Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 119, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 September 1933 — Page 11
SEPT. 27, 1P33
MUSEUM WILL OFFER CLASSES FOR SIXTH YEAR Study in Natural History and Science to Open Saturday Morning. The Children's Museum, 1150 North Meridian street, has announced opening of the sixth year of Saturday morning classes in natural history and science. This year class will be for junior high school pupils. Until last year, classes were planned for departmental pupils, but with inception of junior high schools in the Indianapolis school system, work for the sixth grade was eliminated in this special series of talks, and the revised curriculum for science in the new junior high course, will be followed closely. Two pupils from the eighth grade are invited to represent each school in the city. Principals at the schools appoint the pupils for a period of six weeks. Principal Will Speak The term will begin Saturday morning, with Miss Mildred Weld, principal at School 15, at 501 North Beviile avenye, addressing the class on "Interdependence of Animals.” On the following Saturday, Oct. 7, E B Hargrave, Washington high school, vice-principal, will discuss "Interdependence of Plants.” and on Oct. 14. Walter G. Gingery, Wash- j ington principal, will give a stere- J opticon talk on "The Solar System.” “Constellations and Their Myths” will be discussed by P. A. Holaday of Shortridge science department, Oct. 21. Demonstration Arranged E. C. Belzer. Indiana Bell Telephone Company, will talk on "Making the Stars Work” at the class j Oct. 28. demonstrating his talk by means of a photo-electric cell. "Weather and Climate” will be the | topic of Joel Hadley, Shortridge j vice-principal, at the last of the se- , ries of six classes in the first period, J Nov. 4. Mr. Hadley is chairman of the j public school committee on general; science, and Miss Weld, Mr. Har- j grave and Mr. Holaday are members, j All classes will begin at 9 :30 in the auditorium at the museum. Terms for seventh grade pupils will open Saturday, Nov. 11, Arthur B. Carr, director of the museum, has an- j nounced. COLLEGE'S AUDITORIUM TO BE USED AS CHURCH New Arrangement Is in Effect for Indiana Central Students. Students at Indiana Central College will worship each Sunday morning in the Kephart Memorial auditorium instead of in the University Heights church as in the i past, it has been announced by the college office. The new arrangement provides a non-sectarian service strictly for j college faculty and students. The serivee will be led by Professor D H. Gilliatt, head of the religious edu- j cation department, and Loren S. j Nobiitt. The college choir, conducted by Professor Ethel Gilliatt. will provide special music each Sunday. The j various glee clubs and quartets of the college also will take part in the programs at various times.
FORMER PUPILS ASKED TO MEET IN REUNION Floyd E. Williamson, Once Principal, Would Be Honored. A reunion of all former pupils of Floyd E. Williamson, state auditor, and former principal of the old district school No. 1 at McClainville, which has been replaced by School 72. at Troy and Carson avenues, is being planned. All of the former pupils of Mr. Williamson have been asked to get in touch with Mrs. Edward McKinney. formerly Miss Ruth Dampier, of the class of 1913. Her address is R. R. 1. Box 289A. The arrangements will be made in accordance with wishes of the majority of the former pupils. The reuinon will be held at a picnic ground near Indianapolis. PUPILS OF SCHOOL 33 STUDY INDIAN RELICS Data Gathered at Children's Museum for Use in Pageant. Third grade pupils of School 33, at 1119. Sterling street, visited the Children's Museum. 1150 North Meridian street last Thursday when the afternoon was spent in a study of Indian collection. Mrs. Mary L. Sparks, teacher of the class, planning an elaborate Indian project, and the visit made by the children is expected to aid them in the erection of tepees, pueblos, hogans and other Indian dwellings. Transporations for the pupils was provided by parents of seven of the children. EXPEDITION TO BE TOPIC Children Museum Director Will Describe Trip in Radio Talk. Hillis L. Howie a trustee of the Children's Museum, and director of its field expedition in the northwest, will speak over WFBM on Thursday night at 6:15. He will tell of the eight weeks’ trek which took the party as far as northwestern Montana, and particularly of the search for fossils in the Bad Lands of South Dakota, where valuable material was found. The material will become part of the museum collections. AWARD SCHOLARSHIPS Place Won at Yale by Robert W. Jarvis. 1931 Shortridge Graduate. Robert W Jams Jr.. 1931 graduate of Shortridge high school, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Jarvis Sr., 2814 Washington boulevard, has won a acholarship for the current year at Yale university. He now is a sophomore. While at Shortridge, Jarvis was a member of the History Club, a consul in the Roman state, and a member of the Shortridge chapter of the National Honor Society.
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Left to Right—Reva Wright, Man’ Jane Fairchild, Miss Ina Gaul, Jane Fletemeyer and Mary Liebendefer.
PUPILS READING LISKOMPILED Shortridge Faculty Draws Outline for Use by Librarians. Announcement has been made by the Shortridge high school office of completion of the high school reading li-st which has been compiled under direction of Miss Elizabeth Brayton of the English department. acting as faculty committee chairman. The list was started under supervision of William N. Otto, former Short ridge English department head. It will be used for outside supplementary reading in the Englishing classes. Copies of the list will be furnished the school library, central library and its branches, and to the English teachers at Shortridge. The list is in book form and contains the titles of more than 1.200 books for use in high school English classes. Other members of the Shortridge faculty who assisted Miss Brayton in completing the work are Miss Katherine Allen, Mrs. Edith Campbell, Miss Florence Fritts, and Miss Margaret Montgomery. Mrs. Nell Sharp. Shortridge librarian, and Miss Mary Cain. Central library readers' assistant, also assisted. Mrs. Mary E. Sullivan of the Shortridge faculty, and several pupils of the school, assisted in typing and mimeographing of the lists.
MANUAL GIRLS 1 GLEE CLUB ELECTS HEAD Pearl Demetrius Is Named by Group of 40. The Girls’ Glee Club of Manual high school recently elected Pearl Demetrius president. Other officers of the club, which has forty members, are Esther Koch, vice-president: Gertrude Winklehaus, secretary; Ruth Okey, treasurer: Clara Poggemeyer, historian; Imogene Kirby, sergeant-at-arms. and Josephine McKee and Annabeile Comstock, monitors. A selected group of sixteen of the girls sang at a luncheon of the Exchange Club Friday at the Washington. Girls in the double octet were Miss Koch. Dorothy Cross. Dorothy Wineman. Bernice King. Catherve Bender, Norman Johnston. Rose Resnick. Miss McKee. Miss Comstock. Miss Poggemeyer. Miss Kirby, Louise Bourgonne. Miss Demetrius, Miss Okey. Miss Winklehaus. Mary Whitaker and Alma Foster. BAND PLACES AWARDED Ten Graduated at Shortridge Are University Musicians. Ten Shortridge high school graduates. who played in the Shortridge band, are members of university bands in the state this year. They are: Jack Ford, Albert Mendenhall and Paul Evans, at Butler; Kenneth Hill. Frank Snyder, Donald Shafer and Robert Elder, at Indiana; Peter Lambertus and Robert Swinford, at Purdue, and George Losey at De Pauw. Mythology Club Elects Anne Holmes has been elected president of the Mythology' Club of Shortridge high school. Other officers are Frank Streightoff. vicepresident; James Calvelage, secretary, and Jane Holmes, treasurer. The group is sponsored by Miss Laura Rupp. An ethnologist reports that suicide is entirely unknown among Zuni Indians of the southwest.
Shortridge Paper Nearing List of 1,500 Subscribers
Circulation Gains Several Hundreds Since First Day's Issue. Agents of the Shortridge Daily Echo, publication of the school, rapidly are nearing the goal of 1.500 subscribers, set at the opening of the school. There were 869 copies distributed the first day of publication, and during the two weeks following, ending last Friday, the number had worked up until at present there are 1.018 daily subscribers. The Echo agents include: Bob Aldag. Bob Ahern, Howard Arnold Charles Bailey. Kathryn Barrett. FrM Burnside. Chloris Bell. Gerald BernsteiaL James Briggs. Dorothy Brooks. Bet is
WASHINGTON HIGH SENIOR GIRLS ELECT
Reva Wright has been elected president of the Washingtonians, senior girls’ organization at Washington high school, sponsored by Miss Gaul. Other officers for the current year are Mary Jane Fairchild, vice-presi-dent; Jane Fletemeyer, secretary, and Mary Liebendefer. treasurer. Projects planned for the fall semester by the organization include the annual parasol parade, a party for freshman girls, a doll contest and talks by well-known speakers of the city.
BROAD RIPPLE HIGH ENROLLMENT GAINS Increase of 25 Per Cent Is Reported by Chief. K V. Ammerman, principal at Broad Ripple high school, has anj nounced an increase of 25 per cent in new enrollments at the school as compared with the number of new pupils who entered the school last fall. New pupils this year are; Mary Adams, Margaret Bennett, Mary Billhvmer, Dorothy Blanchard, George Clark. Lester Combs, Jean Marie Coull, Gertrude Ferguson. Helen Flack, John Glelchman. Harold Hamilton. Kathryn Hamilton. Frank Harrison. Robert Herrin, Albert Hermann, Tom Hines, Edgar Hoy, Robert Hurley. Marv Ellen Irwin, Edward Jones. William Johnson, Robert Kelm, Frances Kesler. Clarence Lowe, John Virginia Menikheim. Palmer Millikan, Marjorie Ann Mills. Marianna Munson, Herbert Neely, William Pryor, Joseph Hughey. Hilda Hunter, Jeanette Monroe, Jack Noon. Flossie Oeffler. Jessie Powers, Harrison Millindore. Fred Steinmeier, Henry A. Stipher Jr.. Eva Thompson, Charles Tice. Charles Taylor. Robert Vermeer. Jean Wilcuts, Mary Ellen Huggins, Jetts Kesler, Richard Earle, Frank Huston, Clnudine Kimes, Maxine Rose, Elsene Metzger Garret Wiseman, Miriam icks, Paula Hintze. Edward Ogle, Jean Sheard, Marie Ray, Helen Rector. Bernice Reinert, Ida Mae Renter., Pau Robertson, Josephine Ridenour. Harold Ryan. Albert Scott, Harry Sheagley, Glen Paul Sheridan. George Stevens, Harless Wagoner. Harry Walter. Iva Waymire. David Woods, Dorothy Wray, Mable Burrows. Catherine Callis, Martha Cubert. Robert Glaubke. Bettv Ann Kartzell. Wilma Kopp. Margaret McAnnally, Evelyn Milster. Evelyn Moorhous, Mary Alice Morris. Mildred Peck, Frank Reese. Arlene Rich, Harold Ross. Margaret Smith, Marian Arnold, Robert Campbell. Helen Clickner, Ralph Compton, Howard Dawson. Betty Elliott. Gretchen Huetter, Ann Mae Drake. Cameron Graham, Margaret Hitchcock and John Vance. RIPARIAN FIRST EDITION IS NEARING COMPLETION Marv Jean Hoffmeyer Heads Staff of Broad Ripple Paper. First edition of the Riparian, monthly publication of Broad Ripple high school, will be distributed Friday. The publication is prepared by pupils of the English department, there being no journalistic study. Mary Jean Hoffmeyer is editor-in-chief of the publication. Other members of the staff include Ralph Helms and Mary Alley, features; John Barnett, sports; Ona Buttler, Alice Remy, John Yelvington, Dorothy Steinmeier, Dorothy Elliott, Fanetta DeVault, Margaret Albert, Gladys Blanton and Jean Sheard, reporters, and Jack Perkins and Morris Conley, distributors. GIRLS TO PLAY TENNIS Broad Ripple High School SemiFinals Set for This Afternoon. Semi-finals in the girls’ singles tennis tournament at Broad Ripple high school will be played this afternoon at the close of school on the high school courts. In the first round of play last week. Flora Belle Crawford defeated Jane Goldfarb. 6-2, 6-2; Elsie Higgins won a match from Elsie Applegate, 6-4, 6-4; Margaret McAnally fell before the drives of Nild Mae Wann, 1-6, 5-7, and Mabel Burrows defeated Jetta Kessler, 6-4, 6-4. Music Scholarship Awarded Harriet Payne. 1928 Shortridge graduate, received a scholarship to the College of Music at Cincinnati for one year in the competitive examination. She will study under Emil Heerman, head of the violin department, and concert master of the Cincinnati Symphony orchestra.
Buseher. Virginia Burford. Helen Cain. Bill Chapin Jr.. Ruth Coler. Allen Cotton, Paul Crockett. Virginia De Prez, Frederick Duncan. Laurence Elkin. James Failey. Qumcv Fessler, Jack Flowers. John Barnhill. Leon Cohen. Sam Dobrow. Lawrence Frommer and Luther Gilliom. Jim Gipe. Herman Gregory. Betty Hamerstadt Rodney Hankins, Jack Hatheld, Mary Hesseldenz. Bob Hoover, Wiibur Hulett. Robert Jackson. Llovd Jacobs. Grant Johnson. Maurice Kelly. Billy King. Delbert Kline. Lois La Fara, Gene Leisure, Albert Low. Benton Lvnch, Julius Maurer, Rov McCormick. Sara Alice Mclntosh. John Ewbank. James Harris. Charles Huston. Betty Lou Miller Margaret Minton. Richard Mueller. Elizabeth Neeves, Johnnie Nunes. Robert Osborne. Ruth Palmer and Gordon Messing. Kathryn Neat. Kenneth V. Roberts. Richard Peirce. Donald Piel, Byron Ragsdale. George Reid. Jack Ritter. Norma Rvan, Lucretia Saunders. Rosamond Schlaegel. Fear.ne Settles. Marvin Schuck. Florence Slutzkv. Robert Springer. Jack Stevenson. Malcom Strauss. David Tavel, Fred Thurston. William Troyer. George Vawter. John Wallace. Margaret Wells, Gladys Whitfleld, Helen C. Wilson. Richard Young. Allan Soioman, Richard Voylet and Palmer Ward.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
RED CROSS TO •HOLDSESSION Chapter of Manual School to Be Hostess for State Meeting. Members of Manual high school’s Red Cross chapter will be official hostesses at the annual state conference of Red Cross junior and senior sections Thursday and Friday at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Gertrude Oertel and Anna Louise Lorenz of Manual chapter will be guides on a sightseeing tour of Indianapolis Thursday morning. A luncheon will be held Thursday at the club. At the Friday session, Florence Enos, a Manual graduate, will speak on co-operation of junior and senior divisions. Favors for the Friday luncheon at the Inidanapolis Athletic Club are being made at Manual under direction of the two Red Cross sponsors of the school, Mrs. Coral Traflinger Black and Miss Anna J. Schaefer.
Sideline Stuff
Times Correspondent Now Is Sports Dopester.
WHERE there is a will there is a way, and for that reason Creath Smiley, 16, senior at Shortridge high school, and The Times correspondent, probably will become a leading soprts reporter some day. Creath is one of the younger set who has learned his reading, writing and arithmetic, but who found out only a few years ago that head lettuce is not small heads of cabbage. Following his appointment as The Times correspondent at the opening of the current semester, Creath found it necessary to learn more of sports, in order to “cover” games for The Times. In his three years at the school, Creath has attended but few football games, and never was able to “dope them out.” After much discussion with other pupils at the school, only one question remained in Creath’s mind, and that he decided had better be answered by a higher authority than the pupils. Going to Bob Nipper, Shortridge football coach, Creath asked, “Mr. Nipper, how many players /are there in the back field of a football team?” Fnudamentals of the game, the number of players, both in the line and back field, were explained by Coach Nipper, and Creath will be ready with pencil in hand, all ready to cover his first game, when the Shortridge team meets Jefferson of Lafayette Friday afternoon at 2 at the north side field. BOYS’ GROUP ELECTS Frank Cassell Heads Minute Men of Washington School. The Minute Men. senior boys’ organization of Washington high school, have elected Frank Cassell president for the coming year. Other officers elected include Mike Standich, vice-president; David Mears. secretary, and Alvin Spangler, treasurer. William Bock is faculty sponsor of the group. Elect Smiley Head of Math Club Creath Smiley has been elected president of the Shortridge High school Math Club. Other officers are Bob Axtell, vice-president; Marjorie Dalman, secretary, and Caroline Rehm. treasurer.
TRUTH NEEDS NO VARNISHING . . . nor does Salada Tea. a Many extraordinary virtues sC have been credited to tea. Salada Tea claims only this —that it provides the finest ** cup of pure refreshment VI 000M94M r F it is possible to secure. 'SALADA’ TEA -----~ - - - <
ETCHING GIVEN BY ‘FIRST LADY’ TO HELP SHOW Mrs. Roosevelt Contributes to Cathedral School Fall Festival. Annual fall festival of Cathedral high school will be held Oct. 6 and 7 at the school. A ’’Century of Progress” booth has been arranged as a part of the festival, and oil paintings, hand-made lace and embroidery, and other articles of artistic value will be shown at the booth. The festival is a benefit affair, and money derived will be used to help defray expenses of pupils at the schcool. Mrs. Thomas Gillespie, booth chairman, recently received a letter from Malvius T. Scheider, secretary to Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, extending the good wishes of the j “first lady” for success of the festival. Accompanying the letter was an etching of the White House, which will be displayed at the booth. Features for Children Mrs. George A. Smith, festival committee chairman, has announced a pony track, ten ponies and a merry-go-round will be provided to entertain children. Assisting Mrs. Smith are Mrs. Leroy Keach, Mrs. George Knue, Mrs. Willie Brennan, Mrs. Walter Kibler and Mrs. Joseph Hoffman. A fish fry will be held in the school cafeteria Friday night, Oct. 6.’ The fish fry committee includes Bert Deery, chairman; John Remmeter, Joseph F. O’Mahoney, Fred Pfleger, Joseph Dux, Claude Rochford, George A. Smith, James F. Lynch, Martin Walpole and Elmer Flick. Quilt Show Scheduled The quilt committee which is arranging a quilt show is composed of Mrs. W. M. Walpole, chairman; Mrs. Ralph Isaacs, Mrs. W. I. Seal Jr., Mrs. Bernard J. tluedelhoefer, Mrs. Joseph F. Zimmer, Mrs. William E. Kennedy, Mrs. Frank Wildner, Mrs. Marie Jones and Mrs. Edward C. Brennan. Cathedral high school Mothers Club, under direction of Mrs. Nicholas Connor, president, is assisting James E. Rocap, general committee chairman in making the arrangements for the entire festival. Paul Just is head of the publicity committee. Twenty-three Catholic parishes in the city are represented on the twelve committees.
MAGAZINE TO MAKE DEBUT NEXT WEEK Staff of The Surveyor Is Headed by Earl Hoff. Earl Hoff has been elected editor-in-chief of the Surveyor, magazine of Washington high school, first edition of which will be published next week. Others who have been selected for the staff include George Bange, business manager; Ralph Saunders, Morris Culbertson and George Powers, editorials; Charles Lockwood, Frederick Lawton and Dudley Clark, features; Wayne Whiffling, Thomas Wright and Wilkes Neil, sports, and Jane Fletemeyer. clubs. Reporters for the publication are Vernon Jines, Henry Kreutzinger, Lucille Lance. John Macy, Nick Mates, Victoria Medjeski, Doris Myers. Ralph Mitchell, Violet Powers, Thomas Strouse and Betty Sullivan. A special feature of the publication this year will be a message j from Walter G. Gingery, principal, j to the student body. PLAY BASED ON BOOK “Little Women” to Be Portrayed at ! Manual by Fraternity Members. Members of Lambda Theta, dramatic fraternity, will dramatize Louisa M. Alcott’s story, “Little I Women,” at 8:15 tonight in the j Manual high school auditorium. Those appearing in the cast include Miss Frieda Draeger, Miss Gertrude Bluemel, Miss Pauline Davis, Miss Alberta Stuckmeyer, ; Miss Dorothy Bluemel, Miss Bertha ; Haynes, Miss Hermine Ernsting, Gilbert Maescher, Ernest Schaefer, | Theodore Bluemel, Waldo Mindach and Robert Scharfe. M’CUEN NAMED HEAD Indiana Central College Seniors Elect Napannee Man. Lester McCuen, Napannee, has been elected president of the senior class at Indiana Central college. Other officers of the class are Ansel Simon, vice-president, and Robert Carter, secretary-treasurer. James Eaton, Peru, is president of the junior class; Robert Barnett is vice-president, and Lena Bowen, secretary-treasurer. Hayes Chosen As Boston Agent John Hayes has been chosen agent for the June ’34 Booster of Manual high school. Virginia Russett and Geraldine Allanson will be his assistants. Helen Fechtman has been named roll room representative.
SHORTRIDGE GRADUATES EXEMPTED FROM TEST
Betty Lou Blackmore
Betty Lou Blackmore, Esther Steup and Fletcher E. Humphrey, members of the June '33 graduating class of Shortridge high school, all entering the Indiana university extension center, have been exempted from the freshman 101a course in English composition. Forty-five students took the examination which is optional to incoming students, and the percentage of exemptions here was greater than that of 400 freshmen taking the examination at Indiana university at Bloomington. The three ‘ Shortridge graduates were members of both the senior honor roll and the National Honor Society at the school.
40 IN R. 0. T. G. ADDRESSJPUPILS Work of Unit Topic for Roll Room Talks at Technical. Forty pupil representatives of the R. O. T. C. at Technical high school gave talks in roll rooms at the school this week in order to acquaint the pupils with the work of the unit. Those who spoke were James Raber. cadet colonel; George Messmer, cadet lieutenant colonel; William Kendrick, cadet major; William Feeman, cadet captain and corps adjutant; William Hume, Robert White, Robert Hickman,
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Esther Steup
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Clifford Watson, Walter Jones, Jack Goory, Edward Schock. and David Young, cadet captains. William Imel, Ralph Terrill, and Charles Koelling, cadet first lieutenants; Edward Edwards, Fred Schurman, Harry Griswold, La Mont Miley, Alexander Petrovich, Vance Turner, Richard Kellam, Robert E. Pigg, Tom Berger, Harold Hawes, Lewis Douglas, Charles Culley, Earl Duckum, Jack Hyser, Gene Bruce, Bill Morris, Worbert Croucher, John Logan, and Jack Woerner, cadet second lieutenants. William Charles, master sergeant, Richard Merriman and Benjamin Cole, color sergeants, and Richard Glass and William Morganson, staff sergeants.
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STAFFS CHOSEN TO EDIT TECH'S SCHOOLPAPER Chief Editors’ Posts Given George Messmer and Jane Bosart. Appointments to the two staffs of the Arsenal Cannon, bi-weekly publication of Technical high school, have been made by Miss Ella Sengenberger. staff sponsor. Jane Bosart and George Messmer have been appointed editors-in-chief. Lorril Harper is associate editor of staff No. 1. Others on Staff Other members of the No. 1 staff include Mary Jane McGaughey. school editor; Martha L Cook, copy editor: Martha Hudgins. Page 8 editor; Alice Hart, exchange editor; Mildred Brown, assignment writer, and Mary Mae Endsley. Bernard Flaherty. Maralyn Julian, Alice Staufenbiel, Margaret Kendall, Florida Monical and Alice Kautsky, reporters. The No. 2 staff is composed of Alma Bernhardt, associate editor; Marjorie Hargon. school editor; Jean McLeav. copy editor; Margaret Oldham. Page 8 editor; Bernice Jones, exchange editor: Grace Nobiitt. assignment writer, and Ruth Pierpont, Norval Jaspar, Alice Heine. Lide*Kayler. Beatrice Risk, Helen Karch, Mvla Udell and John St. Helens, reporters. ° ,ts Staff Serves Both Warren Confer and George Worley are sports editor and assistant sports editors, respectively, for both staffs. Jane Howard, Miriam Vollmer and Dorothy Thompson are typists. Walter Sinclair is business manager and Daniel Gleich, circulation manager. Warner Monninger is faculty business manager. Gertrude Walsh has been appointed editor-in-chief of the January magazine. Denton Littell is layout editor; Alfred Henderson, assistantlayout editor; Ray Poole, art editor, and Irvin Du Chemin, assistant art editor. P.-T. A. to Open Season First business meeting of the year for the Parent-Teacher Association of School No. 32 at Twenty-first and Illinois streets, will be held at 3 today in the school and will be followed by a program of music and readings.
