Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 210, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1934 — Page 17

JAN. 11, 1934 _

GIRL LEADS 240 WARREN PUPILS ON HONOR ROLL Thirty Points Earned by Virginia Weller Tops High School List. Virginia Weller with thirty grade points led 240 Warren Central high school pupils who were placed on the honor roll for the second semester. Others who achieved high scholastic standing are: A Honor Roll —Senior Sylvia Loo Bannister. Margaret Pebworth. Chalmer Schlosser. Louise Crouch. Prankhou.se, Dorothy Bollinger. Mildred Nsudenbergcr. Glen Redmyer, John Kissel. Elizabeth Bashore. Helen Merkle. Dorothy Mueslng, Orban Reich. Geraldine Swartz. Red Cotton Irene Sudbrock. Lee Askren. Ann Bowman, Elvira Draper, Ivan Frakes and Lots Lueckert. Ada Betman. Dorothv Colwell, Clarence Goodyear William Swallow. Alice Cartwright. Herbert Fall. Salvatore Go.e, j Annabel Miller, Grace Stow, Marjorie West. Marv Hfllen King. Margaret Laughner, Bet!v B-ott, Mildred Witte, Eleanor Folk- I enlne. Marr Hill. E. Wendell Reich and Fern Tyndall. Leslie Burt, Carroll Schnabel, Fred Mincer, Lee Barrett, Betty Jane Flagie. Gordon Amos. Russell Survant. Helen Tapp Nolle Andre. Janita Fall. Jean Furry Eileen Hall. Dorthv Harlan, Mary Jane Hesketr, Rosemary Johnson. Elizabeth McLean. Kathryn Meyer. Dorothy Spencer and Marjorie Woempner. Juar.ite Bucksot. Magdalene Burk, Irving Folkening. Alden Shield, Cora Louise i Weber. Leila Barrett, John Bavles. Jack Browning. Vere Plummer, Harry Smith and Melvina Jane Yorger. B Honor Roll —Senior Jimmy Shields, Lorraine Simpsin, Eugene Gorham. Arthur Long. Irene Schaekel, Raymond Smith. Mildred Strong. Delbert Timmerman. Dale Wainscott. Flavia Wischmever, Irvin Woempner. Norman Atherton. Laverne Balph. Melvin Oilman, Mary Stillabower. Louise Bain, Howard Harris. Mildred Hartman, Jane Johnson, La Verne Kelly. Eileen Lane, Grace Rector and Lorene Wise. Marion Clark. Raymond Hendricks, Mildred Kropp, Harry Nord. Carl Puhlman, Raymond Trefz. Frances Whittington, Ivan Glaze. John Kielholz, Louis Miller. Albert Pritchard. Lavonne Sedam, Mary Mae Sheldon. Inez Vincent. Norma Bade. Lola Mary Bordn. Glen Simmerman, Ethel Woempner Virginia Amos. Doris Deerburg, Freida Hartman, Eilanor Prange, Nellie Raible. Maevelvn Schiewer. Ronald Stevenson. Gladys Tyner and Bernita Woempner Julius Kltene. Mary Hunter, Agnes Landreth Arthur McDermid. Don Meyer, Mary Kissel. Elmer Reed. Laurdell Enoch. Elma Jefferies Irene Prange. Velma Thomas, Louis Wambsganss, Robert Woempner. Edna Alverson. Lenore Morris, Katherine Sparks, Irvena Audres, William Bowman, Mary Helen Hansen. Ulah Miller, Miriam Neiman. Livetta Sutphin, Helen Tague. Lucille Terry and Eugene Trefz. A Honor Roll—Junior Eleanor Van Sickle. Lillian Bodenslck, Devona Mae Riser, Jean Bowman. Doris McDermid. Clara Brinkman. Blanche Cifaldi, Jean Claghorn. Robert Heath. Alice Frankhouse, Francis Sprowl. Betty Bridgen. Barbara Cotton. Mary Shelton, Margaret Young. La Grant Case. Billie Lou Hurt, Dick King, Jean Van Sickle. George Bayless. James Borders and Mary Louise Wiese Kathryn Langenburg Lois June Frisble, Laura Mae Wessler. Marjorie Ann Stoe, Virginia Calvin. Robert Hill. Ruth Meek, Katherine Bell, Jeanne Le Feber, Harold Surbaugh. Elbert Amos, Robert Geddes, Glenn Hendricks, Donald Holzenhausen, Paulline Rubush, Robert Mithoefer, Alberta Wadswoth and Mary Keevcr. Eunice McLean. Kathryn Ockerhausen, Carol Brinkman. Alexander Sticko, Marjory Ann Amos. Chester Cannady, James Pool. Marv Kinman. Freida Steele, John Dahl, Mary Etta Kiser, Martha Meek. Donald Cartwright. Richard Farris, Helen Puckett. Claire Sloan. Margaret Wacker, Florence Askren. Robert Frost, Harold Toombs. Junior Claxton and Betty Jeanne Scherer. R Honor Roll —Junior Esther Bade. Margaret Bright, Dorothea Hope. Gene Kirkpatrick. Lucille Miller. Jerome Rafferty, Gladys Atherton. George Brinkman. Magdalene Hartman. Gertrude Hurt. Garland Mowry. Madonna Wilson, Betty Davis. Madonna Sedam. Paul Stoner. Juanita Moore. Eileen Denny. Juanita Offenbacker. Frances Prather. Vernier Miller. Glenn Pickerel, Harvey Imoler. Margaret Cook, Joe Schlomer, William Sharp, Eilanor Koch. Frederick Spence, John Bannister. Wilfred Bashore. Verda Meadows, Imogene Laughner and Virginia Giddens. MANUAL DEBATERS TO DISCUSS CITY MANAGER Winners to Receive Trophy Given by Junior Boys. “Resolved, That Indianapolis Adopt the City Manager Form of Government,” is the subject of a debate to be given before Manual pupils In the school auditorium today. Since members of the winning team in this debate will have their names inscribed on the Service Club trophy, presented recently to the school as the annual gift of the junior boys’ honorary organization, John Moffat, debating coach, has selected his veteran speakers to take part in the contest. Members of the affirmative team are Martin O’Neill, captain; Harry Kirschner and Paul Von Dielingen. The negative side consists of Morris Rickin, captain: William Goldstein and Samuel Gordon. BROAD RIPLE GIRLS ENJOY BASKETBALL Practice Every Friday; Soon Will Schedule Outside Games. Girls of Broad Ripple high school's gym classes meet every Friday afternoon to play basketball. No organized teams exist, but new combinations are formed each week, with about thirty-five or forty girls reporting. Games with other city schools are to be scheduled. Paul Hinkle, basketball coach at Butler, will speak before the student body at Broad Ripple today in the school auditorium. Frances Louise Dungan, Broad Ripple ’32. has been elected vicepresident of tfhe freshman class at Franklin college. Girls to Play Basketball A basketball game between Manual's January senior girls'and June senior girls will be played next Monday in the school gymnasium. The June class accepted a challenge from the other class.

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WIN IN FLOWER SHOW HELD AT SHORTRIDGE SCHOOL

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Botany classes at Shortridge high school, under the direction of Miss Ruth Allerdice, held a flower show recently in which the winning plants were grown by Elizabeth Henderson. Carol Crim took second place, while Martha Louise Archer and Alice Rababa tied for third. Decisions of the judges were based on three points:

Two Groups of Red Cross Sponsor Play at School

TECH RIFLEMEN TO SEEK PRIZE Two Five-Man Teams Will Vie for National Honors. With five men on each team, two groups from the military training department of Technical high school will participate in the national R. O. T. C. rifle competition to determine the winner of the William Randolph Hearst trophies. The boys are now doing preliminary firing under supervision of Sergeant Chester A. Pruett. They also will take part in the Fifth Corps Area Rifle meet in which shooting will begin Feb. 1. Members of the team are, cadet major, William Kendrick; cadet captains, William Imel, Edward Shock, Ralph Terrill and David Young; cadet first lieutenants, Wallace Buenting and Alexander Petrovitch, and privates, Thomas Pfenning, Geoffrey Armstrong, sob Hadley, Leander Goodwin, Edward Hutchins, Albert Kennedy, Bernard Hascn, David Lilley and Rolland McCrueder. These pupils obtained the highest individual scores in in-tra-school competition. For the Hearst contest, the Tech team will vie with R. O. T. C. teams from all over the country, which will be divided into four sections for the contest. Tech will compete with ! schools in Indiana, Nebraska. North | and South Dakota, Minnesota, Illinois, Ohio, Kansas, lowa, Wisconsin, Missouri and Michigan. Under the supervision of Captain Leo V. Harris, head of R. o. T. C. in city schools, the Tech team will shoot on the Tech rifle range and submit their targets to the official judge in Chicago. Pottery Lecture Slated Mrs. Walter T. Mitchell, president of the Washington high school Parent-Teachers Ascociation, addressed the school Art Club on I “Ceramics, a study of pottery and | chinaware, recently.

Year’s Plans Announced by Music Conservatory

Arthur Jordan School Will Guide Activities of 600 Students. Plans for the second half of the 1933-34 school year at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music, which will open within the next few i days, have been announced by Max T. Krone, director of the school. The J third term of the preparatory divi- : sion of the music school will open Jan. 29 and the second semester of | the collegiate division will begin I Feb. 5. Approximately 600 students will be affected. Work of the preparatory division, | which includes private studio les- | sons in music, dancing and dra- | matic art. is divided into four j terms during the year, while that : of the collegiate department, which j is affiliated with Butler uninversity, ' operates on the semester basis. Only those students taking class work and studying toward academic degrees enroll in the latter department. The registration offices at the three campuses of the music school will have charge of enrollments for the new term. Miss Evelyn Green, registrar, will be in general charge. Events listed on the second semester calendar of the schoci’ inI elude a Washington’s Birthday holI iday on Feb. 22; spring vacation I from March 31 until April 9; Hon|or day on May 3; auditions for scholarships on May 19; the first annual gala spring concert on the j same date; vacation on Memorial day. May 30; baccalaureate services on June 17. and commencement on June 18. Several of these events will be observed in conjunction with Butler university. A special summer term will open June 6, which will continue until Aug. 4, following which post-sum-mer terms will be scheduled.

JOURNALISM TOPIC OF TECH CANNON WRITERS Ten Members of School Publication Staff Address Students. Journalism was the subject of talks to the civics classes of Technical high school by ten members of the staff of the Arsenal Cannon, | student publication, Tuesday. The members discussed journalism, opportunities in this field, how the newspaper is published, and how the Cannon is published. Those who presented talks were Jane Bosart, Martha L. Cook, Lorril Harper, John St. Helens. Marjorie Hargon, Bernard Flanerty. Mary Jane McGaughey, George Messmer, Norman Jasper, and Gertrude Walsh. , .

Appearance of the plant; the most handsome single stalk, and evenness of the blooming. According to Miss Allerdice, the flower show, which is an annual event, was one of the most successful in years. The winners, shown in the picture, are, left to right, the Misses Archer, Crim, Henderson and Rababa.

Show at Manual Will Be Major Benefit Affair of Year. Both sections of Manual high school’s Junior Red Cross chapter are co-operating in sponsoring a play, “The Prince Who Was a Piper,” which will be given Tuesday at 3:30 p. m. in the school auditorium as a major benefit project of the year. The play, which will be given by members of the Speech 11 class, is being directed by Miss Lola I. Perkins, dramatic coach and teacher of the class. Members of the class are Wilbur Baker, Robert Cain, Mary Margaret Davis, Roseann Fogarty, Mildred Grossman, Frances Haller, Irene Harden, Mildred Hibner, Hilda Hotopp, Marie Kuntz, Stanley Jones, Helen Nangle, De Loris Rahm, Frances Snoddy, Ethel Weigel, Clifton Whitley and Ralph Faccone. Mrs. Coral Taflinger Black of the history department, and Miss Anna J. Schaffer of the home economics department, faculty sponsors of the Manual Red Cross chapter, have announced committees which are aiding in producing the play. Eva Ruark and Floy Cambridge are in charge of the tickets, with a larger group of members acting as ticket salesmen. The advertising committee is composed of Catharine Ferrero, chairman; Dorothy Whitinger and Lil- ! lian Landy. Costumes and properties will be in charge of Marguerite Johnson, chairman; Mary Ellen Beauregard, Mary Colligan, Charlotte Pieper, Helen Wheeler and Ruby Creager. Ushers will be: Idonia Jeffries, chairman; Gennel O’Brien, Frances Jean Webber, Edna Roark, Dorothy Whitinger, Anna Louise Lorenz, Florence Enos, Pearl Demetrius, Virginia Truman, Louise Johnson, Esther Stotler, Betty Cubel, Helen Thomas and Geneva Pattison. Members of the Service Club, junior boys’ honorary group of the school, also will assist in the ushering.

MANUAL GYM GIRLS PRESENT PROGRAM Acrobatic Acts Given in Auditorium. Pupils of Manual junior high school attended an auditorium entertainment yesterday morning which featured acrobatic acts by i girls of the 9B gym classes. Pupils who participated in the ! program, directed by Miss Eloise Hanson and Miss Dorothy Siling, ! gymnasium instructors, were: Ruby Holmes, Ida Nelis, Fema Ali bean, Mary Jane Wainscott, Hazel Hendrickson, Mary Helen Brown, , Sophie Camhi, Hildegarde Klaffner, Ida Loganafsky, Fern Miles, Pauline Mitcllell. Geraldine Nicell, Henrietta Schwartz, Frieda Stainbrook, Belle Goldstein, Evelyn Ayres, Gertrude Berman, Frances Davis, Pauline Kottkamp, Mary KerschenafT, Mildred Crim, Anna May Hayden, Loretta Herndon, June Hoyt, MarI garet Klies, Frances Lorrain, Louise I Schanzel, Betty Vitz, Etselle Whitaker, Margaret Marshall, Carolina De More. Mary Catherine Jolliff, Mary Caldrone. Janet Hatten, Dorothy Hunter, Mary Thompson. Lenore Eisenbarth, Mary Katherine Miedema. Margaret Willard, Nellie fiteinke, Helen McCoury, Dorothy Walters, Eileen Marie Brazeal and . Genevieve Stumps. ALUMNAE PLAN BENEFIT Manual Associatiion Will Donate Proceeds to Student Aid. The alumnae association of the Masoma Club, honorary girls’ organization at Manual, will sponsor

a bridge party in the BannerWhitehill auditorium at 2:30 Saturday. Proceeds from the benefit affair will be used to assist in giving student aid at Manual. Officers of the club are Mrs. Lenora Mullinex Ellis, president; Thelma Roth, vice-president: June Nackenhorst, secretary, and Teena Postma, treasurer. They, with a small group forming the ways and means committee, are planning the benefit. Those who make up this group are Mrs. Helen Harmeson Neale and the Misses Myla Herrmann and Martha Postma. The association nas more than 800 active members at present. National Park Service officials in Washington are planning to make the Big Meadows, Va., park site a permanent camp for motorless .gliders. „

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ENGLISH CLASS GIVESCLASSIC Scene From Twelfth Night Is Stratford Literary Club Offering. Students from Miss Zila Robbins’ English class will present a scene from “Twelfth Night,” at a meeting of the Stratford Literary Club of Technical high school today. The cast includes Margaret Allsobrook, Jack Collier, Joseph Espin, Donald Gray, Edward Hathaway, Thelma Joyce, Eugene Noe, Thomas Osburn, Joe Pottage, Zelma Pugh and Robert A. Wolf. Alice Heine is program committee chairman. Visual Education Plans have been completed at Tech to provide films and slides for visual education in the botany and zoology departments. Clare F. Cox. botany department, and E. V. Rutherford, zoology department, will select films and slides to be shown in their respective departments. Each class in botany and zoology has one recitation period, a week set aside for the films. The Nature Study Club also will benefit by motion picture films and slides relative to subjects of interest to the club members. Mr. Cox is sponsor of the club. Literature Class Meeting Mrs. Jeanne B. Eastland's English literature class gave a program yesterday in her classroom. The program, second to be given by the class this semester, was related to the Victorian era in English literature. Sketches and talks were given on literature of the period. Queen Victoria held court, the Pickwick Club was in session, the erratic Rossetti and his sister were presented, and Thomas Carlyle and his wife Jane, Cecil Rhodes and Alfred Tennyson were portrayed. All sketches were written and presented by class members.

Observe Feast of Kings Meeting of the Technical French Club, Jan. 4, featured Jean Booth in a special song number, sung in French. The French Club also celebrated the feats of the Epiphany, which fell on Jan. 6 and sometimes is called “Les Fetes des Rois,” or “Feast of the King.” Queen or king is the person who finds the figure of a doll in the cake. He or she then is king or queen and accordingly chooses a royal mate. The king at the meeting w r as Charles C. Martin, head of the modern language department, who was chosen by the queen, Martha Cassell. , Club members also found other articles in the cake, which was baked by the Tech bake shop. Alice Kautsky drew' the penny, significant of fabulous wealth; Helen Webster found in her cake the thimble, foreI telling “future spinsterhood”; and ; Robert K. Taylor found in his cake ; the ring, signifying that he will be j the first of the assembly to be marI ried. NEW ORGAN INSTALLED Arthur Jordan Conservatory Gets Valuable Instrument. A new r three manual Kilgen pipe organ is being installed at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music this week. The instrument is being placed in the Odeon, auditorium of the music school, at 106 East North street. Installation is being supervised by Professor Donald C. Gilley, head of the organ department at the conservatory and professor of music at Butler university. Mr. Gilley and j Mrs. Mary E. Wilhite, who comprise the conservatory departtment, ; will be in 'charge of the instrument when it is completed. Shortridge Math Club Elects Five The Shortridge high school Math Club, sponsored by Miss Ellen Ocker of the Shortridge factulty, initiated five new' members at the organization's semester party last | Saturday night at the home of Miss Caroline Rehm, senior and club treasurer. New' mathematicians in the club are Gladys Whitfield, Mary Dold, Joan Reich, Mary Efroymson and Shirley Howell. v

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DRAMA LEAGUE TO GIVE PLAY AT SHORTRIDGE ‘The McMurray Chin’ Will Be Presented Next Tuesday. The Shortridge Drama League will present a three-act play, “The McMurray Chin,” under the direction of Miss Eleanor Dee Theek, faculty sponsor of the league, before the Parent-Teachers Association at the regular meeting in Caleb Mills Hall, Tuesday night, at 7:45. There will be no charge for admission, but the usual collection will be made to cover cost of the royalty. F. R. Kautz will have charge of makeup; Stuart Williams will be stage manager; Dorothy Martenet will assemble properties; * Virginia Davis will be prompter; Marjorie Newman will be chairman of ushers; and Virginia House has charge of costumes. The cast will be: Ellen Lansdale Jane Shielder Philip Lansdale Carl Scheidker Deborah Lansdale Eleanor Firth Miss Griswold Gertrude Osborne Bee Bardin Jeanette McElroy Bob Scott Jack Messick Nettie Quick Edith Moore Doctor Scott Paul Boxell Libbie Gretchen Tripn Doctor Toppins-Sill* Frank Streightofl Aunt Abbie Green Esther Steup Mrs. John J. Brandon is president of the P.-T. A.

WINS PRESS AWARD

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Jane Bosart ] First place in the state interview 1 contest conducted by the Indiana High School Press Association, was awarded to Jane Bosart, senior and editor-in-chief of Staff I of the-Arsenal Cannon, student publication of Technical high school, for an interview with Charles A. Wells, according to a recent announcement of Raymond Blackwell executive secretary of the Press Association. Mr. Wells, prominent cartoonist and feature writer, who was the 1 speaker at the High School Press convention at Franklin in October, granted the informal interview to the delegates from the various schools of Indiana. Interviews printed in the high school paper W'ere submitted to the contest. Miss Bosart’s interview was selected as the best of those wTitten by the Tech delegates and was printed in the November 9th issue of the Arsenal Cannon. It was then submitted to the contest. CATHEDRAL CULTURE CLUB ELECTS FOUR High School Music Pupils Receive Honors. “The Culture Club,” a group composed of many Cathedral students and alumni, recently accepted four new members from the student body. Joseph Breen, Thomas Long, John McMahon and Albert Long were taken in as pianists. All are studying music at the Christamore community house. An art class, taught by Brother Ernest, C. S. C. librarian and English teacher, will be offered at Cathedral high school during the coming semester. The class will devote itself not only to the study of famous painters and their works, but also to practical work in pastels, water colors and oils. A six-reel talking picture w'ill be presented Friday in the biology laboratory at Cathedral high school by Brother Justinian, C. S. C. The picture, w’hich is concerned with plant and animal life beneath the sea, is both educational and amusing. This is the second presentation of talking pictures since the installation of vitaphone equipment at the school a month ago. A short two-reel comedy, “Trayful of Trouble,” will also be presented. Three Freshmen Enter Shortridge Three freshmen have entered Shortridge within the past week. They are Mary' Lou Bedford, Kalamazoo, Mich.; Phyllis Donahue, : Santa Monica. Cal., and Dorothy Fryer, Beech Grove. (Krause Bros & Going Out of Business W 52.95 Blouses, 51.76 B $4.50 Blouses, $2.96 ■ “Courthouse Is Opposite Us”

MANUAL SENIOR OFFICERS

From left to right, above, are: Upper row, Imogene Truman, will maker, and Wilma Williams, prophet; lower row, Nathan Fogle, giftorian, and Richard Emery, master of ceremonies, who, together with Catherine Ferraro, historian, took prominent parts in the schools class day celebration held yesterday in the auditorium.

“Anchors Aweigh,” motto of the class, was also the title of a stunt which was given as part of the program. A quartet composed of Edna Roark, Madge Gallamore, Dorothy Cross and Sarah Craig sang, and Harry Miedema rendered a solo as a feature at the celebration. Earle Sanders directed a newly organized pep band which enter-

SHORTRIDGE TO PICK ANNUAL ‘UGLYMAN* Selection Will Take Place at Dance in Gym. Annual election of Shortridge “Uglyman,” an honor which goes to the most popular boy at the high school, will be held tomorrow afternoon in the school gym at a dance arranged by the student social committee, sponsored by Miss Mary Pratt, Morton Davidson and his band will provide the music. Twelve candidates have been selected by the student social committee to run for the coveted honor. They are: Jack Berns, Willis Blatchley, Ralph Burns, Ben Callender, Foster Clippinger, Arthur Crane,

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, tained both during the program and at the party which followed. Officers of the January senior class which is sponsored by Miss Lena Brady and Miss Jessie Moore, both of the English department, are Silvio Constantino, president; Houston Whitson, vice-president; Jeanette Gentry, secretary, and Paul Collester, treasurer.

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PAGE 17

WASHINGTON TO STAGE DANCE IN AUDITORIUM ‘Last Roundup’ to Be Held Tomorrow: Proceeds for Scholarships. Washington high school pupils are “ headin' for the last roundup,” which is the same as a dance to be given tomorrow afternoon in the school auditorium by the scholarship fund committee. On the student group in charge of the festivities are Michael Dugan, master of ceremonies; Lucille Broich, Naomi Brown. John Dunn, Walter Carnefix, Frank Cassel, Pauline Kiefer and Ida Vance. Among the special features of the party will be a stop dance and a contest to discover the most graceful dancers at the party. This will be the last social function of this semester and its proceeds will go to the scholarship fund. Miss Grace Emery of the Latin department of Technical high school will address the members of the Washingtonians, senior girls' organization of Washington high school, this afternoon, on "Roman Remains in Provence, France.”

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