Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 January 1943 — Page 6
Men and women may enroll now in arc welding classes g offered as a part of the free war produc-
tion training program of the Indianapolis public schools.
Three-hour classes are scheduled for Monday through Friday, 24 hours a day. Registration may be made at the U. 8S. employment service, 148 E. Market st., or'at Tecunical high school. A minimum of 200 hours is required by industries needing welders, and students may take as many as nine hours a day or night, thus
Artur Rubinstein, pianist, will appear in a special concert with the Indianapolis symphony = orchestra Feb. 11 at Murat theater, Howard Harrington, orchestra manager, announced today. The world-famous ‘pianist - will play a complete program. Season ticket holders will have first chance : to make reservations beginning Monday.
by RICHARD LEWIS
Stand By for Action’
~ SAGAS OF THE SEA, as Hollywood concocts them, are notably =productive of heroes being decorated upon emerging with a band-aid “on the forehead from a battle action to try men’s souls and a series -of adventures to try the credibility of the audience. = Usually, too, there’s the regeneration of a Harvard youth with slick hair and a gay-blade manner in the smoke and flames of crashing guns
“Bnd sinking ships. = “Stand by for Action,” which Opened at Loew’s yesterday, has ~all the usual ingredients, plus an Prigiral story twist that brings it “up above par for naval thrillers.
ay
~&he destroyer, Warren, a recom“missioned ship of the first world _War, rescues a boatload of babies nd expectant mothers, then sinks 8 Jap baitle cruiser and saves the “eonvoy. —. The Harvard youth, Robert “Taylor, finds regeneration amidst the smoke and flame of battle ~and the changing of nrany diapers “which along with sinking Jap ships becomes a part of his - fluties as the destroyer’s execu“tive officer. 4x 2 » ” “* THERE LIES Brian Donlevy, “wounded, and only Taylor to take ; ~eommand. The Jap is off the starboard bow. One of the rescued “women is having a baby down Pelow. A score of infants are “Squalling. On ‘the port how, is the convoy with Admiral Laugh#on pacing the deck of his flagship, worrying about the. rudder being shot away and how the ‘expectant mother aboard the destroyer is getting along. - As the destroyer emerges from the smoke screen, the Jap cruiser “going down in flames behind it, “Laughton prepares to read the destroyer’s message of victory with the eloquence that has made " him famous. It is a message, he proclaims, that will go down in history. “It’s a boy,” the message says. Whereupon Taylor medal and he and Donlevy sail off to more adventures on the * high seas. . ” » ” _ IT SEEMS to me that what #aves this picture from running in the usual rut is the baby angle, * which is lifted from a story called “A Cargo of Innocence.” Also some good direction by Robert Z. Leonard and a speed of move-
gets his;
ment which keeps the ball rolling all the way. “Stand By For Action” is pleas-~ ant excitement, with some fine
comedy moments and a plot that is an improbable as they come, Dramatic instants are created mostly by Laughton, who lives up to his past histrionics in a speech commissioning the old destroyer for service once more. Mr. Laughton has abandoned his Capt. Bligh role which made him famous in “Mutiny on the Bounty” for the part of a crotchety old salt aching to get back to sea despite his lumbago. Mr. Taylor, looking ‘debonair as ever, makes a fair showing in the comedy se-_ quences and Mr. Donlevy plays the commander who came up from the ranks. In fairness to M. G. M, it should be said that the film is not without a touch or two of realism. Taylor actually gets his hair mussed.
TO INSTALL OFFICERS
New officers of the Sahara Grotto auxiliary will be installed in ceremonies at 8 p. m., Tuesday at 4107 E. Washington st. Mrs. Eli Thompson, 912 N. Rural st., will be the
president. Others to be in-
Todd Simmons, first vice president; Mrs. Frank Haugh, second vice president; Mrs. Paul Steele, secretary; Mrs, George Her-
Mrs.
retary, Mrs. Charles Beckham,
and Mrs. Irvin Hessel, trustees.
SAHARA GROTTO UNIT
t's Chilly On ‘Bataan’
Taylor's Imitation Sweat Congeals on Face.
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Hollywood Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 1.—(U. P.)— The jungles of Bataan, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer version, turned out today to be so cold the imitation sweat congealed on the faces of
Robert Taylpr and Co. and Director Tay Garnett strode through the
green hell of the Philippines in overcoat and muffler. “What we had to have,” explained Garnett, “was some fog hugging close to the miasmic swamps and Hollywood fog is stuff that floats through the air. I turned that problem over to the experts. These gentlemen turned on the refrigerating machinery and blew icy air across the frangipani blossoms, the bird of paradise plants, the ferns, the trailing vines and the shivering actors that covered stage
rick, assistant sec- Mrs. Thompson | 15.
When the temperatures got down
treasurer; Mrs. -Otis Becker, first| 0 & few degrees above freezing; the guard; Mrs, Jerry Kindred, second | fog squirted out of the nozzles and guard; Mrs. Harry Halter, chairman stayed on the ground, where diof trustees; Mrs. Stanley Bryson rector Garnett wanted it.
He had in production ‘Bataan
Patrol,” an all-masculine story of
FESseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeteeeeee eee heroism in the Philippines.
0 / 9 0 0 9 0 3 A / 4 4 4 /
ahead.
say
NNN NNN NINN
NAR A
“19143 99
Let’salldedicate ourselves to the task that still lies so that when we greet the next new year we may “A VICTORIOUS NEW YEAR”
THE LEADER
WASHINGTON and DELAWARE
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NOON °TIL 9 P. M.
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11
SSS aeeeeeeeeeaeeeee
Enjoy A HAPPY NEW YEAR With Sound, Healthy TEETH!
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Out Squirts the Fog
“There are 13 guys in the detachment,” he said, “and they are ordered to hold a pass in- the hills against the Japs’ heavy artillery. They do hold it, until they all are dead. That's the story. The cast consists of the Messrs. Lloyd Nolan, George Thomas Mitchell, Desi Lee Bowman, Kenneth Spencer, Bobby Walker, Tom Dugan, Phil Terry, Barry Nelson, and the Filipino actors, Alex Harner and Roque Esperitu. These gentlemen wear no makeup except their own personally-grown whiskers, smears of mineral oil, and some dirt. Garnett and his trusty associate, Ralph Cedar, the death and destruction specialist, had just killed off Harner, the third man to die, when we arrived | in their refrigeratec jungle, A Fine Shot
The next scene called for Lieut.|:
Taylor and private Terry to pull a Jap sword from Harner’s chest. They did so, with the proper expression of grimness, after a couple of rehearsals. “A fine shot,” commented Garnett. His actors, including the dead one, got up to walk away and the second assistant cameraman began to blush. Then he began to stutter. And he said something that we never have heard before in our six years of watching the movie makers at work. “I am sorry,” he said, “but there doesn’t seem to be any film in the
Local Marine Ready for Duty
Second Lieut. Wiliam R. B. Calwell of the marine corps is’ now ready for duty with a combat unit, having been graduated recently from the reserve officers’ class at the marine training center at Quantico, Va. The son of
Mrs. Harry G. |
: 3 " “Calwell, :5538 N. Pennsylvania Lieut. Calwell st, Lieut. C oY well enlisted last March. He is a graduate of Wabash college where he was a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternily and the football and track teams.
OLAF IN WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON, Jan. 1 (U, P.).— Crown Prince Olaf of Norway. ar=
rived here last night by plane from|!
Europe, via New York, for a visit with his wife, Princess Martha, and their two children, who are staying in nearby Maryland.
have a glass of ice-cold mud.
Times Amusement Clock
OPENING TODAY CIRCLE
On stage, Henry Busse & band, at 12:25, 2:45, 5:05, 7:25 and 9:45, «Ice-Capades,” with Jerry Colonna and Vera Vague, at 11, 1:20, 3:40, 6, 8:20 and 10:35.
CURRENT FEATURES KEITH'S On stage, ‘Hip, Hip, Hooray,” at 1:23, 4:06, 6:49 and 9 “Something to Sing About,” with 13:10,
James Cagney, at 2:23, 5:06, 7:49 and 10:31. LOEW’S “Stand By for Action,” with Robert Taylor, Charles Laughton a Brian Donlevy, at 10:30, 1:23, 4:16, 7:09 and 10. “McGuerins From Brook! with William Bendix and Baer, at 12:24, 3:17, 6:10 and 9
INDIANA
“George Washington Slept Here,” with Jack Benny and Ann Sheridan, at 12:41, 3:44, 6:47 and 9:50. “Army Surgeon,” with James Ellison and Jane Wyatt, at 11:41, 2:44, 5:47, and 8:50.
ENGLISH’S
“Life With Father,” with Percy Waram and Margalo Gillmore, at
fax
LYRIC “Once Upon a Honeymoon,” with Ginger Rogers and Cary Grant, at 11:05, 1:15, 3:25, 5:40, 7:50 and 10.
MARINE OFFICER LIST TO CLOSE JAN. 31
Enlistment of eligibie men in the marine corps officer candidates class has been extended to Jan. 31. Men between the ages of 20 and 31 may apply if they are college graduates or have had two years of college and two years of civilian experience. be transferred on the day of their enlistment to the marine barracks at Parris Island, S. C. Upon com-
commissioned second lieutenants, Seventeen-year-old college - students are also eligible for enlistment
graduation unless the war situdftion requires earlier training.
VAUDEVILLE
KEITH'S omen |
bnstage:- BI§ Pll UR SHow! |
We uiPH
+ Plus This SCREEN SCOQP ,
JAMES CAGNEY
"Something to Sing About" | PRICES TODAY
336 1 © 506 41 © LNT |
|
Doors Open 10145 A. M.
ENGLISH
Tonight-Tomorrew, Matinee py 4s io
‘SEATS Ll. 6884. Eves, 55¢ to $2.78 Ne J Wed. and Sat. Mats.: 85¢ to $2.20, Inel, Tax
THURS., FRI, SAT., JAN. 7-8-9
BROADWAY'S FUNNIEST SHOW HOLTZ . HOWARD
WHEELER ® LADD
Gene 8 SHELDON—Luba MALINA § Versailles Beauties
HEINE iaLLH
\LL.STA!
Accepted applicants will| |
pletion of training, they will be
and will remain in school until after|.
Fabien Sevitzky will direct the orchestra in the fifth concert pair § Jan. 9 and 10. The concerts will feature Alexander B. Brailowsky, pianist, as soloist. Mr. Brailowsky will play the Rachmaninoff concerto in C minor. The orchestra’s third pop concert, featuring Reba Robinson, orchestra. j harpist, will be given Jan. 14."
SPEAKS ON USE OF WOOD Mr. Rubinstein. T. E. Shaw, Indiana state forester, will speak on “The Use of Wood in War” at a luncheon meeting Tues- | CHICAGO, Jan. 1 (U. P.. day of the Indiana section of thejlars who took $2000 wu: American Chemical Society. Dr.| watches and rings from John A. ‘Leighty of Eli Lilly & Co. | Shapiro's jewelry store earl; will preside. also stole the burglar alarm
HAPPY NEW YEAR! FULL-SPEED AHEAD WITH UNCLE SAM'S os IN THE hy PACIFIC!
TAYLOR: LAUGHTON A zee DONLEVY
ES) STHND BY
MARTA LINDEN Directed by ROBERT Z. LEONARD
WILLIAM BENDIX — GRACE BRADLEY. —in—
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Extra! Disney Cartoon,
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FEATURING
THE ICE + CAPADES COMPANY WITH INTERNATIONALLY: FAMOUS JSXALING STARS
400 - - 55s. ar
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{Fa
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10:30 A. 1.
HPARAN
A NEW NOTE IN HOLIDAY HAPPINE: §!
four weeks.
completing the training in about
Prospective trainees will be asked to indicate whether they are willing to leave the city or state tor
employment. ~ Friday, Saturday
DANCE and Sunday
HAL BAILEY’S ‘BAND
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CONTINUOUS MATINEE FROM 8 PF. Marj. Main §§ 1} ] ; Zasu Pitts TISH ____ “PIERRE OF THE PLAINS"
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sont. Mat. Today Adults 1:30 Till 2 22¢
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PLUS
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Thé Major & the Minor
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«yOQU WERE NEVER LOVELIER”
ox “WiLooaT
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"EAST SIDE
Today Thru Continuous Sunday Matinee Today Ginger Rogers—Ray Milland
“MAJOR and the MINOR”
Bette Davis—Paul Henreid
“NOW VOYAGER”
A | A | \ Matinee Today—I P. M.
Geo. Montgomery—Ann Rutherford GLENN MILLER ORCHESTRA
“ORCHESTRA WIVES”
gio . & mh Olives,
‘A HAUNTING WE WILL GO’
voz. MAT. TODAY, 12: 15 ger Rogers—Ray Milland
“MAJOR 22 TE MINOR”
y Har rie. Cha
PARKER, 'E.10th 6:45 Glenn Ford—Claire Trevor “ADVENTURES OF MARTIN EDEN" “CLOSE CALL FOR ELLERY QUEEN"
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CONTINUOUS MATINEE 5 FIRST IRVINGTON SHOWIN Fay Bainter—Richard Ney = “WAR AGAINST MRS. HADLEY” Joan Davis—Jinx Falkenberg “SWEETHEART OF THE FLEET?
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“BLOSSOMS IN THE DUS
Jas, Stewart—JIndy Garls Lana Turner—Hedy
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Irene Dunne—Patric Knowles
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Wallace Beery “JACKASS: Jon Hall “ALOMA OF THE SOI CONTINUOUS MATINEE
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« MATINEE NEW YEAR'S DAY -
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Ronald Reagan “D Richard Travis “BUSSES ROAR” CONTINUOUS MATINEE TODAY
CINEMA 16th and Delaware Errol Flynn—Ronald Reagan “DESPERATE JOURNEY” Richard Travis—Julie Bishop
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ST AE ZA IN) lll WERE NEVER]
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|#BLOSSOMS IN THI RITAHAYWORTH ‘
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“Stratford Pha:
BELMONT "io. 2 Ray Milland Ginger Rogers ‘MAJOR. & THE OR” Richard Arlen “WILDCA' CONTINUOUS MATINEE TODAY
: - WEST
fn Plus STATE 22¢ f= Shirley Temple —— ANNIE ROONEY” Dorothy al “MOON OVER BURMA” CONTINUOUS his TODAY.
OLD TRAIL waten to yo eries
Autry “STARDUST ON THE & Hardy “FLYING D
MAT. TODAY 1 Adults 1:30 Till 3 22¢ E:
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