Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1942 — Page 17
PAGE 16
BEN DAVIS DRAWINGS G0 TO U. S. CONTEST
Ben “Davis high school pupils have been selected to enter drawings in the national scholastic contest at Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, They are Herschel Fullen, Charlene Davis, Evelyn Shaffer. Margaret Sullivan, Keith Coghill, Jeanne Bushy, Marion Pfeiffer, Richard Ginn, Eugene Warriner, Helen Golay and Bonita Glidewell. Ben Davis won three state prizes In the contest last week.
Eleven
Charter Warren Debate Unit
The national Forensic league, national honorary fraternity for speech pupils, has granted a charter to Warren Central high school debaters. Speech pupils are granted membership in the league after earning 20 poinis. Twenty points are the
equivalent to winning two or three!
debates or three or four speech contests. Charter members are Bill Gale, Jesse Linder, Charles Kemp, James
Garringer, Harold Tignor, David
Haywood, Irving Croshier and James Kemper, 8 2 ® About 85 seniors are participating in “Anything Can Happen II.” dramatic production to be presented at Warren Central at 8:15 o'clock tonight. Miss Marjorie Forsyth, general chairman, W. R. Moore and Mrs. Lucille Miller are directing the three-act play. Musical background is to be provided by the school orchestra under the direction of Paul Hamilton.
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SENIORS IN PLAY
AT SHORTRIDGE
‘Ever Since Eve’ to Be Presented Tonight in Caleb Mills Hall.
Shortridge high school’s senior play, “Ever Since Eve,” will be presented at 8:15 o'clock tonight in Caleb Mills hall. Susan Countryman and Ted LeMaster will take the principal roles in the dramatization which is directed by Miss Eleanore Dee Theek, dramatics teacher. Other members of the cast include Joseph Clark, Sun Canny, Judith Badger, Marge Thoms, Tim Hanika, Robert Palmer, Ruth Ann Hamilton, Frank Shellhorn, William Conner, Edward Hawkins, Harry Collins, George Schricker, August Kasper, Robert Dyer, Alan Kamplain and Jack Peters. Twenty-four pupils will compose the pit orchestra, directed by Will F. Wise. They are: Violins—Carol Doub, Helen Van Dorn, Frederick Brockman, Lou Ellen Rouch, Helen Haley and Robert Hallem; violin—Jon Henry Rouch; cellos—Robert Rudesill and Janet Oren; bass violin—Robert English. Flutist—Glen Grosbach; clarinets —Leslie Lambert, George McClaran and James Stone: horns—Robert Cook and James Belden; trumpets— Paul Coleman and Robert Laughlin; trombones — Robert Plummer and Donald Coleman; oboe — Rey Slaughter; bassoon — Lal Ruff; piano—Robert Smith, and drums—
Paul Johnson. 2 ” ”
Wins French Medal
Evelyn Peterson, Shortridge senfor and president of the Le Cercle Francais, French club, has been awarded the Alliance Francais
medal presented each year to the outstanding fourth year French pupil of the city’s high schools.
= 2 2
Twenty-five members of the Shortridge orchestra have been awarded pins for their time of service. The pins are given annually to graduating members of Shortridge’s “A” orchestra. Gold pins for three years” service were given to Patricia Bishop, Frederick Brockman, Robert Cook, Carol Doub, Glen Brosbach, Helen Haley, Robert Hallam, Mary Elizabeth Miller, Janet Oren, Jack Peters, Jon Henry Rouch, Robert Rudesill, Helen Samuels, George Schricker, Margaret Sellmer and Helen Van Dorn. For two years’ service, silver pins were given to Robert English, Florence Izar, Peggy O'Donnel, Audrey Preston, George McClaren and Rose Mary Wanner. Bronze pins Were awarded to Leslie Lambert, Lal Ruff and James Stone for one year with the orchestra.
WASHINGTON PLANS INITIATION RITUAL
The initiation ceremonial of the national honor society will be conducted at 10 a. m. April 8 in the Washington High school auditorium before the student body. Those to be initiated are: Seniors
—Frank Behning, Carolyn Buckrop, Anna, Humble, Clifford McKay, Winifred Morris, Betty Myers, Maxine Palmer and Leon Walker; juniors, Pauline Broderick, Geraldine Burris, Mary Alice Carter, Thomas Davis, Robert Flum, Marian Gideon, Joan Hopkins, Helen Katterhenry, Virginia Kronoshek, Donald Leckrone, Barbara Lucas, Rosalind Martin, Betty Newkirk, Ruth Pacala, Pearl Rice, Richard Small and Joan Reed. ” ” ”
Lecture Scheduled
Mrs. Charles C. Martin, in costume and accompanied by musical selections, will present an illustrated lecture in the Washington high school auditorium as a part of the celebration of Pan-American day April 9. 2 ” 2 A meeting of West Side elementary school principals with their eighth grade home room teachers and department heads of Washington high school will be held April 8 in the west annex of the cafeteria. Program making for the freshman class of next September will be discused. : *. 5 4 The preliminary poetry reading contest at Washington high school will be held April 9 during period 10 in the English department.
J ARE CONVICTED IN RAIL PLOT CASE
PEORIA, Ill, March 27 (U.P.).— A federal court jury late yesterday found a union publicity man and two employees of the governmentseized Toledo, Peoria and Western railroad guilty of violating an antiviolence injunction issued during an 84-day strike by conspiring to blow up one of the road’s bridges. Convicted were D. W. Newdigate, Peoria chairman of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen; N. J. Dilly, a striking fireman, and Paul Brokaw, Cleveland, O., publicity agent for the Brotherhood of Operating Firemen and Enginemen. Defense attorneys indicated they would move for a new trial and Judge J. Leroy Adair set no time for sentencing.
PLAN FORMAL DANCE
The annual sunshine formal dance will be held by the Ben Davis Hi-Y club and the sunshine society April 11 in the school gymnasium. Arrangements will be coming at the next months meet
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