Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1937 — Page 10

PACE 10

00-OPERATION BY INDIVIDUALS URGED AT I. U.

Followers.as Well as Leaders Needed, Foundation Day Speaker Says.

Times Special BLOOMINGTON, May 5.—Walter A. Jessup, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching president, told Indiana University students today that followers, as leaders, are needed today ji world.

Federal District Attorney and I. U. Arustee, is to be toastmaster tonight at the Founders’ Day banquet in Indianapolis. William Lowe Bryan, president, is to speak. “Much of the difficulty at the present time is due to our incapacity to get understanding or cooperation among, not groups alone, but Individuals who make up the groups,” Dr. Jessup said. “We talk a lot about persons who can lead, but surely it is apparent that it is equally necessary that we have persons who will co-operate, who will follow. Man has always been in a struggle with himself or with his neighbors. The means of fixing the world have varied. For example. in certain’ centuries and in certain places. it was the conviction that the church»could fix the world aright, Government Favored Now | “Just now it is the conviction that | the government can do the job. It is possible that the best way to fix the world right is to improve the individuals ‘in it and to recognize the differences in these individuals as to capacity, as to purpose, as to ideals.” President Jessup paid tribute to Indiana | University and to President William Lowe Bryan: “Indiana University has a noble heritage that has made a contribution to the life of fhe state that cannot be calculated. It has had the great good fortune to have as its head a truly great man for more than a third of its entire existence. We owe to Dr. Bryan, more than to any single person, the fact that the University has been kept out of puerile controversies, that it has forged ahead vigorously and effectively during the recent years of educational expansion, “As a beginning teacher, it was my good fortune to study the edition of Plato's Republic which was edited by President and Mrs. Bryan. | Through this reading, Plato and | Socrates became living personalities for me. | Later. as a mémber of the | * staff ‘of the . University, it was he | who first drove home to me the fact that .a schoolmaster must be! interested in the thing he fences | must have a passion for it, if h student is to get the bast that the | institution affords. I can never re- | pay my personal debt of gratitude to William Lowe Bryan.”

Club to Honor Dr. Bryan

Dr. William Lowe Bryan, Indiana University president, is to be the guest of honor at an Indiana University Club dinner at 6:30 p. m. today in the Marott Hotel. He also is to participate in a nation-wide radio broadcast in which Hoagland {Hoagy) Carmichael, I. U. alumnus and composer, will be heard from Hollywood. Dr. Bryan is to broadcast at 9:30 p. m. from the Founders’ Day dinner, at which new club officers will assume their duties. Harry M. Stitle, Indianapolis attorney, was elected club president at the weekly luncheon in the Columbia Ciub. Others named were Allan Warne, vice president; Samuel Ashby, secretary, and John Scott, | treasuser. Leo W. Schumaker is re- | tiring president.

Head Manual Senior Play Cast

Frances Davis and Alva Stoneburner are to take leading roles in

the Manual Training High School

senior production, “Remember the

Day.” It is to be presented in the school auditorium today and to-

morrow.

GRADUATE CLINIC OPENS MONDAY

Public Lecture Planned for Meeting Here of State Medical Association.

A postgraduate assembly of |g

medical clinics and lectures’ will open here Monday under direction of the Indiana State Medical Association and the Indiana University School of Medicine. Sessions, to continue until Friday night, May 14, will be held in the University medical school and in Hotel Lincoln. The only public meeting of the series is set for Friday night when Dr. Maude Slye, associate professor of pathology, University of Chicago, is tb speak. Dr. Slye is known for her outstanding work in cancer research. This meeting will be held in Shortridge High School. The clinic sessions, which only physicians of the state will attend, are to be held in the School of Medicine and the lecture series will be held nightly in the Lincoln. Each day session will be devoted to a group of allied diseases while night sessions will be addressed by guests speakers from out of the state.

‘WATER UTILITY AND

CITY CITED IN SUIT

Mrs. Jennie Harper asked $5000 | damages in a suit on file in Superior | | Court 3 today against the Indian- | apolis Water Co. and the City of | Indianapolis. | The suit charged that a w ter | pipe valve, protruding from walk at Michigan and Agjles Sts. | caused her to fall on April 17. Mrs

Harper charged that she was seri- | ously injured.

42 COUNTY SCHOOLS WIN SAFETY. AWARDS

Sheriff Otto Ray today announced presentation of safety certificates, for 100 per cent safety records, to 42 Marion County public and ‘parochial schools. The schools are outside the city limits. Certificates were awarded the fol-

lowing schools: William Evans, Albert Walsman, Marvgaret McFarland, Decatur Central, West Newton, Bunker Hill, New Bethel, St. John’s Lutheran, Castleton, Lawrence, Oaklandon, Beech Grove, Bluff Avenue, Edgewood, Glenns Valley. Southport Grade, . Roch’'s, University Heighis, New Au4, ike Township . Pike Township 12, Cumberland, Lowell, Pleasant Run, Shadeland, Clermont Township House, Warren Central, Crooked Creek, Nora, John Strange. Ben Davis Grade. Ben Davis High, Bridgeport. Flackville. Fleming Gardens, Garden City. Mars Hill, Maywood and Wayne Township 13

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