Ccinmittsa
now working on the "Tw Frolic"
says that there are only about &!5
of you who are mmbers. Get I n
the swim of thlngs and let us know
what you'd Ilks to hove and what
yaw special talenh are for binglng about such events.
Calendar of April Evenk:
April 2
-
"Teo Fmllc"
Dinlng
Hall-West Entrance. 3
to 5p.m.
Membenhlp
Card.
Coffee
Mil 7 Welcoming
Home of Mn.
Lloyd
M w n , l O a.m.
How
1428-8.
A p l l 12- Genoral W t l n g - New
(Baby
Theater 3 p.m.
Sittlw at the k r e a tlon Portable.)
Ap11 19- bucutlve Bwrd Meeting*
Aprll ab- Sprlq Tw.
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Saturday- Womn'r Gmup Llbrory
9:30 ta 11:30 a.m.
nnd
bum
5 t o 6 p.m.
1428-8.
Manday- AId lo lblestlnlan Arob
Refugew Swing Gmup
9:30 to 11:30 a.m. ond
2 to 4 p.m. at the home
F.A. Davles.
.
The 1953 lnhdlstrlet Team
Bawllng Chpaplmrhlps
are
achoduld to stort I n w r l y April.
Nut v m k ' e -1
of Sun m d F l w
will terry a complete story of ha
tomomant.
Spring was officially w e l comed in Abqaiq Saturday b y
women of the Abqaiq Women's
Croup, host o r g a n i e ~ t i o n a t
the Annual Spring Tea
for
wives and feminine employees
05 Abqaiq and outlying communitiea. Multi-colored spring
tulips flown f r o m
Holland,
camellias, palms,
Boston
ferns andother plants recently
received f r o m Beirut, as w e l l
PS
individual table centerpieces of cut r p r i n g flowers
f r o m gardens o f Abqaiqblende d to personify apring and decorate the putio lawn enclosure.
Highlighting the ttea was a
musical p r o g r a m by the Dbahr a n Choral Group under the
d i r e c t i o n of M r s . W.A.Weber,
w i t h selection. apropos t o the
theme of spring. The tea table
was lovely, l a i d w i t h a Chinese embroidered cloth, and
centered w i t h a n arrangement
of the multi-colored tulips.
Tea mandwiches and tea cookies
decorated am spring bonnets
complemented the tea theme.
P r e s i d i n g were f o r m c r p r e sidentm, the Mesdames S.P.
Yohe, C.B. Rfdgeway. M.D.
LuFrenz, and E.A. Tindah.
M r s . R.L. Heubner,
first
president. was in charge of
door
r e g i s t r a t i o n for the
primem. F o r m i n g the receiving
l i n e w e r e elected officers of
t h i s year
Mrs. Paul A r not, president; M r s . JirnWebb.
vice president: M r s .
Tom
Stangbye, treanmrer; andMrs.
D.H. K i b l e r , public relationm.
The DecorationCommittee was
l e a d e d b y Mr.. Wayae Brown,
and M r s . D.O. K n u d m n was
chairman of the Food Committee. Mr..
Dm Sullivan
was h o s t e m t o the
vimitlng
vocalist..
--
I
March 25, 1953
-6-
Sun and Flore
Basketball Tourney I REPRESENT ARAMCO AGAINST HlJAZl TEAM Abqaiq Wins 51-49
Led by vebron Center Jock
Starts This Week
Buell who acored 23 poinh, the
The 195L-53 basketball s e a $on winds up this week with
the annual P e r s i a n Gulf Invitation Tournament. Semifinal n.atches a r e scheduled
in r double-header Thursday
evening. with the final and
consolation games to be played
Friday afternoon.
The site of the t o ~ ~ r n a m e n t
this y e a r i s the Dhahran court,
and the four top tcanrs in the
P e r s i a n Gulf Basketball Conference have been invited to
participate. The f i r s t game
o f the tournilnlent will s e e the
hosts, the Dhahran
Oilers.
play a heavily-favored
Air
F o r c e tedm. This c a m e i s
scheduled f o r 7 p . m . . andwill
be followed by the
second
match, in which second -place
Abqaiq and fourth-place Ras
Tanur* battle for a
playoff
berth.
The Air Force is a heavy
favorite to win the tournament.
It h a s a spotless conference
r e c o r d o l 15 wins and no defeats, with solid
victories
over a l l the tournament participants. The Abqaiq team i s
given a n outside chance to upmet the Air F o r c e . It has been
comingon fast since mid-season, and last y e a r won the
tournament, although finishing
third in the conference play.
The F l y e r s , led by Stanfill,
Curtis, and Hendrix, tangle
with a hot-and-cold Dhahran
team that h a s not lived up to
pre-season expectations .Probable s t a r t e r s f o r the Dhahran
team a r e Walsh,
Hegewald,
Olson. Snediker, and Coleman.
In the second half of the double-header, Stan Weiland and
Company f r o m Ras Tanura will
t r y to put a c r i m p in Ahqaiq's
style, a s they have a l r e a d y
done in conference play on a t
l e a s t one occasion.
Abqaiq
will field a team led by Buell.
Kennedy. Porto.
Carlson,
and Galloway, a l l of them
veterans of Saudi
Arabian
c o u r t play.
The finals match in scheduled f o r 5 p . m . F r i d a y a t
Dhahran. with the consolation
contest to be played a t 3 p.m.
reiuvimted Abqaiq All Stars c l o d
with speed and stamina in i h bottle
with Ros Tenuro in the Abqoiq
Arcno Imt Friday night, and six
frw-throw poinh i n succession in
the final two minutes produced o
BLUE
51-49 victory over the
DEVILS. A full-houre crowd of
over 400watchedthewrop in which
the score was tied 14 timw R a
Tonuro held o 20 to 18 odvantoge
at the intennluion, and wos leading at the end of the third quarter,
39-35.
CONFERENCE STANDINGS
-
R.T.SCRATCH BOWLING
The Leading team In the Ras
Tanura s c r a t c h bowling league
turned in a very sparkling
three game s e r l e s March 15th
The team had games of 1028.
855, and 900, for a total of
2783.
The m e m b e r s of the team
s c o r e d a s follnws in t h e f ~ r s t
game: F. Domirlle 182. G.
Harlan ZOO, C. Schrum 191,
J. I l s h e r 227, P. Cry 228.
Dhahran's c h a m ~ i o n s h i nSoccer Football t e a m .
R.T.
Youth Hold
Junior Olympics
The raucous clang o f a c l a s s
bell, r a t h e r than a flaming
torch, ushered in the
Ras
Tanura Junior Olympics of
1953. T h e r e was. however,
the s a m e suspense among the
spectators
and
the s a m e
tensenessof muscles a s m a r k ed the last Olympics in Helsinki.
T h ~ ts r a d ~ t ~ o n Ras
a l Tanura
event was f i r s t held in 1946,
when the c l a s s r o o m s w e r e in
the present Dlnlng Hall. One
event remembered by
"old
t i n e r s " was a
marathon
which followed the "Memory
Lanel'route f r o m the
d~ning
room to the old
open-air
theater, through the sand to
parklng lot, into r e v e r s e , and
back to the dining hall.
Only the Junlor High g r a d e s
participate in this event, and
though no new r e c o r d s w e r e
it
established this y e a r ,
maintained the high competitive spirit which c h a r a c t e r ize. a l l Olympic meetn. Mike
Woodruff, in winning the boys
e v e n t s , a m a s s e d a total
of
30 points. Mike won out o v e r
Danny Whitley. who battled
defiantly f o r 25 points a n d the
second place Bronze Medal.
Norton Bunyap, another strong
contender, suffered s e v e r e
r e v e r s e s in the high jump,
when a bad landing was r e sponsible f o r a n a r m injury
which grounded him f o r the
other events.
In the g i r l s ' events, V r ginia Langhoop and Patty
Allen battled to a, dea
finish with 18points
ch.The
medal
second place b r o
w a s awarded to Beverly Palm e r . Competition was
so
keen
that the 1954 Junior
Olympics a r e eagerly anticipated by both students
and
parents.
MOMEN BOLFERS CROSEN
FOR M. E. 0. I. TOURNEY
Dhahran's Helen
Stewart
and Ras T.mura's Jdclue L a r s e n won b e r t h s on the team
that will r e p r e s e n t Ardmco m
the forthcoming M ~ d d l e E a s t
011 Industry Golf Tournament.
They s c o r e d law c a r d s
ln
tournan.ent playdowns Thursday a t Ras Tanura, in conip e t ~ t i o nwith 10 other d ~ s t a f f
golfers.
.
* * *
Helen .Stewart s c o r e d a 97
in 18 holes of rredalist p k y ,
and Jackie L a r s e n wae
two
s t r o k e s behind. Qtber c o n petltors
were
Mary Marquardt, Ldlidn Sales. Sherman Beresford. Avis BeeWluis, Laura Hardy,
JOY
Anderson.
Gert
Stonghton,
Irene Fleld. P e a r l Obert, a n d
Peggy Hayes.
AirForce
Ahiq
Dhohron
Ros Tonuro
Flwr
15
8
7
...
...
...
...
8
4
1
Last Week's
Abqoiq
Air Force
L
0
6
W
...
9
12
Scores
5l
52
Ror Tonuro 49
37
Dhahron
Dhahran
League Standings
L
1
W
8
Acct.
G . Sthse.
Auto Sthse.
G.O. Eng.
Ind. Rel.
E . 6 M.S.
7
6
3
3
1
2
7
Pct.
888
7 7
3
7
7
8
666
300
3M)
111
Last Week's Scores
.
Acct
Ind. Rel.
Ind. Rel.
GSthse.
40
36
43
46
This Week's
-Wed
- G. Sthw.
CanSthre. 28
24
E. 6 M.S.
G.O.Eng.
E. 6M.S.
16
22
schedule*
vr Auto S h .
2
Distaff g o l f e r s f r o m Dhahran and Raa Tanura who participated
in final competitions Thursday t o choose A r a m c o ' s female r e p r e s e n M i v c s f o r the Middle E a s t Oil Industry Golf Tournament.
P l a y w a s a t t h e RPs Tanura lmks.
(Photo by Fawzi.
Sun arid Flare
Movie Notices
"BECAUSE YOU'RE MINE''
Adults ,Youths 6 Childn. Muslcol
w/Mario knza, b e t t o Morrow
Ras Tanum Mar. 25-26
1st day R.1.--11:30,3:30,7:00,9:00
2nd day R.1.--8:W p.m. only.
"BIG JIM McCLAIN"
Adulk & Youths
Dmw
w/ John Wayne, Nancy Ohon
Ros Tonura Mar. 27-28
1st doy R.T.--11:30,3:30,7:DO,9:M)
2nd day R.1.--8:W p.m. only.
-7
-
March 25, 1953
Arrivals
Departures
Edward Brunner.
Elden
Clark, R. F. King and wife.
Mrs. D.C. Wainwright.Rosar i a Di Lorenzo, R.S. Baker
and family. Charles Collins.
Frank Crawford. Solveig E.
Due. Paul Griffin, Roy McAlear. Carl Mauldin, Carlos
Pinnix. Virginia Randall, A .
J . Sbragia, Carl A . Steele.
Carl Stueve, Herbert Wales,
Helen Webster, Joe Womack.
Florence M. Hnmm.
Elmer
W . Perkins, J r . ,
Dora
J.
Covington, LeRoy Goetz.
Joseph G. Schmidt,
Felix
M. Sagan, George Sales and
farr ily, George A. Vanorden,
Harold L. Case and family,
E.A. Click. David
Heaton.
Frank A. Martin, W.M. Rector. George Von Bieberstein,
G e o ~ g eZenthak and
wife.
L. L. Truesdell, Kenneth C.
Fisher, J . C.
Vredenburgb
and family. Ralph D. Bruno
and family, Orland D.
Fine
and wife, Henry A. Perlak.
CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
"SON OF PALE FACE"
Adulk,Ywths 6 Childn. Comedy
who41 Hop, Jane Russell
Mar. 25-25
Dhohmn
R a Tonura Mar. 29-30
1st day Dh-3:30,5257:20 6 9: 15
2nd doy Dh--ll:3On.m.6 8:15p.m.
1st day R.7.--11:30,3:30,7:00,9:00
2nd day R.T.--8:OO
p.m. only.
"THE RAIDERS"
Adults & Ywths
Western
w/Rlchard Cants, Vlwco Llndfars.
Abqaiq
Apr.
1- 2
1st day Abq--3:30 p.m. and aont.
2nd day Abq-1 l:30 and BIScont.
Friday
3:OO
Melo* time Richard
Croon Orch. Music from the
F r e ~ hOperettas. Symphonic
Portrait of Cole Porter
-
8:OO
Tha Moldau
Srnetano
Symphony No.4 in F minor
Tchoi kovrky
10:30
Symphony No.3 in E Flat major
Schumonn
Lsr Sylphides
Chopin
Sundoy
8:OO
Sulte f r m L'Arieslenn.
Blzet
Symphony Na.8 in B minor Shubert
Mophisto Waltz
Lizst
la30
1 Veal-on-the-
hoof
5 Be a t the helm
"CRIMSON PIRATEn
Adulb,Ywhr 6 Chilh.
Action
w/8urt Isncater, Eve Bortok.
Atqaiq
r . 30-31
1st day Abq-430 p.m. and cont.
2nd day Abq--1 l:30 and 5: 15cont.
Dvorak
khubert
Saturdoy
8r00
Closrical Symphony
Prokof lev
Oprotic Htghllghis-Togliawni
,
"APACHE WAR SMOKE"
Adulh 6 Youths
Western
w/Gilbert Rolond,Glm& Famll.
Atqaiq
Mar. 27-28
1st day Abq-430 p.m. and cont.
2nd day Abq-ll:30 and 5:15cont.
10:30
String Qwrtst In F
Fantasy in C maior
-
ak
"ANDROCLES AND THE LION"
Adults 6 Youths
Comedy
w/Jeon Simmom.6 Victw Mature
+iq
Mar. 25-26
Dhahran
Apr.
1- 2
1st day Abq-3830 p.m. and cant.
2nd day Abq--ll:30 and 5:15cmt.
1st day Dh--3:30,5257:20 6 9: 15
2nd day Dh-11:3On.m.68:15
p.m.
Wednesday
8:00
London Symphony Mughn Wii liams
Piano Pieces
Faure
10:30
Hom~ope Ballet Music Lombert
Concerto in C mior
Beethoven
Somtm
Scarlotti
"EVERYTHING I HAM IS YOURS"
wtla 6 Childn. Musicoi
w/Mcrrge and Govmr Chompion
Dhohran
k . 27-28
Rm Tonum Apr.
1- 2
1st day Oh--3:30,520,7:10,6
9:DO
2nd day Dh--ll:3Q.m.6 a 1 5 p . m
1st doy R.T.--11:30,3:3Q7:00,9:W
2nd doy R.1.-4.W p.m. only.
"0.HENRY'S FULL HOUSE"
Adults 6 Youths
canen,
All Star Cast.
MMhran
Mar. 30-21
Rw Tonura Apr.
3- 4
1st day Dh--3r30,530,7:30 6 9:30
2nd doy Dh--l1:3(b.m.68:15p.m.
1st day R.1.--11:30,3-.3Q7:00,9:W
2nd dav R.1.--8:W n.m. onlv.
Classical Program
-
10 Detarl
14 Seed covering
15 Eat one's heart
out for
16 Mississippi of
E m t
17 Succotash bean
18 Made of grain
19 Examination
20 Diogenes
carried one
22 Umpire
24 Lock of hair
26 Armed conflict
27 Supply food
30 Mr. Johnson
32 London
newspaper
36 Declare
37 Diviaion of
government
39 Males
40 Knight's title
41 Utter
42 Golf gadget
43 Tendency
46 Domesticated
47 Leather s t r i p
48 Australian bird
49 Sea anemone
50 Dust cloth
52 P r i m p a s
birds do
Colonizer
Dim luster of
Press
Former heavyweight champ
65 Pain
66 Lemony fruxt
67 Edition
68 Equipment
69 Sly look
70 Mr. Taylor,
claalrical music's
apostle
71 Sidle
54
58
62
63
LAST WEEK'S
ANSWER
9 Refresh
10 Time between
11 Row
12 Otherwise
13 Apportion
21 Blunder
23 N i c h a m e for
tubby child
25 Undermine
27 Bivouacs
28 Prevent
29 Singing voice
31 Orange flower
33 Heavy
sub#tance
34 Foe
35 Almost straight
up and down
Ear-splitting
noise
Beam of light
Calyx leaf
Business
associate
1 Short visit
Hobgoblin
Ship's carrying
capacity
By mean. of
Frozen
,
2 Operatic solo
3 Portray
/ 55 Great Lake
4 Say kind thing; a £
of
5 Tally
6 Lying crosswiee
7 connume
8 At any time
56 Weightyibook
57
of Sharon
59 Chilled
60 Tangled rnaes
61 At thin place
64 Avail
-
Symphony Fantastic
Somtoine for Piano
Berlioz
Rovei
knday
Serenade in D maiw
Continental Songs
BOO
Eaethovon
la30
Schonberg
Comerto No.27 In 8 Flat mior
Mozart
Transfigured Night
Twldsy
Boo
lkphnir and Chlw
Oscar Levant Ploys Chopin
Ravel
l h3O
Symphony No.3 In B minor Gliere
Ropodie Espgnole
Ravel
Answer to
Arabic Quiz
1. ( c ) "SaHHatiy muw myna"
means "my health i s not good. "
The response. "ana aaaif"
means "1 am sorry." "SaHHatiy kullish Tayyba"
mean.
"my health is all right, " and
'kysh tguwl" means "what do
you say. "
2. (a) "ayah ismak"
means
"what is your name. "
3. (b) 'Chlan wa-sahlan" can
be uaed a s a response to a n
introduction. "minhuw haaDa"
means "who is this",
and
"wayn is-eayyaara"
mean#
"where is the c a r . "
Cant. frpnr pqge
LWT AGMIN.. .T-y%
ttr-
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Law .he, grccn. PXenme
wll kr Twsura ZZOE.
AVAEUBLE.. .a BendlxwrsfP
iag mmcbisc. Tclcphaae 4 W .
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tW d s e ~ n ' tbebag to ur.
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Shwe JOB-2, D b h r ~ n .
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I