Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 December 1940 — Page 6
.
- =» the American Association for the .| his pledge to keep the country out
. tion’s reproduction rate is falling
_. been his wife; Leroy Hinds, 24, and
PAGE 6.
LISTS 3 FACTORS DESTRUCTIVE TO SOCIAL SYSTEM
Professor Says Strife Between ‘Haves’ and ‘Have i Nots’ Must End.
f Copyright 1940 by Science Service
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 28. — To|
have democracy in its highest form, our mode of lile must be: rearranged
so that the individual under the |}
trusteeship of his chosen executives will be adequately fed, clothed and |
housed, provided with such services as eaucation, medical attention and recreation, and have the experiences of working with others to enrich personality.
‘This was the contention of Walter Rautenstrauch, professor of industrial engineering, Columbia University, speaking before the American ‘Association of Scientific Workers and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Maladjustments in our social and economic system result, according to Prof. Rautenstrauch, from three factors destructive. of civilization’s vital forces. 1. Ownership of the natural re--sources of the earth by indivduals, groups or nations, causing a struggle between the “haves” and “have nots,” which is the major cause of war and destruction. 2. Private ownership of the means of production by a small group which imposes its will on mankind, leading to unemployment and want in ‘the midst of abundance of resources, tool power and human skill and energy. 3. Consequent distribution of increasing portion of the fruits of produetion so that there is a maladjustment between our capacity to produce and our capacity to consume. “All attempts at the reorganization of the processes of civilization should be judged in the light of their probable effects at these three focal points of integration,” Prof. Rautenstrauch declared.
Useful Things Cheap
“The greater and more immediate the need, the greater the natural provision and the lower the price of the raw material. In other words, the greater the value in use the less the value in exchange.” This dictum was laid before the meeting as a sort of natural law covering the value of raw materials, by Dr. Alfred C. Lane, emeritus professor of geology at Tufts College. As extreme: but familiar examples, Dr. Lane cited air and water, They are both vital necessities, compared with which gold and pearls are as nothing. Yet in themselves they have no market value. We pay for things we do to them, as in air conditioning and city water supplies, but the substances themselves come free. Less extreme but still familiar is the example of relative usefulness and relative prices of metals. Iron and copper would be more useful, intrinsically, than gold and platinum even if they were less abundent. But they are (fortunately) quite abundant, and quite cheap.
U. S. 'Growing Up’
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 28 (U. PJ). —The United States fast is becom- + ing a nasion of adults'and as such must’ revise its. social scheme of things, Dr. Nathan Israeli of the New School for Social Research told
Advancement. of Science today. The organization and its affiliated groups were in the second day of their 107th meeting. The proportion of Americans older than 45 is increasing rapidly, Dr. Israeli told the convention’s psychology section. At the same time, he pointed out, the number under 20 is decreasing alarmingly, with the result that the average U. S. citizen is older today than his forebear of a generation ago. Future population declines are in store for the United States, Dr, Israeli said, pointing out that the na-
steadily. Dr. Harvey C. Lehman, psychology professor at Ohio University, reported that leading motion picture actresses reach their peak in earning capacity and ability between the ages of 25 and 29. Their male companions make the most money and do the best work between 35 and 40. The most notable exceptions to his conclusion were Shirley Temple and Marie Dressler, Dr. Lehman said.
4 KILLED AS AUTO FALLS 1800 FEET
FLAGSTAFF, Ariz, Dec. 28 (U. P.).—How does an automobile and its occupants fare from an 1800foot plunge into a canyon? . Sheriff Arthur Vandevier, who directed the recovery of four bodjes from the bottom of Oak Creek Canyon, said today that ‘every bone’ in them was broken, and that they were mutilated almost beyond recognition. The auto was a shapeless pile of jumk, unwrothy of salvage. The victims, whose automobile yesterday broke through four guard rails, were identified as Walter Witten, 26, of Salinas, Cal; a woman about 22, believed to have
Deats Boydston, 20, of Carnegie, Okla.
PASTOR SENTENCED AS DRAFT DODGER
PORTLAND, Ore., Dec. 28 (U. P.). ~The Rev. Paul Ackerman, Methodist minister, and Edwin A. Sanders, college instructor, were sentenced today to a year in a Federal road camp by Federal Judge James Alger
‘Free for refusal fo register for selec-|
tive seryice. Ackerman, 31-year-old father of four children and a fcrmer football star at Willamette University, registered for the draft. after he had © peen indicted and pleaded guilty, but across the form he wrote that he was doing so under protest. sanders, who is a Quaker, did not register. He told the court he would «yather accept the penalties of the
Their Holiday Is Over
Thompson and John Schnitzius.
sail for Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
WHITE'S GROUP SPLIT BY STAND
Some May Repudiate His Statement That ‘Yanks Are Not Coming.’
NEW YORK, Dec. 28 (U. P.)— Some officials of the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies indicated today that they would repudiate the “Yanks are not coming” statement of their chairman, william Allen. White. ° The executive committee announced after a meeting yesterday that it stood “unqualifiedly and unalterably” behind the statement of policy made last November, that the organization favors removing “restrictive statutes which hamper this nation in its freedom of action when it would co-operate with nations defending themselves from attack. . . . The executive committee called a meeting for Monday to “reaffirm and strengthen” this statement. : The action was believed taken to offset. the statement made by Mr. White to Roy W. Howard of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers, that the organization opposed repealing the Johnson Act barring loans to debt defaulters, sending American convoys to Britain, or carrying contraband into the war zone on American ships. At the same time, Dr. Frank Kingdon and Herbert Bayard Swope, members of the White committee’s national policy board, issued a statement in the name of the New York chapter's 16,000 members saying that “we will not be intimidated by the word ‘war monger.’ ” Maj. Gen. John :F. O'Ryan, retired, an advocate of physical aid to Britain, sent a letter to Mr. White saying if the statement attributed to him in Scripps-Howard newspapers was correct, “Consider this my resignation as a member of the White committee.”
Marshall Gathers
‘No War’ Signatures
° CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa, Dec. 28 (U. P.)—Verne Marshall, chairman of the NNo-Foreign-War Committee today asembled hundreds of signatures to a telegram to President Roosevelt urging him to renew
of war, in his Fireside Chat tomorrow. °
CLAIMS CONFESSIONS SOLVE 16 ROBBERIES
ROCHESTER, Ind., Dec. 28 (U. P.) —Charles Gibson, 24, of near Rochester, and Charles Burch, 21, of Akron, Ind. today faced charges of second degree burglary in Fulton Circuit Court. Affidavits were filed yesterday by Prosecutor Murray McCarty and Sheriff Russell Voorhees. - Sheriff Voorhees said confessions made by the youths, both of whom are on parole from the State Reformatory, had solved 16 robberies in northern Indiana. Nine were said to involve schoolhouses entered on nights when baskethall game receipts were on hand. Voorhees said the schoolhouse robberies were at Macy, Fulton, Argos, Amboy, Tippecanoe, Deedsville, Bat‘tleground, Chili and Roann. The charges filed against the pair were in connection with the robbery of a local garage Nov. 9 in which $48 was obtained.
Hoosier Goings
IT'S FUNNY
THERE ARE SOME FUNNY
weather.
and had a wing-spread of five inches. And C. T. Goen of Muncie would be glad to have you call at his home to verify the report that summer mosquitoes are sill. lingefing there. “They are too weak to bite so we sit and watch them fiy slowly around,” he says. , 8 » 2 IT'S A LITTLE LATE to report on the Christmas gift situation, but Crown Point Criminal: Court attaches already have Judge William J. Murray’s present for next year planned if he loses the one they gave him this year. It all started last summer when the magistrate lost the outboard motor off his boat while on a fishing trip. His friends this Christmas replaced the motor, plus a long, heavy chain and padoc
Selective Service Act than to Lcomply wit 16° wy
The gift next year if He loses This motor? A diving sul
DESCRIBES VAIN ITALIAN BATTLE AT COAST TOWN
Captured Officer Declares Campaign in Greece Was ‘Blunder.’
By MARY MERLIN United Press Correspondent CHIMARA, Albania (via Athens), Dec. 26 (Delayed) —The story of the Italians’ last stand at this coastal town was given to me today by
|Lieut. Col. Borsini of the Second
It was off for the bounding deep today for four sea-faring Beech : Grove boys (left to right), Everett Bryand Jr, Earl Swartz, Harlin
Ending a five-day holiday in In-
dianapolis yesterday, they left with 80 other officers and men of, the U. S. S. Sacramento for Boston, where the former training ship is being repaired for sea-going service. The men are all local reserves now on active duty. It has been reported that the ship, when outfitted, will
penheims Live Frugally Now
. LONDON, Dec. 28 (U. P. —E. Phillips Oppenheim and his wife are living at Cannes, France, according to a letter from the author received by a friend here today. “As you know I always was a little extravagant and it will amuse you to know I am living now on a small allowance from the Foreign Office and on home produce from my gardens,” he wrote. “One is completely isolated here,” said Mr. Oppenheim. He tried to return to England at the ‘time of the French collapse but was forced to turn back to Cannes when he and his wife were. within 20 miiles of the channel port of St. Malo.
QUAKE FAILS TO QUAKE FOR GULT
Group Leader Foresaw Cleveland Cataclysm, U. S. Jury Told.
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 28 (U. P.) .— William J. Cassiere, a former I Am group leader, predicted that Cleveland would be leveled by a “cataclysmic earthquake,” but he was more interested in “love gifts” than
saving that city from destruction, a Federal jury had heard today. M. J. Casterline, a Cleveland book shop proprietor, testified yesterday for the Government that Cassiere had predicted in 1938 a “great earthquake under Lake Erie which would have flooded the city.” Cassiere is one of 10 leaders of the I Am moyement the Government is trying ory charges of using the mails to defratid their followers of three million dollars. The prediction was made by Cassiere during a series of “high-pres-sure meetings,” Casterline said. “Cassiere told me that the disaster could not be staved off for more than two years,” he testified. “He said it was part of a great cataclysm that would affect various other communities.” But Cassiere, who had accompanied the late Guy W. Ballard, founder of I Am, and his wife, Edna, one of the defendants, back to Cleveland, not to save the city, but to have his pockets “filled with money,” Casterline said.
WOMAN IS INJURED WHEN HIT BY AUTO
Op
Meridian St., front of 716 Russell St.
injuries. her condition was “serious.”
held.
NAME SAVED HIM? ROME, Dec. 28 (U. P.).—A dispatch to the newspaper Popolo Di Roma from Beirut, Syria, today said that a plot to assassinate King Abdul Aziz Ibn Abdur Rahman Al Faisal Al Saud of Saudi Arabia had been frustrated. Several politicians were arrested, including Sheriff
i. at 2
Abdul Hamid, who was executed, the dispatch added.
On
A Butterfly Flits at Dugger and
The Mosquitoes Linger at Muncie y EARL HOFF.
things afoot in Hoosierdom: that
may or may not have anything to do with the unseasonably warm
At Dugger, for instance, Robert and Mary Margaret Wilson were startled to see a butterfly flitting about near their home. turing the butterfly, they reported it was black, yellow ‘and orange
After cap-
+ Fellow workers at Versailles were horrified when they saw
Miles Joyce of Jasonville, a steam shovel operator, tumble 70 feet from the machine which he was repairing to the ground below. His total injuries were shock and a stiff neck.
THE CITY OF HOBART has a new fire engine on the way from the factory to replace the present one. The City Council okayed % fund of 9391 for it.
While on the way to work at Regen’s Bakery on S. Meridian St., Mrs. Kate Larner, 34, of 630 S. was struck by an automobile early this morning in
She was taken to City Hospital with a broken left arm and head Hospital physicians said, The driver of the car, Ben Golden, 28, of 1048 S. Meridian St., was not
Italian Bersaglieri, now a prisoner. He said he had been left with 700 men to stand off the: Greeks here until Italian sappers could reach the coast road for (several words censored), the last natural defense between Chimara and Valona.
and his men took positions in the mountains just north of town, he said, speaking in slow but good English. “We took enough food for three days and all the munitions we could carcy and load on our mules,” he said. “Greek scouts soon located us
they were thrown back. Lost Most of Food “During a surprise night attack we lost most of our food when the mules wandered off. I sent out a patrol with an urgent request for reinforcements and food. It never returned. The next night I sent another patrol. We heard heavy firing, then silence, and guessed that the Greeks had encircled us. “That night the Greek cavalry cut the road ahead of us, and that’s about all there is to the story.” Borsini ‘had a five-day growth of beard and looked tired. His ‘left hand was bandaged. It was frostbitten. He was reluctant to talk of politics, but said he and most Italian officers régarded the Greek campaign as a “blunder.” ; Put Greece in British Arms “It threw the Greeks into Britain's arms and may decide the outcome of the war,” he said. Another prisoner, Maj. Cambolio, gray-hdired veteran of Libyan service, said he considered the Greek campaign a worse defeat for Italy than the battle of Caporetto in the World War, and that it was due largely to a breakdown in the Italian transportation system. He said Italian soldiers frequently were left without food and that their clothing was inadequate for service in the mountain blizzards. I have found among the unsung heroes of this war the Greek and Albanian peasant women, who trudge through the mountains under Italian gunfire to bring the Greek soldiers bread, and the Greek Army mules and little burros which wade through snow to their belliés, with the vame apparent determination as the soldiers, to keep the Greek vanguard supplied with munitions. The gray-haired old woman with whom I stay here has been showing me her bomb shelter—a pathetically shallow cellar, ‘protected only by wooden floor boards. She keeps down ‘there, carefully wrapped in straw, her tinsel wedding crown, a memento of the Greek Orthodox ceremony that every woman saves the rest of her life.
J LIFERS PAROLED BY STATE GOMMISSION
The State Clemency Gommission yesterday paroled three prisoners serving life-terms at the State Prison and shortened the sentences of three other life-termers. The life sentence of William Webster, convicted of first degree murder here in 1923 in connection with the slaying of his brother-in-2%, was commuted to 20 years to life Others whose terms were commuted were Frank Je S, sentenced to life in Criminal Court in 1923 for the murder of a man during a fight and Thaddeus Quinn, sentenced to life in 1933 in Morgan County for bank robbery. The life prisoners paroled were Jack Watson,
which a man was shot; Arthur Cox, sentenced in Bartholomew County in 1930 for kidnaping, and Johnnie Johnson, sentenced in Porter CounBn 1923 for the murder of his wife.
BROADCAST ON DEFENSE
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Dec. 28.— Questions involved in the allocation of numerous large national defense projects to Indiana such as the effect on employment and the general cost of living and what will happen “afterward” will be discussed by a panel of experts, including Indiana University faculty members, in a radio broadcast Sunday at 9:30 a.m. over Station WIRE, Indianapolis.
RAILROADMEN’S
Presents “sn
HARRY BASON
and
DESSA BYRD
. at Keyboard and Console with
Farrell Scott, tenor
and
Mary Ellery Smith, Soprano
"SUNDAY, 5:00—5:30
ITED TIME ONLI!
Dresses, Sulls, Goats DRY CLEANED Qc
AND PRESSED Cash & Carr Slight additional charge for white fure “oc 24 BE or pleated garmen CLEANERS LI. 2628 $07-30§ OCCIDENTAL BLDG.
WIRE
Get Reserved Seat Tickets at
p i 5 P 9 NIA TILE
Three days before the Greeks en- |: tered Chimara, Lieut. Col. Borsini|
and tried co storm our positions, but | .
sentenced in Lake County in 1925 for first degree murder in connection with a holdup in
Townsend Clubs to. Meet—Townsend Clubs of Indianapolis will hold a mass meeting at 2 o'clock tomor-
‘| row afternoon in Castle Hall, 230
E. Ohio St.
New Year’s Dance will be held at 9 o'clock tonight by .the Women’s Auxiliary 20 of T.ocal 226, United Automobile Workers of America, at the U. A, W. Hall, 241 W. Maryland St.
Marion County’s new chief deputy coroner is Dr. James M, Leffel (above), 321 W, 44th St, appointed by Coroner-elect Roy B. Storms. Both wil] take office Wednesday. Si
Club to Hear Batts—Inspector Robert L. Batts, in charge of the Indianapolis Police Radio, will address the Scientech Club at its noon meeting Monday at the Board of Trade Building. Inspector Batts will speak on “The Communication System of Your Police Department.”
Mrs. West Sponsors Program— Mrs. Judson H. West, chairman of the “Academy of Friendship” of the Women of the Moose, will spon-= sor a chapter night program at 8 p. m. Thursday at the Moose Temple. Candidates will be: initiated.
Arrius Court to Meet—A regular meeting will be held by Arrius Court 5 of the Ben Hur Life Association at 8 m, Tuesday in Castle Hall, instead of a New Year's dance as previously announced, Elizabeth C. Himes, Scribe, announced today.
Lodge to Install Swords—John E. Swords will be installed as worshipful master of the Southport Masonic Lodge 270 at 8 p. m. Mcnday. Other officers to be installed are Leon Roquet, senior warden; B. L. Parham, junior warden; william Talbert, senior deacon; Stone, junior deacon; Otto Gustin, secretary; Leonard McAlpin, treasurer; Doris Ryder, senior steward;
Rev. Jonas: Collins, chaplain; William H. Bohne, tyler, and Charles F. Bohne, trustee.
Club to Sponsor Party—Townsend Club 9 will sponsor a card party at 8 p. m. Monday at the I. O. O. F. Hall, Hamilton Ave. and Washington St.
Pocahontas A W. T. Club to Meet —The A. W. T. Club, Degree of Pocahontas, will meet at the home of Jennie Laux, 1154 Lee St., Thursday.
Sunday,
Albert Warner. Monday, Dec. 30 |
7:45 A. M.—Martin Johnson 11:00 A. M.—CBS Headlines | 12:15 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 2:55 P, M.—CBS Headlines 4:40 P, M.—Martin Johnson - 5:45 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 7:55 P. M.—Elmer Davis ] 10:00 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 10: 30 P. M.—“The World 1 . Today” : 10:55 P. M.—Bob Trout 11:55 P. M\.—CBS Headlines
Wednesday, Jan. | |
7:45 A. M.—Martin Johnson 11:00 A. M.—CBS Headlines | 12:15 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 2:55 P. M.—CBS Headlines ' 4:40 P. M.—Martin Johnson 5:45 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 9:55 P, M.—Elmer Davis 10:00 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 10:30 P. M.—“The World }. Today” i
10:55 P. M.— Bob Trout
11:55 P.M. — CBS Headlines
Fri. Dee. 21
7:45A.M.— Martin : Johnson 11:00 A. M.— Bob Trout cpg Headlines 12:15 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 2:55 P. M.—CBS, Headlines 4:40 P, M.—Martin Johnson 5:45 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 7:55 P. M.—Elmer Davis 10:00 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 10:30 P. M.—“The World Today” 10:55 P. M.—Bob Trout 11:55 P., M.—CBS Headlines
4,
q
ON YOUR DIAL
Auxiliary Schedules Dance — A|
|I have seen how convoys,
Carl
Francis Strong, junior steward; the
NEWS BROADCASTS
Week Beginning December 29
GILBERT FORBES
WFBM NEWS EDITOR
8:00 A. M.—“News of Europe” 3 11:00 A. M.~-CBS Headlines, 12:00 Noon—Gilbert Forbes 6:00 P. M.—CBS “World News”
7:55 P. M.—Elmer Davis 10:30 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 11:55 P. M.—CBS Headlines
AGED U. S. SHIPS] HELP TO REDUCE U-BOAT MENACE
Reporter Guest Aboard One Watches Them Shepherd British Convoys.
By BRYDON TAVES United Press Staff Correspondent
ABOARD A FORMER AMERICAN DESTROYER, Dec. 28 (U. P.). —Fifty over-age destroyers which the United States turned over to
| Great Britain are playing an im-
portant role in countering the
U-boat menace to British shipping.
For more than a week I have
been a guest on one of these ships, the former U.S. S. Branch, and large and small, are shepherded through what the Germans have claimed was an iron-clad biockade. Some of the convoys which steam
‘|through submarine-infested waters
to ports around tne United Kingdom bring vital food supplies while others carry stocks of raw material, armaments - and other forms of American aid to Britain.
Some Carry Exports
Some of the gutward bound convoys carry British exports to the four corners of the: world to obtain kthe foreigh exchange needed to pay for imports to Britain. Still other convoys transport troops, planes and guns to reenforce the Allies fighting in the Middle East or to prepare them for whatever sudden stroke the Axis {may have in readiness against any part of the scattered British Empire. Destinations of the convoys, particularly those carrying troops and war supplies, are so secret that not even the screen of destroyers used to guide them through the U-poat net know where they are going. From the bridge of the former Branch, I watched a’ convoy slip out of a British port on a gray December morning. It was an extremely important convoy. From official reports to which: I have had access I can say that owing partly to the efficient convoy system, in which the old American destroysars are participating, it arrived safely at its destination.
There’s No Fanfare
There is no waving of flags and fanfare of trumpets to speed the convoys on their way. On the contrary, everything is carried on so secretly that the casual onlooker on shore is scarcely aware that anything is going on. In our convoy: there were ships which were familiar to Americaa
tourists in peacetime. One I. hail
seen steaming many times in. and
out of Rio de Janeiro Harbor. An-
other ship I had known in New York. But their paint and polish]: has gone now and in their place is rust and battleship gray, and guns have been mounted aboard them.
ORANGE GROVE
46th & Keystone—Take Keystone Bus
NEW YEAR'S EVE DANCE
Carnival Style—9 p. m. to 4 a. m. Heinie Howard’s Famous Band Dancing Every Sat.-Sun. Nite Delicious Sandwiches
Eel JEWELRY
Rai
V- RIN MARKET ST.
Gilbert Forbes
Tuesday, Dec. 31
%:45 A. M.—Martin Johnson 11:00 A. M.—CBS Headlines 12:15 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 2.55 P. M.—CBS Headlines ‘ 4:40 P.M.—Martin Johnson 5:45 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 9:55 P, M.—Elmer Davis 10:00 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 11:55 P. M.—CBS Headlines
Thursday, Jan. 2
7:45A.M., § —Martin Johnson 11:00 A. M. —CBS Headfines 12:15 P, M., ~—Gilbert Forbes 2:55 P. M., —CBS - Headlines 4:40 P. M.— #5 Martin Elmer Davis Johnson 5:45 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 9:55 P. M.—Elmer Davis 10:00 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 10:30 P. M.—*“The World Today” 11:00 P, M.—CBS Headlines 11:55 P. M.—CBS Headlines
Saturday, Jan. 4
7:45 A. M.—Martin Johnson 10:00 A. M.—CBS Headlines 12:15 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes 2:30 P. M.—CBS Headlines . 4:55 P. M.—CBS Headlines 5:45 P, M.—Gilbert Forbes 7:55 P. M.—Elmer Davis 10:00 P. M.—Gilbert Forbes . 10:30 P. M~“The World
Today” 11:00 P. M.—CBS Headlines 11:55 P.M.—CBS Headlines
"GOOD MUSIC" By James Thrasher There's a busy day ahead for Albert Spalding tomorrow. He has a solo engagement with Dimitri Mitropoulos and the New York Phil-harmonic-Symphony Orchestra in the broadcast concert which begins at 2 p. m. And at 3:30 he’ll be back
“Poeme” = Capriccioso.
“Drgams” and “Hurdy-Gurdy.” - » ns 8
ductor,
on the air with Andre Kostelanetz ‘land Helen Jepson. -In his earlier appearance, Mr. Spalding will play the Chausson and Saint-Saens’ Rondo For the later and lighter program, the violinist has announced. two pieces of his own composition as solos. They're titled
Mr. Mitropoulos will be making his second of four air appearances’ as the New York orchestra’s conwhile John Barbirolli is
sae | time” from Gershwin's opera, Porgy and Bess,” and the vocal srrangement of Rtrausy “Voices, jot Spring.” ® » ” Lawrince Tibbett will end a long and niedically-prescribed absence from the musical arena tomorrow When he sings with the Dee troit Symphony
schedule 1a s fd season left Mr. Tibbett’s voice the worse for wear, according to reports, and his physicians advised a long vacation. Now that he feels his baritone is back
having his annual mid-wipter®va-cation. A ‘program builder who keeps hig eyes open for ‘novelties, Mr. Mitropoulos will open tomorrow’s concert with “La Peri,” a little known work by Paul Dukas, the “Sorcerer’s Apprentice” man. And after Mr. Spalding’s appearance he will introduce a work that is new to American audiences, Alexander von Zemlinsky’s Sinfonietta. Mr. Zemlinsky, who now lives in this country, is better known as a conductor and teacher than as a composer. He was for many years a conductor at the Volksoper -and Royal Operas in his native Vienna, and numbers among his composition. pupils such artists as Arnold Schoenberg and Erich Korngold. The Sinfonietta to be heard tomorrow was composed in 1933.
2 8 2
With all ASCAP music due to leave the networks at Tuesday, midnight, Mr. Kostelanetz apparently figures to give his listeners one last fling before the lid is clamped down,
kowsk
seconl with
Solemn, gaged Zinka, Milanov, Jussi ; nis.
Mr. 'Tibbett
in shape again, the Metropolitan star has picked an estimated
atidienpe of 13 million on Which to try it put.
His program tomorrow night cally
for “Eri tu,” from Verdi's Masked Ball”; “Ring Out, Wild
“The
Bells, | by Gounod, and the La-
s =
touche Robinson “Ballad for Amerie cans. - Music by: Suppe, Gardiner, Tschale and Johann Strauss is on Mr. Bebirots announced list,
appearance of the season + NBC Symphony Orchestra
see Toscanini will make his
tonight when he conducts a pere
formance of Beethoven's Missa As soloists he has ena distinguished quartet in Bruna Castagna, Bjoerling and Alexander KipAnd the choral passages will
Rodgers’ Heart,” tunes.
®
* INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230
(CBS Net.) {NBC-MBS)
school | 00)
Buffalo Presents .- Buffalo Presents Eddie Duchin
Eddie Duchin
Report to Nation Report to Nation Svncopators Gilbert Forbes
gH
Public Welfare Santa Anita
News Red Grange Church News Carillon Music
[J ee Inside Sports
Plavhouse Plavhouse Truth or—e Truth or—
Barn Dance Barn Dance Barn Dance Barn Dance
U. 8. Arm 5 Chemistry Today . 0 Gay Nineties 5 Gay Nineties
5 Marriage Club Wavne King 5 Wayne King
0 i Parade Parade 0 Hi Parade 5 Sat. Serenade
Accordingly, his program tomorrow lists orchestral arrangements of “With a Song in My and three Jerome Kern Miss Jepson, the guest soloist, also will put more serious things
be sung by the Westminster Choir. The concert is a benefit for. the National Conference of Christians * and Jews, and will be broadcast on NBC-Blue stations at 9 o'clock, in stead | of the customary 8:35 p. m.
8 = THIS EVENING _(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible nouncement caused by station changes after pre
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400
for inaccuracies in program afie ss time.)
CHICAGO WLS|INBC
World Is Yours World Is Yours Curlis Institute Curtis Institute
El Chico Wh zeer Vass New warn News
“| Israel Message Isr ge] Message
Ervin Lewis Pra rie Ramblers
Westerners Westerners Barn Dance Barn Dance Barn Dance Barn Dance Barn Dance Barn Dance
ATT UN
CIN! (NBC-. Opera
Met i Jateriude
Lig
re American Baker-Denton Big Town
Big Town
Renfro Valley Benito Valiey Spor s z } H. V. Kaltenborn
Plavhouse Plavhouse Boone County Boone County =
Barn Dance Barn Dance Barn Dance Barn Dance
Jinan] cosococs | 89890909] mar
0 Sat. Serenade Station EZRA 5 Asaph Chanukah 0 Asaph Chanukah
5 Frank & Johnny 0 Gilbert Rories 0:15 Dick Stabile
2 World Today a
NBC Symphony
:0 1 3 4 0 1 3 4 :0 11 :3 14 100 Marriage Club 13 4 :0 *1 3 4 :0 1 3 4 90 Dick F
Miller Miller Byrnes Byrnes
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1230 (CBS Net.)
:30 Timely Tunes :45 Timelv Tunes :0
0 Furonean News :15 Interiu 30 Wings Cver Jordan :45 Wings Over Jordan
Lutheran Churches Lutheran Cc hitrches ass Jase
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1400
Tone Pictures Christian Science
Ford Porter Ford Porter Eastside Church Eastside Church
Primrose Strings Primrose Strings Indiana U. Indiana U.
News Layman Singers Irving Miller Irving Miller
Cana
"B. Lew. Church Services Church Services
Baile
i45 Melodie :00 Gilbert ee
:30 Talent Time :45 Talent Time
Revival Hour Revival Hour Revival Hour Revival Hour
News College Circuit Lutheran Hour Lutheran Hour
Master Mind Indpls. Chorus Sunday_Concert Radio Warblers
Rhythm Review Rhythm Review
Cameos Bob Becker
LOD on = » ® = or vy 8 ®
Y. ¥Y. Symphony
Jamboree Jago oree Mitiwest Dramas Midwest Drama
Baim Dance
Barn Dance
Barn Dance Barn Dance Barn Dance - Barn Dance
SUNDAY PROGRAMS
INDIANAPOLIS WIBC 1050
Gospel Hour Gospel Hour
Halleluiah guy Jones Sing Calvary abernacle Calvary Tabernacle
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