Indianapolis Times, Volume 42, Number 219, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 January 1931 — Page 4
PAGE 4
1,800 PUPILS TO BE GRADUATED FROM 91 CITY GRADE SCHOOLS AT COMMENCEMENTS THIS WEEK
High School's Enrollments to Be Augmented by Mid-Winter Groups. STETSON ON PROGRAM Exercises, Begun Tuesday, Are to Be Continued Through Thursday# High schools of the city at the opening of the second school semester will have their enrollments augmented by approximately 1,800 pupils who are being graduated from 8-A classes this week. Exercises which started Tuesday are being held In the ninety-one grade schools of the city for the 8-A graduates. Most of the programs were to be held this afternoon and •Thursday. Largest graduating class in the city will be at School 8, 520 Virginia avenue, where Miss Mildred Weld, principal, announces seventy-nine pupils eligible for promotion to the high school. Paul C. Stetson, schools superintendent, was to present diplomas to thirty-five pupils at the Grace W. Julian school today. Songs for the program were to be given by the 8-A boys’ chorus, assisted by the Julian school orchestra. Dr. Dtmkel to Speak Graduation exercises at the John McCormick school No. 30, 40 North Miley avenue, will be held Friday. The Rev. j. Ambrose Dunkel will speak and present diplomas to the ten graduates. Twenty-one pupils will be graduated this afternoon at School 78, North Sherman drive and East Vermont street. The Rev. B. B. Shake will deliver the address and present diplomas. Diplomas were to be awarded twenty-four pupils at School 76, College avenue and Thirtieth street, where Miss Belle Ramey Is principal. Exercises mainly were under direction of the 8-A class. Exercises were held this morning for the graduates of School 67, 3615 West Walnut street. The Rev. Robert A. Gardner gave the commencement address and awarded diplomas. Hacker on Program William A. Hacker, assistant schools superintendent, was the principal speaker at the 8-A graduation program of School 35, 2201 Madison avenue, today. Miss Martha M. Pich, principal, presided at the program, graduating nineteen pupils. Miss Ada Wyrick, principal, presented diplomas to thirty-six pupils at School 33, 1119 Sterling street, this morning. Singing of the school song, dedicated to School 33, was a part of the program. Final exercises for January 8-A pupils at School 29, at 2102 College avenue, were held this morning with the address by D. T. Weir, assistant schools superintendent, In charge of elementary education. Miss Mary Gilkison handed diplomas to thirteen pupils. School Chorus Sings The school chorus sang at exercises at School 27. Park avenue and Seventeenth street, at 10:30 today when twenty-three pupils were graduated. J. R. H. Moore, head of the Manual high school history department, addressed thirty-seven, graduates of School 18, 1003 East Palmer street, in the school auditorium this morning Members of the graduating class each had a part on the commencement program held at School 16, Bloomington and Market streets, today. Twenty-four pupils comprised the class. Other exercises today Included a program for fifteen graduates at | School 5, 613 West Washington street, and a program for thirtysix graduates of School 2, 710 North Delaware street, who were addressed by Milo H. Stuart, assistant superintendent of ‘schools In charge of the high schools. Fourteen to Get Diplomas Exercises will be held at 10:30 Friday for fourteen 8-A pupils at School 85, 330 South Arlington avenue. Miss Anna Pearl Bedford Is principal. A representative from the Marion County Tuberculosis Association will speak * Thursday at exercises at School 63, where fourteen pupils will receive diplomas. A class of forty-three pupils will receive certificates from Superintendent Stetson at graduating exercises at School 58, 301 Linwood avenue, at 10:30 Thursday. Scenes from Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar” will be presented by the 8-A class at a program In School 50, Belle Vieu place and Ohio street, Thursday. Nineteen will be graduated. Discussion to Be Held Commencement at School 47, 1240 West Ray street, will be In form of a club meeting at which graduates will give oral discussions on various topics. Mrs. Grace W. Kimber,
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principal, will preside, and diplomas will be given thirty-eight pupils. Twenty-three will be promoted from the 8-A class at School 32,2100 North Illinois street, at 10 Thursday monring. Schools which held graduating exercises Tuesday were: School 62. at WaUace and Tenth streets, 23 rraduates; School 54, at East Tenth and Dearborn streets, 50 graduates; School 45. at 2301 Park avenue, 37 graduates; School 44, at West Twentyfirst street and Sugar Grove, 32 graduates; School 41, at Thirtieth and Rader streets, 50 graduates; School 21, at 2815 English avenue. 40 graduates; School 12, at 733 South West street, 36 graduates; School 9. at East Vermont and Davidson streets. 34 graduates; School 3, at 23 North Rural street. 30 graduates.
STETSON CITES HIGH VALUE OF CHILD MUSEUM Worth of Organization as Aid to Educators Is Shown. "What s an andiron, Daddy?” Johnny Hoosier looks into the wan, workaday face of hi3 father and makes the query. The father’s looking at the gas grate, trying to get CMC, “Habana,” Cuba, or smoking meditatively and thimdng of nothing in particular. He jumps, startled. "Andiron” roams through his mind. Iron. . . . Mother wanted one for Christmas. ... He got it for her. . . Did he pay the bill on it? . . Andiron? “What’s an andiron, Sonny, why —uh—uh—uh—thing—you find on fireplaces, In fireplaces Why—uh—uh, say, Johnny, they’ve got andirons at the Children’s museum down on North Meridian street, whyn’t you go down and look at one? I’ll tell you what, we’ll both go take a look. Your dad needs brushing up on them. Andirons—huh!” Museum a Practical Aid This uncast scene is visualized daily in Indianapolis homes by Paul C. Stetson, superintendent of schools, and in the visualization he tells of the good performed for the city schools, teachers, children and citizens by the Children's Museum, 1150 North Meridian street, with its and biological objects. “We, teachers and parents, create the curiosity and the museum satisfies,” he remarks. “For instance, the andiron as a word doesn’t register in the boy’s mind. The andiron shown as a photograph registers partially, but when he sees that andiron in actuality in the museum he learns more in a minute that he could learn through pictures or lectures. “The andiron becomes something alive in the museum. He almost can see in his imagination the logs smoldering near it. He reads of that andiron in histories and instantly knows its use,” the school executive explained. Helpful Three Ways “There are only two or three cities in the nation that have anything like our museum in organization and unique collection. “Organized as an institute —and sometimes I think it should be called an institute —and not a museum, it should be enumerated as one of the city’s leading educational plants. It is organized primarily to serve as a school, and not merely to house antiques,” he said. The museum's helpfulness to the city school system is divided by Stetson into three sections: 1. A traveling exhibit which teachers can call to their schools for the study of nature. 2. Visits by school pupils to the museum and study of specific collection:. 3. Possibility of pupils hearing lectures on the collections visited In the museum’s auditorium, following the visit to the exhibits. Desire Is Stimulated “Take the exhibit showing Indianapolis in its pioneer days. A boy easily can transport himself by imagination back to those days because of the museum’s picturization of Indianapolis. "The museum,” he continued, “is one of the most valuable parts of our visual educational program in the city schools. “You can show a child moving pictures, you can explain objects to him through lectures, but when you can show him those objects instantly you satisfy his curiosity and stimulate Ids imagination and desire to know more of the history of the object he views in the museum.” Drowned Boy Buried By United Press KENDALLVILLE, Ind., Jan. 21. Funeral services were held today for Clifford Hoffelder, 8, who was drowned in Bixby lake, near here, while sledding. Two sisters of the dead boy, May Jane, 4, and Dorothy Ann, 2, were rescued when ice on which the children were playing broke.
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Leads in Senior Class Play
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Leading parts in the senior class play, “The Rivals,” to be presented at Broad Ripple high school Friday night, Jan. 30, will be taken by (left to right) Robert McAnnich, Ella Jean Ward, Marjorie Mittman and Paul Matthews.
SCHOOL PUPILS ENTER CONTEST Miniature Model Homes to Be Built by Children. Hundreds of Indianapolis school children have become “home builders” as a result of the miniature model house contest conducted by the Indianapolis Real Estate board in connection with the tenth annual realtors’ heme show to be held April 11 to 18 In the manufacturers’ building at the state fairground. J. Ray Monaghan, committee chairman, has announced that parochial, grade and high schools of the city have assured his committee of their co-operation in carrying on the contest. Milo H. Stuart, assistant schools superintendent, and Harry G. Woods, head of the public schools vocational training department, and art instructors in the high schools have met with the committee and pledged their assistance in aiding students to compete for the prizes offered the winners. Other members of the Gmmittee are: Robert Allison. C. J. Corbin. WlUiam L. Hackemeyer. Ralph E. Hueber. E. A. Heassler. Alvin Jose, Howard Pleber, Joe J. Schoen. Wayne Temple. Ernest Spiekelmier. Jack Morrison. W. T. Clifford, L. P. Likely. W. H. Bass. A. H. Jorgenson. A. J. Weiss. L. W. Welch, Charles Binkley and Charles H. Bailey. Copies of the contest rules may be obtained from the real estate board office at 820 Lemcke building. There will be three major prizes and six minor prizes for grade school pupils and high school pupils as follows: First, S2O; second, $10; third, $5, and fourth to ninth places, $2 each. GIRLS' CLASSES WILL HOLD DOLL FESTIVAL Contest at Community Houses Is Set for Saturday. Girls’ handicraft classes are preparing for an annual doll festival to be held at the community houses Saturday under supervision of the city recreation department. Each handicraft class will enter a large doll in the festival to be judged in a contest directed by Miss Julia Landers, assistant director of recreation. One of the largest classes is working at Rhodius park. More than 600 dolls were entered in last year’s festival, Miss Landers said.
FINDERS ARE NOT KEEPERS THIS TIME Murder on the Spot Is Committed in “Super=City" by Harry Hershfield in His New Serious Novel. BY WALTER D. HICKMAN SUPPOSE you found two seats on the first row on a Saturday night for the most expensive show in New York. What would you do? You probably would do just what Manny and Morton did in “Super-City,” a serious novel of New York life, by Harry Hershfield. Manny and Morton used them but they found out that finders are not always keepers. There was a string attached to this unusual gift. And around this idea of three idle millionaires flinging on the street two front row seats for the best show in New York is woven a story that develops into several murders and a bunch of fine character writing.
Hershfield has don? an unusual thing in “Super-City;” he actually puts you right on the spot while the various characters are being murdered or think ing up trouble. This author brought me closer to men being actually knocked off in the printed page than any other author. Generally in our modern murder and gang stories, the dirty deed has been done long before we open the front page. Not so with Hershfield. He allows you to rub elbows with those who pull off the trick and yet you are not actually in on the know. This has been done by a clever literary trick which I call the literary flashup as well as the flashback. The flashup reflects upon certain characters who were doing certain things at the time the murder or murders were pulled off. And the author has been mighty clever in connecting up all of these threads. Manny and Morton have the precious theater tickets while Morton is suffering with the disgrace of having a son in jail for forgery. Don’t seem like much connection here with murder but the author does it in many ways. Manny and Morton are on their way to prison to visit the young culprit when they run into “London” Libby, one of those clever and wise dames on the big money make in New York, and her boy friend, Palzer, a man who knew his racket. They just heard the name of "London” Libby, but the memory of that name resulted in the working out of the first rqurder in the story. And the name Os Libby is directly connected up with the two tickets because the finders were to be en-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
EXHIBIT OF SCHOOL PAPERS DISPLAYED
Collection of Publications to Remain All Week at Branch Library. Pupils’ publications from 148 high schools of the country will be exhibited for the next week at the Teachers’ branch library in the city school office building, Meridian and Ohio streets. The publications were collected by Mrs. Georgia Lacy, School 36 principal, and were used in her study for a master’s thesis at Butler university. Results of the study are set forth in the thesis, which concerns the publications issued in elementary and junior high schools of the United States. Summaries in the disclose that the chief purpose for which the school papers are published is to promote school spirit. Papers are divided into three types, mimeographed, magazine or newspaper, according to the type of school. Seven types of staff organization were found. These include the editorial staff, press club and English class, which in some instances supervises the publication. Answers of 191 principals indicate the school paper helps unify school work and departments of the school. TEACHERS TO MEET New Township Trustees to Attend as Guests. Principal speakers at the chird Marion county teacher professional meeting of the year at Warren Central high school Saturday will be Professor Fowler D. Brooks, education department head, De Pauw university, and B. E. Bayh, Terre Haute schools physical education director. Newly elected Democratic township trustees will attend as guests of the teachers. Fred E. Gladden, county schools’ superintendent, will preside, A forenoon session will be given over to sectional meetings at which various departments of the high school and grades will meet in separate sessions. Luncheon will be served at the school.
tertained at a week-end party as human specimens in a rare debauch in the home of a rich man. But another murder is committed" and poor Manny discovers that finders is not always keepers. I am going to give Hershfield, the author of “Super-City,” the credit for drawing the best character study in a few words. He does that with “London” Libby while the dame is taxiing in New York. She looks out of the window, and, as Hershfield puts it, “She was looking out of the window, when in the split second of flashing by, she saw an emaciated, highly roughed female walking hopelessly along, swinging her bag. Libby understood. A golddigger down to silver.” You will find a lot of keen character drawing, a lot of natural exciting theater and tons of suspense. And you are going to love Manny. “Super-City” is presented by the Elf Publishers, Inc. I recommend this one. a a a Indianapolis theaters today offer: Salt and Peanuts at the Lyric, Benny Rubin at the Indiana, “Mother’s Cry” at the Circle, “The Man Who Came Back” at the Apollo, “The Bat Whispers” at the Palace, “Widow From Chicago” at the Ohio, movies at the Colonial, and burlesque at the Mutual. Anderson Woman Dies By Time* Special ANDERSON, Ind., Jan. 21.—Mrs. Mary Emma King, 72, wife of John R. King and mother of two daughters. is dead.
KOREAN TEACHER TO SPEAK AT MUSEUM Costumes of Asiatic Country to Be Shown, Life Described. Life among Korean children will be the topic of Miss Belle Overman, principal of a school at Hajii, Korea, who will address school children at the Children’s Museum, 1150 North Meridian street, Saturday morning. Miss Overman is visiting relatives in this state. She will exhibit costumes and household utensils used by the Koreans. All children of school age may attend free. Territorial possessions of the United States will be studied by a museum geography class at 9:30 a. m. This is the sixth of a series of classes conducted by the museum curator for school children.
BROAD RIPPLE MAGAZINE OUT Distribution of Riparian Is Being Completed. BY ALINA FINKMAN Distribution of the Riparian, midyear magazine of Broad Ripple high school seniors, was completed today by the Riparian staff. This year’s magazine is dedicated to Edward Diederich, Broad Ripple athletic director, and carries an interview with Kin Hubbard, written by a Broad Ripple pupil shortly before the death of the humorist. Members of the Riparian staff who will attend a luncheon party at Technical high school Thursday as guests of the Arsenal Cannon, Technical student paper, and present an act, are: Mary Elizabeth Sawyer, Charles Todd, Frank Gleaves, Ruth Halstein, Alma Flnkman, Franklin Bridges, Caroline Smith, Ruth Worrell. Jean Ward, Jane Fisher, Betty Jane Garber, Mary Margaret Cox, Bill Hardin and Eleanor Klutey. WASHINGTONIAN CLUB TO INSTALL OFFICERS Nel! Hollingsworth New President of High School Group. Officers of the Washingtonian Club of Washington high school will be installed at a meeting Feb. 5, according to the club’s sponsor. Nell Hollingsworth is newly elected president of the club. Other officers are Dorothy Schwab, secretary, and Marquerite Kersey, treasurer. Several members of the club also are members of the Washington branch of the Campfire Girls organization which recently elected Credella Campbell, president; Marguerite vice-president; Said Mason, secretary; Edith Hooser, treasurer, and Edna Rackley, scribe.
Best Sellers The following is a list of the six best sellers in fiction in Brentano’s New York store: “Portrait by Caroline.” a charming study o l a modern woman and her friends, by Sylvia Thompson (Little Brown). $2.50. “Rachel Moon.” a psychological study of girlhood by the author of “Six Mrs. Greenes,’’ by Lama Lee (Harper), $2.50. “Up the Ladder of Gold,” the fantastic story of the man who made war impossible, by E. Phillips Oppenheim (Little Brown). $2. “Imperial Palace.” the author of “The Old Wives Tale” has written an exciting story of modern life, by Arnold Bennett (Doubleday Doran), $2.50. “Roman Holiday.” a social satire indicting our modem civilization, by Upton Sinclair (Farrar Rinehardj, # $2.50. “Sunset Pass,” an exciting story of the old west, by Zane Grey (Harper), $2.00.
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129 PUPILS WIN HONOR AWARDS AT WASHINGTON Girls Lead Boys in Both High, Regular Lists at High School. BY JOSEPHINE HALBING Washington Correspondent Honor roll positions for the final part of the first semester were awarded 129 pupils at Washington high school, according to figures announced by Mrs. Ina S. Gaul, dean of girls. Highest grades were won by fiftyseven pupils who were given places on the high honor roll. Girls led the boys on both the high and regular honor rolls, with forty-four girls and fifteen boys gaining the high honor positions. Regular honor roll positions were won by twenty-one boys and by fifty girls. High honor awards follow: BOYS Marshall Smith, Ray Allen, Glen Ludlow. Frederick NeavlUe. Charles Gibson. Michael Stanlch. George Mock, Charles Cox. Leroy Stutsman. Edward Mock, Kenneth Scott. Luclle Brolck. Stanley Lawton, Ralph Howell. Walter Culbertson. GIRLS Virginia MiUer. Wanda Penisek. Edith Gingery. Cecelia Kupperschmidt, Frances Wright, Jane Leonard. La Verne Conway, Mary Ann Duke. Alice Walker. Eunice Vestal. Elma Haworth, Lyla Fullen, Lottie Gross. Elsie Stock, Ruth Eldridge, Dorothy Edwards. Edythe Flack. Helen Muterspaugh. Lucy May Powell. Mildred Fletemeyer. Betty Branlgan, Helen Sanford. Mary Elisabeth Jameson, Christine Gareloff. Violet Douglas. Opal Nance. Mary League. Riviers Mason. Margaret L. Traeger. Thelma Berry. Bernice McPeek, Edith Carter. Josephine Halblng, Lillie King. Reva Wright. Ruth Walters. Dorothy Alexander. Ruth Fltswater. Irene Grose, Nell Hollingsworth, Emma Perkins. Marlon Ratcliff. Regular honor roll awards were as follows: BOYS Floyd Blake. Mason Blven. Donald Baldwin. Curtis Gordon. Herman Fischer. Frank Vargo. Edward Heise. Thomas Moffet. Morris Culbertson. Vemle Garland, GUbert Sprecher. Robert Flake. Charles Raymond Wells. Henry Kruetzlnger. Paul Dunbar. Walter Pieczko. Jerome Quirk. Russell Sandmever. Sam McCormick, James Rankin, Norman Curtis. GIRLS Betty Douglas. Ada Gooden. Janet Nogle, Anna Lascu, Geneva Cox, Helen Wilson, Evelyn Blven. Credella Campbell, Helen Junkel. Muriel Melvin, Audrey Prestln, Gertrude Wood, Mary Margaret Wolf, Georgia Belle Weatherford. Virginia Roth. Delores Easley. Lillian Montenegro. Lois Ely, Catherine Twigg. Mildred Morrow. Catherine Heicken. Evelyn Montgomery, Vera Fowler. Matilda Sparenblek, Jane Fletebeyer, Margaret Henderson, Dc.othy Teepe, Mary Elizabeth Johnson, Marcella Beamen, Evelyn Calvert. Kathryn Murphy, Evelyn Lewis. Marguerite Halblng, Margaret Schoen. Lucille Chambers, Vera Smith. Janet Ernst. Blanche Grimes. Mary Brothers. Mary L. Wilson. Geraldine KeUy, Frances O’Neil. Mildred Shepherd. Mary F. Shelly. Norma Martin. Velma Tlpmore, Ruth Hendricks. Bessie Butcher, Kathleen Drake. Adelaide Smith. Two Suffer Broken Legs PLYMOUTH, Ind., Jan. 21.—Hay figured in two accidents which resulted in two men suffering leg fractures. Frank Rowe is in a hospital here with a leg broken when he fell from a load of hay. Another patient is M. S. Morris. He suffered a broken leg in a fall from a haymow in the barn at his farm.
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Shortridge Cadets Will Stage Play Cadets of the Shortridge high school, directed by Major A. O. M&nseau, will present a play, “The Traitor,” before Shortridge pupils in the near future. Cadets who will compose the cast are: Major John Bradshaw. Captain John Beeson, Captain Francis Sonday. Captain Ralph Clifton, Lieutenant James Orr, Lieutenant Robert Hiatt. Seargent Leslie Barlett, and Corporal Lester TaveL Members of the Shortridge honor unit at the last meeting of the organization held a competitive rifle drill to determine the best drilled cadet in the unit. The drill was won by Sergeant Robert Kryter. Cadets Stanton Smith, John Carson and Lewis Smith won highest places in the drill. The winner of the drill was awarded five honor points toward his semester rating. EDUCATOR TO SPEAK Child Study Club to Hear Professor Carter. Privileges of children will be discussed before the Child Study Club of School 76, College avenue and Thirtieth street, at 10 a. m. Thursday by Professor Ralph Carter oil the Indiana university extension center. The regular meeting was postponed to the above date because of the 8-A commencement program at the school. Mothers of children attendirg other schools are invited to attend the session. Graduation exercises were held at the school Wednesday. Twenty-three pupils were awarded diplomas. Mias Belle Ramey is principal. Park Addition Bought By Times Special RICHMOND, md., Jan. 21.—Despite considerable opposition, the' city council voted an appropriation of $20,000 for purchase of additional land for Glen Miller park. The land, owned by Joseph H. Hill, local florist, is adjacent to the park and councilmen who favored the measure stated the acquisition of the land would safeguard the springs in the park, which are considered among its greatest assets.
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CANNON STAFF AT TECH WILL HGLDLUNCHEON Workers on Publications at Five High Schools Will Be Guests. BY FRANCIS NIPP Invitations to a luncheon and party which will be held Friday at Technical high school have been issued to the staffs of the school papers of Shortridge, Manual. Washington, Broad Ripple and Warren Central high schools by the staff of the Arsenal Cannon, Tech's school paper. Speakers at the luncheon at 1 p. in. will be Paul C. Stetson, superintendent of schools: Milo Hr Stewart, assistant superintendent in charge of secondary education, and Raymond Blackwell of Franklin college, executive secretary oL the Indiana High School Press Association, of which all of the in--vited staffs are members. Dewitt S. Morgan, Technical principal, will welcome the speakers arid staff members. Ned Linegar of Greensburg high school, vice-president of the state press association, and Mary Frances King of Shelbyville high school, secretary, will be out-of-town guests at the luncheon and party. Warren McDermed of Technical, president of the press association, will be master of ceremonies at the luncheon. After the luncheon the group will meet in the girls’ gymnasium, where each school staff will give a stunt or have charge of a game. Two hundred high school journalists are expected to attend. FRESHMEN AID PLANNED Tech High School Paper WHI Print Instructions for New Pupils. Information for enrolling freshmen will be printed in the final semester issue of the Arsenal Cannon, Technical pupils’ publication. Copies will be distributed to freshmen when they report to sponsor rooms for the first time Jan. 26. A diagram of the campus showing* location of buildings, a time schedule, and stories concerning the book store, lunch room, athletics and the Technical scholastic merit system will help incoming pupils.
