Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 September 1941 — Page 5

* BIDDLE CHOICE

Terms Appointment FDR’S Best; Minton Urges Extra Judgeship.

By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. Senator Frederick VanNuys (D. Ind.) /has paid high tribute to Francis Biddle, whose appointment as Attorney General of the United States has been unanimously approved by the Senate Judiciary Committee. __ “He is fearless, honest and able and by far the most outstanding an President Roosevelt has named the Attorney Generalship,” Senator VanNuys said. Others have been Homer Cummings, who retired, and Justices Frank Murphy and Robert 8. Jackson of the United States Supreme

20 Minton a Visitor A Senate visitor was former

Democratic Senator Sherman Min-|

ton, now a judge on the Federal Court of Appeals at Chicago. He

attended the Judiciary Committee]

hearing. Judge Minton still is interested in the Judiciary Committee Bill which would add another Judge to. his Court. It was put through the Senate by his good friend, Senator Carl A. Hatch (D. N. Mex.) but has been held up in the House. Both the Judge and Senator conferred with Rep. Hatton W. Summers (D. Tex.), House Judiciary Committee chairman, regarding its being reported out.

Judge Sparks Opposed Rep. Raymond S. Springer (R. Ind.) is responsible for holding it up. He has a letter from Judge Will Sparks saying that another Judge is not needed on the Court at this time. Judge Sparks is a Republican who was appointed to the Court of Appeals after he had given D. C. Stephenson, one-time Indiana Klan . Dragon and G. O. P. political power in the State, a life sentence for murder. Other. members of the Court disagree with Judge Sparks, however, and the addition has twice beeni asked for by the Federal Judicial Council under the chairmanship of

Clear across the str, from: Rosemary La Planche, 19, to win the Atlantic oy Beanty Pageant.

ATLANTIC, CITY, N. J. Sept. 8 (U, P).—Miss Rosemary La Planche, 19, appearing every bit as “Miss America of 1941” should appear, yawned prettily today and admitted frankly: “My goal, of course, is pictures.” Miss Planche came here from Los Angeles to win the “Miss America” title on her second try. She was runner-up last year. She still was

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ELASSES START |

So Far; Tech: ‘Boasts: A-1 Darkroom.

their doors today with photography a ubject for hundreds of pupils. Tech High School has one of the best equipped darkrooms in the city.

equipment and several faculty members ‘who are photo-hobbyists are willing to teach ”’em how.” Hats off to Herbert Traub of Tech, Robert C. Grubbs of Short ridge and H. H. Seimers of the same school. Plaudits also are due to T. W. Holaday, Shortridge’s maestro of the enlarger and better prints. However, a handful of faculty

' |members who love the hobby enough

Los o Anieles, came beantifuj blond the title of Miss America, 1941, at

No 'Dumb Blond,’ She Says

Seeks Career in the Movies

of parading her beauty before critical judges and discussed her future while clad in gold celanese pajamas with sandals to match. It was a very pretty picture. § Surprisingly, Miss La Planche, who is blond and weighs 120 pounds, has no boy friend. “I'm out for a career,” she said. “7 think that marrying can come later. I plan to marry if I find t| the right one, but not for a long, long time. “My favorite type is blond and athletic,” she added. Her career appeared to be well on its way, with some $10,000 in contracts already lined up for the coming year, including indorsements, modeling and personal appearances. She will make her first appearance Wednesday night as guest star on Eddie Cantor’s radio show in a dramatic skit with movie star George Raft as her hero. Miss La Planche wants it known that she is no “dumb blond,” and boasted a little of her accomplishments in two years at the University of Southern California. “I got straight A’s,” she said. She was a little more naive about her beauty. “My sister, Louise, is much more beautiful than I am,” she said. “She’s dark and is under contract to Paramount.” . Asked if she had won any beauty

22 contests as a child, Miss La Planche

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turned to her mother and said: “Mother, was I a cute baby?” “You were a very cute baby,” her mother reassured her. She still is a very cute baby.

T00 ENTHUSIASTIC

WILSON, N. C., Sept. 8 (U. P.).— Italian prisoners in the Wilson city jail, sentenced to prison for sabotaging the Italian motorship Villarperoso, wrote too glowingly in their letters home of the good times they were having in jail. County Manager Walter H. Mercer said today officials in Washington read the letters and reported the good «imes to Federal Court authorities who clamped down on liberties and ordered a rigid supervision of the prisoners. Liberties included recreational activities on the jail roof and use of radios, Mr. Mercer said. The Italians are being held here until an appeal they have taken to the Circuit Court of Appeals in Baltimore in perfected. They were arrested last spring when the Federal Government seized Axis ships in U. 8. harbors. The VilMrperoso, badly , since has been as

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to give their knowledge to the pupils isn’t quite enough nor is the fact that most of the "“lab” work is classified as “extra curricular.” Surely the skill of observation is

: [the result of camera interest. And

as any amateur knows, a darkroom teaches cautiousness, cleanliness and patience. The day may come when DE TEIEY is taught side by side} with higher calculus. :

Shutterbug Problems

Here is an interview we had other day with a high —— and periaps it illustrates the em ter than we could word a of my age have problems you don’t realize,” he declared. “We can’t get meeting rooms in schools without having a faculty adviser present all the time, many teachers do not have that much free time to give us. Some who are friends, as those above, do their best though. “I would like to see all the schools and camera clubs organized into photographic council, with ach school sending a representative to regular council meetings. But we need a place to meet; we can’t afford to pay for it, and we need speakers to give us the kind of talks the grownup clubs have.”

Need Meeting Place

My friend says that most people “usually think of us as box camera kids, but you would be surprised how many high school fans own good cameras and know how to use them. Why, many of my friends have helped a lot of grown peopl& whose shutters had stuck or who didn’t know how to use their equipment.” The boys right now need a meeting place, big enough to hold 50 to 100, and an adult shutterbug to act as counselor, guide and general helper-outer i getting them started. Somebody in the trade should be able to figure out the trade the youngsters wil bring in in the future. : 8

Forming a Club

And speaking of camera clubs, here’s some advice for that first meeting: Get officers elected and plan the program for the next meeting ‘in advance so it can be announced. It is very important to keep the meetings simple, with a minimum of business details. These things should be taken care of by committees, who present brief reports. The membership will dwindle if the people have listen to a long, dry business meeting instead of something about

2.»

photography. Read the constitution and bylaws through without interruption, otherwise a lot of arguments will start which wouldn't if the interrupter had heard the full text. In any case, most of the points brought up will be unimportant. Don’t vote on the constitution piece at a time but get a vote on the whole constitution and on all the bylaws. The matters which really need full discussion are not hair-splitting details about the rules but a thorough talking out of the purpose of the club and of the amount of the dues. Dues ought to be at least $5 a year—$10 is better. You will have more expenses than you imagine— not only rent after you get your own quaiters, but light, stationery, postlage, Jimecgraphing: supplies for demonstrations and transportation for loan exhibits.

VITAL METAL SAVED BY TELEPHONE CO.

By substituting other materials, the Bell Telephone System is saving 5,000,000 pounds of vital defense metals this year, including enough aluminum to build 275 fighter planes, the Indiana Bell Telephone Co. reported today. The substitution will make available 1,700,000 pounds of aluminum alone for defense manufacturing, almost one-third of 1,000,000 pounds of nickel, more than 3,000,000 pounds of zinc and 8300 pounds of magnesium, according to the report. Additional reductions were foreseen next year.

‘SECRET CLAUSE’ IN WELFARE ACT HIT

RICHMOND, Ind, Sept. 8.—Walter Bossert, Liberty attorney, yesterday condemned the ot clause” to the State Welfare Act, passed by the last Legislature, as a “step toward Communism,” Fascism and Nagziism.” Addressing g Townsend Club rally, he said the Legislators who passed

provides that the Department k

secret

the Animals to "Talk" in Kipling

and Brothers Korda — Alexander,

(IN CITY SCHOOLS,

Subject Extra Curricular

Indianapolis ‘high schools open}

Washington and Manual have some|

Orson Welles’ “Citizen Kane,” one of the most talked about picture in years, comes to the Indiana At the beginning of his career, Citizen Kane is young, wealthy, and a devil-may-care dandy. A bit older he is a respected and popular member of his community. He had just been married to the niece of a prominent statesman. Old, paunchy, and tired of face, he’s ready

to retire. Now he is a hated publisher.

Jungle Built | For Movie

Friday, following “Manpower.”

Story.

: By PAUL HARRISON ‘Times Special Writer

HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 6. —

The producer; Zoltan, director: Vincent, art director—are making a movie

out of Rudyard Kipling’s “Junglef

Books,” and the result really will be something to see if it’s as impressive as the preparations. About 40 miles from Hollywood at Sherwood Forest, they've built a 10acre jungle complete with river, a village and handsome temple, and many a barrel of monkeys.

tigers, leopards, jackals, irds, snakes, crocodiles, water buffalo jand snakes. By now, most of these are personal friends of Sabu, the young East Indian star who seems to be having more fun than anybody except a couple of dozen monkeys who have got loose and gone native in the forest.

Kala Nag Missing

About the only thing they haven't|

got is the boss elephant they wanted. That's Kala Nag (“Black Snake” in Hindu) which was used in “Elephant Boy” and is still in the interior of India. Ship space probably could have been found and they were willing to take a chance on submarines, but they couldn’t bear to make poor old Kala Nag walk 600 miles to the coast. He's too tall for clearance if transported by trucks or barge. Lawrence Stallings, who wrote the script, hasn’t made all the animals talk’ as they do in the Kipling book. The python and cobra will talk because they hiss ay and it will sound fairly natural when sibilant words are dubbed on the sound track for them. For the other creatures, no voices could be devised which wouldn’t sound distractingly unreal. = Therefore, a little girl barely mentionéd by Kip-

ling has been given a more promi-| | nent place in the screen play so that]

Mowgli (Sabu) can tell her what the animals say. The python is 24 feet long and lives, off the set, in a bedroom closet of his owners, a couple of snake fanciers in Glendale. By f him 12 dresed rabbits for breakfast i y're able to start him at work a highly torpid state! but when re gets warm he grows ‘frisky, and the crew has to keep him in check with the only weapons he understands—blow torches. The cobra is a very gentle white oné whose mistress merely has to look at him and say, “Hood, baby!” —and he does. But he's still ‘a cobra, and the rest of the company keeps clear. Sher Khan, Lord of the Jungle, is an unbelievably beautiful halfBengal and half-Sumatra tiger. Real name's Roger. He’s plenty tough, not the sort of beast for a Dorothy Lamour idyl. The shot made of Roger the other day runs

says that only over his dead body]

exactly three minutes, and

will so much as a foot of it be cut.| |

Bear Performer

In the Kipling story, Baloo the Bear taught Mowgli the law of the jungle, but the Himalayan brown

giant that the Kordas are using is|' RENT |

no model of patience or virtue. Other day while a scene was heing rehearsed by the water's edge a crocodile popped up snorting, and

scared the bear out of a three-|

weeks’ growth of inhibitions. He

WHEN DOES IT. START?

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RULES LEOPARDS; PIG BITES HIM

HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 8—After working for several days with leopards, which behaved perfectly in

gn

Donlevy was bitten by a small and absolutely uncontrollable pig. They

finally cut the pig episode clear cut of the picture.

NO CUPID

What happens when an old friend comes to stay with a young married couple, and stays and stays and stays, furnishes the fun in “Weekend for Three.” Dennis O'Keefe, Jane Wyatt, Philip Reed, Edward Everett Horton and ZaSu Pitts head the cast.

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