Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1941 — Page 9

FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1041

WARREN BAND |74 Seniors af Washington Cast in Next Week's Play

SEEKS HONORS

Shortridge Juniors to Give Vaudeville Show; Tech Pupils Win.

The Warren Central High School Band will compete in the Class B state band and orchestra contest tonight at Tell City. The band, which placed first di-| vision in the state contest last year| and second division in national] competition, will be competing to- | night against bands from schools] at Southport, Crawfordsville, Mar-|

By EARL HOFF Fourteen Washington High School

| seniors will be in the cast of “Seven | Sinners,”

senior play to be pre|sented next Thursday and Friday afternoons at the school, according

tinsville, Brazil, West Lafayette, Mt.| 3

Vernon, Oakland City, Princeton, Lawrence Township, Tell City, Seymour, Aurora, Greensburg, Rushville, Morton Memorial, Noblesville, | Alexandria, Shelbyville, Conners- | ville and Sullivan. The Warren orchestra will compete in the national contest May 15 and 16 at Flint, Mich, by virtue of winning first division in the 1939 national contest. Bands and orchestras participate in the national event in alternate years.

Robert Harris Thomas Taino

|to Mrs. Bess Sanders Wright, di-

rector. The cast includes: Mary Lascu, Suzanne VanTagle, Norma Jackson, Regina Nichols, Dorothy Ellis, Eleanor Lornston, Laura Updike, Ann McWethy, Carroll Trotter, William Asher, Robert Harris, Louis Mader,

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WE CARRY A COMPLE

| Mary

Thomas Paino and Wilma Mergole. The costume committee includes Bernice Austin, Margaret Beasley, Nell Beck, Juliann Blank, Betty Browning, Dorothy Bundy, Elnora Craig, Wilmajean Cribelar, Marjorie Dagey, Ruth Dougherty, Frieda Ellaby, Eileen Fink, Mary Fisher, Christine Gorenc, Marilyn Hartley, Mary Louise Hazelwood, Anna Kinninger, Mary Logue, Shirley Mattel, Barbara McFadden, Anng Nuetzman, Donna Petit, Dorothy Randolph, Bettijane Schenk, Dorothy Seminick, Yvonne Simpson, Betty Steele, Elizabeth Stewart, Marie Swearingin, Evelyn Thompson, Lucille Tompkins, Margaret Weaver, Josephine Wolfe. In charge of stage scenery are Wilbur Groseclose, William Houser, Archie Rinehart, Elmer Poland, Charles Rogers, Roy Rogers and Leon Walker. On the costume design committee are Bessie Jane Atkins,

Wilma Mergole Laura Updike Hendricks, Margaret Lienhoop, Maryellen McMahon, Shirley Newton, Nita Rose Payne, Betty Roller, Suzanne VanTalge, Marjorie Waggoner, Esther Angrick, and Geraldine Money,

Tech Alumni to Meet

The Tech Alumni Association's annual party, marking the 25th anniversary of the class of 1916, will be held Saturday night, May 24, at the school. A business meeting will be held in Stuart Hall, while dancing will be in the boys’ gymnasium. Dance music will be provided by the I. U. Campus Band, directed by Forrest Ehrnman and including two Tech graduates. They are Fred Hess, first trumpet, and George Willeford, first violinist. Association officers are Oscar A. Jose Jr, president; Mrs. Myra Major Wirenius, vice president;

{Miss Rosemary (and Principal H. H. Anderson, treas-

Lawlor, secretary,

| urer,

the purchase of a Suit or

|

| tendants | be Lois Julian, | Mary | Wanda Hamil- | ton, | Winterrowd,

| 20-foot maypole

| Queen of May Chosen

Jane Sockler, Ben Davis High

| School senior, will reign as Queen

of the May next Sta n the high school aud- °

itorium.

Imogene Wells

| will be maid of

honor and ate will

Bodell, Mildred

Elain Craig and Betty James. A

A n Lg

will be erected apice gockler

| in the gym and

| patriotic dances.

sophomore and freshmen girls will present solo, character, folk and Beth Traub, a senior, will read the story of May

| Day.

LESS $5 FOR

| ist, | movie, | with a Naturalist,”

| Color Movie at Tech

Karl H. Maslowski, Ohio naturalwill present his natural color “From Seashore to Glacier in Stuart Hall at

| Tech, May 17.

|

|

COAT A

COMPANY

Indiana Theater

TE LINE OF JEWELRY

high schools,

AY LL

NORGE

vw Fa

His appearance, open to the | science students of the various local is under the auspices of the Indianapolis Science Teachers Association and the combined Tech Science Clubs. Admission will be by tickets distributed to each of the high schools.

Candid Camera Winners

Marilyn Demaree, magazine editor of Tech's Arsenal Cannon, today announced the winners of the Candid Camera Contest sponsored by the June issue of the Cannon. In the pictures of people class, James Rouch was first, Gene Spahr, second; Fred Henke, third, while Theodore Stalas won honorable mention. In the campus scene class, winners were Frank Stewart, first; Fred Henke, second; Fred Gilmore, third, and Edgar Seitz, honorable 1 mention.

DECATUR CENTRAL

TO PRESENT PLAY|

Two casts will present “The Family Upstairs,” a comedy, as the annual senior play of Decatur Central High School tomorrow and Saturday at West Newton. The cast for tonight's performance will be Juanita Johnson, Lloyd Siéfker, Clara Jo Walters, Robert McGahey, William Butler, Mary Frazier, Geraldine Breeden, Marjorie Westerfield and Charles Thornberry. Tomorrow night's cast includes Peggy McBride, Lloyd Siefker, Irvin McCray, Martha Jean Richardson, Kenneth Moore, Margaret Kollman, Geraldine Breeden, Marjorie Westerfield and Charles Thornberry. Dean Thornberry is director; James Dortch, assistant director; Robert Remster, house manager; Max Shanklin, stage manager, William Amos, ticket manager; Ida MecGill, programs, and Avanelle Carra- [ advertising manager.

BULGARIA LISTED BY | F.D.R. AS AGGRESSOR

WASHINGTON, April 25 (U. P.).|

School News—

GRADUATION AT NEW AUGUSTA

Baccalaureate Set for 2:30 Sunday; Speedway Pastor to Talk.

Baccalaureate services for the 33 seniors in New Augusta High School will be held at 2:30 p. m. Sunday at the school auditorium. The speaker will be the Rev. Howard Anderson, Speedway Christian Church pastor. The commencement will be at 8 . m. Monday with J. Raymond Schutz as speaker. Diplomas will be presented by County School Superintendent H. F. Griffey. The graduates are Robert Blue, Asher G. Brunes, Sam Burden, Lee P. Chance, Virginia Lee Craig, Della M. Davis, Hanna G. DeHart, Arthur E. Floyd, Allen A. Grundy, Alma Guion, Thelma Guion, Donald Harvey, Francis J. Higdon, Irene Johnson. Sam E. Kissell, Constance MecLean, James T. Myers, Howard W. Miller, Frances Pendergast, Bernadine Perkins, James B. Power, Norris D. Reed, Roscoe C. Reed, Ruth J. Rentsch, Jack C. Snyder, Marion J. Tapscott, Jack A. Taylor, Edgar E. Tyler, Thomas Wagle, Evelyn Wood, John J. Wright, Gerald D. Young and William M. Shaw,

12 Girls Compete

A Queen of the May to reign over the spring Cannon Dance at Tech May 1 will be selected by Tech Cannon subscribers from among 12 girls nominated in preliminary voting. The nominees are Mary Piper, Jane Chaney, Marjorie Rose, Elizabeth Ott, Nellie Scott, Joan Melle, Gloria Monninger, Donna Wiggam, Rose Hamilton, Dorcas Bender, Virginia Peterson and Dorothy Breeden. The girl

maid of honor, The remaining 10 will serve as the Queen's court.

Present Vaudeville

Portions of the 1941 Shortridge junior vaudeville show will be presented before members of the Scottish Rite tonight at the Scottish Rite Cathedral. The presentation will include two acts from the show presented by the junior class last February, Jack Smith and his orchestra will have the featured musical spot. In his act are Jane Butler, Charlene Clore, Eugene Tiffany, Betty Jane Alderson, Emily Jean Lewis, Marshall Samms and Jackie Karsch, In the finale, a chorus led by Peg O'Donnell will raise the Stars and Stripes to the tune of “God Bless America.”

Girl Band to Play

The All-Girl dance band of Washington High School will play for the Lauter Club dance tomorrow night. Band members who will participate are Eleanor Williams and Betty Carroll, trumpet; Jean Linn and

' | Juanita Foreman, saxophone; Trilla

Cox, accordian; Betty Jean Hoyt, drums; Wanda Arnold, electric guitar; Virginia Wright, Hawaiian guitar, and Loydlovella Cook, piano.

Tech Pupils Honored

Three Technical High School pupils received Division 1 rating in the annual music contest at Bloomington. Alma Twineham, a senior, won a gold medal as the highest in the state in the piano division. Virginia Rush, senior, also competed in the piano division, while Kenneth Bayless, postgraduate, won his rating in the vocal division. All three are eligible for scholarships to the I. U. musie school.

Heads History Society Edward McKinney, a Tech junior, is the new president of the Indiana Junior Historical Society. Others elected at the fourth annual convention at Tech include Barbara Shaw, Warren Central, northern district vice president, and Marjorie Loreng, Shortridge, executive board.

2 to Give Concert

James Hartley, an alumnus of Washington, will give a piano concert before a convocation at 10 a. m. Wednesday in the school auditorium. E, Wayne Barry and Mr. Hartley will present an organ and piano number, assisted by Miss Kitty Giles, vocal soloist.

TWO MORE ESCAPED NAZIS ARE CAPTURED

MEDICINE HAT, Alta, April 25 (U. P)~—Two German airmen, arrested in a railroad y:i'd here, were expecled to be returned today to a northern Ontario internrient cangp to join 20 of their comrades recaptured after a wholesale break. Police believed Sergt.-Major Karl Grund, former air observer, and Sergt. Horst Liebeck, arrested by a Royal Canadian mounted police officer, had hoped to reach Vancouver by rail and board a ship for the

Orient, \

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

receiving the second|p highest number of votes will be] fS

Plays Lead Role

Maxine May Highstreet will play the leading role in “Aunt Drusilla’s Garden” to be presented by the eighth grade class of the Southport School at the school tonight.

BUSES FOR SALT LAKE SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (U. P). —In July of this year, Salt Lake City’s street railway system will celebrate its golden anniversary—by vanishing. Traction officials have ordered the last of the old railcars scrapped at that time. They will be replaced by modern busses and trackless trolleys.

Te

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8.0.7. C. CADET MAJOR NAMED

Semester Officers Chosen at W. Side School; Tech

To Elect Queen.

Appointment of John Menchhofer as cadet major of the Washington High School R. O. T., C. for the current semester was announced today. Meanwhile, 1st Sergt. G. W Wolff, instructor, announced the following other officers for the semester: Cadet captains — Warren Rairden, Morris Poindexter, Donald Curiman, Harry Waggoner and I Jack Lewis; cadet First Menchhofer lieutenants—Gerald Reeves (adjutant), Robert Everett, Charles West, Merle Metcalf and Theron Guire; cadet second lieutenants—Ellis Cripe, Richard Lentz, Carl Singleton and Delmar Hillard.

Sheriff Feeney Speaks Sheriff Al er last week addressed the annual Senior Hi-Y Father and Son Banquet at Ben Davis on “Co-operation of Father and Son.” J. I. Shockley, club sponsor, was in charge of the banquet.

PAGE. ¥

RESTRICT AIRLINES FOR DEFENSE NEEDS

WASHINGTON, April 25 (U. P.) ~New restrictions on operation of commercial airlines were invoked today to make more aircraft construction facilities available for defense work. The Civil Aeronautics Board announced that any airline expansion must have Army and Navy approval before a CAB certificate is granted. This meant that the Army and Navy would be given final authority on all applications for new air routes and extensions of routes previously established. The restriction was designed to

limit new planes and aviation pers sonnel required in establishing new air routes.

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—President Roosevelt today issued a proclamation declaring that a state of war exists between Bulgaria on the one hand, and Jugoslavia and Greece on the other. The proclamation condemned Bulgaria as an aggressor. Mr. Roosevelt found that nation had “without justification attack the two neighboring states. The proclamation automatically applied the provisions of the Neutrality Act to Bulgaria. It already ‘had been applied to Greece and | Jugoslavia,

GOLFER EATS BIRDIE

DE QUEEN, Ark. (U. P).—-A. L. “The Skipper” Kimball teed up his golf ball on the first hole of the De Queen Country Club course and right off the bat scored a “birdie.” He later ate the birdie—it was a guinea fowl,

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