Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 May 1941 — Page 12
Permit Meat Yor
| Catholics Friday
[ CATHOLICS IN the Diocese { of Indianapolis may ‘eat meat ' this Friday. A
; This special dispensation from
the usual fast was granted for
. $he holiday by Bishop Joseph E.
| Ritter. | However, Catholics cannot eat ! meat this Saturday, which is the vigil of -the Feast of Pentecost ‘and a day of fast and abstinence.
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FRANKLIN LISTS 43 FOR DEGREES
U. B. Bishop® Will Deliver Baccalaureate at _ Indiana Central.
A Times Special FRANKLIN, Ind., May 27.—Fortythree candidates for degrees at Franklin College, ° including * three from Indianapolis, will -hear = Dr. Kyle M.: Yates,’ Theological = Seminary, = Louisville, Ky., at baccalaureate services Sunday, June 8. : Justin W. Nixon, prominent educator and clergyman, native of Delphi, Ind., will deliver the commencement address Monday, June 9. Graduates from Indianapolis are Mary Agnes Dunwoody, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Dunwoody, 117 N.. Sherman Drive; Gerald Mullens, son of Mrs. Hilda Mullens, 3525 N. Pennsylvania, ‘St., and William Wilson, son of Mrs. Beulah Wilson, 1402 N. =P av.
U. B. Bishop to. Speak
Dr. Fred L. Dennis, First United Brethren Church, Dayton, O., pastor and newly elected bishop of the northwest area of the United Brethren Church, will - de- § liver the bacca- § laureate sermon next Sunday for Indiana. Central College candidates for degrees. The services will be held in the University Heights , United ‘Brethren . Dr- Dennis Church. The college choir, under direction of Miss Esther Becker, will sing. o f- 3 ”
453 to Get Degrees
Times Special
For the first time, only students who have completed at least four years work will be granted degrees at the Indiana State Teachers College 71st ‘annual commencement June 5. : The two-year elementary teaching certificates have been discontinued. .Dr. A. L. Crabb of Géorge Peabody College, Nashville, Tenn., will ress the 453 candidates for deBe The Most Rev. Edwin H. Hughes, retired Methodist bishop from Washington, D. C., will deliver the baccalaureate sermon next Sunday. The Alumni-Senior Day will be held Wednesday, June 4. - For the. first time the graduating class includes eight students who have completed work for the A. B. and B. S. degrees as nonteachers.
z o 2 2 Display Fine Arts Two Indianapolis students of the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts will display their work at the Stu-
dent Exhibition in Chicago June 5 to 8. They are Miss Betty Efroym-
son, 23 E. Maple Court and Arthur Gilliom; 2850 N . Delaware St.
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‘Southern ‘Baptist|
TERRE HAUTE, Ind, May 27—|
CITY IS SERVED AT SCHOOL 12
Pupil and P.-T. A. Councils.
Join in Beautifying South Side.
By EARL HOFF As long ago as 1932, the eighth
reasoned it had a stake in the community’s welfare. That was when the Civie Council, which has sponsored projects ranging from clean-up campaigns to construction of a park playground, was organized. Spurred by the example of their children, the P.-T. A. formed a Safety Council in 1935. - Two years later the committee’s ' name was changed to Civics Council, Now the two groups work hand-in-hand beautifying the South Side community. Work Is Divided The eighth grade council confines its activities chiefly to school] problems and community problems as they affect school children. The P.-T. A. group discusses problems of child life and works with City officials to obtain gains for the community. Some of the activities the school children have sponsored #this year have beef: A beautify-your-yard campaign, a drive to keep children off the school lawn, an assembly program, a - follow-up study ®of School 12 graduates, service. duties in connection with eare. of the building, paper sales, exhibition of home projects, a lost and found denvartment and “clocking” of automobiles driver through the .com-.
Dump Becomes Flower Plot The ‘two councils have been instrumental in having the Park Board convert a dumping ground located across the street from the school into a flower plot. In 1935 the Park Board, on the recommendations of the councils, leveled the ground between Wyoming and Ray Sts. and equipped it for a summer playground. The. councils also were instru-
drain installed on Norwood St. and soon will serve’
children. Mrs. Hazel Callahan directs the
the community
Carty is in council.
charge of the P.-T. A.
OFFICE TO BE SET UP
BY MISSION BOARD f
Headquarters for the newly organized Board of National Missions of - the Evangelical and Reformed Church will be established in Indianapolis this week, according to Maurice, G. Lipson, Indianapolis, treasurer of the Board's ‘general fund. Articles of incorporation : for ‘the Board have been filed with the. Secretary of State. The organization was formed recently by.a merger of the Home Missions Board of the former Evangelical Synod of North America and the Reformed Church. The Rev. Purd E. Deitz, of Webster Groves, Mo,, is prescient of the new board. :
About 10" over all ———
‘|care of for next fiscal year, the
"|troversial than WPA, it is certainly grade of School 12, 733 S. West St., Nya.
munity to determine danger spots.
mental in having a permanent
in obtaining a playground on S. West St. near the school which
pupil group, and ‘Mrs. Margaret Mc- | |
What A Treat | Special Feature. .. Wednesday and Thursday—2 Days—and Only While They Last!
Grade 100 ir in Applied | C
Safety fits into a_civics program, Fire Prevention Chief ‘Bernard Lynch (second from left) fells the pupils and P.-T. A Civics Councils of School 12. Left to right: Ray Herner; Chief Lynch and Fay Raugh of the Fire Department; Jake Cohen, pupil council president; J vice president; (standing) R. N. Purcell, pupil. council sponsor; Mrs. Ethel Dees; Mrs, Marjorie Turner; Mrs. Cresey Jackson, and (seated) L. N. Abell and Mrs. Adele Weber, chairman of the adult coun).
lune Wayman, secretary, and Jack Berry,
ivics.
|The
- | diana University tomorrow.
Coddling o or G
By PETER EDSON Times Special
WASHINGTON, May 27—After. or maybe before WPA gets taken
Congress will have a chance to work on National Youth Administr: ation, and if there is anything more con-
A good part of the argument will probably revolve around the real usefulness of NYA’s training for industry in the defense effort and the further need of coddling the young folks in these defense boom times. If the NYA can show that it is a necessary part of the defense program, the chances are that it will stick. As President Roosevelt has indicated that this training is necessary, the tipoff is that the Administration” will give full support to continuation of NYA and the yelling of the economy minded will go unheeded. NYA has been called everything, even Communist, which is easy to say but hard to prove. The real bone of contention over its effectiveness is whether its “work experience” instruction is worth the time.
May Be Path to Jobs
The theory behind this work experience idea is that there are thousands, yes millions of young people who never worked. Literally. All you have to do is remember back to the depression days when youngsters just out of school couldn’t even give their service away, let alone get paid for them. Hence the alleged need for work experience, teaching the simple, but. still commendable habit of geing: to work.
in industry, 17,000 in manufacturing, 22,000 in -non-manufacturing, 30,000 just got ‘jobs, unspecified. On May 1, there were over 400,000 boys and girls on the NYA out-of-school rolls, with another 390,000 certified as eligible for NYA, but for whom there was no money and no jobs. There were also close to 500,000 students in 30,000 schools getting NYA help, $3 to $6 a month in high school, $10 to $30 in college.
YS Sa) |
Ah A AUT WE
NYA Fate Hinges on Verdict
In the first three: months of this ‘ year, some 70,000 NYAers got jobs|
and
ood Training?
To be eligible for an- NYA job, a youngster’ must be from. 16 to 24 and it must be proved he needs work. He can be in secondary school or college and need the money to finish his education or he can be out of school and just need the money. Average wage runs about $15 a 40hour month. * Every NYA project must, by law, be socially useful. That is, they can’t just whittle or pound nails in telephone poles. They must be making furniture that can be sat on, or vocational school buildings with
help, library research, public health work, helping handle school lunches, and so on. Girl workers make or repair clothing, or can food, or
T0 MEET AT LU.
| sored by the I. U. Institute of Crim=|inal Law Adminis
_ |prisoners will be given by Clifford
roofs that will keep out rain. On| the white collar projects, clerical}
; Chaps 0. E. 8. will trol. ‘Reservations for dinner at 6:30 | P Masonic Tem- p. m. should be made not later than |
{>
Addresses on Technique. o Police Work to Mark 2-Day Session.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May: 27 Indiana Sheriffs ‘Conference will open -a two-day session spon-
+
tration and the Indiana Sheriffs’ Association at In-
The opening discussion Lomoriow will be on methods of raids and dislodging .riminals from buildings. ‘An’ address on the law of arrest in Indiana will be given by James K. Northam, deputy attorney general. Reports on jails and care of
0. Fields, of the State Welfare De-’
John Knotts.
Lieut Don L. Kookem, of State Police, will lead a discussion on the | technique of criminal investigation and Dr Rollo N. Harger of the In-
diana University School, will give a talk on laboratory. aids to investigation.
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