Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1940 — Page 7
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DAY, UNELTO® _ oh THE TS
| TR Chup St | a ‘Wins 4-Year Scholarship) BROAD RIPPLE Je i .S. FEARS ATTACK gE IF GERMANY WIN
nis Baker Two of Three Voters Believe Assault Would Follow Allied
Pirst GRADUATES 96:5 Loss; Feeling Has Increased With dianapolis last night and tonight
Ann HEE Current European . Events. there will be four graduation cere-| jeanne Alice Gass ph N. Gentry
EK atharine E. Champlain | ; : Jeanng Al : ) By DR. GEORGE GALLUP i wii] monies. : BaF Guest" Director, For Bi Institute of Public Opinion 3 : A class. of 96 seniors were Piven Betty Vane Bocas \ roel
ex t | hi: WG Chey PRINCETON, N. J, June 4.—America’s reaction to diplomas at the Broad Ripple school the war in Europe—as revealed in a nation-wide survey by auditorium last night by Schools the American institute of Public Opinion—continues to be Superintendent DeWitt 8. Morgan. fines. influenced by the belief that if Germany should defeat Eng- he Riaretes ere made od four Faure Tan Sele land and France she will sooner or later attack the United pp es > Eh or Sa States. Whether this fear of a German attempt to dominate on “—And Not to Yield.” George H. Harry B. Noon the United States is justified, _ Cornelius Jr. R. R. 16, Box 281, or not is a matter about
asked “Where Do We Go From which military and civilian
Here?” The subject of George H. Christena, 1642 E. 62d 8t., was “As experts disagree. But the fact remains that the fear is shared by
Re. We Live.” Malcolm Dick Minnick, Rober ynor James Robert Risley 6008 Michigan Road, spoke on “Lifs rR oann Glare Reece Roark Smale wo april s Sean Ammerman, principal, pre- Hato 3d GC. Riley Jr. John" Ryan y agen ah ay 2 ee y sented the James Whitcomb Riley is ai e for swift en- medal to David Charles Hyde, 5980 Jak W. Spencer largement of the Ewing St. The Alumni Award went Fiaraare: Stadler try’s national to Miss Martha Ann Cravens and =r rs ys ha os the James Dungan Citizenship Hehert % Talbots, Seorse 0, :TaHior - as a factor in the Award was given to Howard 8S. American desire Scott, 6519-Ferguson St. to give every help ‘Manual High School’s commence“short of war” to ment will be held in’ Cadle Taberthe Allies. “If Germany
nacle tonight and Tech High School's in the Butler Fieldhouse. should defeat England and France in the present war,” the Institute
St. John’s Academy will hold its commencement at the school tonight asked voters throughout the United States, “do you think Germany
and the Warren Central High School auditorium will be the scene would start a war against the Unit- of its commencement tonight. | ed States sooner or later?” Tomorrow night St. Agnes AcadThe answers were: emy and Shortridge High School will hold ‘their commencements an Belles Germany Would 4+ 55 the Washington High School and Believe Germany Would Not , Attack U. S.
U. S. WITNESS IN FRAUD TRIAL DIES MARION, Ind., June 4 (U. P.).— Mrs. Ed M. Lambert, victim of an alleged race track swindle some time ago in which she and her husband lost $17,000, died at her home here yesterday of a heart attack.
- She was expected to be one of the principal Government witnesses in the Pederal tridl of five .men held in Detroit in connection with the alleged fraud. Her husband and a brother survive her.
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Manual, Teoh, St. John's, Warren Central to Hold Ceremonies Tonight.
Broad Ripple High School started a busy commencement week for In-
E. Covert Ann Cravens
Doroth Howar Joseph
L. Danforth ela] Davis
Marjorie J. Elliott Rosemary Blliots
we Fret
Ernest J. Fisher Jr.
William X. Laycock
re. Vier Ms Be th Mis a Miler ibe glen D. rion nick
Nee
Barbara J. Osterheld
—P |
Hubert P. Powell
almer ennington
Eva Jean Times ¥hota, Rodert, O. Both teacher and pupil seemed very happy as K. V. Ammerman, Broad Ripple principal, congratulated Malcom Dick Minnick, Broad Ripple graduate, for winning a four-year Rector Scholarship at DePauw University. He received the award at Broad Ripple commence-
ment exercises lagt night.
‘Cling to Self-Reliance,’ oe] Frank Tells I. U. Grads
completed the CAA flight training course. At the alumni luncheon, the Rose cup was awarded to the Class of 1890 for having the largest number of its living members back; . the McMurtie cup was awarded to the 1939 class for having the largest number returning; and the Campbell cup to the class of 1910 for having the largest percentagé ot its living members as active members of the Alumni Association, | Alexander M. Campbell, of Ft.
The Answers
» Do you think our country’s Army, Navy and air forces are strong enough so that the United States is safe from at-
tack by any foreign nation? Marjorie
Scnweinsberger Howard S. Scott
Should the United States require every able-bodied young man 20 years old to serve in - the Army, Navy or the air forces for one year?
Myron Unversaw Joseph C. VanMeter Russell H..
Betty Wen fri? Harrison end we
AMERICAN INSTITUTE PUBLIC/OPINION
Times Soper BLOOMINGTON, Ind, June 4.— The graduating class of Indiana University was urged yesterday by Glenn Frank, former Wisconsin University president, “to cultivate and cling to the ancient’ virtue of self-reliance.” He spoke at commencement exercises for 1470 students. “The temptation will be strong in your generation,” Dr. Frank said, “to
Ro obert ala. Sarah Neti © Young
~~ 146 East WASHINGTON ST.
Do you think that the CCC camps should give military training to every young man in the CCC?
ess ihdrarseseeee 35%
2% minishing with the course of events
in, Europe. an-
Park School Commissioners will be on Friday. Cathedral High School Only one person in 10, on the average, said he had no opinion on
The trend of opinion on. the question, as revealed in successive Institute tests, has been:
lean on the Government, to look to others. to pull your weight, to nurse your grievances, and to wait for
Wayne, was chosen to serv other term as president of Alumni Association. Other officers chosen for the com-
the
On Friday night at 8 o'clock eighth grade pupils of Holy Angels School will be graduated following
will hold its exercises: today. the question.
German official sources, eluting Chancellor Hitler himself, hav ridiculed the notion that Germany intends to attack the United States. * In a speech delivered before the Reichstag in January, 1939, Hitler compared the idea with the notion that Germany would invade the moon. Nevertheless a belief that Germany entertains the notion of world-wide dominion has persisted in American minds’ for many months, increasing rather than di-/
ing year were Ray C. omas, Gary, vice president; Mrs. | Ethel Larm Stembel, Indianapolis, secre-
. Germany Attask 8.? Belie Beyer ve
February, 1939 i (before war) ver 62% (38% Sept., 1939 37 35
Interestingly enough the present survey shows-far greater apprehension of Germany's intentions among
‘Southerners, 82 per cent of those interviewed saying they would anticipate a German attack, sooner or later, if the Allies are defeated.
the presentation of a play ‘Tarcisjus” by fifth, sixth, seventy 2 : jghth grade pupils in the schoo tary: Ward G. Biddle, Blooming- 3 h ton, treasurer, and Judge Walter E. Ball, 28th. St. and Northwestern Treanor, Chicago; President L. A.}’ Rippl Pittenger, Ball State Teachers Col- Ye Sf he B toad Pyle lege, Muncie, and Lewis S. Arm-|® wi strong, Elkhart, members of the re executive’ council.
e some magical leadership to put | bonbons in your mouth. “Flee| from that temptation as from a! plague. There is a growing articulate thought which insists that the America we have known— the America of private enterprise and political liberty—is a dying America. : “These prophets of decay insist that the masters of our economic life are ignorant, incompetent and callous and show no signs of bringing soc Hal intelligence to bear on ’ ) their | problems and that, in .conseé quence, the political medicine men flock about these problems with {their ' ‘quick and quack demedies.
“The ranks of businessmen, industrialists and financiers are not | devoid | of intelligence, competence and fog sensitiveness. The polit- | ical genuis of the nation is not} bankrupt. There is a vast fund of | leadership in the nation that suffers neither from the rigor mortis of reaction nor from the St. Vitus: Dance lof irresponsible utopianism. “It is for you to find the standards around. which the stable ine telligenice, effective competence ang .sou | social” sense of America who believe in Democracy and an | intelligently modernized economy of private enterprise can rally.” Oswald Ryan, Civil Aeronautics Authority member, presented certificates to 29 students who have
TEXAS GETS CUSTODY OF ELWOOD GUN GIRL
TIPTON, Ind, June 4 (U.P.).— Sheriff Reeder Webb of Clay County, Tex., arrived here today to take custody of Isabelle Messmer, Elwood, Ind., gun-bride who escédped | from the Odessa, Tex. jail after | being sentenced to a three-year prison term for murder. | Miss Messmer was captured last | week as she left an Elmore theater, | She had been free since March. o Yesterday she ran amuck in the y jail, beating her mother, Mrs. Frank Whites Decker of Elwood, who was visiting @ : her, partially disrobing herself and P r ints cutting herself with a razor blade : in an attempt to attack Sheriff C. ’ D. Hobbs. She was placed in solitary confinement. Miss Messmer was sentenced to the three-year prison term for the slaying of Buford Armstrong, a former House of David baseball player. Previously she had escaped from a New Jersey jail. J
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