Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 20, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1934 — Page 2

PAGE 2

KENNETH DUGAN, I. U. STUDENT, KILLEDINCRASH Local Youth, Captain of Crimson Nine, Dies; 3 Others Hurt. Shocked by the death of Kenneth Francis Dugan, 24, captain of the Indiana university baseball team, who was killed in an automobile accident in the 6500 block East Thirty-eighth street yesterday, an air of mourning prevailed over the campus at Bloomington today. Three other students of the university were hurt in the fatal traffic accident, one of whom may die.

Death of Lee Burgess, 23, R. R. 4, Box 551, in another automobile crash at Harding street and Center Church road Saturday night, brought

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the total number of auto deaths in Marion county since the first of the year to fifty. 'Little hope of recovery was held for Verne Olsen, 25, East Chicago, who was hurt in the accident in which young Dugan was killed. Wallace De Hart, 20, of 5717 Broadway, w’ho suffered a fractured right shoulder, and Herbert Allison, 20, of 4709 North Pennsylvania street, driver of the car, who suffered lacerations and bruises of the face and body, will recover. At Methodist hospital, where the injured were taken following the crash, Mr. Olson was reported to be in critical condition. Visiting at the home of his mother. Mrs. C. C. Nave, 5401 Central avenue, last night, Mr. Dugan and his three companions had gone to Mr. DeHart’s home on Broadway and started across Thirty-eighth street, headed east. ..Two miles east of the city limits, Mr. Allison, who was driving the coupe in which the collegians were riding, momentarily was blinded by the headlights of an approaching car. He lost control of the coupe, which careened down an embankment and rolled over several times. A saddened and crippled Indiana baseball team will attend Captain Dugan's funeral here at 8:30 Wednesday. Last rites will be held in St. Joan of Arc’s church and interment will be in Holy Cross cemetery 7 . Members of the baseball team will act as pallbearers. ! Kenny Dugan was graduated from Cathedral high school, where he was a “three-letter” man in baseball, football and basketball. He entered Indiana university from Cathedral, majoring in physical education. He was captain of his freshman baseball team, and in his sophomore year was a star on the varsity baseball team, which won the Big Ten championship. Survivors are his mother; Joseph Dugan, a brother, a former I. U. Star; his father, Patrick Dugan, and two uncles, Detective Sergeant John liugan and Hugh Dugan, juvenile 'cburt bailiff. sixty nurses~toTet METHODIST DIPLOMAS Ceremonies to Be Held at North M. E. Church Thursday. Sixty graduate nurses will receive diplomas from the Methodist hospital school of nursing at 8 Thursday night in North M. E. church. Presentations will be made by Dr. John G. Benson, hospital superintendent. Music will be by the nurses’ chorus, directed by Mrs. Jane Johnson Burroughs, accompanied by Mrs. Fanetta Hitz Brady. The speaker will be Dr. Harry B. Gough, professor of speech at De Pauw university. MERCATOR CLUB OPENS SESSION HERE JUNE 10 ‘Delegates From Many States to Attend Annual Convention. Mercator Club and its auxiliary will hold the thirteenth annual convention at the Lincoln June 10 to 12. The local club will be host to delegates from New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Illinois, Michigan and Indiana. Harry G. Woodbury is general chairman assisted by William H. Meub and W. W. Drayer, local club president.

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I. U. STAR KILLED

tX ■ ' W&ssbsl "* *Kv ** y^wwiw

Kenneth Dugan

BUTLER PLANS ALUMNI EVENT Annual Celebration Will Be Held at University on Saturday. Saturday has been set as Alumni day at Butler university, according to announcement by officers of the university alumni association. Invitations for the event are being mailed to the more than 3,600 graduates of the institution. More than 1,500 Butler alumni reside in Indianapolis. The 1934 Alumni day celebration will include senior class day activities in the morning, a special memorial service to Miss Katharine Merrill Graydon, for years a professor of English at the university, the traditional alumni supper and a special program by students and graduates in the evening. Mrs. Howard C. Caidwell is chairman of the memorial service and William Pearcy has been placed in charge of the supper. Mrs. Freda Robinson is directing the special program. An alumni baseball game at 2:30 is being organized by “Tony” Hinkle and Hermon Phillips of the Butler coaching staff. SCHROEDER PAROLE DRAWS CRITICISM Action ‘Breach of Faith/ Says Judge Baker. Sharp criticism of the quiet parole given Harold Herbert Schroeder, convicted of the murder of the youth found in a blazing automobile on the High school road four years ago, greeted the discovery Saturday that the convict was free. Herbert E. Wilson, Marion county prosecutor; Criminal Judge Frank P. Baker and Fred Simon, detective chief, were outspoken in their resentment at the action of the parole board of the Indiana state prison at Michigan City in releasing Schroeder. " ~ r Schroeder, The Times learned, was paroled from the institution March 31 last after serving three years of a two to twenty-one year sentence for the bizarre “torch murder” outside Indianapolis on May 31, 1930, after the Speedway race. Terming Schroeder’s release “a breach of faith” Judge Baker said that members of the parole board had promised him and Prosecutor Wilson that Schroeder never would be paroled. Fred Simon, chief of detectives called the convict's parole, “a mockery o/ justice.” Governor Paul V. McNutt stated today that his office had made no attempt to conceal the parole of Schroeder from the public. He said that the parole papers do not come through his office. The Governor cited a statute which provides that a prisoner may be paroled at the end of the minimum term. He stated that the policy of* the parole board is to avoid publicity in the release of prisoners to provent ‘stigma’ attaching itself to their names.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

.JUNE '4, 1934