Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 July 1937 — Page 10

PAGE 10 ACTIVITIES FOR NEW STUDENTS AT 1. U. PLANNED

Orientation Week Is to Begin Tuesday, Sept. 7.

Times 8perinl BLOOMINGTON, July 30.—Orientation week for new Indiana University students is to begin Tuesday, Sept. 7, Thomas A. Cookson. The first three days of the orientation program are to be optional, but. the program for Friday and Saturday, Sept. 10 and 11, is required. Sorority Tuesday and end Thursday ning. The required first day, is to include a | meeting for all new students at 1:30 Pp. m. and one for all new women students Friday morning at 11 o'clock. At the meeting for all new students, deans or selected representatives of various divisions are to | meet with students who expect to | enroll in their division. The deans in charge are to discuss briefly the | curricula for their respective di-| visions. The required meeting for | new women students will be os E.| the supervision of Dean Agnes E. Wells.

| |

eve-

Other Events Listed |

Other events on Friday's program | are to be payment of fees, registration for all students, physical ex- | aminations for new women students, optional examination for | exemption in English composition | and a freshman frolic. All new students are to be required to take the psychology examination at 8 Saturday morning. In addition, there will be two re- | quired meetings for new students | and one additional meeting for new women students. First of the required meetings for all new students | will be at i0 a. m., at which time | students will meet in small groups | with faculty members and student | assistants to disess programs of study for individual students and arrange- | ment of studies into =a program, | The second meeting will be at 2:15 | Saturday afternoon when new stu | dents will meet with student assistants to discuss enrollment in classes, | filing enrollment cards, study schedules, campus activities and univer- | sity regulations pertaining to students. | The first of the required meetings | on Saturday for new women only | will be at 1 p. m. under auspices of the department of physical educa- | tion for women. At 2:15 Saturday afternoon there will be a required | meeting for all new students who | have been awarded county scholar | hips for the coming school year.

Dance to Be Held

Optional events on Saturday's program will be the dance sponsored by the Union and Association of Women Students, a program by the University Theater and a meeting | designed especially for students who transfer to I. U. from some other | college. Opening of dormitories and pay- | ment of fees are on the program for | Tuesday, Sept. 7, the first day of the optional orientation program. Payment of fees will continue Wednesday and there also will be physical examinations. Thursday's program | includes payment of fees, registration for new students, physical ex~ aminations and a lawn picnic for women sponsored by the Association |

Sp nla dren crm:

according to Registrar ||

HH. MAYERS —

Draws Special Baker Venire

rush is to begin | LN

program for Friday, | ha

Times Photo. A special jury venire of 200 names for the Joel A. Baker trial is drawn by Chief Deputy Clerk Charles Ettinger (left) from the refilled jury box. Theodore Weiss, jury commissioner (seated) is checking the names as they are drawn.

And Once Again

In Waynesburg

| By United Press

WAYNESBURG, Pa, July 30.-—

|

It Didn't Rai am

Jupiter Pluvius was terribly unpop- | {ular as a rain god in Waynesburg

today. It didn’t rain here vesterday. This college town is very

proud |

of the tradition that it always rains |

on July 29 | tered old log book that some one started years ago showed it rained every July 29 from 1875 to 1936, except twice. One of those times »ccurred in the drought vear of 1930. But it didn’t rain here yesterday so that's three rainless July 29s in 62 years, Byron Daily, druggist who carefully keeps the records, dolefully made this entry in the log book today: “July 29, 1937—no rain.”

29-—or nearly always. A tat- |

|

the 50-year-old |

Daily is so confident it will rain |

every July 29 that he has a standing bet of a hat against a hat that

| it rains. The rainy day has become

such a tradition that he found no takers of his bet, though the sun shone brightly yesterday.

BAHAIS TO MEET

The Indianapolis Bahai Assembly | is to hold its regular meeting at the home of Mrs. C. A, Esinhart, 4010

| N. Capitol Ave, tonight at 8 p. m.

SATURDAY

| |

|

IE

CABINET CRISIS IN GHURCH WAR

One Killed, Hundreds Hurt In Riots as Patriarch Is Buried.

By United Press BELGRADE, Jugoslavia, July 30. —A serious Cabinet crisis was reported developing today following riots coincident with the funeral of Patriarch Varnave, head of the Greek Orthodox Church. One woman was reported killed and hundreds injured. The crisis was believed due to participation in the funeral of Minister of Commerce Verbanic — a Roman Catholic—while certain Orthodox ministers and deputies were barred by the Orthodox Church. Thousands of Mohammedans, bitter against both the Roman Catholic and Greek Orthodox Churches,

meanwhile were reported to have

H. n

MAYER, Annual

101

BRAND NEW MODELS

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

SLAVS FACED BY

taken advantage of the rioting to stage anti-Catholic demonstrations at Sarajevo, where 23 years ago this

month a young Serb student as- |

sassinated Archduke Francis Ferd- | inand and brought on the World | War.

The trouble today centered about signing a concordat with the Vatican—suggested by the late King Alexander shortly before an assassin’s bullet took his life three years ago. The concordat, with which Alexander hoped to win the favor of the Roman Catholic section of Serbia, was forgotten after his death. Tt was revived several weeks ago and passed last week by the lower house of Parliament.

26 FACE CHARGES IN SLOT MACHINE RAIDS

By United Press VINCENNES, Ind. July 30, = Formal charges were on file today against 26 Knox County business-

men alleging illegal possession of slot machines. The charges followed a county raid by Sheriff C. A. Joice. In a signed statement, Prosecutor Wayne Combs declared the raids had not been fair and that “a certain big shot” had moved his machines out the day before the

raids.

OLD AND IVORY CARGO REACHES CHICAGO SAFELY

Expect Egyplian | Discovery To Clear Palestine’s Ancient History.

By Science Service CHICAGO, July 30=An archaeological treasure in gold and ivory | has arrived safely in Chicago, it was | announced here today by Dr. John | A. Wilson, director of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. The treasure, from Megiddo (Armageddon) in western Palestine, was discovered during last season's digging and a brief announcement made last March, by cable. The discoveries will have an important place in disclosing new knowledge of historic Palestine during the troubled years from 1500 to 1200 B. C., when the land was a loosely joined group of city” states under the nominal leadership of Egypt. Gordon Loud, field director of the

Institute’s expedition, who has just returned from Palestine, related the details of the discovery. “A magnificent palace,” he said, “with frescoed walls and floors of sea shell mosaic stood just within the city gate and dominated the ramp approach to this fortress city. Within this palace lived Princes of Megiddo who ruled this small section of the Egyptian Empire from about 1500 to 1200 B. C. “While we were engaged in clearing the floor which served the second phase of the palace we noticed that the lime pavement in the corner of a comparatively inaccessible room had been replaced with tamped earth. Exploring spades exposed a gleam of gold, and then patient and painstaking work with knife and | ‘brush uncovered the en-

. FRIDAY, JULY 30, 1987 |

tire cache of gold and jewelry une der the floor. “About 1356 B. C. a threatened invasion had caused the Prince to ° bury his valued treasure, hoping it might escape the general looting which inevitably accompanied invasions. His hopes of safety for the gold were fulfilled, but he apparently never lived to reclaim his possassions.”

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the Women's Athletic Association. EED CI J IN g | | » B BB 9 There will be special services for | Ly the new students at all Bloomington churches Sunday. Regisiration and pavment of fees will continue through Monday. Enrollment in| classes also will be held that day, | with regular classroom work beginning Tuesday morning, following the induction services Jor new Stucients,

MILEAGE BANNED IN SHERIFFS’ BUDGETS

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LADIES’ WHITE SANDALS, TIES, Seventy Indiana county sheriffs | OXFORDS today were warned hy William Cos- | grove, State Examiner, that no mileage allowance should be in- | cluded in their 1938 budgets. The Board of Accounts ruling, | based on an Attorney General's opinion, applies to enforcement officers in counties of 30,000 population or less. The 1937 Legislature passed a law | allowing such officers $400 annual- |

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ACADEMY TEACHER WALKS ON STILTS

By United Press VALLEY FORGE, Pa., July 30. Life in a second-floor dormitory has | all the privacy of a goldfish bowl | since Capt. Kenneth F. Hill, registrar at Valley Forge Military Academy, has taken up stilt walking as a hobby. | Capt. Hill, Shakespearean scholar and former English instructor, startled brain-fagged students in second-floor rooms when he strolled across the campus on 18-foot stilts and chatted in =a Iriendly way through the windows.

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