Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 169, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 25, 1962 Page: 34 of 40
forty pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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COVER:
February 25, 1962
Board of Editors
Family Weekly, February 25. 1962
15
® 1962, FAMILY WEEKLY MAGAZINE, INC. 153 N. Ave . Chicogo 1, IH. All rights reserved.
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off a i a routine mission—sweeping an arc of
about 370 miles on convoy and antisubmarine
This energetic lovely. photographed by
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Fam1ly
ERNEST V HEYN Editor-in-Chiet.
BEN KARTMAN Ezecutive Ed>tor
ROBERT FITZGIBBON Managing Editor
MARGARET BELL Frature Editor
PHILIP DYKSTRA Art Drrrelor
MELANIE DE PROFT Food Editor
Candr. Donald F. Mason was bom in Roches-
ter. Minn., in 1913 and joined the Navy in 1935.
After an uneventful flight, my three-man
crew and I returned to base six hours later. No
soom r had I climbed out of the cockpit than
a messenger ordered me to the squadron duty
officer. I got orders to get back in the plane as
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headed toward England.
Unfortunately, or as it turned out later, for-
tunately, the squadron duty officer gave me the
wrong latitude and longitude. When we reached
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e famous slogans of the war. He retired
the service in 1955, and now lives with his
in Oxnard, Calif.
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Rosalyn Abrevaya, John Hoehmann. Jerry Klein, Hal
London. Jock Ryan; Poor X Oppenheimer, Hollywood
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from,
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with Name and Address
Imprinted in Blue Ink
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LEONARD S DAVIDOW PrrridrUt and PudJOhrr
WALTER C. DREYFUS vice Prr^drat
PATRICK E O'ROURKE Adverting r>,r(fto-
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MORTON FRANK Dir-fetor of PkHMr
Send all odvertising communications to Family Weekly,
153 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago 1. Ill,
Address ati communications about editorial feature! to
Family Weekly, 60 E .56th St . Now York 22. N. Y.
| than any other laxative
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the supposed meeting point, instead of finding
a large convoy, we saw only a single cargo ship.
A few minutes after leaving the cargo ship.
I saw what appeared to be a white feather
streaking through the ocean. It was caused by
a submarine cruising about 50 feet below sur-
face at top speed, with the periscope cutting
through the water.
My first reaction was one of surprise and dis-
belief. Ordinarily, no submarine captain, friend
or enemy, ever kept a periscope up long enough
to cause such an obvious giveaway sign unless
he were absolutely certain there was no dan-
ger of unfriendly aircraft flying overhead. Fur-
thermore, his eagerness to get where he was
going indicated he was preparing to get into
position for a kill. His victim could only be the
cargo ship I had left behind.
My crew and I had waited and hoped for an
opportunity like this since we had finished train-
ing at Pensacola, Fla. Yet none of us really
knew what his reaction would be. '
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Shows we’re in the smarter set.
Proves we’re in the groove.
And, unless I miss my bet,
Means we’re going to move.
—Betty Billipp
II92
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base commander: “Sighted sub—sank same."
We had been calm before, but now we were
exuberant, yelling at each other at the top of
our voices. We must have been more tense than
we realized.
We circled the area for almost an hour till
lack of fuel forced us back to the base. There
had been no sight of any survivors.
By Comdr. DONALD F. MASON, U. S. N. (ret.)
as told to Peer |. Oppenheimer
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on submarines. His terse report,
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Twenty years ago, this Navy flyer commanded
the first U. S. crew to sink a U-boat;
here's his thrilling story of the adventure
—and the slogan that made history
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The new teacher insisted on field trips
for her young charges. One day she took
the little pupils to the local art gallery,
where students were diligently painting.
"Watch, now,” the teacher said, “see
how an artist can take a brush and with
a single stroke can change a smile into
a frown. Isn’t that wonderful?”
“Huh!” exclaimed one tyke. “My Mom
can do that, too—and without even
having to th ink, twice about it!”
—V D. Palat
rTo MY SURPRISE. all of us took it calmly. The
JL months of training were paying off. I re-
duced the speed of the plane and when I came
close enough, dropped the two bombs—one on
either side of the periscope. We made two per-
fect hits! Upon explosion of the depth charges,
the submarine lost control and inadvertently
was blown to the surface.
A few seconds later, it went down—leaving a
trail of foam and oil as it disappeared. It was
then that I sent a four-word message to the
“Sighted Sub — •
Sank Same” /
A businessman who had had an ex-
tremely tough day dragged himself wear-
ily home one night to be greeted at the
door by his wife with the announcement
that the maid had walked out during the
afternoon.
“What did you do this time?" he asked
dispiritedly.
“Me?" raged the wife. “This was en-
tirely your fault. She said you used very
insulting language to her over the tele-
phone this morning.”
“Good night!” exclaimed the husband.
“I thought I was talking to you!”
—Dan Bennett
p
Tired out from
AS I landed the plane on the base runway with
A little more than a few gallons of gas left,
we were all feeling pretty darned good at being
the first American crew to sink an enemy sub-
marine in World War II. T felt particularly
proud since I was among the 10 percent of non-
commissioned officers with pilot ratings.
By coincidence, the Senior Naval Officer for
the North Atlantic area happened to be in port
that day and asked me to report to him. When
I stepped before him, he greeted me with, “That
was a job well done. Chief," He thus informed
me that I had been promoted from First Class
Petty Officer to Chief!
None of my subsequent promotions—I became
an ensign when I sank my second sub a month
later, and eventually rose to the rank of Com-
mander before I retired in 1955—meant so much
to me as this on-the-spot promotion.
But even that didn’t equal the excitement of
hearing three months later that my brief mes-
sage announcing the kill had made such an
impact on Americans—that in morale-building
at a desperate time in American history, it could
also be credited with a “job well done.”
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It was one of those tear-jerking day-
time television shows in which contest-
ants vie with each other in telling their
woes. One woman stepped before the
camera and soon had the audience in
tears with her troubles.
“Things are just terrible," she ex-
plained. “We need help. Our baby hasn't
got a bed, and if I win today that's the
first thing I will buy.”
“And what is the poor child using for
a bed now?" asked the TV’ host.
“Oh,” she replied, "we’re using the
crate our new television set came in.”
—A. w. Stinson
Ld
"Sighted sub—sank same” when he sank an
enemy submarine in World War II, became one
And paw prints on your chest;
if you don’t object to rising
At the faintest crack of dawn
And strolling outdoors in the rain
With just your bathrobe on;
’Who's going on this vacation—you and me, or you and your golf bag?
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VKNMN MONTICELLO ILLINOIS
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If you can keep your temper
And discount with a shrug
Puddles in the hallway
And stains upon the rug;
If you can calm a neighbor
V hose garden’s been dug up
You’re the kind of parent
U hose child should have a pup.
—Susanne Douglass
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If you can keep on smiling
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 169, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 25, 1962, newspaper, February 25, 1962; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1478952/m1/34/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.