Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 June 1942 — Page 4

PAGE 14

BUTLER NAMES. '42-'43 EDITORS

Betty Murnan Will Direct Manuscripts; Ohleyer Heads Bulldog.

Editors and staffs of Butler university’s two publications for the 1942-1943 school year were announced today. Miss Betty Murnan of Indianapolis will be editor of Manuscripts,

quarterly publication issued by the

English department, and Robert Ohleyer will head the staff of the

Bulldog, monthly humor magazine. |

Mr. Ohleyer's appointment as editor of the Bulldog followed the resignation of the other candidate for the editorship, Frank Goll. who will enter military service this summer. Other Bulldog staff members will include Miss Jane Mottern, associate editor; William Ransdell, business manager: William circulation manager. Dean man, promotion manager: Janet Stayton. howls editor: Miss Isabel Burnside, styles editor: Miss Connie Doran, exchange editor: Harold Darmer, feature editor, and Jack Wheeler, sports editor.

WildMiss |

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In wri

McLeod, !

thas now as {a nation at war.”

Governor Schricker (left) and Niles Trammell , . . they donned the Senslustie hoecds of doctors of Iaws.

“NBC President

}

| | |

Given De Pauw Certificates

mes Special

GREENCASTLE, na. June 1— {Niles Trammell, National Broadcasting Co. president, yesterday told {DePauw university's graduating jclass that “under the spotlight of } radio, secret bargainings and the wiles of diplomacy at the peace conference could not well operate.” Radio, he said, will Play an even greater role in the peace than it “the rallying voice of

He asked what might have been the effect now if Woodrow Wilson had been able to carry his ideas of world peace to the nation in a series of “fireside chats.” Opportunity for Youth Speaking at the university's 103d annual commencement exercises, the first to be held in the new football stadium, Mr. Trammell declared that even with the uncertainties of the immediate future, youth never has had such » great opportunity to shape tlie course of international affairs. Mr. 7'rammell was one of six upon whom DePauw conferred honorary

degrees. Others were Governor Schricker, doctor of laws; the Rev.

Get Honora ry Deg rees

SRA

Among $i

ed a gift of 10 paintings from George C. Calvert, Indianapolis art connoisseur and a DePauw graduate in the class of 1893. The paintings are by representative Indiana artists and were displayed in Bowman memorial gymnasium for the alumni day luncheon Saturday.

Artists Are Listed

Among the artists represented in the gift are T. C. Steele, Wayman Adams, John Elwood Bundy, Simon Paul Baus, Otto Stark, Clifton Wheeler, William Forsyth, Richard Buckner Gruelle, Joh Otis Adams and Reynolds L. Selfridge. At the Rector Scholar Alumni association meeting yesterday afternoon, J. Lowell Craig of Indianapolis, insurance counsellor for the Northwestern mutual Life Insurance Co., was elected association president, succeeding Dean G. Herbert Smith; Paul Vawter, of Chicago, vice president, and Harold E. Robbins, of Tuscon, Ariz, secretary treasurer.

SEVEN KILLED IN

{witnessed the scene which led to the

GIRL: SLAIN WITH KNIFE IN BOSTON

Police Say Dishwasher Admits He Planned

Criminal Attack.

BOSTON, June 1 (U.P.).—Fidella Briand of Woburn, 18-year-old back bay business school student, was hacked to death today by a 28-year-cld man who waylaid her en route to school and attacked her with a bread knife. Within five minutes, the girl had been pursued along the Boston side of the Charles river embankment and fatally stabbed, and police had seized and subdued a man identified as Harry Adams, a west end dishwasher, who allegedly confessed the slaying. “I just killed a girl,” police quoted Adams as saying. He admitted he planned to attack her, police said. Three Boston university students

daylight killing. They said they saw the man chasing the girl as he brandished an object which resembled a stick, As the man closed in on her, they said, the girl stumbled and fell on the grass and her assailant pounced on her, Preliminary examination indicated that Miss Briand had not been criminally attacked but disclosed numerous stab wounds on her face, neck and shoulders. The body was identified at the scene through school books, and later by Miss Roberta MacDonald, a Fisher business school teacher.

EXAMINE BODY OF TELEPHONE OFFICIAL

NEW YORK, June 1 (U. P.).— Police medical examiners perform an autopsy today on the body of Samuel Gilman Ordway, secretarytreasurer of the International Telephone & Telegraph Co., which was found yesterday in a half-filled bathtub in his apartment. Ordway’s body was found 20 hours after he had returned from a hospital where he had been treated for injuries suffered in a hotel room brawl with a former convict. Police, responding to a call from guests at the hotel last Tuesday, found Max Edelstein, a petty thief and narcotic addict, and Ordway hurling glasses at each other, Ordway was bleeding profusely.

- THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES |

by RICHARD LEWIS

Scaring Little Children

MAYBE YOU HAVE wondered about the reaction of children to

movie horror and radio crime programs.

Does this type of “Enter-

tainment’ tend to make the kiddies bite their nails? Does it make

them nervous, fearful?

®

It definitely does, according to two recent studies on the subject. One is “Crime and Punishment on the Air” by J. Howard Rowland.

The second is “Children’s Reactions to Movie Horrors and Radio Crime,” by Dr. Mary L. Preston. Mr. Rowland is doing research on the effects of radio listening upon little children. The project is conducted at Ohio. State university under the sponsorship of the Federal Communications commission. Both surveys suggest that where crime and punishment fill the air and the motion picture screens, it is the kiddies who take the punishment. Maybe they like it. But can they take it? Both scientists say “no.” Mr. Rowland finds that radio horror is a lot more horrible than the movie brand. There is no visual stimulus there to impede the listener in the task of constructing his own private image of things that are horrible. Youngsters literally become addicts to these programs. And it gives them the jitters.. = 2 ®

Horror Addicts

SEVERE ADDICTION to movie and radio horror was found in 57 per cent of a group of 200 normal children studied by Dr. Preston. These youngsters listened to many radio crime programs and went to the movies two to five times a week. Dr. Preston found that: 1, Addiction to movie horrors and radio crime programs was found to be detrimental to general health and interfered with school success. 2. Nervousness was more pronounced among the addicts than among non-addicts, in the form of tics, twitches, pallor, sleeping disturbances, eating disturbances, fears and nail-biting. Children who were greatly affected by these programs were given a diet of more wholesome recreation which not only improved their physical condition but decreased nervous symptoms. The average child, according to this study, hears radio crime between 4 p. m, and 9 p. m. Most

grossly distorts the concepts of justice and induces ‘“misconceptions about the nature of the police and the courts in the minds of the young listeners.” Despite the “crime - does - notpay” motif, critics contend that voung people actually learn delinquent methods from these broadcasts and that delinquent behavior is encouraged by listening, the survey said. While studies have not yet been made to prove or disprove this motion, Mr. Rowland said, there is evidence that children from delinquent areas listen to crime programs proportionately more than from non-delinquent areas. “This does not mean,” he said, “that listening to crime programs necessarily is a cause of delinquency. Instead, it is more probable that the same economic and cultural factors which produce delinquency also produce a greater number of voung people who enjoy crime drama more than other types of radio programs.”

Jordan Sets Graduation

Exercises To Be Held Friday At Odeon.

The Jordan Conservatory of Music will hold commencement exercises at 4 p. m. Friday at the Odeon, 106 E. North st. Ceremonies will begin with a processional in front of the building, headed by board and faculty members. Twenty-two candidates will receive music degrees. During the musical program, the Jordan string orchestra will play under the baton of Fabien Sevitzky, Indianapolis symphony orchestra

|

conductor. Those receiving degrees are Mary

Waits Divorce ws

Myrna Loy

RENO, Nev, June 1 (U. P.).— Myrna Loy, the screen’s “perfect wife,” will apply for Reno's first 1942 June divorce here today. She was a June bride six years ago when she slipped away to Ensenada, Mexico, and married Producer Arthur Hornblow, Jr. She will charge Hornblow with extreme “mental cruelty,” her attorney, William Woodburn, said. Her six week's residence in Reno, necessary before she could file suit, ended last night. Property matters Have heen

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1942

LAST 2 DAYS.

George BRENT BEN} NETT

in “TWIN BEDS” re PIS “KID GLOVE KILLER”

| STARTS WEDNESDAY!

BRIAN DONLEVY MIRIAM HOPKINS PRESTON FOSTER

in

“A GENTLEMAN AFTER DARK”

plus

“THE VANISHING VIRGINIAN”

with FRANK MORGAN KATHRYN GRAYSON SPRING BYINGTON

eo 1] » > CENDLETON PIKE ontinuous From D " Williara Powell ot “I LOVE YOU AGAIN" ; and “MISS POLLY," Zasu Pitts J Slim Sammerville 4

settled out of court.

PICTURE OF

Er

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HOLIDAY TRAFFIC

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MICE 29 on the CIRCLE

lapolis, doctor of divinity: E. Robb

{ Zaring, former editor of the West‘ern Christian Advocate, doctor eof (divinity;

the Rev. William W. Robinison, superintendent of the Ft. | Wayne district of the Methodist church, doctor of divinity, and Kenneth C. Hogate, editor of the Wall {Street Journal, doctor of humane | letters. Unable to Attend

{ Mr. Hogate's degree was conferred in absentia, Clyde E. Wildman, uni- | i versity president. explaining that ill-| ness prevented Mr. Hogate's atten-| | dance. { Favored with clear weather de-| spite surrounding rains, the seaior| |class marched by twos across the ! scenic campus and out to the ‘stadium at sundown. 1304 in the class, second largest the {school has graduated. Several, however, were absent.| ling forces. Two in the procession ‘had to forego the customary cap| ‘and gown for army uniforms.

Stresses Need For Characler

{ President Wildman, in his haci calaureate address in the morning; lat Gobin memorial methodist church, warned his graduating] {students that it would be those with | | “deep roots” land education who would weather {the “hurricane of the next 10 years.’ “But,” he promised them—his | last words to the class yesterday ” Meanie, the university accept-

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{They already are in America’s fight- |

in character, religion

orning—“the hurricane will pass.”|

Seven persons, including an Indianapolis resident, died in holiday week-end traffic accidents in the] state. Mrs. Mary Bittner, 62, of 436 N. Bancroft st., died of injuries received in a collision near Sunman which also claimed the life of her nephew, Eugene Feller, 17, of Sunman. The other dead were: Horace Sears, 52, and his mother-

Portland, killed in a collision near their home. Celeste Perry, 17, and Helen Follis, both of Warren, victims of an {accident at the intersection of [Pies 221 and 218. rs. Pearl Nicholson, 55, of Rus-

Russellville. Mrs. Bittner was a member of {Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic church. She is survived by three brothers. Elmer, Theodore and Leo; three sisters, Mrs. Marcella Springmeyer of Indianapolis, Mrs.

George Schott of Alexandria and! {Mrs. Joseph Vogelsang of New Al-| 'bany: her mother, Mrs. Rosa Feller | {of Sunman; two daughters, Mrs. | Albert Kuhn and Mrs. Clara, Steiff | of Indianapolis, and a son, John | Bittner of Detroit. Funeral services will be at 8:30 {a m. tomorrow at the home and at a. m. in the church. Burial will {be in St. Joseph's cemetery.

Peter Will Wed Greek Princess

LONDON, June 1 (U, P.. King Peter of Jugoslavia, who will be 19 in September, is planning to marry 21-year-old Princess Alexandra of Greece and probably will announce his engagement before leaving for the United States within the next three weeks, it was understood today. Friends. of the youthful monarch, who heads the Jugoslav government in exile here, said that the Greek princess whose father was the late King Alexander, is wearing a diamond ring and clip given her by Peter. Peter, who is a student flier became King under a regency when his father, Alexander I, was assassinated at Marseilles on Oct. 9, 1934, and the regency was dissolved by a revolution in March of 1941 just before the German invasion of Jugoslavia. Princess Alexandria is a niece of King George of Greece.

{

a guard was placed at Ordway's hospital bedside. At#a preliminary hearing Friday, he was released in absentia in $1 bail. Edelstein was remanded to prison and both were to have appeared at a hearing tomorrow.

POOLS OF MANPOWER ARE LISTED BY WMC

WASHINGTON, -June 1 (U. P.. —The war manpower commission revealed today from where it expects to get the estimated 10,000,000 new workers needed for war in-

dustries this year. Here are the WMC's figures: From peacetime industries—T7,000,000 to 7,900,000. From the farm-—400,000 to 600,000. From the ranks of the self-em-ployed (professional men, etc.)— 400,000. Unemployed—1,500,000. Housewives, youths, old workers and others not listed as a part of { the regular labor force—2, 00000:

BARRYMORE RITES WILL BE PRIVATE

HOLLYWOOD, June 1 (U. P.).— Only a small group of intimates will, attend the requiem mass tomorrow at 11 a. m. for John Barrymore, who died Friday after a 10-day illness. At the request of the family, there will be no public services or public viewing of the body. The funeral will be conducted by the Rev. John O'Donnell, pastor of the Immaculate Heart church, who a few hours befcre Barrymore died administered the last sacrament and thus received the actor back into the Catholic church.

BRITISH RAID SICILY ROME, June 1 (Italian Broadcast Recorded by United Press in New York)—British planes raided the harbor city of Messina, Sicily, during the night, causing “ccnsiderable” damage, the high command said today.

it in bed. They dream about kill- |

ings and have fears of kidnapings. Day-dreaming, in addition, is reported to be filled with thoughts of crime, in which most children identify themselves with criminals,

” It's Murder

MR. ROWLAND STUDIED 20 radio crime programs and found

2 ”

30 characters were done to death by murderers, 15 were nearly murdered but not quite while three murders were implied but not proved. Mass murder was approached in one program, with eight killings either committed or attempted. Twelve other programs averaged three murders per program. Shooting was the most prevalent method of murder, although murders also were committed by use of occult powers, hypnotic suggestion, hammering the victim to death, stabbing, drowning, strangling, poisoning or hanging, In one radio program for the kiddies, murder was attempted by cutting loose a railroad car on a steep hill. Next to murder, larceny was the most frequent offense followed by kidnaping and sabotage. Other offenses included extortion, arson and other means of destroying property, assault, drug peddling, spy running, jailbreak and escape from mental hospitals. “Although murder predominated among the ‘crimes’ in these radio dramas,” Mr. Rowland said, “it is interesting to note that murder is one of the least frequent of our major crimes in real life.” ” z 2

Radio Distortion

ONLY FIVE of the 20 radio dramas studied deal with law enforcement as the main theme. In most of the programs, the apprehension of criminals through legal channeis was only a secondary consideration. The researcher found that radio

WHEN DOES IT START?

CIRCLE “Juke Girl,” with Ann Fherlann and Ronald Reagan, at 1:45, 4: 30, 7:20 and 10: . “Murder in Big House,” with Gene Lockhart and Alan Hale, at 12:45, 3:35, 6:20 and 9:05

INDIANA

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