Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1941 — Page 2
7
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
'repare F ‘or Enrollments
XC m -
x ye ‘Ford | school principally trains T
ation machinists mates,
OFFER J08S T0 TRI-STATE MEN
Air Mechanics Classes Are
berger is the -in- : : oso using ois Given by Angola College, i it abn ® "| Pioneer in. Nation.
Graduates of Tri-State College, at Angola, are being offered more jobs than they can fill.
LESSONS INSTRUCTION IN ALL tic DANCING might be the fact that Tri-State CE rt was one of the first colleges in the in aeronautical engineernig. Tri-State is one of the oldest engineering schools in the country, and was a pioneer in the use of a
COLLEGE ©
B.S. Degree in 21/4 Yrs. World-tamous for 3%-year ical, Mechanical, I ' Radio EngineerFiori and AccountK . courses (36 weeks) _ Drafting. Non-essentials tion, living costs low. Spey department for those who » school work. Students of the world. Graduates
models ine the study of aerodynamics. - y The sch is approved by the Department of Commerce, of the @ivil Aeronautics Administration, and was one of the first to be selected by the War Department for the recruiting of groups of 20 flying cadets to be trained as college units.
a prospective CAA cadet from the written. educational examination and enables him to meet the re- - |quirements of iwo years’ college work. Tri-State ‘offers two-and-a-quar-
grees in Civil, Electrical, Mechanic-
ing: Two-year courses are offered in Business adnintsistion and Acgounting, [
2 the Present, for the Future
C. I. 0. UNIONS HEAR tit not pro- || TOWNSEND SEPT. 7
without education. ; . | with . Twenty-three international matter what the unions affiliated with the C. I. O. ‘may bring, the will be represented at the meeting
of the Richmond Defense Committee of the Indiana State Industrial Union Couneil ‘to be held at the {Westcott Hotel,| Richmond, Sept. 7. Among the speakers invited are M. Clifford Townsend, ex-governor of Indiana and Elmer Benson, exgovernor of Minnesota. - The group will urge the release. of people jailed as a result of an International | Harvester Co., riot March 27.
= THE ORCHARD SCHOOL Four-Year—Kindergarien to High School
as Soho Dieting a rich prog ram of shop crafts, music and art in S. Adaptat on to individual differences. After school HAY Sabie BA c
tive play activities. f ~ FOR BO¥S AND GIRLS Reson st.
» thon on DePauw, Write
of Bf Bemissions
Indiana
sa
20th year opens September 17 HU-2300
‘Where School Is Adventure
~
i | ’ . Fall Semester Opens September 15
Painting ® Sculpture .* Advertising Art : Teachers’ Training ©® Evening Classes ra Registration Begins September 8
ST. JOSEPH'S COLLEGE
Rensselaer, Ind. SENIOR COLLEGE and FULLY ACCREDITED HIGH SCHOOL
Confers B. 4, B.8., and vB |Degrees a pee eee
a] _—— —_— _— == ire] ETE = = rend = =
BOARD, LODGING, TUITION $215 A SEMESTER ————
* For Detailed Information, Write to
OF STUDIES, ST. JOSEPH'S COLLEGE RENSSELAER, IND. —
.
941 Yearbook Photo
SEAL OF APPROVAL
The college seal on the diplor ma is the aca“demic seal of approval. It is awarded on the combined judgment of scholars and experts. Much of its value" depends n the standing of ihe. jcolege, BE
are trained to be leaders, to shoulder respon3 shit. to live better. College may not make
-
pOUNDES bt fam
One reason for this great demand |
Middle West to offer degree courses.
wind tunnel for testing airplane
The completion of five quarters] college work in any course exempts] :
ter years Bachelor of Science de- 5
al, “Chemical and Radio - Engineer- |!
ciate professor of International re-
‘drama.
‘land anatomy,
right: Juanita Stutz, Terre Haute, man, Brazil, Lambda Delta Phi, Kappa Kappa.
CENTRAL ROLLS MAY REACH 430
Dr. Hightower Arranges 60 Classes; Registration Begins Sept. 16.
Times Special DANVILLE, Ind, Aug. 30.—Dr. Pleasant R. Hightower, dean of instruction at Central Normal College, has arranged 60. ciasses in 10 departments to care for the college's expected 450 registrants this year. More than 350 students have made application for registration, which will take place Sept. 16. This is the highest- number of applications for admission recéived by this date in recent years. Prof. Blanche Wean, head of the depariment of commerce, has ‘announced that courses designed to prepare for secretarial employment in defense industries will feature the evening classes of the commerce
department. Evening classes in social studies
national problems and. contemporary personalities. These classes will be taught by Robert E. Elder, asso-
lations. Dr. Edwin Barlow Evans, head of the department of English, will offer an evening course in world
New members of the “faculty include coach “Hank” Miller, formerly assistant physical education director at Valparaiso; Miss Lois Blair, Danville, head librarian, and Dr. Isabel Morgan, Indianapolis, college physician and instructor in physiology
RADIO STATIONS AID TEAGHERS AT FAIR
Because the Educational Building has been given to the Army, \the Navy and the Marines at the Indiana State Fair this year, Indiana State Teachers’ College will hold forth in the Grandstand building. Station WISH of Indianapolis and WBOW, Terre Haute, -both will as-
sist the Teachers’ school in putting on its exhiibtion for Fair visitors.
grounds will be given by the college
Daily broadcasts from the Fair
over WBOM. Audiences may view the broadcasts, which are in charge of Dr. Clarence Morgan, director of radio education at the college. The exhibit is in charge of Miss
tor of public relations.
PARK SCHOOL
A COUNTRY DAY
SCHOOL FOR -BOYS ‘Opens Wednesday, Sept. 17 HIGH SCHOOL COURSE PREPARING FOR ALL COLLEGES school for grades. All-day lete equipment. Sutics for every on Per Semester t 1, $150 to $187.50 to $250.
- COLD SPRING ROAD WA-1586 JOHN R. CALDOW C. F. HAMILTON Headmaster Registrar
Lenora Williamson, assistant direc- |g
~
Resting before the rush. Three coeds at Indiana State Teachers’ “College at Terre Haute take a breather before plunging into the business of welcoming candidates to their sororities.
They are, left to Omega Sigma Chi; Peg Schrepferand Dorothy Rowe, Terre Haute, & iY ~— Farmer, at 40,
- ToEnterO.S.U.
HAROLD LUSK, a farmer of Kingman, Ind., will enroll at Ohio State University this fall just 20 years aftér his grasation from high school. Mr. Lusk, who is 40, is to take work preparatory to g course in in veterinary medicine. His work with hogs and cattle on his farm near Kingman brought about his desire to become a veterinary. The specialty of the 370-acre Lusk farm has been auiry cattle and hogs.
CITY BOYS ADVANGE IN ARMORED FORGE
Twenty-eight Indianapolis selectees on duty with the First Armored Force, Ft. Knox, Ky,, have completed their first six weeks of basic training with the mechanized unit and are preparing for specialist training. ‘They are: James G. Sharpe, 412 N. New Jersey; Henry O. Tuttle, 839 S. Holmes Ave.; Earl W. Nevins, 548 E. 20th St.;
son; Robert C. Taylor, 303 N. Irvington; Howard C. Woodward, 1038 E. Washington St.; Earl H. Malicoat, R. F. D. No. 3; Walter D. Hughes, 724 Harrison St.; Andlrew’ W. Zech, R. F. D. No. 3; Richard G. Peirce, 3935’ Carroliton: Harold H. Bernhardt, 2304 Pierson; William T. Dungan, 1212 N. Emerson. St.; Charles F. Morse, 1011 S. Taft; Leo ¥. Crowder, 713 N. Pershing. Clayton D. Beatty, 14 N. Keystone; William, C. ‘laylor, 1018 N. New Jersey St; Gerald D. Nieten, 2514 &. 17th St.; Harold E. Christy, 2921 E. Washington St.; Earl W. Miller, 2848 Kenwood Ave.; Charles G. Young, 1145 Broadway; David Bernstein, 3015 N. Pennsylvania; Louis E.
Hunter Martin, 1714 Ingram St.; Gilbert K. Smith, 352 Whittier Ave.; Marion E. Sullivan, 5465 Julian Ave,; John J. Sechrist, 404 Foltz St.;
and William Wilkins, 758 N. mont Ave.
| wrought in the lives of students by.
* |ficers Training Corps is to be estab-
will be given in contemporary inter- [Warren B. Pattison, 630 N. Jetter-,
Swartz, 910 N, Tacoma Ave.; Irvin
Lloyd M. Merritt, 51 N. Arlington, Tre-
[ADJUST COURSES | |AT NOTRE DAME
University Fis Itself to Events of This Changing World..
Like many other universities and
colleges, Notre: Dame University” is aware of the change which has been
the national emergency." First of -all, a Naval Reserve Of-
lished at the university. Applications to this unit indicate intense interest in the opportunity for training.
dustrial school, and so does not feel the difference’ in occupational interests, there is a’ definite change in the subjects that students want to take this year. In the College of Arts and Letters, chief interest is being shown in courses dealing with economics, politics and modern languages. Courses dealing with Accounting and Law dre preferred in the ga lege of Commerce. Chemical, Aeronautical and chanical Engineering courses Jove the most popular in the College of Science and Engineering. Indianapolis this year is furnishing 17 students to Notre Dame. They are Herman Matthew Maher, 1157 W. 33d St.; James Howard Larson, 4360 Cold Spring Road; Joseph . Foltz, 1030 Blaine Ave.; .; John Meyer, 844 Eastern Ave.; bert L. Corum, 33 N. Kealing Ave., and John H. Lauck, 1458 S. Meridian St. Richard E. McCalley, 638 Eastern Ave.; Joseph M., MtNamara, 4349 Washington Blvd.; Michael Anthony Bisesi, 2243 E. Garfield , Dr.; James E. Murphy, 21 N. Hawthorne Lane; John R. O’Connor,. 1213 N. Pennsylvania St.; Joseph F. Quill,. 112 E. Market St.; James B. Riley, 5324 Broadway; Robert Joseph Ullrich, 5331 Ohmer Ave.; George F. Usher, 2614 W. Washington St., and John Richard Welch, 4310 Broadway.
HOLLINS COLLEGE MARKS CENTENARY
Hollins College, Va., its 100th year of operation Sepf. 19, with a capacity enrollment of 330 students. Thirty-one states, the District of Columbia, Canada, the Canal Zone, Brazil, England and Belgium will be represented in the student ‘body. Hollins College is one of the oldest liberal arts colleges for women in the country. It was founded in 1842 as the Union Valley Seminary, and has been in continuous operation on the same grounds since that date. Indianapolis Sh attending this year will be Martha Cantwell, Mary Jane Hess and Margaret
“STUDENT _ INTERVIEWS
Prospective Students and their parents may get information concerning INDIANA STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE from qualified faculty ISprasentatives at the
STATE FAIRGROUNDS Room 104, Grandstand
MARIAN COLLEGE
. 1337 :
3600 cr “Spring Road Indianapolis, Indiana Catholic College for the Higher Education of Women. Registra-" tion the week of September 8th..
Classes September 15th. Late Afternoon Evening Saturday Classes
3
NIGHT HIGH SCHOOL
Welding and
For Men and Women Complete High School Course in 3 Years
Classes Forming—Enroll Now
Y.M.C. A Evening Schools
Y.-M.-€. A. Bldg, 310 N. Illinois St.
A N GOLLEGE
Machine Shop
RI. 1331
With. B.
SEND FOR
GHEMISTRY—PHARMACY—BIOLOGY
+ Accredited by the American Council on Pharmaceutical Education
We Can Not Supply the Demand for Our ‘Graduates
INDIANAPOLIS COLLEGE OF PHARMACY
802 East Market B81, Iadianspolts Phi
S. Degree
»
CATALOGUE
INDIANA LAW SCHC
hani hinist mates, s Rig
I. U. Ap dinlee FINISHES FORD TRAINING Addliated With Butler © = PP James Foster White, 1528 Mont- Jot ure ET
calm St, has graduated in the August class from the Navy Service School, Ford Motor Co., Dearborn,
Balled 0 on Request, Classes ty
SAINT MARY-OF-THE-WO00DS
While Notre Dame .is not an in~|
1840-1941
iberal arts college. Seujrses Sau. to
fh sredieg Siandard ome econofules, libr comm io mH isdee, eo Seuss: in teac
i4eiude ‘music, a! tarial s
ah rial trai n boratories. un and art. ell on okey and labora! Reaso Sister Secretary, Box 10%, ofa oi Ind.
BOMAR CRAMER S UDIOS |
a FOR PIANISTS : CATHERINE BELL—SARA HO! Registration Begins Septem
83 Monument Circle—300
Dr. Thomas D, Speidel |
Dr. T. D. Speidel to Teach Orthodontia at School Of Dentistry.
"Times Special ® BLOOMINGTON, Aug. 30. — Dr. Thomas D. Speidel, formerly of the University of Iowa, has been ap-
Indiana_Central Cotes
L J. Good, President Indignapolis
DEPARTMENTS
English, Speech, Latin, French, German, Greek, Education, chology, History, Government, Sociology, Economics, Mathematics cs, Physics, Chemistry, Botany, Zoology, Physiology, Geography, Geology, Astronomy. Philosophy, Religion, Art, Music, Home Economics, Commerce and Business. i PRE-PROFES JONAL COURSES: Medicine, Nursing, Law. Dentistry, Com-
merce ‘COURSES: For Teachers in High Schools and Elementary S
: Registration, Sept. 8
Bachelor. pl E
pointed professor of orthodontia at the Indiana Upiversity School of| Dentistry. Dean William H. Crawford said that when Dr. Speidel joins the faculty next month, he will become the school’s first full-time instructor in orthodontia. : This is the field of dentistry hays ing to do with correcting the - tion of teeth and irregularities of, dental arches.
T adywood
Resident and Day School for Students in Junior and fWenior High School Fall Term Opens Sept. 16 Address Sister Secretary “8”
LADYWOOD SCHOOL
INDIANAPOLIS BRoadway 1062.
TECHNICAL TRAINING
Downtown at Convenient Times
Fees $5 to $25 Strategic Materials Metallography General and Organic Chemistry Qualitative Analysis Quantitative Analysis Special Laboratory Problems Algebra, Trigonometry
Analytic Geometry Calculus
116 Different Courses, including pre-medical, pre-dental, prenursing, technicians’ work, preengineering business, and: teachbe oe Beginning Sepia er 11
Indiana University
Extension Division 122 E. Michigan St.
RI. 4927.
MUSIC as a rounpation ror SECURITY
Give your children the assured future afforded by a thorough musical educate tion, Jordan offers complete courses under an exceptionally well-qualified faculty. Full preparation for Radio, Concert or Teaching career, Bachelor and Master degrees conferred. Affiliated with Butler University,
. ARATORY DEPARTMENT Registration Sept. 2 : Write for Beautiful New Catalog
JORDAN
BUTLER UNIVERSITY ANNOUNCES ITS L%) | 87th SCHOOL YEAR
Butler Univérsity makes every effort to give its students the best . in qualified instructors and educaa facilities. Freshmen are guided under the Freshman Sponsorship Program. ©
Well-rounded curricula, supervised athletic programs, and the affiliated schools, Arthur Jordan Conservatory, John Herron Art School and Indiana Law School of Indianapolis, naturally lend themselves as solid foundations on which to build your future.
Freshman Week, Sept. 5-9. Registration for Upperclassmen, Sept. 8.
4
1204 N. Delaware, Indpls.—LI-7511
\,
BEER
-
a
YOUNG PEOPLE
Where Are You Going to School This Year?
NEW SCHOOL year is at hand. Many young people have alrsady decided on their turther training programs. You may have decided upon yours. If you have not, your decision must be made soon. [t will be an extremely important one—perhaps the most important decision you have made. For, the manner in which you spend this new year will have much to do with the shaping end molding of your career—your life.
If your thoughts are running toward bushisks, INDIANA BUSINESS COL.
LEGE extends a hearty invitation. the state to give thorough consideration to its courses, faculties, equipments, placement services and its prestige and following among businessmen.
It invites you and othen young people of
The institution has an average annual enrollment of 3, 500 students in ifs ten . schools, which are located.in Marion, Muncie, Logans Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond, Vincennes and India
sport, Anderson, Kokomo, napolis {Central
A
CONSERVATORY
=
INDIANAPOLIS IND. ['@
LL1753 ©
INDIANAPOLI ACADEMY -&
OMMERCIAL,
[ART
CTICAL day and «ayening courses for Pe in—
,- ADVERTISING ART ® FASHION ILLUSTRATION - @ DRESS DESIGN
our Graduates have important positions. BEGIN SEPT. 8th
Highest Acoreditment With Al Byeluating 4 encies I I Ad Field.
Literature on request.
Work recognized as
Write for
CENTRAL ~
1B emmorvani Be Duias ploy
v
Se Your Training NOW Fall Term Opens ‘September 12 - Teacher Training—Business Training
ing, Professional Werk or Military" Service.
THE COLLEGE or sERYICE. tig AND FRIENDSHIP
prerequisite for Nurs
Information
ORMAL COLLEGE
, INDIANA
RS——
A A
Under normal bpsiners conditions, to. demands for I. B. C. graduates are usually equal to the number available. Now, the calls are away beyond the organization's placement facilities to supply. To help ‘meet this situation, an effort is being made to increase the registrations materially at all ten points,
S
COURSES OFFERED
Complete Comics Junior Executive Executive Secretarial Standard Secretarial Senior Accounting " Junior Accounting Stenographic
Prospective students are requested to call at the schools in‘their respective areas - _ for a discussion of their school plans, or 8 te Relels most convenient to them. therwise, a letter or telephone call will ~ similar work done bring complete Bulletin, which describes gg: Teme : / courses and quotes fees.
ALSO ACTIVE NIGHT SCHOOLS FOR DAY WORKERS
Proper credit allowed Jor
Indiana Business College
Comprising
Lafayette Business College. . Lafayette H. Peterbaugh, Manager Columbus Business College . .Columbus ~~ Leuise P. Brickler, Manager Richmond Business College . .Richmond W. L. Stump, Manager Vincennes Business College . .Vincennes LR Lawrie, Manager Central Business College. . . Indianapolis
Find W. Case, Principal Ora E. Duis, Presta t
Marion Business| College. . .....Marion James T. Maher, Manager
Muncie Business ‘College ......Muncie 3. T. Pickerill, Manager . Logansport Business College’ Logansport Sadie K. Creery, Princippl Anderson Business College. . . Anderson . C. R. Pickerill, Principal
Kokomo Business College . ....Kokomo R, H. Price, Manager ’
FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 2
