Indianapolis Times, Volume 43, Number 272, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 March 1932 — Page 8
PAGE 8
KITE BUILDERS WILL COMPETE AT SCHOOL 20 Pupils Are Busy Preparing for Variety of Contests to Be Held Friday. Education via kites. That’s the latest thing at school No. 20, at 1125 Spruce street, where pupils and teachers, fathers and mothers are busy preparing for the big kite contest to be held Friday. From the homes in the vicinity of the school will come the entries for the honor of being the larged, the smallest, the most beautiful, the oddest, or the best flying kite. Scarcely a father in the neighborhood but must arrive home in the evening with anew consignment of string, sticks, paper or glue. Roth Boys and Girls Compete Boys and girls alike are eligible to compete for honors. Only two conditions must be met by contestants. The kite must be proven in the air before it is entered, and no kite may be flown from the street. Preparations for the gala day have been feverish. Pupils who have been a trifle sluggish in reading their history books in the past, now anxiously con reference books on “Kites of Other Lands” or "The Developin' at of the Kite Through the Centuries.” Reading Has Improved Teachers at the school state that the contest has aroused interest in history, geography and social science. In addition. It has been noted that the reading ability of the pupils—their speed and thoroughness has increased remarkably. Principal and teachers have answered hundreds of questions as to the best book on kite construction. Books describing the famous kites of history have been much in demand. They’ll have a “high” time at school No. 20 Friday.
MANUAL WRITERS IN NATION-WIDE CONTEST Twenty-Two Enter Stories, Essays or Poems in Magazine Event. Twenty-two Manual Training high school pupils have entered short stories, essays or poems in the national scholastic contest, sponsored by the scholastic magazine. The contest is open to all high school pupils in the United States. Pupils entering short stories are Merle Faubion, Raymond Meyer, Rachel Cohen, Anna Calderon, Eileen Davis and Herbert Neidenberger. Those submitting essays are Elizabeth Miller, Hilda Bookatman, Louisa Paul, Olive Stout, Irene Graham, Joe Calderon, Helen Moeller, Lucille Miller, Glen Roberts and Robert McDaniels. Poems were entered in the contest by Adrabelle Fisher, Eileen Davis, Ethel Lyons, Dick Edwards and Joe Calderon. Winner of first prize in the contest will be awarded SSO. A certificate will be given to the pupil who submits the best short story in Indiana. This award was won last year by Anna Calderon of Manual Training high school.
FIVE TECH GIRLS ARE IN LIBRARY CLASS Cataloging and Lending Books Is Big Part of Their Work. Five girls are enrolled this j semester 'in the library practice j course at Arsenal Technical high school. Cataloging and lending of books constitutes the majority of the work done. New girls in the course are Frances Brown, Sara Bell Wells, Adaline Walker, Katherine French and Cleo Carter. Those who have completed the course and now are on staff duty are Mary Stevens, Mary Williams, Evelyn Shipman and Gracena Sherwood. Dorothy Dilworth. Iva Hrndorspn. Roberta Auble. Alberta Riffle. Helen Storner. Catherine Duke. Elaine Washburn. Kathrvn Knepoer. Betty Jane Burcaw. Josephine Tavlor. Grace Victor Alice Kautskv. Gene Hall. Anne Abrams. Evelvn Miller. Martha Currie. Dor°thv Kct kcc°mhf' Gertrudc EsslK. Josephine Williams and BC Miss n Lyle Harter is librarian and Mrs. Frieda Patton is assistant librarian. U. $. STUDENTS INVITED Summer Courses Are Offered to Attract Americans. San Marcos university of Lima. Peru, the oldest university in the western hemisphere, will offer summer courses especially designed to attract American students this summer. Collegians from the United States will be able to study Spanish. Latin American literature. Peruvian archeology and Latin American affairs. The summer school is to be sponsored bv the Institute of International Education. Dr. Stephen P. Duggan is director. WORK FOR SWEATERS Names of Five Girls Are Posted by Shortridge Athletic Organization. The girl’s athletic organization at Shortridge. the Philateron Club, has posted the list of names of the girls who have gained at least 500 points toward a Shortridge sweater. They are Mary Houppert, June Siebert. Evelyn king, June Wayland and Margaret Richey. The three charter membes of the club who have already won their sweaters are Charlotte Sputh. Jeanne Spiegel and Lois Le Saulnier. The club has also posted its new plans for admission to the club. PLAN MAY DAY PARTY Manual Girls League to Give Show at Annual Fete. Features of the annual .May day celebration of Manual Training high school. May 15, will include a show sponsored by the Girls’ League of Manual, and a girls’ gymnasium exhibit. In charge of arrangements is a faculty committee, headed by Mrs. Ruth Allee. Others on the committee are Miss Bernice Baldwin. Mrs. Louise Batchelor. Mrs. Coral Black, Miss Eloise Hanson. Miss Maude Haynes, Miss Anna Schaefer, Mrs. Mary Spiegal, Miss Helen Tipton and Miss Vivien Webster.
EATING WAY TO HEALTH
School 84 Pupils Are Vitamin Conscious
Phyllis Heidenreich, 5768 North Delaware street (left), and Howard Koch, 5640 Central avenue.
PRINCIPAL HAS 43 ASSISTANTS Pupils Serve Half Hour a Week at School 49. Few are the bank presidents who have as many as forty assistants. Fewer still are the presidents with assistants who feel honored to have the job. But practically every grade school principal in Indianapolis has forty or more assistants who attend to such office work as answering the telephone, meeting visitors, and doing errands at the building. Miss Dorothy Pennington, principal of school No. 49, at 1902 West Morris street, has forty-three assistants who are pupils in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades. .Each pupil serves as assistant for half an hour, once a week. Eighth grade pupils who are assistants are: Lawrence Owens. Elizabeth Leerkamn, Mildred Jenkins. Marion Willoughby. Dora Thorne, Cora Pox. Margaret, Morris. Gladys Swineford. Bertha Jines. Robert Kirk. Leetha Steele. Margaret Kirk. Bonnie Wilson. Florence Beaver, Margaret Dunn. Nathan Steele. Elmer Rosebrough. Harold McLaughlin and Mary Wright. Assistants who are pupils in the seventh grade are: Irene Robinson. Esther Ford, Charles Strange. Virginia Williams. Genevieve Boufford. Catherine Ball. Edith Brown, Maxine Clark. Ruby Kemper. Esther Ford. Maxine Burton. Donald Wright and Gladys Walton. Sixth graders who serve as assistants are: Dorothy Deweese. Virginia But.tz. Helen Deatrick. Mary Harsin. Curtis Baker. Mary Waltz. Raymond Cheit. Ina McGee. Jean Steinhrugge. Geraldine Burns and Thomas Hodges.
FEEDS 230 DAILY Shortridge Cafeteria Head Has Held Post 14 Years. Fourteen years of well-fed Short-ridge-ites is the record of Mrs. Lon Craig, 67 Whittier place, who has charge of the Shortridge high school cafeteria, with Mrs. Florence C. Porter, school dietitian. The cafeteria feeds approximately 2.200 pupils and teachers daily.
Thirteen hundred persons were fed at each of the two ParentTeacher Association banquets in the cafeteria this year. Fifty-one pupils and thirty adults assist Mrs. Craig. Twelve thousand dishes and nine thousand pieces of silverware are used daily. Mrs. Craig’s weekly order includes one- half
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Mrs. Craig
ton of beef, five hundred loaves of bread, three thousand half-pints of milk, four hundred gallons of ice cream and seven hundred pies. She serves 6.000 sandwiches and 2,500 salads to hungry pupils every week.
HOLBEIN’S PORTRAIT OF BABY KING, HENRY VI, IS CLASSIC
BY ALICE ROHE Written for NEA Service AFTER last week’s little girl with only the title of Innocence we have a prince who became king of England at the age of 9. Surely every Amercian child has either read Mark Twain's fascinating tale of "The Prince and the Pauper.” or has seen the play made from the book. The story is of the poor boy who* so resembled the prince that he was given royal honors while the real heir with whom he had changed clothes was thrown from the palace to live among the most wretched of his subjects. The prince whose heart was touched by the misery of his peopeople is the baby of today’s picture. He was the only son of King Henry VIII of England and his sister was no other than Queen Elizabeth. Edward's mother was Lady Jane Seymour and Elizabeth's was Anne Boleyn. Prince Edward had another sister. Mary, who had still another mother. Catharine of Aragon. Henry had six wives, two of whom he divorced, thus causing the great rift between England and Rome. Two of them he beheaejed, but Edward's mother died when she gave her husband the greatest desire of his life—a son. m n u FDWARD did not greatly resem- * ble his arrogant, self-indulgent father, who regarded his son and heir with a sort of idolatry. Holbein’s picture was painted when he was only 15 months old and does not show the frail health which is so ntorked in later pictures. When you realize the restraint
PUPILS in the 4A-5B grade at Joseph J. Bingham school No. 84. Fifty-seventh street and Central avenue, are eating their way to health. Not so long ago mother ad to keep a close eye on Howard Koch to be sure that he ate his spinach. Now, Howard thinks of vitamins, and forgets that spinach can’t compare with pie when it comes to taste. He tells Phyllis Heidenreich that prunes and rolled oats and carrots can’t be beaten for health-giving qualities. Phyllis, like all her classmates, used to try to feed things like prunes and rice to the dog under the table. The reason for this change? Easy. tt u tt THE children built a Health House. It is at the corner of Cereal street and Vitamin avenue. They feel happy, for they know that no danger lurks in those streets. The children like their Health House so well they got their heads together and wrote a poem about it. OUR HEALTH HOUSE There is a land called “Health Land,” To all it’s the greatest joy. The house is made of rolled oats white, They’re good for each girl and boy. The roof is made of crackers, Painted a brilliant red. The trees around this "food house,” Are made of wholesome .bread. The chimney Is made of a carrot, Upon the roof it stands; This brings health and happiness To every one in Health Land. Raisins, rice, beans and potatoes. Prunes, apples, and oranges, too, Spaghetti, radishes, onions, milk. And cereals wait to greet you! Teacher of the class is Miss Mabel Bateman.
WEEK REMAINS IN • ESSAY COMPETITION
Entries in Washington Contest Must Be in by April 1. Only a little more then a week remains in which Indiana high school pupils may enter essays in the George Washington bicentennial essay contest. The contest closes Friday, April 1. Pupils from thirty-one high schools have entered the contest so far, according to Paul C. Stetson, chairman of the Indiana contest committee. Schools which to date are represented by essays in the contest are: Anderson, Bicknell, Bremen. Clifford. Dexter: Central and Reitz at Evansville. Central Catholic and North Side at Ft. Wavne. Frankfort. French Lick. Greensbur. Catholic and Central at Hammond. Huntingsburi?. Arsenal Technical. George Washington and Emmerich Manual Training at Indianapolis. Kentland. Lebanon. Leopold. North Vernon. Princeton. Rome. Southport. Sullivan. Wilev at Terre Haute. Tobinsport. Valparaiso. Wanatah and War'"schools having pupils entering the contest will judge their own entries, and send only its best three. Topics about which pupils may write include: “George Washington, the Farmer at Mount Vernon;” “George Washington’s Spirit of Sportsmanship;” “George Washington, Statesman and Soldier,” “George Washington’s Sense of Duty;” “Washington's Balance of
and formality which surrounded Edward the pained look in his face as he grew older is not surprising. Even at the time Holbein painted his baby portrait the tiny prince had his own household —a noble lady housekeeper, a nurse, chamberlain, comptroller, almoner and even rockers of the royal cradle! Later on he had a whipping boy who, if Edward misbehaved, was i given a good lashing in his stead. It is fortunate for the whipping boy that the prince was well behaved. Edward was thoughtful, studious and precocious. When he was 8 years old he wrote to Archbishop Crammer in Latin. At 9 he knew four books of Cato by heart as well as a great deal of the Bible. He didn’t have much fun and before he was 10 years old his father died and he became king of England. tt * a A BOUT the only playmate he J*- enjoyed, if so serious a little king could enjoy himself,' was his beautiful young cousin, Lady Jane Gray. When Edward made his will, he passed over his sisters Mary and Elizabeth and named Lady Jane as his successor. Poor boy, he did not know he was condemning her to death. For the beautiful and talented girl who did not want to be que e n reigned only ten days. Then Mary, who became queen, beheaded her. King Edward had died a short time before at the age of 16 in the seventh year of his reign. Holbein, who was born in Germany, became court painter to Henry VIII % 1532. His likeness
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SKATING FETE IS SET THURSDAY Tickets for Event on Sale Since Monday. Ticket sale for the skating party of the Shortridge high school senior class opened Monday. The party will be held at 2:45 Thursday at the Riverside rink. The affair will be the first of its kind to be held by Shortridge pupils. Numerous contests and features have been planned. Advertising for the event has been carried on over the school’s broadcasting system, which connects the central station in the physics department with the senior session rooms. Committees for the party have been appointed by Charles Feibleman, class president. Members of the ticket and finance committee are: Jean E. Boyd, Ann Brown, Ralph Brown, Robert Brown, Betty Calvelage, Heath Compton. George Duke, Marcella Esler. Theodore Feucht. Max Gallaway. Paul Gebauer. Robert Godley. John Hair. Gordon Hall. Katrina Hulst, Pauline Judd, Helen Keller, Ann Komstohk. Robert Lawson. Susan McGaughey, John Morgan, Robert Netzorg, Jack Pedigo. Channing Taukersley. Louis Thomas, John Weinbrieht and Mary Margaret Williams. General chairman of the party is Earl Robinson. Mary Ann Russe is publicity chairman. Heading other committees are Agnes Hinkle and Ed Blackwell, entertainment, and Julien Kennedy and Jane Crawford, transportation.
Character;” “The Many-sidedness of George Washington;” “George Washington, the Friend;” ‘‘Washington’s Influence on Our Life of Today.” Judges of the Indiana contest will be Dr. Christopher B. Coleman, director of the Indiana historical bureau; Stephen C. Noland of the Indianapolis News, and Miss Corinne Welling of the English department of Butler university. Winning essay in the state will be entered in the national competition. The state winner will be awarded a George Washington bicentennial medal in silver. The medal in bronze will go to the winner of second place. COMMITTEES NAMED Broad Ripple High Senior Chief Announces Selections. Committees of the senior class of Broad Ripple high school were announced recently by John Ammerman, class president. The committees are as follows: Mothers’ Tea Committee—Marv J. Clark, chairman: Hortense Davies. Frances Louise Dunttan. Ruth Stewart and Virginia Sheelev. Invitations Committee—Vance Waggoner, chairman: Samuel Meyer. James Hoggatt, Margaret Kent and Ruth Anna Michael. Class Dav Exercises Committee—John Ammerman. chairman: Gene Bisinger. Norval Avers. William Talbott. Harold Engleman. Helen Ford and Louise Pike. Senior Breakfast Committee Ruth Eaton, chairman: Keith Roberts. Maurice Eddinefield. Cora Zaser and John Vance. _ Faculty sponsor of the class is Miss Winifred West of the commercial department.
of Henry VIII has made the face and costume of that much married monarch familiar to every one. It is the baby prince's portrait, however, that has th e greatest charm. It was no easy task for an artist to paint this child, whom Henry regarded as the most wonderful creature ever born. But Holbein succeeded in pleasing the king. Art in England was at such a low ebb that Henry had been forced to call in a foreigner. a tt * UNLIKE most German artists of this period, Holbein combined imagination and an innate grace, a great feeling for physical beauty with the German gifts of detailed finish, fineness of line, delicacy of modeling, accuracy. His portraits are so exact a reproduction of the subject as to suggest their images in a mirror. Artists in those days had to do many kinds of work. Holbein, whose father also was an artist, designed many woodcuts for books. As Henry's court painter, he had to decorate the walls of the palaces, design royal pageants as well as paint royal portraits. He loved best : to paint portraits and his paintings are so distinctive that you can tell them without even seeing his signature. Next week another little prince will gallop right onto this page on his pony—Don Baltazar Carlos of Spain. Velazquez, who painted his por- , trait, believed just the opposite to , Holbein. He achieved in a few strokes instead of going into detail.
CITY WILL SEND DELEGATION TO MUSICJARLEY Teachers and Pupils Will Depict Indianapolis Instruction Ideas. Indianapolis school pupils and teachers will play a prominent part in the National Music Supervisors’ conference, which will be held in Cleveland, April 3 to 9. The conference will attract approximately 5,000 persons interested in public school music education from all parts of the United States. Ralph W. Wright, director of music, will attend the conference. Others in the department may go to the conclave, but their names have not been announced. Pupils in the Washington high school music department will go to the conference to sing in the national chorus, which will be made up of pupils from high schools in all parts of the country. The pupils who will attend have not been chosen. They will be announced later by Miss Etta Sherf of the Washington high music department. Depict City Schools’ Work Members of the music department have been collecting material which will depict work of Indianapolis pupils in music. This 'will be sent to Cleveland to become part of the educational exhibit, which will aim to show what is being done in the teaching of music in the United States. Original poems and drawings, which were stimulated by listening to music will be sent as examples of creative work. Pictures will go to the exhibit. They will show choruses, rhythm bands, glee clubs, and other musical organizations in the schools. Programs of the Orloff trio and the Indianapolis symphony orchestra will show that school children here have opportunities to hear the best of music. Clearing House for Ideas ♦ Radio programs which have been presented by the music department over the radio during the public schools’ weekly half-hour broadcast will be shown. Indianapolis is among the leaders in public school radio programs. The conference aims to be a clearing house for new ideas in music teaching. “The conference always is a great aid to those attending,” Wright said. “It sums up music teaching as it is all over the country.”
PLAN TREE PLANTING Pupils to Observe Arbor Day, Honor Washington. Dual observance of the George Washington bicentennial and Arbor day will be held April 8 at school No. 49, at 1902 West Morris street, when the pupils of the school will plant an American white elm tree. Opening the planting ceremony will be the singing of “America,” by school pupils. Jean Fullen, 6A pupil, of 2013 Jones street, will recite a poem, “What Do We Do When We Plant a Tree?” by Abbey. Following this, the departmental classes will sing “Under the Greenwood Tree.” Nathan Steele, 1235 Hiatt street, president of the 8A Civics club, will make the speech of dedication, telling of the purpose and significance of tree-planting. To close the program, the intermediate classes will sing “Trees,” by Joyce Kilmer.
SCHOOLS WILL CLOSE FOR SPRING VACATION Repairs Will Be Made to Buildings During Recess Next Week. More than 57,000 Indianapolis school children will leave the city's schools Friday afternoon for a week of spring vacation. They will return to school April 4. Os the 57,000, approximately 42,500 are grade school pupils. Warnings to all motorists to use added caution in their driving will be made later in the week. Repairs will be made to school buildings during the week's vacation, school officials anounced. H. F. Osier, superintendent of buildings and grounds, is planning to replace old equipment in many buildings.
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King Edward VI ... as the 15-months-old prince
PUPILS’ HANDICRAFT SHOWN AT LIBRARY
“Gosh, could a feller have a good time around a place like that or not!” sighs Billy Winningham Jr., 3ip East North street, Apartment 1, as he calculates with his eye the space at Mt. Vernon available for playing marbles and flying kites. Billy Jr. is studying the miniature replica of Washington's home on display at the handicraft fair in the central public library. The model was built by S. Dale Jay, a pupil at school No. 58. It won first prize in the 1931 realtors’ home show contest. Practically every grade school in Indianapolis is represented by an exhibit in the handicraft fair, being held this week in the Cropsey auditorium of the library. Hundreds of articles, made by school children, are included in the display.
Wide Variety of Talent Is Shown in Exhibit, Open All Week. Outstanding among the panels, wall hangings, clay models, maps and other examples of popular hanidicraft are a colorful map of Indiana, a group project of the eighth grade, school No. 43, to illustrate outstanding events in Indiana history. Research for the map was done in the public library and the museum. There are molded masks of papier-mache representing different industries sent in from school No. 5; block prints and plaques In original designs from school No. 17; mats designed after study of oriental symbols submitted from school No. 31 by Raymond O’Neil and Harry Walther. There are trays designed by the manual training classes at school No. 67: lamp shades from the eighth grade school No. 78; a miniature model of Mt. Vernon made by S. Dale Jay, school No. 58, which was first prize winner in the Realtors’ Home Show contest of 1931. There are knights and cowboys modeled in clay by Henry Ford Gaines, 78, school No. 14; crayoned wall hangings on muslin or conventional designs from the seventh grade, school No. 47; sixth grade, school No. 2, and seventh grade, school No. 57. Original designs crayoned on muslin have been submitted by Louise Volrath, Mary Green, Marjorie Love and Donald Carson at school No. 34, and clever little eccentric animals from grade 4 at school No. 34, among them impossible giraffes, weird zebras and griffons that never were on land or sea. There are soap carvings from schools Nos. 75, 78 and 54; tiles decorated by the fourth grade, school No. 32; colorful panels, one a Russian peasant group and interior to illustrate a geography lesson from school No. 4, another decorative medieval panel and a Greek panel from school No. 58. A framed colored panel to illustrate European costumes and architecture comes from the sixth grade, school No. 29, and a puppet stage and puppets illustrating “The Frog Prince” has been sent in from the 8A at school No. 38. Many other entries are In the exhibit, too numerous to mention. The fair is open to the public. Doors are open from 9 in the morning until 6 at night.
TAKE TEST ON LEAGUE Manual Pupils Study Work in Special Class. Seven pupils of Manual Training high school, who have been studying the history of the League of Nations for the last three weeks in a special class conducted by E. F. Moore of the history department, took a test last week at the close of the course. The two best papers in the- test will be sent to New York where they will be judged along with others from all parts of the United States. First prize In the national competition will be a trip to Europe. Pupils at Manual, who took the course, were Margaret Bourgonne, lola Marsh, June Nackenhorct, Augusta McCray, Philip Fogle, Louis Goldman and Samuel Gordon.
Billy Winningham Jr.
Pupil Sculptor
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Henry Ford Gaines
Miniature clay statues of cowboys, knights, and prize fighters in action are * the specialty of Henry Ford Gaines, 138 North Highland avenue, a pupil at Washington Irving school No. 14, at 1229 East Ohio street. A group of his models are on display at the handicraft fair at the central library this week.
WIN PERFECT RATING Manual Machine Operators Undergo Test. Thirty-four operators in the machine calculation classes at Manual Training high school gained a rating of 100 per cent in the first official tests given recently. The perfect rating qualifies the pupils for other tests to be given later in the semester. A gold pin will be awarded operators making 100 per cent on the series of four tests. Pupils who qualified for the future tests are: Alpha Peckham. Arthur Brehob. Elizabeth Britt. Helen Rinker. Violet Ruwe. Edna Chastain. Rachel Cohen, Esther Freui denber*. Elizabeth Scherer. Bennv Dichner. i Mildred Reimer. Eileen Hadlev. DeVere Blum. Selma Mever. Prudence West. Katherine Olshan. Raymond Walton. Helen Sanford. Cvnthia Alderson. La Verne Wagener. Helen Shuey. Marie Grubbs. Martha P-ost-ma. Harriet White. Geraldine Dagev. Alice Yeager. Margaret Tinslev. Katherine Beckman. Dorothv Hummel. Elizabeth Hansing. Esther Schulz. Virginia liesse. Earnestine Moore and Margaret Hollingsworth. The following pupils also made 100 per cent scores, but are not eligible to receive the awards because they are advanced students: Catherine Cramer. Lorraine Presnail. Joe Mankovltz. Roxie Max. Engle. Hilda Brink. Lucille Moore. Thelma Jacobs. Lena Wright and Thelma Wright. Scholarship Contest Open A SSOO scholarship to any college or university in the United States is being offered by Antioch college. Yellow Springs, 0., for the best essay on “What Is College For?” i The contest is open to high sohool seniors who stand in the upper third of their classes.
WEEK-END EXCURSIONS TO CHICAGO $5.00 Round Trip Leave Indianapolis 11:30 A. M. Friday; 2:35 A M. or 11:3(1 A. M. Saturday, and 2:35 A. M. Sunday. Returning; to reach Indianapolis not later than 4:10 A. M. Tuesday following; date of sale. $3.60 Round Trip TO LOUISVILLE On all trains leaving: Fridays. Satnrdays and Sun Returning; to and including; Mo Y ; wins; date of sale. Coaen Service Only For Tickets and Information apply to City Ticket Office, 116 Monument Place. Phone Riley 9331. Pennsylvania Railroad
AETNA TRUST AND SAVINGS GO. Insurance of all kinds Excepting Lffe l S. A. SALMON Mgr. Insurance Dept. IS Jforth Fenn.jiTanl* StMtl Lincoln 7371 A
.MARCH 23, 1932
MISS CROZIER WILL SPEAK ON WKBFPROGRAM ‘Busybodies and Better Boys,’ Topic of Physical Education Chief. Miss Ada B. Crozier, acting head of the physical education department of the public schools, will speak on “Busybodies and Better Boys” during the twenty-fourth weekly half-hour broadcast of the public schools from 9 to 9:30 tonight over WKBF. Tommy Wright, a pupil of school No. 41, will play three piano solas. His selections will be “Nocturne Opus 9. No. 2.” by Chopin: “Bluette,” by McDowell, and “Butterfly,” by Grieg. Billy Jolly of school No. 85 will play three banjo solos, “Stars and Stripes Forever.” by Sousa, and “Echoes From Dixie” and “Dixie Rube,” southern folk songs. Alice Adelia Hite, a pupil of school No. 57, will play a group of piano solos, “Hungary” by Koelling. “Mazurka” by Chopin, and “Salfeggio’’ by Bach. Two elementary school pupils will give readings. Ruth Pope of school No. 40 will give “Epaminondos” and Jimmy Carlin, a pupil of school No. 66, will present “Changing Places” and “Books.” The school ship of the air, which rails at 9:35 three mornings a week, will go to Wyoming Friday, to New Mexico Monday, and to Arizona next Wednesday. PUPILS DRAMATIZING GROUP OF STORIES Characters Are Black Cardboard Figures Moving Against Light. Pupils in the 3A-4B grade at school No. 76, College avenue and Thirtieth street, are dramatizing a group of stories. Characters in their dramas are black cardboard figures which move in silhouette against a background of light. Scenes are painted in black on white cloth, so that the figures, controlled by wires, arei visible through the cloth. Pupils who have submitted stories for dramatization are: Jean Barnes. “The Frog Prince”; Roberta Wright. “How the Letter C Got It'* Sound”: Flora Marie Miller. “The Frog and the Bovs”: Frederick Llovd. “The Camel and the Pig”; Marv Elizabeth Caldwell. “The Country Mouse'; Jrvlng Sabolaskv. “The Uglv Duckling"; Marv Katherine McCartv. “Pinocchio ’: Rooerta Hamilton. “The Camel and the Jackal"; Doninld Whitman. “The Beauty and the Beast"; Ardis Beal. "The Cock and the Little Red i Hen", and Frank Guthrie. “The Rabbit 1 and the Tar Baby.” In charge of the class is Miss ! Laura Cooper, teacher.
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