Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1938 — Page 18
PAGE 18
MAJOR FACULTY Refuse Dumping Brings Protest
CHANGES MADE AT INDIANA U.
|
Dr. Robert Theodore Ittner
Succeeds Dr. Zucker in German Department.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Sept. 14—Major appointments to the Indiana] University faculty were announced today following the September meeting of the trustees. | Dr. Robert Theodore Ittner of the University of Illinois was named assistant professor of German and acting department head. He replaces Dr. A. E. Zucker whe re-| signed to take a post at the Uni-| versity of Maryland. Dr. Robert E. Walden was appointed professor of accounting and placement bureau director of the] school of business administration.| William E. Ross of Chicago was appointed assistant professor of voice in the music school. Mr. Ross holds B. A. and B. M. degrees from Wisconsin University and an M. M.| degree from Columbia University. Miss Mary Lyon Hall was named | instructor in home economics. She | was a member of the Des Moines High School faculty and holds an M. S. degree from Iowa State Col-| lege.
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Times Photo.
Attention of City and State Health Board officials has been called by residents in the vicinity of Fall Creek and the old 38th St. bridge
to huge amounts of refuse and ru It was believed gathered from the after the State Fair. secretary, said the dumping was in
bbish dumped on a sandbar there. State Fair Grounds in cleaning up
Dr. Herman G. Morgan, City Health Board
violation of sanitation laws.
Times Special
Expert Opinion Sought on Old William Henry Harrison Picture
VINCENNES, Sept. 14 —Expert opinion on a hitherto unknown por-
[trait of William Henry Harrison, discovered here recently, was being
Branch McCracken and Paul J. sought today by the Vincennes chapter of the D. A. R. The picture was found by William E. Bradbury in back of a framed tor in physical education for men| portrait of his father, P. G. Bradbury, founder of the law firm of Brad-
Harrell were given ranks of instruc-
and C. O. Dahle instructor in edu-| cation and principal of the Univer-| sity School. Dr. Logan Esarey of] the history department was given a leave of absence for the year and the leaves of Prof. Fred V. Chew] and Prof. Thomas J. Rogers were continued. | Approve Calumet Building Prof. Robert E. Lyons was named professor emeritus of chemistry,| Dean B. Winfred Merrill and Prof E. B. Birge, professors emeritus of music. { The trustees approved plans for | the Calumet Extension Center build- | ing and also the location and plans, for the domitories and the business administration building. { The executive committee of the board is to meet Oct. 14 to open bids for the women's dormitory tunnels The trustees are to meet on the following dates for bids on: Nov. 3 business administration; Nov. 4 men’s north dormitory; Nov. women’s dormitories, and Nov. men’s west dormitory
16,
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LOYALIST AID DRIVE | NETS $200 FIRST DAY
85 Cases of Groceries Also
Are Contributed. |
If contributions continue at the | present rate. Indianapolis is expected to reach its quota soon in a na-tion-wide drive to raise money and goods for relief of Loyalist Spain, ac- | cording to David Rubin, publicity | chairman for the local committee. Contributions vesterday, first day of | the drive, totaled $200 in cash and | 85 cases of groceries. Contributions are being raised here by a committee of 250 prominent people, wholesalers and manufacturers, clothiers and grocers. Local headquarters are at 244 Iilinois St. | Among those assisting in the drive, | according to Mr. Rubin, are W. Rowland Allen, Dr. Charles McCormick, Dr. James Himler, Mrs. Dean Tyndall, Dr. Theo Cable, Rabbi Elias
Charry, Rev. James Crain, Prof. Walter Bittner, John Bartie, Prof.! I. R. Shannon and Arthur Zinkin. | Under the local sponsorship of the Indiana Medical Bureau to Aid Spanish Democracy, the drive hopes to fill a specially chartered ship with medical supplies, ing.
|
| {
MANY HOOSIERS GOING TO LEGION PARLEY
Indiana officers of the American Legion today said a record number of Hoosiers would attend the national convention in.Los Angeles, Cal, next week. | Special trains leaving Indianapolis will follow scenic routes to the Coast and already many Hoosiers have left by auto for the convention, officers said. The 40 and 8 has arranged for a return train trip that will include San Francisco, Portland, Ore., and Victoria, B. C
POSTS TO INSTALL Times Special BOONEVILLE, Sept. 14 —Installation of new officers of Warrick County's three American Legion posts was to be held here today at the same ceremony. Present will be Harold Shindler, Newburgh, state commander, and Arlie G, Skelton, district commander.
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bury & Bradbury. Mr. Bradbury said he decided to clean the glass and when he removed the back of the frame discovered the Harrison picture. It measures 102 by 13'2 inches and is in soft shades of brown, blue, It shows Mr. Harrison in a tight-fitting dark suit over which he wears a long dress cape with a rose lining. His right hand rests on a cane
and in the background is the Cap- | On the picture are his dying|
itol.
r—
l
BISHOPS OPEN M.E. SESSIONS
First Full Day of Activity Listed for Today at
words, “Sir, I wish you to under-|
stand the true principles of Government. I wish them carried out. I ask no more.” Also there is a legend: Feb. 9, 1773. Inaugurated March 4, 1841, William Henry Harrison, ninth President of the United States. Died, April 4, 1841. Lith and Published by H. Robinson, 42 Courtland St., Washington, D. C.” The picture is to be presented to the
' Vincennes D. A. R. Chapter for the
Harrison Home.
Value Doubted by
Herron Director
Wilbur D. Peat, John Herron Art Institute director, said today that from a description of the Harrison picture he doubted “it had much value.”
“It seems to be one of the thousands of lithographs issued following the death of President Harrisen Although I have not seen a reproduction of this picture before, the description leads me to believe it has little value. “From the reproduction it is obviously the work of an unskilled
artist and from its size and legend | I would think it a print rather than
an original.”
WAGE-HOUR BODY COUNSEL IS NAMED
WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 (U. P). Calvert Magruder, 44-year -old
Harvard Law School professor and,
former secretary to Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis, was ap-
pointed general counsel of the WageHour Administration today. He will have the difficult job of defending the Fair Labor Standards Act before the Supreme Court and of interpreting its general terms so that Administrator Elmer F. Andrews can define the industries which are affected by it. Mr. Magruder took a year's leave of absence from Rarvard and will begin his work here Friday.
the |
Born, |
Roberts Park.
i i
The 107th annual conference of Indiana Methodist Ministers and laymen met today for its first full day of sessions, scheduled to last through Monday of next week at the Robert Parks M. E. Church. The conference opened last night, led by Bishop Edgar Blake, Detroit; Bishop John N. Moore, Dallas, Tex., and Bishop Raymond J. Stockholm, Sweden. gave the opening address. A proposal was submitted to the Methodist Board of Education urging legislation turning the college over to the city of Evansville for use as a municipal college. Recommendations and of a special committee will be submitted to the conference later in the week. Assignment of pastors will be made Monday.
GOODWILL FLIGHT SET BY CHICAGO AMATEURS
Times Special CHICAGO, Sept. 14—A goodwill | flight of 30 planes will take off {here Saturday for French Lick, | Ind, carrying greetings of Chicago sportsmen pilots to southern Indiana aviators.
Wade, | Bishop Moore |
of the board
| helium.
LATE GROWING CONDITIONS AID CORN ESTIMATE
Expected Indiana Yield Above August Figure, Below Last Year's Total.
LAFAYETTE, Sept. 14 (U. P).— Indiana farmers this year will pro-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
YE ICT Jeter = Ep i i hf emer
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 14, 1938 Charles O. Williams, State geddddisddesdaddgusdd dd sadn
Teachers’ Secretary, Is Dead oe FIRST WITH pp er THE Newest
Served 15 Years as Execu-| tive Official; Rites to Be Arranged.
Funeral services were to be arranged today for Charles O. Williams, permanent executive secre- ; tary of the Indiana State Teachers’ Association, who died last night at his home, 3842 N. Capitol Ave. Mr. Williams, who was 63, had been ill
| duce an estimated 163,904,000 bushels of corn, M. M. Justin, Purdue| University agricultural statistician, | announced today. Mr. Justin, working with the U. S. Bureau of Agricultural Economics, based his figure on Sept. 1 weather and temperature conditions. The estimated crop is 47,866,000 bushels less than the 1937 total and 20,570,000 bushels more than the 1927-36 average. The estimate makes an average of 40.5 bushels an acre, one bushel more than an estimate last month. Mr. Justin said that near-normal rainfall and “somewhat above” normal temperatures were reasons for the higher prospects. “Oats yielded 26 bushels an acre this year, lower than expected earlier, with a total production of 36,634,000 bushels or 74 per cent of the 1927-36 average,” Mr. Justin reported. “There was ho change in | spring wheat or barley | tions. “Spring wheat at 16 bushels an | acre amounted to only 80,000 bush- | els, or 43 per cent of average. Batley at 22 bushels an acre totaled 1 528,000 bushels or 72 per cent of
| » | average.
INDIANA RED CROSS TO BROADEN DRIVE
Times Special FRENCH LICK, Sept. 14—The Red Cross in Indiana this year will conduct an enlarged campaign for “local disaster relief,” representatives of 24 southern Indiana counties were told at a meeting here. | Gus G. Meyer, Washington, D. | C., general field representative, said the district's goal for 1938 would be memberships from 5 per cent of the population. The 1938 Roll Call for southern Indiana, Mr. Meyer said, is to be from Nov. 11 to Thanksgiving Day.
LUTHERAN SYNOD PICKS UNIONDALE
FT. WAYNE, Sept. 14 (U. P) — | Uniondale was selected as the site of he 1938 conference of the Northern Indiana Synod of the United Lutheran Church at the closing sessions of its meeting here today. The Rev. H. A. Kunkle, Albion, and the Rev. W. E. Weber, La- | grange, were nominted for president of the conference. The election will be conducted at the Indiana Svnod meeting at Napoleon, next
NEW ZEPPELIN GETS TRIAL
' FRIEDRICHSHAFEN, Germany, | Sept. 14 (U. P.).--The Zeppelin | LZ-130, successor to the burned Hindenburg, went aloft today on its first test flight, carrying Dr. Hugo Eckener as commander and 74 passlengers and crew, Although built for noninflammable helium gas, the dirigible used hydrogen because of (the United States embargo on
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bo |
with
32
expecta-
several weeks. Mr. Williams became executive secretary of the association in 1923 and helped build it to a total mem- | § bership of 16,000 teachers.
He had served as Indiana director of the National Education As-!? sociation since 1950, and was a candidate for president of the group when delegates met last June in New York.
He also had played a prominent part in State educational work. He served as president of the Indiana |= State Teachers’ Retirement Fund | for many years and had been a board member since 1925. Editor and publisher of the Indiana Teacher, official asSociation publication, Mr. Williams also was a member of the National Council of Education, the Indiana Schoolmen’s Club, the City Superintendents of Schools Association and the budget committee of the National Education Association. He was born Sept. 19, 1874, at
Xr
Charles 0. Williams
Bloomington, and Otis, Fountain City; three brothers, Frank A., Liberty; Paul E. Richmond, and Isaac |R., Fountain City; two sisters, Mrs. | |Mabel Beall, Richmond, and Mrs. | {Della Thornton, Fountain City, and five grandchildren.
Others at $1.69 and $1.99
350 AT FRANKLIN COLLEGE Times Special FRANKLIN, Sept. 14.—More than Fountain City, Wayne County, and |350 students, a record enrollment,' received his primary and secondary | registered today at the opening of, education there. He was graduated | the 1938-39 Franklin College school from Valparaiso University. Al-|year. | though he also studied law and held memberships in the bar associations of Indiana and Kentucky, Mr. Williams entered the teaching profession immediately. He taugh first in rural schools land then at the Webster High | School for 10 years. He then be- | came superintendent of Wayne | County schools, which position he | held for 14 years. | He was a member of the Central | § Christian Church, the Masonic! Lodge at Fountain City and the | Scottish Rite. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. | | Florence Eva Williams; three sons, | Harold B., Lexington, Ky.: Dale, |
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