Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1941 — Page 5
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TUESDAY, MAY 8 1641 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE 5
FORMER BUTLER New Scout Chie HEAD TO SPEAK
Dr. Garrison to Address
Honor Day Assembly In Field House.
Winfred E. Garrison, only live] ex-president of Butler Univerwill speak on “Living on a Vol-! eano” at 10:15 m. Thursday as Butler undergraduates assemble in! the Field House gymnasium for the! 1 Honor Day | Dr. Garrison, now on the faculty © of the University of Chicago, will be| introduced by Dr. Frederick D.| i Kershner, dean of the Butler College of Religion
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Activities will open with a procesional of the faculty in caps and | wns, The band under direction Ellis Carroll will play. Invocaon and benediction will be by the { Robert Talmage Beck, pastor he First Christian Church at Castle
D. S. Robinson will 3 significance of Honor and the Butler Choir, directed Prof. Joseph Lautner, will sing. The program will be in charge of Dr. Clarence W. Efroymson, president of the campus Phi Kappa Phi chapter, national scholastic honor society Alpha Phi act as ushers
President gpeak on the : i Day ps by Lord Somers, former assistant desk in London after assuming the duties of his superior, the late Lord Robert Baden-Powell, founder and head of the Scouts.
l, U. FOUNDERS T0 BE HONORED
State Officials to Take Part In Anniversary Day Exercises.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, May 6—Governor Henry F. Schricker and Lieutenant Governor Charles M. Dawson will join in paying tribute to the founders of Indiana University at ceremonies tomorrow, which 13s the school's 121st birthday. At that time the University
Omega members will
» » 5
Sara Ward Honored
Miss Sara C. Ward, 41 N. Bolton College of Education senior, has 1 awarded the Kappa Delta Pi) dlaque as the person most likely to ucceed as a teacher, according to P. M. Bail, dean of the college = ~ q
Expect 350 Pupils
350 high school e expected Saturday, May at the eighth annual Butler Journalism Field Day when facultypupil roundtables and “on-the-spot” | contests will be held Awards will be presented for the news story, best sports story, editorial, best feature story, news picture, best advertisement and best advance story on the Field Day appearing in high school new spaperl 8 Awards also will be given for “on-the-spot” competition in reporting, | sports writing and copyreading.
Approximately p nile al
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versity. R. 0. T. C. to Parade Members of the hoard will be BETTER | guests of honor at the Foundation Day ceremonies at which Kent Permanents Cooper, New York, general man-
5 EL ae, X ager of the Associated Press and an FOR LESS \ 1 lad
alumnus, will speak on “The A
Press—American and European; Comparison.” The detailed program for the Foundation Day as announced by George F. Heighway, chairman of { the university committee: 7:30 A. M.—“"Happy Birthday." plaved on the Student Building chimes by Ned E. Gardner, Greensure A. M.—Concert by the R. O T. C. Band in the auditorium plaza.
| Football Game Carded
9:50 A. M.-—Academiec procession to the auditorium. 10:00 A. M.—Foundation Day exercises in auditorium, Pr 12:00 Noon—Annual Foundation = | pay luncheon for guests, students, | faculty, alumni and the public in | the Memorial Union Building. 2:00 P. M.—Pilgrimage to the grave of Andrew Wylie, the univer- | sity’s first president, in Rose Hill Cemetery. 2:30 P. M.—Military parade by | the University R, O. T. C. 3:00 P. M.—Football game between 1841 squad members and 1940 varsity seniors. | 6:00 P. M—Student-faculty din- | ners in all organization houses. 8:00 P. M—First annual presentation of “the Indiana University Histologue” and traditional alluniversity competitive sing in the auditorium,
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Chief Boy Scout, is shown at his |
DEPAUW HONORS
Eighty-Five in Nation Get Rector Scholarships Worth $1000 Each.
Times Special GREENCASTLE, Ind, May 6. — Three Indianapolis high school students are among 85 in the nation who have been awarded Rector scholarships by DePauw University, it was announced today. Each scholarship is valued at $1000 | and pays all tuition for four years at DePauw,
CITY TRIO GIVEN
The three Indianapolis winners | were Raymond McClure, Gordon R.| | McKinney and Robert Otis Seeman, | | Others from Indiana receiving the |
& | scholarships included:
| Henry Earl Bromer, Decatur; | | George Malcolm Bruce, Newcastle: | | Kenneth William Chambers, Shelby- | ville; Gordon Edward Fisher, An-| |derson; Walter G. Cadient Jr., New| | Albany; John Victor Gidley, Hebron; | Robert Stanton Goyer, South Bend; |Orville Melvin Graves, Princeton; | (Dan Guinnup, Seymour; John| (Hemy Huneke, Batesville; Jack] | Isenbarger, Muncie; James Thomas (Little, East Chicago; Claude M. |Lowry, Bedford; John Paul Lun(strum and Howard Waldo Mitchell, Terre Haute; Christian Matthew McClure, Grrencastle; Harry David Maloney, Peru; Frederick Eugene Mitchell, Brookston. John Robert Mossler, Corydon; Max Reid Raines, Bedford; James | Stewart Robertson, Plymouth; Or(ville McKinley Savage Jr, Martins|ville; William Carl Schrode, Evans- | ville; Clifford Simon and Samuel [Edward Stuart, Ft. Wayne: John Phillip Sowerwine, Huntington; El(bert Lain Tetrick, Greensburg; Gerald Fremond Ward, Washington; Wilbur Eugene Wright, Elkhart, and Robert Sherman Daugherty, Car-
mel.
Eddie Mattingly, Paralyzed in Mishap, Edits Own Newspaper, Evento Comic Strip
THE OTHER DAY, Eddie Mattingly, 20, discovered that one of his teen age chums had broken his arm. That gave Eddie the idea of putting out a newspaper to let the neighborhood know the details of the accident. So he made himself editor, set up shop at his home, 1333 E. Tabor St., and rounded up his young brother, Paul, a fifth grader. He named Paul his reporter and told him to go get the facts. When Paul returned Eddie pounded out Vol, 1 No. 1 of “The Mattingly Messenger.” He gave a flip account of the accident, threw in some European news and a love lorn column for good measure, drew a comic strip, and there it
Was. » ” 5
EDDIE HAD an accident in 1936, which left his hands virtually useless and ended his dream of a career as a Catholic priest and a hobby as a naturalist,
So, to produce “The Mattingly Messenger,” Eddie had a spike of steel strapped to the wrist of his left and more manageable arm. A portable typewriter was put on an adjustable board hooked to the arms of the wheel chair. And k © Eddie pounded out the copy, let- - 3 ter by letter, by hitting the keys with the steel spike. To garnish the paper with a comic strip, the typewriter was taken away, the board readjusted, and, pencil in mouth, Eddie drew. The tone of the entire paper is light hearted, and shows a good sense of humor,
= ” 2
EDDIE ALREADY has attracted nation-wide attention because of his determined battle against the partial paralysis which followed a broken neck. On July 19, 1936, he was playing water tag, dived in shallow water and was carried to a fracture bed at St. Vincent's Hospital, where he stayed for nine months. He was a patient in the hospital for two years. He battled and battled and now is allowed up in the wheel chair for a short time each day. At first he spent all his time reading. Then one day he wanted to sit up, but was tired of read-
Eddie Mattingly types with a steel cylinder taped to his wrist.
I just would.”
Now Eddie has branched out. He is attempting his first piece of fiction and it's about a fighter. The manuscript is not finished and Eddie, characteristically, bhelieves it's not so good.
“You got to have ideas to write,” he says. Nevertheless, his friends believe privately that he'll make the grade and maybe illustrate his own stories. He's going to point for boy's magazines, at least at first. His drawing subjects are quite apt to run to animals and nature, and Eddie admits he has quite a butterfly collection, which he caught himself before the summer of 1936. And his smile loses no candle power when he says, simply: “It's still unfinished.”
ing. So he put a pencil in his mouth and began to draw. Several of his drawings have been published in Catholic publications. When Eddie was hurt, he had finished his third year studying for the priesthood at St. Meinrad’s. In February, 1940, “The Grail,” published at the school, carried a story about him. That started him on extensive correspondence with people all over the country, and brought him letters of congratulation and applause from President Roosevelt, Governor Townsend and many others. He invented the mechanical system of typing in order to answer the letters.
os »” ” SO FAR, no one has offered to buy any of his drawings, which he refuses to describe as “art.” “I wouldn't say they were art,” he says. “I just draw-—that's all
draw like anyone else
TWO NAMED BY ALUMNI OF I. 0
Elkhart Banker and Detroit Attorney Candidates to Head Association.
Times Special
|have been nominated for the presi-
|dency of the Indiana University Alumni Association. John S. Hastings, Washington, Ind, attorney, has been nominated for re-election as an alumni member of the university's board of trustees. . The retiring president is Alex Campbell, Ft. Wayne, United States district attorney for the northern Indiana district. Other alumni association nomina«tions include Joe S. Hatfield, Evansville, and Harry Gause, Indianapolis, vice president; Ward G. Biddle, Indiana University comptroller, and Croan Greenough, Indiana University personnel director, treasurer. Nominated for the executive council, with three to be elected, were | Mrs. Kathrwn Hoadley Pell, Kokomo; Luther Ferguson, Bloomington;
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BLOOMINGTON, Ind, May 6. — Lewis S. Armstrong, Elkhart banker, | {and Fred G. White, Detroit attorney, |
Benton J. Bloom, Columbia Oity; Walter H. Fisher, Muncie; Charles A, Beal, LaPorte, and Mrs. Jane {Vesey Smith, Ft. Wayne.
Q—ARE THE LONG LINES BENT OR STRAIGHT?
1 AS
. A—THEY ARE STRAIGHT.
Now! READ THIS ccc
The above trick is one to which all normal eyes react in the same way. It's normale=in this case for your eyes fo fool you. But—often when our eyes become tired and strained, they fool us in more see tious ways that are not normal. This can be very serious. Guard against it by having your eyes examined today.
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