Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1939 — Page 37
NATIONAL GUARD ENLISTS 791 IN STATE OUTFITS
1271 Recruits Join in Area to Bring Total Strength To 9000 Men.
A total of 1271 new recruits have been enlisted in the 38th National ‘Guard Division from Indiana, Kentucky and West Virginia since presidential authorization for an increase in Guard strength six ‘weeks
A total of 791 new Guardsmen. have been mustered into Indiana Guard units, bringing total Hoosier National Guard strength to approximately 6000 officers and enlisted men. Col. Norman Nicholai, 38th Division chief-of-staff, announced that the Division is within 197 of fulfilling its authorized quota of 1468 new Guardsmen. Strength Now 9000 Men Total division strength to date with the new enlistments is 9000, -. Col. Nicolai said. He added that the quota would be filled within the next few weeks. At the same time he announced more than 400 Hoosier guardsmen will take to the field again this week-end for training and maneuv- . ers. A total of 1500 enlisted men and officers, including the 38th Division air squadron from Stout Field, will conduct war games at Ft. Harrison.
Artillery to Take Part The largest encampment -during the present field training program ‘is expected to be held/Thanksgiving week-end when, in addition to Guard infantry units, an entire regiment of artillery will engage in mimic warfare.
3 BUTLER TEACHERS 60 TO. U. MEETING
Three members of the Butler University College of Education _ faculty are attending the annual conference of the Student Critic Teacher Association today and tomorrow . at Indiana University. They are Prof. Henry M. Whisler, acting education dean; Dr. Amos B. Carlile and Miss Elizabeth E. Bettcher. Richard Dempsey, senior adviser for the university ¥Y. M. C. A. chapter, is to attend a meeting of ~ the Central Field Council executive committee Nov. 24-26 at the Hyde Park Y. M. C. A, Chicago. Students at this meeting will plan group activities for the Y. M. C. A. chapters in the Midwest area.
CONNERSVILLE BANK RECEIVERSHIP ENDED
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—Complete liquidation of the defunct First National Bank of Connersville and termination of the receivership was reported today by the Treasury Department. The bank failed in December, 1930, and John Russell, Greensburg businessman, was appointed receiver. Capital stock at the time of the failure was $200,000. The final receivership report shows that total disbursements amounted to $1,200,849. This amounted to 96.82 per cent of the total liabilities. Dividends to all claimants were 95.1 per cent, so the liquidation costs amounted to 1.72 per cent.
BURT'S
Smiling her pleasure at arrive ing in peaceful America, Jadwiga Smosarska, Poland’s leading screen actress, is pictured as she arrived in New York. She left everything she owned back in Warsaw when she fled Nazi blitzkrieg.
TEACHERS SEEK "40 CONVENTION
Bid to Be Made for Meeting Of Science and. Math Association.
An invitation for the Central Association of Science and Mathematics Teachers to hold its 1940 meeting here will be extended by
an Indianapolis delegation attending the 1939 meeting in Chicago
,|Nov. 24 and 25.
Heading the delegation will be Mrs. Marie S. Wilcox of Washington High School, association president. Several other local teachers are leaders ‘in the association. E. S. Martin of Tech is a director; L. R. Allen, Tech, is vice president of the geography section; Miss Martha Hunt, Shortridge, is secretary of the mathematics s€ction, and J. E. Potzger of Butler University is business manager of the yearbook. Indianapolis teachers who are association committee members include Walter G. Gingery, Mrs. Geraldine Johnson, Allen Ross Stacy, Walter Carnahan, C. I. Morrison and Carl Hanske. Others attending the Chicago meeting are to include Otto Ww. Kuehrmann, Manual; Panoria Apostol, Broad Ripple; "Lester Bolander, Raymond D. Hornaday, Kettery, W. E. Krickenberger, A. M. Welchons, Dorothy Carey and Viva D. Martin, Tech; Vivian Ely, Lillian Niemann, Grace Barker, Mildred Ross, Glen Ludlow, Estil Van Dorn, Arthur Sims and J. C. Nelson of Washington High School; R. W. Wolfe of Howe, and J. J. Cripe of the Indianapolis Convention and Publicity Bureau. <
CAST IN FRANKLIN Times Special ° FRANKLIN, Ind, Nov. 17.—Miss Edna McDermet, Indianapolis, has been cast in the Franklin College Theater's Christmas play, “Christmas, Inc.” It is to be presented be-
fore the holiday vacation, beginning Dec. 15. :
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PURDUE VALUES
TOTALHOLDINGS | AT16 MILLIONS
38-39 Income $4,412,333, ‘Report to Land-Grant Group Shows.
By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—Purdue University is one of the leading landgrant colleges in the United States, ith a total property value of $16,%2, 271, an income of $4,412,333 and expenditures of $4,054,679 for the year ending June 30, 1939. These figures are contained in a
report to the fifty-third annual con-| «
vention of the Association of LandGrant Colleges and Universities now in session here.
Seven members of the Purdue| faculty and David E. Ross, Purdue} = trustee and owner of the Ross Gear| & Tool Co., Lafayette, are attending the meeting. Mr. Ross addressed|#
the engineering section last night on co-ordination of college: and industrial research.
Dean Potter Speaks
Dean A. A. Potter of the Purdue|
School of Engineering addressed the same section yesterday afternoon on academic degrees and professional}: experience for enginering teachers. Others attending are Dean S. G. Dukes of -the Graduate School; Dean Mary L. Matthews of Home Economics; Dean H. J. Reed of Agriculture; Associate Dean V. C.
Freeman of Agriculture; L. E. Hoff-| .
man, associate county agent leader, and G. S. Meikle; director of research of the Purdue Research Foundation. The Purdue report showed the total income to be derived as follows: State Government $2,200,623; Federral Government, $692,848; student fees, $715,251; endowment earnings,| $12,738; private gifts and grants, $208,136; sales and services, $578,167, |, and other sources, $4570. Auxiliary enterprises provided an additional income of $1,194,656.
Additional Receipts Listed
According to Mr. Ross, auxiliary enterprises don’t mean football re-| ceipts, but businesses fostered by the school foundations, such as the Ross-Ade Foundation, named after Mr. Ross and the Hoosier humorist, | George Ade, who endowed it. Additional receipts, designated for physical plant, endowment and other non-expendable fynds, amounted to $1,848,654. The States contribution to plant expenditures for the year was $555,148. Total increase in these items over 1938 was $44,832, the report shows. | The $4,054,679 spent for educa-
tional and general purposes was as|
follows:
Administration and general ex-}|
pense, $348,173; resident instruction,
J.1$1,772,575; organized research, $832,-}
535; extension services separately organized, $696,151; libraries, $54,923,} and plant operation and maintenance, $350,322. 6795 Enrolled Last Year
Auxiliary enterprises and activities cost $923,491; capital outlay for plant and equipment, $2,416,058, and other non-educational expense, $19,676. There were 4862 men and 1933 women enrolled in the school during the year ending June 30, 1939. The faculty consisted of 761 men and 118 women and instructional and administrative salaries totaled $1,422,324. All other salaries and wages amounted to $1,977,313. “ Federal funds’ under various landgrant college laws amounted to $704,722 and the Public Works Administration grants: for the period, $1,293,506.
BUSINESS LEADERS TO HELP STUDENTS
A layman’s program planned to aid Indiana University Extension Division students in the selection of business courses is being set up by the Association of Student Businessmen of the division. The organization will promote increased interest in advanced busi=|. ness subjects and closer relationship between students and businessmen on the level of university credit work. Asociation officers are Clyde PF. Ford of Eli Lilly & Co., president; Bruce H. Johnson, attorney, vice president; Floyd Blake of the Citi-}| zens Gas & Coke Utility, sebretary; Merle Swango, Public Service Co. assistant secretary; J. H. Rushton, Shell Oil Co., and Carl McNeely, Columbia Construction Co., directors.
BID FOR POSTOFFICE
WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—Stansbury and Stout, Circleville, O., was the low bidder on the new postoffice building at Sheridan, Ind., the
today. The bid was $57,590 and the next two were $60,748 by H. D. White & Co., Chicago, and $62,490 by
highest bid was $69,828.
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