Motion Picture Guide By Bill Lindley, Motion Picture Editor, The Emerald s v M ,ey Kooney gets into more trouble as Andy Hardy in “Andy Har dy's Double Life,” opening Sunday at the McDonald theater. Although there are no dance numbers in “Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon," latest of a series of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle detective stories being picturized by Universal, Johnny Mattison, studio dance director devoted hours of his time to the picture, which comes Thursday to the Heilig theater. Heilig Mystery The script called for Basi Rathbone, as Holmes, to decotl a message written in character.' representing dancing men. Bu1 lief ire Holmes could decipher Ur. message, telling of the where abouts of a bombsight which th*. enemy is trying to steal, a cock had to he devised. Director Roy William Neill, s straight thinking realist, decid ed the man best fitted to wo fl out: such a code would be the studio dance director, so Matti son was called in to devise a body position for each letter of the al phabet, plus additional postures for numerals, characters, etc. Nigel Bruce is co-starred with Rathbone in the new mystery drama and the large cast in cludes Lionel Atwill, Kaaren Verne and other popular cinema players. Howard Benedict was the associate producer. £ —STARTS NEXT SUNDAY— BEST Y£T... foolin'/. Andy Hits Triple Riot OnCampus The Hardy Family gets togeth er again to send Mickey Rooney off to college in “Andy Hardy’s Double Life,” which opens Sunday at the McDonald theater. And Mickey gets into comical compli cations galore before he’s more or less safely on the train—de lighted to see that a pretty coed from the same college is aboard. The story deals with three di lemmas for Andy Hardy before his departure for college. He sells his jaloppy to a pal, who damag es a greenhouse with it, and Andy is held responsible as the owner because the car is not paid for completely. Then a pretty girl makes a fuss over him, and in sists that his romantic behavior means a proposal of marriage. Also his father wants to go to college with him and introduce him to his friend the president, which Andy knows would make him an outcast with “the fel lows,” but he hates to tell his father this. Human Interest His difficulties are ironed out amid laughter, some human in terest moments, and an inspiring (Please turn to page seven) Humphrey Bogart is featured with Ingrid Bergman in “Casa blanca” which starts Thursday at the Rev theater. 'Lucky' Ladd Next For Mac Screen With that handsome tough guy, Alan Ladd, as its chief protag onist, Paramount's lively spy drama, “Lucky Jordan,” will blast its way come Thursday into the McDonald theater. The story concerns the adventures of an American, gangster who meets up with some of Hitler’s mobsters, boys of the submarine brigade, and discovers that the good old U.S.A. is a swell country to fight for after all. In “Lucky Jordan" Alan Ladd is a ruthless underworld “big shot” who tries to evade the draft but learns that Uncle Sam is one guy who can't be “fixed.” Even an ersatz mother, played by Mabel Paige, fails to save him from the army. Discipline, how ever, is something the gangster isn’t used to. He promptly goes A.W.O.L., steals an automobile, kidnaps a canteen hostess (that's Helen Walker) when she gets in his way and heads back to his big city haunts. Happily for the picture's plot, the stolen car, owned by a war department offi cial, contains a brief case in which are some vitally important military secrets. From then on the film's action is fast and fu rious with rival gangsters and Axis agents fighting against Ladd and the F.B.I. for the plans. Dorothy Lamaur and Bob Hope score again in Sam Goldwyn’s laugh hit, “They Got Me Covered,” coming Sunday to the Heilig theater. They Got Me Covered’ Biggest, Best Hope Vehicle The attempts of a newspaper correspondent to expose the activities of foreign spies in this country give rise to the hilari ous doings in Samuel Goldwyn’s newest comedy production, “They Got Me Covered,” which opens Sunday at the Heilig theater. The RKO Radio release co-stars Bob Hope and Doro thy Lamour as a pair of news syndicate employees, Miss La mour as the manager of the syn dicate’s bureau in Washington, Hope as a foreign correspondent who is in bad with his boss and is anxious to redeem himself with a big story. When a mysterious European offers to sell him a complete con fidential report on the personnel and activities cf the Axis agents in America, Hope leaps at the opportunity. Before lie can get the story, the Axis spies learn of the threatened betrayal, pursue the mystery man, intercept the account he has just dictated, and kidnap the stenographer who wrote it. Hot on t.he trail, Hope follows in an effort to rescue his inform (Please turn to page seven) mbowM COMING SUNDAY 'Andn Hardg's DOUBLE LIFE' DON'T MISS MICKEY ROONEY In His Latest Hit—With Lewis Stone i PLUS-"WILDCAT" RICHARD ARLEN — ARLINE JUDGE STARTS SUNDAY * CARY GRANT * KATHERINE HEPBURN —IN— BRINGING UP BABY -r-SECOND FEATURE lAt the Front’ ARMY FEATURE