Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 March 1941 — Page 14
PAGE 14
School News—
SPEEDWAY H, S. PLANS ANNUAL
Pupils Show Enthusiasm in Getting Out School's First Year Book.
By EARL HOFF Wednesdays, switches to Monday Facing difficulties keeping up with | night broadcasts starting tonight : Eh rooming community, Speed-| and will be heard over WIRE at way Hig chool is right in the ; middle of a string of oy the | 9:30. It's a summer Ed) latest of which is the first year | for the Burns and Allen show. Pau Muni is to be starred in the first
boak. A staff of pupils is busy IR oi on the new schedule in ‘Edwin Booth.”
school hours, editing articles, plan- | ning layouts and arranging picture! Good news for local quiz program (fans is that Bob Hawk is bring-
deadlines. campaign, ing his Take It Or Leave It Pro-
TONIGHT 7:00—Telephone Hour, WIRE. 7:00—Those We Love, WFBM. 7:30—Gay Nineties, WFBM. 7:30—~Voice of Firestone, WIRE. 8:00—Radio Theater, WFBM., | 8:00—Dr. 1. Q., WIRE. 9:30—~Cavalcade, WIRE. 9:30—Blondie, WFBM.
Cavalcade, previously heard
The subscription steered by Dorothy Moldthan, cir-|gram to Indianapolis on May 25. culation manager, is already fin- The Murat ished and definitely a success. | Theater has There are 114 pupils in the high | 8 l been engaged school. The pupils sold 150 vear- |.¥ y the broadbooks. |§ Putting the financial question of publishing a year book out of the worry classification, three pupils, |g Robert Bland, Ferda Crawley and|§ Dorothy Gleason, sold all the ad- |g vertising for the book before the |g layouts were planned. N. D. Cory, principal and superin- | tendent of Speedway schools, said | they already have collected cash for all but $4 worth of the advertising. James Kellam is editor of the an-| nual and Dorothy Gleason is assist- pretty much in ant editor. Other staff members are demand. Hawk's Margie Kelly. feature editor; iy | Indianapolis appearance will be one ard Jennings, photography editor, lof a series during a tour of cities and Marian Dewar, layout editor./of the West RE Ndwost starting Mrs. Lucille Zimmerman, co-sponsor | aypil 6, He recently completed a o the Sor class with Mr. Cory, iS| tour of the major cities in the aculty director. South. The new tour will open Tentatively, the pupils have se- in Kansas City on April 6 pe lected Speedette as the mame Iori; gqgition to Indianapolis Will intheir fd anya) Sie jihoal NeWs= clude Los Angeles, San Francisco, er goes by the s: : ’ Pe The BIE ‘will have a stiff cover | PO: tend, Ore, Seautle, Denver, . inidiee { Minneapolis, Louisville and Chicago and will feature pictures of sah where the tour will be concluded class, the athletic teams, Schoo lon June 8 after which the show Shut nd pictures of classroom C=, to New York for the balTylHes. ' {ance of the summer. The book will be dedicated to . David Ross is the announcer, Zimmerman with music under the supervision “SALUTE TO SPRING” IN SNOW lof Ray Block. A Columbia network PHILADELPHIA (U. P.).—City | feature, Take It Or Leave It 1Is merchants opened their annual “Sa-| heard Sunday evenings at 9p. m, lute to Spring,” a week-long flower
n bedecked festival, as Philadelphia] eid was digging out from the second 10- | When Columbia's Eric Sevarel
interviewed Security Administrator WwW fh how in ® weer Paul V. McNutt on a recent Jobs ior Defense program the former
- ° : MENTHOLATUM | Hoosier Goverrior turned the tables I Quickly Checks jon Eric and spent nearly half the | RUNNING | program interviewing him on his | SNIFF * SNIFFLING | experiences in Europe as a CBS| If You
. SNEEZING §| war correspondent. . . . The $3200 paid for President Roosevelt's old Feel Like the Dickens
Take It Or Leave It has one of the highest Crossley ratings (listener re- § sponse) among the quiz shows and there is no § doubt that tick- § ets for the local airing will be David Ross
» 8
campaign hat by Edward G. Robinson and Melvyn Douglas when it [was put up for auction by Jean | Hersholt will serve to endow | bungalow unit at the new Screen | | Actors’ Guild home soon to be con-| [structed out of funds from the! Screen Guild Theater programs. A plague bearing the President's name will be placed on the bungaiow and Mr. Robinson adds that for “good luck” he'd like to nail the Presidential chapeau over the door. . . . Following a concert tour of the West, Margaret Speaks, soprano, returns as soloist tonight |on the Voice of Firestone program, WIRE at 7:30.
5
But can't put your finger on the cause — an X-ray of vour teeth wouldn't be a bad@Frwe, idea. One ab-% A scessed tooth can Over disrupt the whole 39 Years works. Here y ”
DRS. EITELJORG | Wallace Beery and Mickey Rocney
{renew a popular partnership when [they co-star tonight in Radio | Theater's dramatization of “Stable{mates,” WFBM at 8 o'clock. Mickey land Beery starred in the film ver|sion some vears ago. Fay Wray and
”
SOLTIS AND FRAY
DENTISTS
84 E. Washington St. RI-7010
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1260 (CBS Net.) 2 Boy
NBC-M
Girl Alone Lone Journey Dick Reed Beautiful Life
Dessa Byrd Orphan Annie News Highlights Easy Aces
Ryeasure Time Son! 1d Moki
Dic Thstie RSoorts
Telephone Hour Telephone Hour Firestone Firestone
Dr. 1 Dr, \ Showboa Showboat
Contented Hour Contented Hour Cavalcade Cavalcade
Dick Reed
and Band alk tI Over Salk Information Scattergood
Ww falta Time a Hopper St sors Gilbert Forbes
Modern Muste
ose We Love hose We Love Say Nineties Gay Nineties
Radio Theater
Treater
Guv Lombardo Guy fomugrdo Blond} 45 Blondie
4 Gilbers Forbes 0
S952 | vows | nmwen| aaa sane sonancn | san
Lou Breeze
ON THE RADIO
THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for 4 ake in program ane nouncement caused by station changes after press time.)
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1 5
CHICAGO WLS-WENR 890 (NBC Net.)
Norman orma n Ros Joseph Higgins Midstream
Whizzer The Bartons News Drama Tom Mix
w 7 (NBC-MBS)
Small Town Lone Journey ach Armstrong ews
Superman Paul Jones
Organ Lowell Thomas Fred Waring Newsroom
Cavalcade Cavalcade
Telephone Hour Telephone Hour reston restone
Bl Supe
Renfro valle
Content Content Squeakin’ Deacon Squeakin' Deacon
hres Grant w essler Joe y Mii Wally Johnson
Organ Better Business ews Frazier Hunt
I Love a Mystery 1 Love a_Muvstery
True or True or False
In the Army In the Army Basin Street Basin Street
Jury Trials Eo
Hour Radio rum
10 O'Clock nal It Scieck Bin 0 SGlock Pin
Music You Want Music You Want Music You Want
30 George Hall Carmen Cavallero
5 George Hall
TUESDAY PROGRAMS
Globe Trotter Stan_Mevers Joe Sanders Joe Sanders
Dance Music
Mocn River
INDIANAPOLIS WFBM 1260 (CBS Net.)
Early Bir 8 Early Birds
Early Sa
INDIANAPOLIS WIRE 1430 (NBC-MBS) Dawn Patrol Markets European News Musical Clark Musical Clock Musical Clock Musiesl Clock
Mark Time Mrs. Farrell Mrs Farrel Church Hymns
Kathleen Norris Mvrt & Marge a comother Song Shop
Edward McHugh
Ellen Randolph Guiding Light
Houseboat Hannah Bachelor's Sodren
INDIANAPOLIS CINCINNATI WIBC 1079 WLW. 1700 (NBC-MBS)
Devotional Organlogue
Breakfast Jam Breakfast Jam Breakfast Jam Breakfast Jam
News Buccaneers as to Shine
Boone Oounty Consumers
Aunt Jenny Goldbergs Kitty Keene Linda's Love
Houseboat Hannah Hearts in Harmony Ellen Randolph Woman in White
News Lester Huff Band Wagon Devotional
Melodie Moments Waltz Lester Holt Tropical Moods
Mary Lee Tavlor Martha Webster Big Sister Aunt Jenny
Kate Smith Girl Marries Helen Trent Gal Sundav
Kathryn Garten
Man I Mar
Road ot Life David Harum
Singin’ Sam Betty Randall
Markets. Farm Ha Reporter Dick Reed
EONOrrON, 8 Hits Linda‘s Love Fditor s Daughter
Weather nds
Pt dn yh fk oh hh pk et RN (rere OOOO | ©
Es Le
Dawes aed AS | hw | awe | awe | aw
Dr. De en Fletcher Wilev Home of the Brave
Marv McBride Song Treasury School of Afr School of of io
porua, Blake Tea
Marv Marlin
IQ | POU ONO | OVS | OVD | OVO | OND | SOND | OPO | IO
=
Vic & Sade
Backstage Wife Stella Dallas renzo ones Widder Brown
r= Te ea
Bor me son Masterworks
ried Against the. Storm
Homemakers Hour Homemakers Hour
Hearts in Harmony
Friendly House Friendly House Ruble School the Mall
Community Hall Bill Jones Off the Record Bov Greets Girl
Mid Dav News Melody Farm Checkerboard Meet the Bus
Matinee Musical Matinee Musical Wildwood Church A-Z in.Novelty
Master Singers Gov't Reports Concert Concert
Variety Theater Variety Theater Request Time Request Time
Man I Married Against Storm Road of Life Right to Hapvpines:
Guilding Light O’Nellls Farm Hour Farm Hour
Live Stock Dreamers’ Songs Editor's Daughter Tony Wons
Hvym Grimm: s Daughter Valtan dv LA ght bt World
Marv Marlin Maw Perkins Penver Young Vie & Sade
Backstage Wife Stella Dallas Lorenzo Jones Beautiful Life
Masterworks Christian Science Your Information Scattergooda
Girl Alone Lone Journey
Dick Reed Beautiful Life
- sa Dest 83838380 Shu
CI - OUD |r
Small Town Lone Journey Jack Armstrong News
Rhythm Roundup Rhythm Roundup Rhvthm Rounauo Rhythm Roundup
MUTUAL—WOR,
KEY NETWORK STATIONS (Subject to Change): 710; WHK, 1420; WSM, 650. NBC-BLUE—WJZ, 770; WOWO, 1190; WLS-WENR, 890; KWK, 1380. NBC-RED—WEAF, 660; WTAM, 1100; WWJ, 850; WMAQ, 670. CBS—WABC, 880; WJR, 760; WHAS, 840; KMOX, 1120; WBBM, 780.
Noah Beery will have leading roles in the network adaptation.
Between Meridian St. and Marott’s Shoe Store
Registered Optometrist with Offices at the
TTT: AT
29 ON THE CIRCLE
INDIANA NEWSMEN
26 LOCAL STUDENTS GET PURDUE RATING
Times Special
LAFAYETTE, March 31.—Marion County students accounted for 26 [places on the list of 462 students (receiving “Distinguished Student” awards at Purdue for the past semester. This is the highest scholastic honor offered by the University. They include Floyd Bass Jr.,, New Augusta; Charles E. Bosma, Beecn Grove, and the following students from Indianapolis: Helen J. McLean, William Carrier, Paul L. Brink, Walter E. Rafert, Carmen Van Thomas, Irwin S. Ulrich, Jean L. Thompson, Franklyn K. Levin, Davis M. Shryer, Stanley K. Suddarth, John R. Hoffman, Wilford S. Shockency and Richard E. Sprague. Others are Stephen A. Minton, Raymond E. Robertson, John R. Day, Alphonso A. Topp Jr., Herman P. Raah, Vern C. Vanderbilt, Margaret E. Vansickle, John C. Van Horn, Fred Richards, Philip W. Wolverton and Robert L. Fuller.
TO LUNCH AT BUTLER
Directors of the Indiana Weekly Press Association will meet Friday at Butler University, Arden Rearick, Winamac Republican editor and association president, will preside. A luncheon with members of the Butler journalism department will precede the meeting. Mr. Rearick will address Prof. Charles V. Kinter’s class, “Newspaper as an Institution,” Friday morning. His subject will be “Editing a Small Town Newspaper.” Richard Carson of Indianapolis, Butler sophomore, has been elected business manager of the 1942 Drift, junior class yearbook publication. Arthur Hamp of Kokomo was named editor.
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Five Cities Listed On Safety Roll
FIVE INDIANA cities have been listed on the National Traffic Safety Contest Honor Roll for having no traffic fatalities during 1940. The cities are those with populations between 5000 and 10,000. They are Bluffton, Sullivan, Mt. Vernon, Warsaw and Rushville, The four latter cities were also honored in 1939. There were 141 United States cities so honored.
SEEK APPLICATIONS FOR NURSING JOBS
Applications to take merit examinations for Public Health Nursing supervisors will be accepted by the Indiana Bureau of Personnel until April 12. The examination will consist of a written test and an interview. Salary range for the position is $150 to $195 a month. The work will consist of rendering public health nursing supervision to county public health nurses, and assisting with staff in-service training and promotional work in public health nursing. To qualify, applicants must be citizens of the United States and residents of Indiana for at least one year, They must have graduated from an accredited high school, graduated from a nursing school approved by the State Board of Examinations and Registration of Nurses, and hold a license to practice nursing in Indiana. Applicants must also have had at least one year’s approved study in public health nursing and two years’ experience in the field.
SOCIETY TO PRESENT ‘MARGIN FOR ERROR’
Times Special CRAWFORDSVILLE, March 31.— “Margin for Error” will be present= ed by Scarlet Masque, Wabash College's dramatic society, as its second production of the year, to be given April 13 and 14. William Moore of Indianapolis is a member of the cast. Dewitt S. Snell was to address the College chapel today. Tomorrow is the date set for Wabash College's annual Peace Oratorical contest. Five speakers will compete for prizes of $50, $30 and $20.
2 FROM CITY NAMED ENGINEERING CADETS
William David Gaus and John E. Goory Jr. of Indianapolis were among 14 appointed as flying cadet engineering students by Fifth Corps Area Headquarters, Ft. Hayes, Columbus, O. Although the engineering cadets will not receive the pilot rating, they will be known as Flying Cadets and will receive the same pay as pilots. Finishing their studies, they will be commissioned second lieutenants in the Air Corps Reserve and will be assigned to Army units as engineer-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1941
66% OPPOSE U.S. FIGHTING ABROAD
But 60% Fear Forces Will Go to Europe, Survey By Fortune Shows.
NEW YORK, March 31 (U, P) — Fortune magazine announced today that its latest survey of public opinion indicated 60 per cent of the American people believe “the chances are 50-50 or better” that
send a Navy and an air force to Europe. Only about one-third of the people favor sending an expeditionary force to Europe, the poll indicated. “By parts of the country it is the West North Central states that are most opposed to war, with twothirds of the populace opposing the use of ships and planes, and threequarters against using an Army,” Fortune said.
Isolationists Decrease Only 6.6 per cent are against any arms shipments to Britain, the survey showed. The survey showed that the Southern and Western states have the highest expectancy of war, Of those polled, 384 per cent favored sending “about half” of our war materials to Britain; 22.5 per cent favored sending ‘all or most of them”; 19.7 per cent, “a small part”; 6.6 per cent, “none of them”; and 12.8 per cent were undecided. Another question showed, Fortune said, “that more than two out of three Americans believe that Hitler wants to dominate the U. 8.”
New Order Seen
Fortune announced also that =a majority of the 17 international specialists who comprised its eighth annual round table reported they believed a new order of free peoples could be established after the war if the United States agrees “at once to assume a large share
of the post-war world.” The report proposed United States and Britain ‘create at once a superior military and economic nucleus around which other “peoples can gradually be rallied—a democratic bloc having enough power to dictate the termination of the present war and also the character of the next peace.”
WOMEN TO OBSERVE MISSION BIRTHDAY
As the clock strikes three Thurs day afternoon, Indianapolis churchwomen and those of 33 states simultaneously will open meetings celebrating the 70th anniversary of the Woman's American Baptist Foreign Mission Society. Seven women representing the seven special causes for which funds
six months will light candles in a seven-branch candelabra at the Woodruff Place Baptist Church. The
resented in all the societies of the Convention.
are included in the Woodruff Place celebration by Mrs. Royal McClain and Mrs. Gerald Martz, co-chair-men. Mrs. R. R. Mitchell of Indianapolis is president of the Indiana Society and Mrs. Jasper Scott of the Indianapolis Society.
raised in the 33 states over and above the usual annual gifts to missions, for the seven special causes. Causes include aid to veteran missionaries, a hospital, training for native foreign missionaries, services of a nurse, and an evangelist in China, Burma or other foreign fields.
DINNER TO HONOR FRATERNITY GROUP
Three co-founders of Sigma Delta Chi, national honorary journalism fraternity, will be special guests at the dinner to be given at the Athenaeum tomorrow night by the Indianapolis professional chapter and the Butler University chapter. The guests will be Paul N. Riddick, publisher of the LaGrange Standard; Eugene Pulliam Sr., president of WIRE, and Leroy H. Miliken. Robert Nixon, International News Service correspondent, will speak on his experiences in Europe during the war. Prof. Donald D. Buchard has charge of arrangements. The dinner will be preceded by initiation ceremonies for three Butler Chapter pledges—Richard Mohr and Robert Schalk, Indianapolis, and James Neal, Noblesville.
HIS HEART'S IN THE RIGHT ALBANY, March 31 (U. P.).—Robert H. Ford's heart is in the right side of his chest, but he marched off with the Army as a draftee anyway. Army doctors said the 23-year-old Clinton marketman was perfectly fit.
the United States eventually will |
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An organ recital and a tea also |b
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By DR. GEORGE GALLUP
Director, American Institute of Public Opinion PRINCEL'ON, N. J, March 31.-— How far is the American public ready to go today to check strikes in the defense industries? That is the key question as President Roosevelt's new 1l-man mediation board tackles its job in the national capital, The evidence which has been accumulated in the Institute's current factfinding survey of public opinion in regard to the labor situation — evidence which comes from talking with thousands of U. S. citizens in all parts of America — Sums up to this: Eighty-five per cent of the voters favor a law to require employers and unions to lay their differences before a Federal mediation board— before a strike can begin, not after it has been called. Even if all mediation plans should fall through, a large majority hold that defense production must continue anyway. Seventy-two per cent of the voters have said that the Government should forbid strikes in the defense industries altogether. Here is a tabulation of sentiment | as as expressed in the Gallup polls:
Dr. Gallup
of responsibility for reconstruction |i’:
that the |g ==
have been accumulated over the last |i}
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enough?
per cent,
are helping
should?
as they should?
Which do you harder
Do you think America’s produc tion of arms, airplanes and other war materials is going ahead fast
Yes—-30 per cent, No--53 per cent. No opinion—17 per cent. (Those saying no): think is the chief reason why pro-|/you approve or duction isn't going ahead faster? Strikes in defense industries—52
Politics and red-tape—11 per cent, Shortage of plants, etc.—6 per cent, All other answers—19 per cent, No answer—12 per cent, Do you think labor union leaders the national production program as much as they
Yes—18 per cent. No—68 per cent, No opinion—14 per cent, Do you think industrial (business) leaders are helping the national de|fense production program as much |the right to strike? (July,
Yes—51 per cent. No—31 per cent. No opinion—18 per cent. think to help national defense less regulation of labor unions by production—labor union leaders or|the Federal Government than at industrial leaders? Industrial leaders—56 per cent, Labor leaders—10 per cent. Both the same—16 per cent, No opinion—18 per cent. Would you favor a law compelling employers and union to submit their | differences to a Federal labor board
85% of Voters in Favor of Compulsory Mediation Before Strikes Can Begin’
before a strike could be ealled in Phi connected with the dee fense program? Yes—85 per cent, No-T7 per cent, No opinion=8 per cent, Henry Ford has refused to recoge What do you nize labor unions in his plants. Do disapprove of his attitude toward labor unions? Approve—58 per cent, Disapprove—29 per cent. No opinion=13 per cent, Westbrook Pegler, the newspaper writer, claims that many labor union leaders are racketeers, Do you agree or disagree with him? Agree--72 per cent, Disagree-—14 per cent, No opinion—14 per cent,
Should the Government forbid strikes in industries manufacturing materials for our national defense program, or should the workers in these industries continue to have 1940.)
defense
Yes—T72 per cent, No--20 per cent, No opinion—8 per cent, During the next four years do
is trying!you think there should be more or,
present? (Nov. 1940.) More-—60 per cent, Less—21 per cent. Same~—19 per cent, Are you in favor of labor unions? (May, 1940.)
Yes—T4 per cent. _No—26 per cent,
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