Indianapolis Times, Volume 41, Number 287, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 April 1930 — Page 21

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122 ATHLETES WIN HONORS AT TECHNICAL HIGH Awards Are Made to Pupils for Participating in Year’s Contests. BY RYAN HALL Athletic awards were given 122 pupils of Technical high school for participating in and supporting athletic contests of the school year. Monogramed sweaters were given Robert Babcock, Emmett Lowery, Frank Reissner, Frank Baird. Eugene Behmer, Earl Campbell, James Jackson, Ted Lippincott, Frank Lutz, Jack McLaughlin. Albert Newman, Robert Overtree, Richard Rothert, Sanford Smith and Herbert Wetzel. Girls who received monograms for work in athletics are Thelma Berry, Bcrtine Burks, Martha Caskey, Dorothy Downey, Louise Eppen, Dorothy Milliron, Mildred Thixton and Lois Willsey. Sweaters Are Presented Six members of the basketball squad were given block Ts. Theyare Frank Baird, Robert Babcock, Eugene Behmer, Earl Campbell, Emmett Lowery and Frank Reissner. Tech monograms were awarded twenty-six boys of the football team, as follows: Hubert Achelpohl, William Babcock, Charles Bowman, Herbert Branham, Fred Collins, Richard Davenport, Hewitt East, Ott Frey, Kennard Fritz, Hubert Granins, Ralph Grave, Landon Guntal. Thomas Johnson, Elmer Johnston. William Justice, Leland Loman, John Miller, Frank Montfort, Don Ratcliffe, Robert Rousch, Charles Shearer. Robert Sieloff, Ralph Simpson, Charles Wild, William Wilkins and Norman Worth. Cage Letters Awarded Fourteen basketball letters were given to Kermit Bunnell, Halbert Gauker, Raymond Gladden, Clarence Jones, David Jordan, Robert Loser, Earl Overman. Kenneth Payne, Howard Pursell, George Templin, Earl Townsend, Carl Truemper, Howard White, and Ralph Wilils. Buttons for work in different sports were awarded to forty-nine bovs and nine girls.

Shortridge

BY JAMES STEWART The Shortridge trio comprising Muriel Wagner, violinist; William Breunig, cellist, and Susan Aughinbaugh, pianist, entertained the student body at auditorium exercises Monday. John P. Collett. Indianapolis business man, spoke on the subject, “Why I Am Interested in Debating.” Pupils who took part in entertainment at the first April meeting of the Honor Society are: William Breunig. Robert Cavanaugh, Dorothy Dauner, Helen Dauner, Hope Bedford. Robert Deupres. Josephine Meloy. Mildred Grayson and William Hausman. The Shortridge high school sextet. pupils of Mrs. Laura C. Moag of the Shortridge music department, were on the nrogram at the Brookside Civic League meeting this week.

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Appear in Manual Play

Beautiful stage settings and artistic costumes are used in “The Bluebird” senior class play, second performance of which will be given at Manual high school tonight. A cast of sixty seniors takes part in the production. Leading parts are played by Lenore Rundberg (at left above), Helen Davis <at right and Fred Kattau (below). Members of the sextet are Gino Ratti, Ralph George, David Duthie, Robert Hiatt, George Blackwell, Charles Clary and Homer Cornell. Miss Zerelda Frick, Shortridge graduate in 1929, has been given recognition by the Mortar Board, senior women’s honorary society at Indiana university. Guernsey Van Riper Jr., Shortridge graduate, will be graduated from De Pauw university in June with the highest scholarship record made in that institution in thirty years. Mrs. Janet P. Bowles of the art department, will speak at the Woman’s Alliance meeting of All Soul’s Unitarian church Saturday on, “Some Impressions of the New Russia.” Winners of prizes in the first state junior convention of the Indiana Federation of Music Clubs included two from Shortridge: Maurice Fowler, $5 in gold for best boy soprano, and Maryetta Coval, silver cup for toe dancing. New pupils will be honored at an all-school party today. Music for dancing will be furnished by the Shortridge orchestra, directed by Robert Ellswortii. A playlet, “It Ain’t My Fault,” is to be presented by Katherine Kavanaugh, assisted by the following cast members: Betty Sue Woolling, Ruth Cooke, Charles Blackw'ell, Donald Coffin and Dick Hoover.

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60 PUPILS IN CAST

With a cast of sixty pupils the senior class of Manual high school will present the second performance of “The Bluebird” in the high school auditorium at 8 tonight. The first presentation was made Thursday night. This is the largest cast ever to appear in a play at Manual. Miss Maude Blackwell is director. Leading parts are taken by Wilbur Smelser, Leah Whaley, Lenore Rundberg. Mary Stirewalt, Edythe Murphy, Fred Kattan, Helen Ruth Davis, John Wood, La Grange Thompson, Elizabeth Hocker, Angela Vinci, Gussie Silverman, Rebecca Cohen, Earl Hutsell, Clarence Thormeyer, Charles Hawthorne, Rudolph Klinge, William Covert, Kenneth Campbell, Robert Davis, Robert Montgomery, William Schulz ; Marguerite Boatman and Ruby Mabee.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

SENIORS’PLAY CAST SELECTED Broad Ripple Production to Set New Level. BY' FRANCES COFFEE Cast members for the 1930 senior class play at Broad Ripple high school were announced today by Miss Lillyon Snyder, director. The play, which is to be one of the largest productions ever staged at Broad Ripple, will be presented by twenty-eight pupils. Seventeen girls have been selected for roles in the production. They are Anna Marie Dungan, Geneva Fitch, Helen Weatherbee, Alma Hohlt, Frances Coffee, Thelma Hohlt, Georgetta Meloy, Frances Brumit, Mary Christy, Alice Stanton, Thelma Dutchor, Irma Rauh, Bessie Ryan, Mollie Zivien, Pauline Copp, Martha McClintcck and Madge Mehring. Boys who will have leading parts include Harry Riddell, Marion Martin, John Barrett, Thomas Wilmeth, Howard Farrington, Hugh Cline, Robert Elliott, Walter Wilson, Ed Van Meter, Herbert McAnich and Edward Perry. HONOR DECEASED QUEEN Fleet Bears Body of Victoria From Germany to Stockholm. fiu United, Press SWINEMUENDE, Germany. April 11.—A Swedish funeral fleet, headed by the flagship Drottning Victoria, steamed slowly out of Swinemuende harbor early today, bearing the body of the late Queen Victoria home to Stockholm. Accompanied by two units of German torpedo boats, while coast artillery fired a parting salute, four Swedish cruisers formed the honorary escort for the mourning party.

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Writes Article

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Ethel Mary Ostram

Experience in journalism while working on the staffs of the Arsenal Cannon, Technical high school publication forms the background for an article by Miss Ethel Mary Ostram, Tech graduate and at present a De Pauw student, which appeared in a recent edition of the Scholastic Editor, national magazine. Miss Ostram was editor of the Cannon during her high school career, and won a Rector scholarship to De Pauw. The article describes work of staffs in publishing the Cannon. Honduras Taxes U. S. Leases Bit 1 nitrd Press TEGUCIGALPHA, Honduras, April 11.—American companies holding thousands of acres of stateowned land, under lease, will be affected by a tax of $1 an acre, monthly, under provisions of a bill passed by congress Thursday.

BRITISH NEWSIE WINS AMERICAN HEIRESS BRIDE •Perfect Darling’ Hubby Six Years Junior to Woman of His Romance. Bu United Press FOLKESTONE, England. April 11. —The romance of an American heiress and a 21-year-old Folke- j stone newsboy, described by his bride as “a perfect darling,” was j revealed here today in the registry of marriage of Vivienne Maude Huntington and Alfred Cecil Durban. Mrs. Durban is the daughter of the late millionaire architect of New York. Charles Iratt Huntington. Her husband is the son of a butcher. Among Mrs. Durbin’s distinguished relatives is Archer Huntington of New York, noted in the world of fashion-, literature and wealth. Durban has two brothers, one a newspaper vender like himself, the other a professional football player. The young man, whose usual “stand” was just outside the Folkestone station, met Miss Huntington for the first time w r hen he delivered a newspaper at her house. Friendship followed and, in the j course of several long walks, finallyblossomed into love, Mrs. Durban said. “I am *not really class conscious, and never have been,” said Mrs. Durban, “though I always said I

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wouldn’t marry- ’-cneath my station. But love came rlong.” Discussing their plans for sailing to Canada shortly, Mrs. Durban spoke of the ambitions of her husband. “He hopes to secure a post in the engineering business at Toronto,” she said, “because, although I have money, he doesn't intend to live a life of idleness.” The Registry reveals that Mrs. Durban is 27, six years her husband's senior. Fascist Militia Given Power Bu United Press ROME, April 11.—Premier Benito Mussolini’s blackshirt army, the fascist militia, has been given a juridicial capacity and will be an active part of the Fascist state, a party bulletin revealed today, this army will have a strength of 300.000 by the end of 1930.

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PAGE 21

'GANDHI TO BROADEN DISOBEDIENCE DRIVE , Taxed Liquor, Foreign Cloth are Targets: Salt Revolt Spreads. Bv United Press BOMBY, India. April 11.—With India’s salt rebellion spreading through the provinces, Mahatma Gandhi intends to spread the active gospel of resistance to British rule by preventing the sale of taxed liquor and foreign cloth, as the next step in his program of defiance, it was announced today. The mahatma called a conference, to meet Sunday, of women adherents to his civil disobedience campaign, at which picketing of shops selling foreign cloth or taxed liquor will be discussed.