Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 125, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1933 — Page 9

OCT. 4, 1933

-.NAME EDITORS FOR BOOSTER. MANUAL PAPER First Issue Will Appear on Oct. 13 Under New Editorial Staff. The appointment of Jessie Levin as editor-in-chief of the Booster, w eekly publication of Manual Training high school, was announced today by Miss Elizabeth Hodges, faculty adviser. The first edition of the paper will appear Oct. 13. Clara Poggemeyer is associate editor and Harry Miedema, sports editor. Other positions on the staff I have been filled as follows: Sports reporters, David King and Wilbur Baker; feature writers, Lucille Davis and Virginia Russet; exchange editor, Norma Hall. Reporters include Roseann Fogarty, Mary Ellen Billiard, Samuel Gordon and Edward Roessler. Other positons are: Proofreader, Miss Poggemeyer; joke editor, Miss Russet; typists, Madge Gallamore, Juanita Miller and Catherine Ferraro. Robert Duncan has been appointed business manager by Miss Helen Haynes, business staff sponsor. Mildred Jackson, Erie Wilson and Robert Mathews will act as posting clerks. Mathews also is mailing clerk and Harvey Wyant Is circulation manager. Active work in connection with the campaign for subscriptions to the Booster, was begun Monday when the various Booster agents were given time in roll rooms for their sales talks. Booster agents for the year, elected last week, include: Paul Baker, Frances Bernloehr, Robert Cain, Mary Colligan, Charles Dickmann, Herschel Duncan, Ruth Dunn, Harry Einstandig, Don Emery, Charles Goebel. Clifford Griffith, Robert Hansing, Irene Hardin, Max Harris, Jeanette Hatten, John Hayes. Helen Jones, Lewis Kemmerer, Orval Kidwell, Marie Kunta, Kenneth Lee, Robert Maar, Mildred Moore, Ed Morris, Rosemary Morris. Norman Mueller, Josephine McKee, Veneta Nelson, Alberta. Pasch, Eva PopchefT, Essie Privette, Vera Raesner, Lilyan Reiser, Robert Sanford, Herbert Schwomeyer. Dorothy Shearin, Esther Louise Skaggs, Frances Snobby, Walster Stoltz, John Stucky, Genevive Stumps. Ruth Tiefert. William Vaughn, June Wagner, Emily WalkCharlotte Wallace, Clifton Whitfiey. Lois Wolfanger and Harold Yeagy.

TECH CANNON PUSHES SUBSCRIPTION DRIVE Posters Accented in Campaign Under Business Deal. Posters, both clever and ultramodern, are being used in the advertising of the Arsenal Cannon subscription campaign being carried on at Technical high school this month under direction of Walter Sinclair, pupil business manager of the school publication. The posters, made by pupils of Mrs. Roberta Stewart’s commercial IV class, are especially attractive, due to a novel idea of using actual copies of the Cannon, on which the posters are painted. Pupils who made the posters are Wanda Juniper, Eloise Riley, Eugene Holland, Ellen Clark. James Shrout, Marion Wortman, Dorothy Meyers. Francis Carter, Jean Wetty, June Fischer, Charles McLaren and j Raymond Poole. SHORTRIDGE HISTORY CLUB'S HEAD NAMED Dwight Schuster Elected President for Current Semester. The Short ridge high school History Club, sponsored by Miss Naomi Fike, recently elected 'Dwight Schuster, a senior, president for the current semester. Other officers elected were Martha Norman, vice-president; Jean Knowlton, secretary, and Frederick Tucker, treasurer. / The new president appointed Allan Solomon, Betty Weier, Margaret Stump, Sidney Netzorg and Bobby Jo Vestal members of the program committee. He instructed them to find out the cost of a year book. EXPLOSIVES ARE TOPIC Shortridge Chemistry Teacher Is Speaker Before Club. “Uses of Explosives." was discussed by Frank B. Wade, Shortridge chemistry department, in an address, to the Shortridge high school Chemistry Club last week. The club, under the direction of Mr. Wade experimented with gun powder, gun cotton-and T. N. T. Following the address the club elected new officers for the coming year. Those elected were Julia Anne Benson, president; Robert Lipton. vice-president; Mary Burrin. secretary, and Frank Streightoff. treasurer. Gordon Jacobs. Morris Taylor and Bobby Jo Vestal were appointed members of the . program committee for the If"-(Hl-Y HEAD IS NAMED 9'llmer Schloot Elected President at w Broad Ripple High. F Elmer Schloot has been elected resident of the Hi-Y club of Broad Ripple high school. Other officers elected include Jack Rich, vicepresident; John Barnett secretary, and Eugene Johnson, treasurer. The organization, which is open to juniors and seniors of the school will be operated on the lines of a fraternity this year, opening and closing with ritualistic ceremonies. A. J. Kettler is faculty sponsor. RILEY PROGRAM IS SET Anniversary of Poet to Be Marked by 6A at School 20. Grade 6A of School 20 at 1125 Spruce street, will commemorate the eightieth anniversary of the birth * af James Whitcomb Rilev. by a program of songs selected from the poet • work at the opening meeting of the school’s Parent-Teacher Association Wednesday afternoon. Charles Sunthimer, principal of the school, will address the gathering in a welcome to parents of new pupils.

RILEY DAY IS OBSERVED AT FRESH AIR SCHOOL

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I/eft to Right—Frank Meid, Helen Ervin. Esther Hand, Robert Brown and Jeanne Fisher.

And the goblins will getcha if you don’t watch out! That is what Esther Hand, center, as Little Orphan Annie, is telling her classmates at the fresh air school, 1601 East Tenth street. The story, as told by Esther, was a part of a Riley day program presented this morning at an assembly program by the children under direction of Miss Iva

SCHOOL TO GIVE HONOR PROGRAM Celebrate Memory of Poet Loved by Children. Pupils of the James Whitcomb Riley school, 150 West Fortieth street, will give their annual program £t assembly Friday in memory of the beloved childrens’ poet after whom the school is named. The program will be under the direction of Miss Effie Moschelle. Each child in the school will have some part in the ceremony, since all are asked too bring flowers which will be collected and placed on Riley’s tomb. The program at assembly will be presided over by Nona Margaret Riggin, a pupil. After an introduction by Miss Riggin the program will be: Sketch of Riley’s life by Mariam Goldfarb; two .stories of Riley’s childhood by Riley Hancock and Robert Sternberger; “The Bumble Bee,” by Hazel Gabbert; “Granny,” Van Darrell Abrogast. Several of the poet’s letters will be read by Virginia Landreth, Betty Porter and Mary Kershner; “When the Folks Get Back,” by Joan Colgan; “The Raggedy Man,” by Virginia Schwartz; a song by the boys’ glee club; "Out to Old Aunt Mary’s,” by Marcia Stump; and showing of the baskets of flowers for the tomb, by Mary Helen Yates, Jean Marie Lees and Gene Clairmont. The “Prayer Perfect," by the entire school will close the program.

CHILDREN'S MUSEUM SEASON WILL OPEN Films to Be Shown at Program Saturday. The Children's Museum, 1050 North Meridian street, will open its sixth season of general program for children Saturday morning at 10:30 with two films, one showing buildings at A Century of Progress fair and the other dealing with natural history. All children have been invited. Tire programs will be given each Saturday at the same hour throughout the school year anad are under the direction of the educational committee of the museum, of which Mrs. Robert B. Failey is chairman. Special class for general science pupils of junior high school age will be given Saturday morning at 9:30. The class will be conducted by E. B. Hargrave, vice-principal of Washington high school. Mr. Hargrave, who is a member of the general science committee of the public schools, will speak on "The Interdependence of Plants.”

57 Tech Graduates Win College Scholarships

Indiana Extension Grants Half Tuition to 15 Former Pupils. Fifty-seven members of the class of 1933 of Technical high school won scholarships in various schools and universities. Indiana university's extension division granted scholarships, which cover half the tuition fee. to Alfred Kuerst. William C. Mellender, Edwin Ray Moyer. Howard Rettig, Janet Rhoades. John W. Varley, Clifford Lee Hewitt, Geraldine Longest, Robert E. Elliot. Herman E. Rinne. Charles Hoover. Walter Twineham, Katherine Boone Ross, John Fargo. Dorothy M. Quick. Katherine Herbers and Charles F. Gillespie. Scholarships covering one-third of the tuition also in the extension division went to Katherine Knepper. Robert Munsford. Harold Cooper and Neil Whitney. Philip Jeffries received a scholarship from the International Corres*pondence Schools. Mary Lee Walker and HermanVVlbert Lynch won half tuition 't franklin college for a semester. E.'lyn Venitz will attend Capitol university on a one year scholarship granted on student application. Allen Breedlove received a scholarship for full tuition for one year, and Esther Hipes and Leonard Gasaway grants for half tuition for a year at Indiana Central college. Alfred Ferguson will attend Wooster college on a scholarship renewed for each of four years. Four year scholarships at Lake Forest college went to G. Dale Smith, John Baker, Alfred Kuerst, Hazel Fisher and Marian Phipps. college presented a scholar hip to Manemma Gorman,

Pearcy, teacher, and Miss Jeanette Riker, principal. The program was arranged by Miss Pearcy and Miss Riker, and the setting was arranged by Miss Pearcy and the children. Materials for the setting were furnished by the children. Music and ojher entertainment were included in the program.

154 Tech Pupils Named on Staff of Cafateria

3,000 to Be Served Daily on Campus in Three Lunch Periods. Serving approximately 3,000 persons daily during three lunch hours is the job assigned to 154 pupils of Technical high school who have been appointed to work in the Tech cafeteria. The work is done entirely by the pupils,, under direction of only one adult supervisor, and is considered excellent business training for them. A substitute list of twenty pupils, to serve when the regulars are unable to perform their duties, Is kept by the cafeteria management. Cashiers, chosen from pupils of high rating, include James Brooks, James Cahill, Orville Hancock, Robert Hill, Charlotte Klepper, Felix Masaracha, Beecher McGinnis, Glenn Meier and Frederick Roehm. Other pupils who serve at the steam tables, salad, ice cream and supply counters and in the kitcheen include: Herman Aikens, Della Mae Allen. Edna Mae Anderson, Lillie Antle, Lewis Aull. Roger Aull. Florence Bailev. Marv Bailey. Jeannette Baldwin, George Barnett, Robert Barth, Alvia Batts. Charles Batts. Max Beier. Opal Vee Bennett. Bob Biedenmeister, Frank Biedenmeister. Harry Biehl, Charles Bines Charles Bowhav, Clarence Boyd, John Briel, Vera Brown, Charles Bruner, William Burns, John Byers, Kathleen Byers. Mary Kathryn Carter. Geraldine Christman. Rov Collier, Robert Collins, James Comfort, Dorothy Crouch. Rosemary Demarree, Donald Dick, Joseph Edwards. Warern Evans, Bernard Flaherty, Catherine Foerderer, Viola Francisco, Woodrow Frank, John Frantzreb. John Freeman, Harold Frost. Harold Fymier. Viola Gearriess. Miriam Giddens, Cecil Goode Wanda Goodwin, Dorothy Green, Raymond Green. Albert Habermeyer. Forrest Hale, Charles Hamilton. Orville Hancock, Katherine Hann, Charles Hardestry, Raymond Hardy, Marjorie Hargon. Ralph Harlow, Richard Hartsock. Juanita Harvev. Owen Harvey. Lorraine Hituer, Robert Hoober, Coy Howe, Gladys Lee Howe, Harold Howenstine, Robert Huddleston. Ruth Huettlin, Blanche Humphries, Jack Hysar. Norval Jasper, Charles Johnson, 'Walter Jones. Harold Kauffman. Elsie Keiter, Jack King. George King. Kelvern Krause. Dorothy Lagler. Glendola Lancaster, Venice Lewis. Melinease Lucas. Maurice McKinzie. William McKinzie. Vernon McKinney. Dorothy Matillo, Charles Matthews. Edward Meredith, Evelyn Montgomery, Comer Morgan, Vivian Moyer, George Murphy. Irene Neal. Lucille Nelson. Arthur Nooe. Claud Pattison, Edward Perkins. Gerald Peterson, Victor Peterson, Martha Pritchard. Mary Jane Quillan, Robert Reasoner. Ernest Reepmaker. Robert Reno. Clark Rickard, william Rhoades, Don Roepke, Ruth Ross. Everett Rothman. Ralph Rukes, John Rush. Helen Sanders. Virginia Sanders. Harold Schaeffer, Francis Silver. Le Rov Snyder, Marguerite Sommers, Edith Spurlock, Rhea Stephens, Samuel Stephens. Martha Stewart. Fout Stewart. Mary Alice Stone, Arthur Suite. John Switzer. Walter Tharp, William Thixton, Carol Traub. Myla Udell. Marie Van Vleet, Earl Vicars. Mary Jane Wade. Harry Ware, Betty Jean Wells, William T. White, Virginia Lee White, Gerald Wiker. Frank williams, George Wood, Juanita Wood, Hugh Wotherspoon. John Zimmerman. Lucille Zion.

Scholarships to the John Herron j Art Institute for one year were won by Paxine St. Helens William Peed. Richard Aust, Pauline Dingle and June Hopper. Hollister Gahan, Charles Fisher. Junior White and Carol Geisler will attend Butler university on half tuition scholarships. Purdue university merit scholarships were granted to Arthur Vincent Cohee and Albert Lee Hughs. Gilbert Jay Easley won a four-year scholarship there. A one-year scholarship to the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music and Butler university went to Betty Schellschmidt. Four-year scholarships at De Pauw university were granted to James Ali. John Flick and Rcbert Williams. A full scholarship for one semester given by Miss McGregor, organ instructor at Indiana Central coli lege, to Thelma Hastings. Half scholarships went to Rhea Stephens. Marybelle Masterson, Thomas Tibbs j and Merriam Howenstine. PRESS TtfUR IS MADE Freshmen See Operation of Tech Cannon at Offices. Four freshman English classes visited the offices of the Arsenal Cannon, the Technical high school publication, recently to familiarize themselves with the various stages through which a high school paper must pass before it appears in print. The recent visitors ’.rill test their skill at news writing by submitting stories to the Cannon for possible publication. The classes which visited the paper were those instructed by Mrs. Jeanne Eastland. Miss Mary Winters and Mrs. Ethel Mclntosh.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

CATHEDRAL WILL HOLD JESTIVAL Student Council Completes Arrangements for Benefit. Cathedral high school fall festival will be held Friday and Saturday at the school. Arrangements for the festival, the purpose of which is to obtain funds for student aid, have been completed by the Student Aid Council. The council, which is beginning its eighth year at Cathedral, is pledged to assist in affairs of this kind. The members are for the most part honor pupils and while on duty represent the faculty. Each year the council sponsors a dinner and theater party. Members of the council this year, as announced recently by Brother Richard, C. S. C„ are Joseph Hoffman, William Conner, Charles Betzner, James Carson, Joseph Clark, William Clark, John Gallagher and Ray Grothouse. Andrew Heichelbeck, Joseph Kernel, John Sullivan, Leo Welch, Charles Wolfla, John Culbertson, William Brennan, Charles Broderick, John Krieg, James McConahay, Robert Meihaus, John Quinn and Robert Shiel.

Washington High Honor Society Head Is Elected

David Mears Is Chosen by Chapter; Faculty Is Sponsor. David Mears has been elected president of the National Honor Society chapter of Washington high school for the coming year. Other officers elected include Evelyn Lewis, vice-president; Mildred Morrow, secretary, and Edith Carter, treasurer. Mrs. Margaret McWilliams is faculty sponsor for the chapter. Qualifications for membership in the group are character, scholarship and leadership. The Camp Fire Girls of Washington have elected Blanche Chanley, president for the current semester. Other officers include Mildred Poland, vice-president; Clarice KanaLac, secretary and scribe, and Evelyn Stokes, treasurer. Faculty sponsor is Miss Mary Alice Purvis. Miss La Vada Rice has been appointed recorder of the school scrap book for 1933-34. The 1933 senior class has presented the school with a 16-mm. film projector which will be used to supplement teaching of various departments. The projector is portable, has a wide variety of ranges and may be used without a screen.

BUSINESS COURSE IS OFFERED FOR JUNIORS Training Class Opened for Ninth Grade Pupils at Ripple. A course in junior business training is being offered at Broad Ripple high school for ninth grade pupils under the sponsorship of Miss Winifred West. The purpose of the course Is the training of young people to become intelligent consumers, the discovery of individual abilities and the laying of a foundation for advanced commercial work. Karil V. Ammerman, principal, was one of a committee of Indianapolis educators who helped plan the course. SCHEDULE RECITATIONS Riley Poems to Be Given by Pupils at P.-T. A. Meeting. Recitations and songs from the works of James Whitcomb Riley bypupils of School 12 at 733 South West street, will feature the opening meeting of the school’s Par-ent-Teacher Association meeting Wednesday afternoon. Rebecca Levi, 10; Orville Burge, 10; Evelyn Howe. 11; Edward Tournagis. 13; Marian Ballenger, 13; Geraldine Carlue, 9. and Mildred Delkf, 11, are the pupils who will be featured on the program. Talbut Howell will speak on the Community Fund. ®

SHORTRIDGE TO BE ACTIVE AT STATE MEETING Vice-Principal to Speak on Professional Training. Shortridge high school will be well represented on the program of the Indiana State Teachers’ Association’s annual meetings to be held here Oct. 19 and 20. Emmett A. Rice, vice-principal at Shortridge, will speak on “Professional Training for the Teacher” at a meeting of the secondary school principals’ section of the association, at Manual high school, Oct. 19. The social study section, of which Paul Seehausen of the history department is president, will hear Paul Lockhart of the north side high school’s faculty on “The High School's Part in Local Archeological and Historical Research” at the Lincoln the same day. The Shortridge Girls’ Glee Club, under direction of Will F. Wise, will present a program Oct. 19 before the social studies group at Roberts Park M. E. church. The Shortridge orchestra, also directed by Mr. Wise, will entertain the mathematics section at the Columbia Club. E. Carl Watson of the high school’s mathematics department is president of this section. A one-act playlet will be presented before the teachers cf speech in the ballroom of the Antlers by the Shortridge Drama League, sponsored by Miss Eleanor D. Theek. Miss Trella M. Wood of the Shortridge commercial department is president of the business education section of the association. Miss Lois Martin, chemistry department, is secretary of the chemistry-physics section, and Russell S. Julius, athletic department, is secretary and treasurer of ' the Indiana State Coaches Association.

ANONYMOUS AWARD IS GIVEN MANUAL GRAD Margaret Bade, Receives Scholarship at Butler U. Miss Margaret Made, January ’33 graduate of Manual high school, has been awarded a scholarship to Butler university by an anonymous donor. The scholarship is in memory of Miss Evelyn West, teacher for many years at School 39, < at 801 South State street. The scholarship, it is announced, will be given each year to a Manual graduate who also is a graduate of School 39, and who is particularly interested in music, art, history and literature. Miss Bade will major in history and Spanish at Butler. Broad Ripple Seniors Elect Senior class of Broad Ripple high school, numbering fifty-four, last week elected Phillip Waggoner, president. Other officers elected were Ona Butler, vice-president; Eleanor Earle, secretary, and Morris Conley, treasurer.

ELECT OFFICERS OF DEPARTMENT CLUBS Tech Societies Name Heads for Fall Semester. New officers to serve throughout the current semester were elected at meetings last week of three groups at Technical high school. The clubs and new officers are as follows: Spanish Club —Joan Ley, president; Delores Ferrer, vice-president; Gertrude Walsh, secretary, and Max Beier, sergeant-at-arms. Nature Study Club—Thelma Fitzgerald. president; Caroline Goepper, vice-president; Juanita Brann, secretary, and Oscar Kirsch, treasurer. Latin Club—Mary Mae Endsley and Hix Meier consuls; Mary Lou Hamilton scriptor; Louise Moorman, Sterling Meier and Geneva Senefeld, aediles, and Beverly Zolezzi, custos. ROSES TO BE PLACED ON GRAVE OF RILEY Primary Class at School 9 to Hold Rite on Friday, Six little girls from the primary rooms of School 9 at 740 East Vermont street will place roses on the tomb of James Whitcomb Riley in Crown Hill cemetery Friday morning in commemoration of the eightieth anniversary of the birth of the famed Indiana poet. Pupils from the school will visit Riley’s Indianapolis home prior to the ceremony, where they will present a short program of songs and recitations from the poet's celebrated works for children. Riley’s birthday falls on Saturday, but since that date is a school holiday the school program has been moved ahead one day. Junior Passes Choir Test Dorothy James, a junior at the Broad Ripple high school, has passed the test for membership in the Capella choir of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music. Light travels 186,264 miles a second, sound travels 1,088 feet a second. Light speed is constant, while sound speed often varies with the temperature. End Serious Coughs With Creomulsion .Don’t let them get a strangle hold. Fight germs quickly. Creomulsion combines the 7 best helps known to modern science. Powerful but harmless. Pleasant to take. No narcotics. Your own druggist is authorized to refund your money on the spot if your cough or cold is not relieved by Creomulsion,—Advertisement,

CRIPPLE SCHOOL OPENS WITH ‘RUSH’

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Left to Right—Rob Eldridge, Miss Mary Doeppers and Anna May Mohr. Pupils of the cripple school, California and Washington streets, wasted no time at the opening of school this year in getting under way in their studies, and the first-grade class of Miss Mary Doeppers began unit work almost on the first day. The 1A class began a study of writing, and drew pictures and wrote words to accompany the pictures. One of the best specimens of the work was turned in by Rob Eldridge, 6, of 232 North La Salle street. A farm unit study was begun by the IB class, and Anna May Mohr, 6, of 1242 North Holmes avenue, showed her ability in using crayons by completing a farm project picture in short time.

TECH SPONSORS PLAYLETSERIES Underclassmen Will Have Opening for Talent; Tryouts Set. Underclassmen at Technical high school who have an urge to display their dramatic talent will get a chance soon through arrangements of the Technical English department which is sponsoring a series of playlets. First of this series will be “The

A New Automobile Xtires ill With Each Purchase of 1\ V More-Cash or RE-FURNISH your HOME and at the same time RE-TIRE your CAR FREE. You shall receive TWO NEW AUTOMOBILE TIRES FREE if your purchase amounts to SSO or more—CASH or CREDIT. HERE IS WHAT YOU GET iTk $lO • 2-Pe. LIVING Room SUITE® ■ UU QOWH • 1 OCCASIONAL CHAIR WARNING J~§§ • 1 JUNIOR LAMP BASE ruTnQW W Ik# • 1 JUNIOR LAMP SHADE • 1 COFFEE TABLE riiDTUCD • 1 BOOKCASE .SEIuaS • 1 TABLE LAMP BASE ADVANCE • 1 TABLE LAMP SHADE IN fc l ( ZM \ 3 • 1 MAGAZINE BASKET PRICES Guar l PIMTfE/' “ • 1 OCCASIONAL TABLE and and \ YJjfif*/ 2™° tires free with this outfC I Back j d .... w _ = If You Can Buy for Less f l - J When You Buy r Elsewhere. 4 Here, F if you can buy the same, or j Yah Uawa a- even similar, merchandise ; TOU nave a ~ an y place else in Indiana, * GUARANTEE P for less than you have paid 3 ROOM OUTFIT - ■> =us for it, we shaU lmmedi- : nuum VV That Yu.. Ira - ately and cheerfully refund - Jfe Jt ' " a * ' OU * r§ Z the difference. 2 IL 1 Buying Quality r l. and. FOSTER 2 I OO MERCHANDISE MANAGER-^—JS S2O DOWN pl l ihl, L PHM ljn !WPPPPn ti gj] [|] Possib.e Price M eu* Mjn SB

Ghost Story,” written by Booth Tarkington, to be presented Oct. 18, in Room 7 of the school at no charge. Try-outs for the various parts will be hmd Thursday afternoon and all pupils in English V classes will be eligible to participate. Judges for the try-outs will be Miss Mabel Goddard, head of the English department; Miss Clara Ryan, instructor in dramatics, and Chelsea Stewart, faculty stage manager. Dramatically inclined freshmen and sophomores will be given a chance to take the stage later. Only one-act plays will be presented. The new postoffice at Dagenham, Essex, England, has a skylight which takes the glare and most of the heat out of the sunlight.

PAGE 9

FIRST ISSUE OF PAPER APPEARS ] AT SCHOOL 39 McKinley Broadcaster at Start of Fifth Year: Girl Is Editor. Pupils at School 39. at 801 South j State street, publish their own I monthly newspaper, the McKinley | Broadcaster, which recently made I its first appearance in this, the | fifth year of its existence. The paper was founded to teach | the children to express their opin- | ions well, freely and clearly; to en- | able them to co-operate betier in ; their school activities .and to en- ; courage an early interest in reading the daily papers. Helen Schmidt is editor-in-chief of the Broadcaster. Her staff is: Alice Crane, news editor; William I Jones, editorial editor; Rosalie Beel, | primary editor; William Stansbury, j feature editor; Rush Robinson, i alumni editor: Jean Dick, ParentI Teacher Association editor. Raymond Lowe is poetry editor; | Howard Strausser, teacher editor; Ruth Gullian. exchange editor: Marie Zike, assistant exchange editor; Louise Moody, recipe editor; Donna Sanford, club editor; Morton Campbell, art editor; Valeta Pray, personal editor; James Smith advertising manager. Staff Is Named The staff of special reporters are: Elizabeth Beberdick, Eldeen Blair, Frances Bryant, Lily Crutchley, Helen Edmonds, June Martinelia and Kathleen Shaw. Esther Love is room news editor, one of the most important positions on the Broadcaster, since she receives the news from the junior reporters, who have a representative in each room of the school. The junior reporters, who meet once a month with the entire staff of the paper, include; Part of Education Room 1. Alice Esther Jones; Room 2, Mearl Perry; Room 3, Aleen Quack; Room 5, James Ott; Room 6, Robert Snyder; Room 7 Esther Love; Room 8, David Cass; Room 9, Russell Matzberger; Room 10, Lillian Forsyth; Room 11, Orval Cauffman; Room 12, Frances Landram; Room 15, Pauline Wells: Room _l6, Charlene Hulse; Room 17, Imogsne Rhodes; Room 18. Billy Shaffer; Room 19, Robert Coffin; Room 20, Junior Habig, and Room 21, Mary Alice Lamparter. Miss Lena D. Swope, principal, regards the Broadcaster as an integral part of the educational program of her pupils. Schoolmen’s Club Picnics Indianapolis Schoolmen's Club held a picnic yesterday at the Boy Scout reservation. The program consisted of a variety of outdoor sports.