Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 87, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 August 1934 — Page 4

PAGE 4

ABOUT SCHOOLS, COLLEGES

REGISTRATIONS AT BUTLER ARE SEPT. IT AND 18 Normal Enrollment Seen As University Enters Eightieth Year. Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 17 i and 13, have been set as the regis- ' tratjori dates for the eightieth annual session of Butler university, according to Dean James W. Putnam, acting president. All upperclassmen will enroll on Sept. 17 and freshmen will matriculate on Sept. 18. Preliminary registration for freshmen will be available after Aug. 21 when Professor George A. Schumacher. chairman of the freshman advisory committee, opens his office in Arthur Jordan Memorial hall lo consult with all beginning students. All functions of registration can be completed in advance with the expectation of fee payments which must be made on the regulation date. All class work will begin Sept. 19. i The semester will continue for eighteen weeks closing Feb. 1. 1935. Thank.'giving will be observed with a three-day vacation and students will be dismissed for two weeks at Christmas. Home-coming will be celebrated on Oct. 19 when the Butler Bulldogs meet Indiana State in , a night game at the bowl. The J Butler football season opens Sept 28 against Ball State. Eight games are on the 1934 football schedule. The Fairview campus is beginning to take on its usual pre-registration activity. With only a few post- i summer students on the campus the \arioua administrathe offices are bending every effort for the new semester. Student organization heads are meeting on the campus to map plans or the new semester, fraternity and sorority members are planning their fall rush campaigns, the employment department is seeking odd jobs for needy students, and the registrar s office is rushing to completion the fall class .schedule. The 1934-35 school year is expected to be unusually significant due to the fact that Butler will be j completing an eyrn four score years of educational service to Indian- j apoiis and the state. Next June, the university will hold its eightieth annual graduation ceremony since the j institution opened in 1855. At no : time during its history has the in- i stitution interrupted academic work. Professors will be returning from summer study, work and vacation within a few days. Indianapolis students are already returning to the j campus to check up on requirements for graduation and out-of-town students are showing interest in the new school-year via letters. Dean ; Putnam predicts a normal enroll- j ment for the fall semester but a sensational increase in enthusiasm and spirit. CENTRAL NORMAL HAS NEW TRAINING PLAN Program Is Developed at College During last Year. Anew teacher-training program has been developed at Central Normal college. The object is to train teachers so that they will not only know how to help the child obtain knowledge, but build into his habit systems, the type of behavior that bring the most happiness to the child and the group in which he lives. The first step in the program was j to select the best prospective teacher j possible. Upon the reeommndgticn of the president of the college, the board of trustees apropriated 30*1 scholarships for high school graduates who rated 90 per cent or better m scholarship, attendance, punctuality. deportment, percentage rank, personality, leadership, character, initiative, co-operation, loyalty, reliability. honesty, self-control, religiousness. aporeciativeness. unselfishness. sympathy, health and tact, and did not use tobacco, liquor or any kind of ha bit-forming drucs. Applicants who met the rating qualifications were recommended by i their high school principals and local ministers. The highest rating students were selected in each county and 250 scholarships have been awarded to date. SCHUBERT KIN ’BROKE' Grand Niece of Composer Found in Dire Poverty. By l miff and f'n .. VIENNA. Aug. 21. Franz Schubert's grand niece. 52 Bluemengasse • Street of Flowers! will deeply ap- j predate rven small help." said an ; advertisement in an afternoon newspaper. Investigation today showed the grand niece of the famous composer was in dire poverty. In the Air Weather conditions at 9 a. m.: South wind. 8 miles an hour: barometric pressure. 30 05 at sea level: temperature. 65: general conditions. high, overcast; ceiling, unlimited: visibility, fifteen miles.

FALL TERM OPENING AUG. 27 to SEPT. 4 Many h entered thi* rhonl a year asn are braiding pleasant, prnmloinc position* now. Spertallted bnaineaa training it direr,, pnaitire, elfeitne. It , making a atrnng appeal tn ambition* ynnng men and *ma today. “Central” it the INDIANA BUSINESS COLLEGE •f India>upoll*. The other* are at Marion. M>inri*. Logantport. And'ton Kokemo. I tt-!te o cm bat. Rirhie-nd and AUnrenne*—Ora t. Butt TretKlen,. Tot B t'ettn firing (all parliralan. get >n tonrh with the I. B C. nearest oa. or Fred W. Care, Prtnripal Csntral Bushess C II g: Arrhiteet* A Builder* Blilg. roansytvania A Vermont SU IndianapoUt

DePauw Prepares for Ninety-Seventh Opening Hoosier College Founded in 1837 Rapidly Is Nearing Centennial: Prospects Are Good. By 1 imrs Special GREENCASTLE Ind, Aug 21.—De Pauw university will begin its ninety-seventh year of academic instruction Sept. 10. Founded in 1837. De Pauw rapidly is approaching its centennial. Many of the old graduates are enrolling their sons and daughters at De Pauw this year so that they will have a part in the great celebration that De Pauw is planning in 1937. Prospects for a large enrollment are good.

One hundred and fifty-two rector scholarships were granted recently to honor high school graduates who will enroll with this years freshman class. This exceeded by more than fifty the number of scholarships granted last year. Dean G. Herbert Smith, dean of freshmen men. and Dean K. S. Alvord, dean of women, have been making room assignments in De Pauw’s four modern dormitories and reports that only a few rooms are available. Transcripts are coming in rapidly as late applicants seek admission. The freshman week program which begins Sept. 10 has been completed and new students will find an excellent setup, arranged for assisting them In arranging their program and becoming acquainted with the campus and the members of the faculty. Every effort has been made to secure for each new student a counselor who is qualified and Interested in the field that the applicant indicated his interest lay. Twenty-nine groups have been arranged for men and thirteen for women. Counselors for men are Professors O. H. Smith, J. M. Fulmer, J. L. Riebsomer. W. A. Neiswanger, C. L. Arnold. R E. Williams. L. H. Turk. G. B, Manhart, A. W. Cran-

Ball State Will Open Sessions on Sept. 10

College Officials Look for Increased Registration for Year. /t ii Times Special MUNCIE. Ind., Aug. 21. The campus at Ball State Teachers’ college is alive with activities as final preparations are being made for the opening of the fall quarter Monday morning. Sept. 10. when a special convocation for freshman will be held in assembly hall. All freshmen will be expected to take part in the three-day orientation program, consisting of meeting with deans and sponsors, tests, and social events. College officials are anticipating an increase in enrollment. Several hundred students already have filed transcripts of high school training, and many requests for the new bulletin of information for prospective students have been received. Registration of upper classmen will take place Wednesday forenoon. Sept. 12. All classes will meet Wednesday afternoon. At the initial convocation. President L. A. Pittenger will give the principal address. Dean Ralph Noyer will preside. Short talks will be given by W. E. Wacpner, secre-tary-registrar; Miss Barcus Tichenor. librarian; Professor Claude E. Palmer, head of the department of music;- and Dr. Amelia T. Wood, director of the health service. An interchange of classes between the college and Ball Memorial hospital. an arrangement which has proved successful for four years, will be continued. This year the Burris School, the college laboratory here students may observe experts teach in classes from kindergarten through high school, is entering on its sixth year. Teachers from all parts of the state have visited the school this year; many have come in groups with their principals or superintendents. Work on the new Arts building, which will be ready for classes in 1935, is showing great progress. This

Butler Offers An Academic Education and More, Butler University maintains standard collegiate courses in an excellent environment. Indianapolis, the political, commercial, financial and intellectual center of the state provides unusual cultural opportunities. Its libraries, museums, and institutions of music and art. its financial and commercial activities, and its state and municipal governments form a portion of this “laboratojy of life.” The environment supplements the campus and the classroom. “Become acquainted with the life of which you hope some day to be a part.” Butler Provides expert instruction in colleges of liberal arts and sciences, education and religion. All academic work is fully accredited by other universities, the North Central Association of College and Secondary Schools, and the leading standardizing agencies. Fall Semester Opens Sept. 17-18 For information write Dean James W. Putnam, acting President, Butler University, Indianapolis.

NEED DEEP? Do you need assistance in order to enter college this September? De Pauw University has 160 part-time jobs available for those who must work a portion of their way through college. De Pauw also has a number of valuable scholarships that may be earned during the freshman year. FRESHMAN WEEK STARTS SEPTEMBER 10 Write for Literature DePAIAV I nivcrsitv Greencastie, Indiana

dall. H, E. Ross. L. B. Gale, P. G Evans, and C. D. W. Hildebrand. Those who will assist women students are the Misses Mildred Dimmick, Virginia Harlow, Ermina Mills. Vera S Mintle, Ruth Robertson, Dade B. Shearer and Winona Welch. Music school students will be advised by Dean R. G. McCutchan, head of the De Pauw School of Music. The first general assemblage of the freshman class will e held Monday night, Sept. 10 in historic Ms-harry hall where they will rei ceive a word of welcome from President G. Bromley Oxnam, who is expected back from his summer tour of Europe about Sept. 1. Upperclassmen will not arrive until Sept. 13. All students will go through their completed schedule of classes Saturday, Sept. 15, and receive assignments of texts and supplies. Recitations and lectures will begin 1 in earnest Monday, Sept. 17. Students who must work part of their way through school will have greater opportunities than ever this year as De Pauw will have part time work for 160 students under its FERA grant. This includes work for both men and women.

building, which will house music, art, English and so' al science departments, will be the ninth on the campus and will be Tudor-Gothic in design to harmonize with the other buildings. The campus consist of eighty acres, several of which are a natural forested area, where the botanical gardens and bird reserve are located. Under the leadership of Dr. Pittenger, the college has attained a high scholarship and is fully accredited by the Board of Education of Indiana, the American Association of Teachers Colleges, and the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. The trustees have given capable directum to the policies of the college and have been largely responsible for its rapid and sound growth. Dean Ralph Noyer is responsible for the reorganiation of many courses in the various departments in order that new procedures may make instruction vital and that the needs of an ever-changing social order may be met. Since the college was established in 1918, when the Ball brothers purchased the original propprty and gave it to the state, the school has graduated 4.241 students. The departments include art, business education. English education, foreign languages, the sciences, mathematics, social science, home r — 'lies, industrial arts, music, library, physical education. Extra-curricula activities through which students may learn to become leaders in the communities in which they will t''-'"h. are open to all students. They include band, orchestra, glee club, choir, d’-amatics, intercolleg 4 “* -and games, newspaper, annual, outstanding concerts, lectures and olays. Y. M. C. A.. Y. W. C. A., field trips, departmental clubs and social •organiations. Libraries, laboratory . demonstration school, gymnasium and athleic fields are well equipped. Hundreds of persons from all parts of the state have visited the college art galleries this year to view the collection of paintings which have been lent to the college bv Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Ball.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

MUSIC SCHOOL TO OPEN FOR ENROLLMENTS Arthur Jordan Conservatory Announces Registration Dates. Two fall registration daies have been announced by the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music. Children and adults wishing to take private lessons in music, dramatic art or dancing will begin their work Sept. 4. Students of college age who plan to register in the collegiate department and work toward academic degrees granted in affiliation with Butler university, will enroll Sept. 17-18. This will be the seventh annual school year of the conservatory since its founding in 1928 and the third year it has operated as a nonprofit corporation. Registration activities for persons taking private lessons will be received at the three conservatory campuses. Students registering in the collegiate department should come to the main campus, 1204 North Delaware street. Fall registration activities will be in charge of Max T. Krone, director, Mrs. Blanche Harrington, business executive, and Mrs. Evelyn Green, registrar. The private lesson department will operate on a term basis with ten weeks comprising each term. The collegiate department will operate on a semester basis which coincides with that of Butler university. Sixty faculty members wall comprise the music school staff this fall. Anew dormitory for women will be opened at 1500 North Delaware for the convenience of out-of-town students. Weekly chapel programs will be held this fall each Tuesday. The initial faculty meeting of the school year will be held Sept. 13. All plans and policies for the year will be announced at that time.

CITY STUDENTS WIN UNIVERSITY HONORS Tech Has Three on List at Bloomington. By Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Aug. 21. Saul Bemat, post-graduate student from Indianapolis, made a perfect mark in twenty hours of scholastic work during the second semester of the past school year at Indiana university, according to tabulations released today by John W. Cravens, university secretary. Norman Parnell, Indianapolis, junior, made A’s in eighteen hours of study. Os the Indianapolis high schools, Tech had three on the honor roll; Shortridge, two, and Washington, two. Other Indianapolis students listed on the honor roll are Lillian Coleman. Jack Shrader, Virginia Hitchcock. Hester Gruber, Donn Watson, Herbert Ludlow, Frances Blank and Max A. Fritz. Mr. Fritz is not a graduate of an Indianapolis high school.

The Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music Indiana’s Largest Music School. Affiliated with Butler University. Offers private studio lessons and class instruction for children and adults in all phases of music, dramatic art and dancing. Maintains a collegiate department which offers courses leading to baccalaureate degrees in public school music, etc. tt> tt t onrvTYr Private instruction Sept. 4 PALL Ui LIMA lx Collegiate Dept Sept. 17-18 For Information write Max T. Krone, director, 1204 N. Delaware St., Indianapolis.

STUDY I AW 2-year course UIU w 1 Inw j* ” Leads to LL. B. Degree EVENING CLASSES—LOW TUITION RATES TERMS AS LOW AS SB.OO PER MONTH Get our Free Catalogue before selecting your school. Most modern instruction methods. We use latest case and textbooks in class room study. Excellent faculty. FALL TERM BEGINS SEPT. 10. REGISTER NOW. LINCOLN UNIVERSITY 803 Union Title Bldg. (135 E. Market St.) LI. 6046

MANCHESTER COLLEGE A Standard College—Fully Accredited A Liberal Arts College with departments of Education, Music, Art. Home Economics, Commerce, Physical Education, Bible and Religious Education and professional work in medicine, dentistry, nursing, engineering and agriculture. An ideal location in a beautiful city. A faculty of forty members. Six hundred students. Good buildings and equipment. Expenses very low for a standard college. The fall term opens Sept. 11. For catalogue and special information, address OTHO WINGER. PRESIDENT North Manchester, Indiana.

Ball State Bleachers College Prepares Teachers, Administrators, and Supervisors. Write for Catalog. Fall Quarter Sept. 10—Dec. 7 Winter Quarter Dec. 10 —Mar. 14 Spring Quarter Mar. 19—June 12 Mid-Spring Term Apr. 30—June 12 First Summer Term June 17—July 19 Second Summer Term July 22—Aug. 23 L. A. Pittenger, President Muncie, Indiana

WINS PROMOTION

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Charles R. Michael Announcement has been received from national headquarters of the Veterans of Foreign Wars at Kansas City, Mo., that Charles R. Michael, Indianapolis, has been appointed national deputy chief of staff for the Seventh district of the organization. The Seventh district comprises Indiana, Ohio and Kentucky. Mr. Michael has been active in veterans’ affairs fifteen years and has served two terms as commander of Lavelle-Gossett post No. 908, and two years as commander of the Marion county council, V. F. W. Mr. Michael lives at 160 South Bancroft street. 4.000 CONCERNS EMPLOYPUPILS City Business College Cites Job Records for Five Years. Many young people are “forcing” their way into desirable, promising business positions through thorough, specific preparation and a determination to win. They are not looking for “easy sailing.” They realize the value to themselves in meeting obstacles. Many who entered the ten units of Indiana Business College a year ago are holding positions today. They planned, decided, and acted. Records of the institution’s employment department show that for the year ended June 30, 1934, 872 permanent and 1.322 temporary positions were filled. Many of the latter developed into permanent places. Central Business College is the I. B. C. of Indianapolis. The others are at Marion, Muncie, Logansport, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond and Vincennes. The normal annual enrollment of the schools averages 3,100. In the last five years, more than 4,000 firms employed one or more I. B, C. graduates. The school's fall term opening will be from Aug. 27 to Sept. 4. According to officials, the fall registration will run considerably ahead of that of last year. Ora E. Butz is president and treasurer, Fred W. Case, vice-presi-dent and principal of “Central,” and Roy H. Puterbaugh. secretary. Car Kills Hoosier Boy By United Press FT. WAYNE, Ind., Aug. 21.—John W. Mannweiler, 15, was killed instantly yesterday when he stepped from behind a parked automobile into the path of another car driven by F. M. Vickery, North Manchester.

SAHARA GROTTO ! AUXILIARY SET FOR FISH FRY Fete Planned Two Nights at Order Home; Dances Featured. Dancing, music, vaudeville and ahletic exhibition will feature the annual fish fry of the Sahara Grotto : ladies' auxiliary Friday and Saturday nights at the Grotto home, Park avenue and Thirteenth street. The Grotto band will give its weekly concert Friday night. Miss Rosalind Ludwig and Miss Joan Degischer will dance both nights. Miss Ludwig will feature Hawaiian dance the latter night assisted by the Harlan Hawaiian quartet. Also on the Saturday night program will be amateur boxing contest and an exhibition by the Sahara drum corps. Mrs. Martha Reinhardt, auxiliary president: Mrs.

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Charlotte Halter, entertainment committee chairman, and Mrs. Lois Houston, ways and means committee chairman, are in charge of the affair. They are assisted by the following committee heads: Mrs. Herman Blomberg. cakes: Mrs. Lawrence Neal, coffee: Mrs. Lee Reed, ice cream; Mrs. Joseph Nelson, candy; Mrs. Roy Stebbine. popcorn; Mrs. Jeanette Wells, fortune telling: Mrs. Ralph Wurz. soft drinks; Mrs. Ralph Reeder, watermelon: Mrs. Fred Hollingsworth, salads, and Mrs. William Hamilton, fish. PIANO PUPILS REGISTER AS FREE TERM NEARS Course Sponsored by Marion Music Company Starts Labor Day. More than 200 piano pupils have registered for the free term of lessons sponsored by the Marion Music Company in co-operation with the Indianapolis Piano Teachers Association. it was announced today. Lessons will start Labor day and applicants may register at the Marion Music Company store at 229 North Pennsylvania street at any time. The offer is open both to beginners and advanced students. Nearly all piano teachers in the city are participating.

AUG. 21, 1034

STAR WEEPS WELCOME Ann Dvorak Sees Father for Pirt Time in Sixteen Years. By United Press HOLLYWOOD. Cal.. Aug. 21 Words failed Ann Dvorak as she gazed upon her father. Edward MrKim. Philadelphia business man. for the first time in sixteen years at the railroad station yesterday. The actress threw her arms around him and wept copiously. Then they posed for pictures and hastened away in a car.

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