Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 June 1943 — Page 13
By Richard Lewis NT £ LUE pa " cg Tmelevels | 13 MEIE!
¢/J COLLINS & PETERSON JACKIE GREEN o/yices MV] * ON OUR SCREEN °*
‘Tahiti Honey’
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BERKELEY, Cal., "June 7 (U, PJ). —Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, comman-der-in-chief of the U. 8. Pacific fleet, has returned to the United
States and participated in a secret conference t¢ plan “more trouble for
ae
y VICTOR'S feature set for June is the classical symphony of ‘Prokofieff recarded by the St. Louis symphony orchestra under the direction of Vladimir Golschman. This is an excursion into the past for the contemporary Russian composer who wished to duplicate the spirit, of Mozart in the work. The classical structure of the symphony, however, cannot disguise the
On Active Duty i in Alaska
WASHINGTON, June 7 (U, P.).— Maj. Kermit Roosevelt died Friday in Alaska, where he had been serv ing on active duty for several 3 months, the war department an-
8 WEDNESDAY
Temples Will Nill Formally Confirm Hebrew Boys
impulsive satire that springs up in Prokofiefl’s music. The first movement is written in ‘brief sonata form, The second and third movements, short like the first, continue in the same pattern, with unexpected satirical twists as though the composer couldn’t quite contain himself in Mozart’s century, Mr. Golschmann and the St. Louis orchestra play the symphony much in the manner that Indianapolis folks have heard Fabien Sevitzky and the Indian‘apolis symphony orchestra perform 1t. . » # »
MR. SEVITZKY and the Indianapolis orchestra are repre‘sented in the recording field this month ‘with Victor's release of “Prelude and Allegro” in E minor by Fritz Kreisler, arranged for ‘symphony orchestra by “Mr. Sevitzky, The prelude is a characteristic work of Mr. Kreisler, simple and melodic. It shows off the orchestra's string section to advantage. Last month, you may recall, the Indianapolis symphony was featured
in Victor releases, in the impos- |
4 ing symphonic poem, " ‘by. Tchaikovsky. » ” o THE BRIDAL scene from Wag--ner’s “Lohengrin,” act III, sung by Kirsten Flagstad, soprano, and Laurita Melchior, tenor, with the Victor symphony ' orchestra, is also available this month. This is Elsa and Lohengrin alone at last, singing their song of love after many tribulations. You get a lot of Flagstad and Melchior in. this romantic duet, which expresses the more human, sentimental side of Wagner's music drama. » » on
ARTHUR WHITTEMORE and Jack Lowe are a duo-piano team of which ‘more probably will be heard after the war. They're in the navy now.
“Manfred,”
the
Reger waltz, Dubensky’s- “Gossips” and the march from “Love for Three Oranges” by Prokofiefl. Their piano work is ‘neat, especially in the march” where their arrangement is just this side of jive. : Ne. : CORELLI'S concerto in C major for organ and strings appear on the musical masterpiece series for June. It is played by E. Power Biggs at the baroque organ at Harvard university, the only instrument of its kind in America, and Arthur Fiedler's string orchestra. The album also includes the 18th centry composer’s sonata in D major, originally written for string trio, and arranged for organ and strings by Francesco Malipiero. Mr. Biggs is one of America’s leading organists. .
.
Times Amusement Clock
CIRCLE “Reap the Wild Wind,” with Ray Milland, Paulette Goddard and John Wayne, at 11:12, 2:42, 6:22 and 9:50.
N “Night Plane from Chungking,” wit Robert Preston and Ellen Drew, :33, 5:13 and 8:43,
KEITH'S On stage, vaudeville, 4:17, 6:52 and 9:50, “Tahiti Honey,” with Simone Simon and Dennis O'Keefe, at 12,10, 2:45, 5:10, 7:45 and 10:40.
LOEW'S
“Lady of Burlesque,” with BarBary Stanwyck and Michael O'Shea, 11:15, 1:58, 4:40, 7:24 and 10.
fo with Hitler,” with Allan Mowbray and Marjorie Woodworth, at 12:50, 3:30, 6:15 and 8.
INDIANA “Five Graves to Cairo,”” with Pranchot Tone, Anne Baxter and Eric von Stroheim, at 12:33, 3:41, 6:50 and 9:57. “Follow the Band,” with Frances Langford, at 11:32, 2:40, 5:48 and 8:56.
at 1:52,
LYRIC : “Crash Dive,” with Tyrone Power and Anne Baxter, at 12:25, 3:35, 6:45 ig 10. “He's Guy,” Davis, a 1: 20, 2:30, 8:50.
with Joan 5:40 and
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Lloyd Nolan plays the part of Corp. Barney Todd in M-G-M’s thriller, “Bataan,” with Robert Taylér. The film follows “Lady of Burlesque” at Loew's.
FOR'S GRANDSON IN GUN MISHAP
Playmate Accidentally Shot By William Roosevelt, Son of Elliott.
PHILADELPHIA, June 7 (U. P.). investigated the death of Lewis Hutchinson, 11, whe
was shot last night when, authorities said, a .22 caliber rifle was discharged accidentally by William Roosevelt, 10-year-old grandson of President Roosevelt. Coroner W. J. Rushong said the shooting occured as the boys, schoolmates at Episcopal academy, rushed into William's suburban Edgemont home to get bows and arrows to play Indians. William is the son of Col. Elliott Roosevelt, second son of the President, and Mrs, Elizabeth Donner Winsor.
Kicked Weapon
Rushong said the rifle was standing in a hallway when William opened a closet door, accidentally kicking the weapon, which went off as Lewis entered from another room.
4 o'| When she attempted to force her 2 | way into Chaplin's home to plead
|G. 0. P. VETS, INC.
Mrs. Winsor, who divorced the president's son in 1933, and a child’s nurse drove Lewis to Bryn Mawr hospital, where he was pronounced dead on arrival. The bullet had pierced his chest. Lewis screamed and staggered out the door before he fell on the front steps. William ran for a first aid kit and called his mother, the daughter of William H. Donner, Villanova, steel manufacturer.
CHAPLIN ORDERED TO APPEAR IN COURT
HOLLYWOOD, June 7 (U. P.).— Charlie Chaplin was ordered today to show why he should not pay the living expenses of Miss Joan Barry, his red-haired protege, pending trial of the suit in which she charges that the white-haired film comic is the father of her unborn child. Chaplin will appear in domestic relations court Thursday for a hearing on the show cause order. Miss Barry is scheduled to appear in the Beverly Hills police court Friday to seek suspension of the vagrancy charges filed against her
with him to marry her. Police arrested her at the time and listed her as a vagrant.
RE-ELECTS EBAUGH
J. S. Ebaugh, 2146 N. Delaware st.,, was re-elected president of the G. O. P. Vets, Inc., at the election of 1943 officers held at the Hotel Antlers - Saturday. Mr. Ebaugh is district agent for the Occidental Life Insurance Co. Other officers elected at the meeting were Arch Bobbitt, first vice president; S. C. Bates, second vice president; Charles Lee, third vice president, Marian C. Van Sickle, fourth vice president; William Stalcup, fifth vice president; Ira H. Gibson, secretary; Carl T. Bowen, treasurer, and Charles Crouch, ser-geant-at-arms. The board of directors elected included Carl T. Bowen, W. T. O'Leary, L. C. Nine,
Emil Swift and Ancil Martin.
And Girls.
Indianapolis Jews will join those of their faith all over the country and in the free countries of the world in celebrating the Feast of Weeks, or Shovuos, Wednesday. Rededication of faith and recon-
secration for religious values are
the themes of the festival. Accordingly, Jewish temples formally confirm boys and girls on the feast day. Confirmation will be observed in the Indianapolis Hebrew congregation Wednesday at 9:30 a. m. and by the Beth-El Zedeck temple, Sunday morning at 10:30.
Shovuos is called the Feast of}
Weeks because it comes seven weeks after Passover. Orthodox and conservative ‘Jews celebrate it for two days and reform Jews for one. In the early days, the feast marked the end of the grain harvest, but after the fall of the temple it recalled the giving of the law to Moses on Mt. Sinai. . Will Give Sermon
Rabbi Morris M.- Feuerlicht will deliver the sermon and Rabbi Maurice Goldblatt: will preside at the confirmation services of the Indianapolis Hebrew congregation. The - temple choir, led by Farrell Scott and accompanied by Mrs. Scott, will sing and Mary Reynolds will play the violin, Che confirmation class includes: . Robert S. Bodner, Rosann Borinstein, Marcia Jane Fink, Dorothy Jean Friedland, Barrett L. Gould, Leah Greenstein, Anita Louise Kaplan, Frances Lurvey, Betty Lutz, Robert M. Lutz, Alice Rene Rosenfield, Joyce Ann Rothberg, Rose Elaine Solomon, Bernice Steinberg, and Janet Sussman. At the Beth-El temple, there will
be Shovuos services tomorrow at
7:45 p. m., Wednesday at 7:45 p. m. and Thursday at 8 a. m. in addition to the Confirmation to follow on Sunday. Rabbi Israel Chodos is temple director and the confirmants are: Bernard Charles Berger, Jerome Lee Cohan, Paul Bernard Fishman, Paul Robert Goldstein, Richard Lee Perk, Charlotte F. Pollock, Gertrude Rappaport, Irwin R. Rose, Roselle Frances Schuchman, Allan Bennett Selig, Sarah Reva Sussman, Florence Tamler, Jerome Tamler, and Barbara ‘Anne Weiss.
GETS 39TH TERM AS DRUIDS’ SECRETARY
Charles G. N. Geider, 1822 S. Talbott ave. for the 39th consecutive time was re-elected grand secretary of the grand grove, United Ancient Order of Druids of Indiana, at the 83d annual convention held Saturday at the Druids hall, 29 S. Delaware st. ; Mr. Geider has been a member of the Druids for 48 years, and has been supreme secretary for the last 20 years. Other officers named at the convention were: Wesley McCoy of Richmond, re-elected noble grand arch; William Fred Young of Indianapolis, re-elected grand treasurer; Albert Minner of Richmond, elected grand marshal; Otto S. Swanson of Indianapolis, elected grand herald; Carl A. Franz of Lafayette, elected grand guardian, and Philip H. Robbins of Richmond, elected deputy grand arch. F. Earl Geider, deputy supreme arch, and Louis G. Schwarts, past supreme arch, both of Indianapolis, installed the officers. Mr. McCoy presided at the. convention. The members voted Richmond as the site for their 1944 convention. About 50 delegates were present.
TEACHERS PLAN PIANO RECITALS
Piano pupils of Mrs. Jessie Thiebaud Clapp will be presented in recital at 7:45 p. m. Thursday at the D. A. R. chapter house. Miss Jeanne Bray, a violin pupil of Mrs. Ruth Gentry Edwards, and Miss Virginia Sferuzzi, vocalist, will assist. Norma Kristian will present . a
-
group of her piano pupils in recital|
at 8 p. m. Friday at School No. 78 and another pupil, Carol Moir, at 8 p. m. June 14 at the East Park Methodist church.
CHICAGO, June 7 (U, P.).— Daniel J. Tobin of Indianapolis, president of the = International Brotherhood of Teamsters (A. F. of L.), sounded a warning to the United Mine Workers, congress and the isolationist press yesterday that the public will not tolerate interference with the war effort.
Dedicating Chicago's new “Victory plaza,” which was donated by the teamsters joint council No. 25, Mr. Tobin predicted that the miners will not resume their strike. “I am satisfied that members of that organization (U. M. W.) will not cease work again for the duration of the war,’ he said. “The people and the government have the right to insist and demand that every individual do his part of the job toward winning the war. The people will not stand for anyone who does not.” Tobin charged that criticism
Public Will Tolerate No New Tie-Ups, Tobin Warns UMW |
ist press has done more to hinder the war effort than any other single cause. Regarding congress, Mr. asserted: “It would be well if that body adjourned for a year to give President Roosevelt and the people who toil 3 chance to win the war.”
Tobin
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Roosevelt.
Roosevelt,
Africa. Their younger - brother over France in the last war. The war department said not know yet the circumstances of Kermit Roosevelt's death. He served in the last war, first as a captain with the British army and later with the United States th field artillery, 1st division.
He accompanied his father on exploration trips into Africa and South tions of his own. In 1929 in Tibet
pandas to be brought back to the United States.
Maj. Roosevelt, 53, was a son of the late former President Theodore
A brother, Brig. Gen. Theodore : has been on duty -in°
Quentin, was killed in air combat
it did |
America, and later went on expedi- §
he captured one of the first giant ?
the Japanese in the near future.”
States was disclosed yesterday when he made a surprise appearance at University of California commencement alumni luncheon, he said he had returned from his Pacific command to attend a strategy conference, but he did not disclose when or where the: conference was held, or who partici--pated in it.
Nimitz’ presence in the United
exercises. Addressing an
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Kermit Roosevelt
HOLLYWOOD, Cal, June 7 (U. P.).—Army air corps officers said today that low flying caused the crash of a fighter plane which cut a path of destruction through a residential district, plowing into a garage with an explosion and a burst .of flames whi¢h cremated a housewife and killed the pilot. The hedge-hopping pilot failed to pull the Lockheed interceptor out of a dive after he'had circled three times over the vicinity, skimming so low that the roar of the heavy motors shook buildings in the vicinity. Col. Ralph A. Snavely, commanding officer of the Los Angeles air defense, blamed the tragedy on low flying and said regulations prohibited coming below certain specified altitudes over residential areas. The dead woman was tentatively identified as Mrs. Myrtle Baker; army authorities withheld the name of the pilot until the next of kin had been notified. Witnesses said the pilot repeatedly dived apparently on mythical targets and pulled out within a few score feet of the ground. On his fourth dive, he misjudged his altitude and clipped a eucalyptus tree. The twin-engined plane first hit the homes of Arthur Horn and A. C. Simels, shearing the roof corners of both houses, and struck a barbecue pit in Simel’s backyard. Then it plunged through the garage of the Baker home and crashed with an explosion that was felt and heard for miles.
BRITISH TO KNIGHT LT. GEN. . H. BRETT
BALBOA, June (Delayed) (U. P.).—Lt. Gen. eres H. Brett, chief .of the Caribbean defense command, in the near future will recelve the honor of knight commander of the order of the Bath from Charles Dodd, British minister of Panama, command headquarters announced today. The information was received here from the war department which inclosed a letter ‘from Viscount Haiifax, British ambassador to the United States, to Secretary of War Stimson, informing him of the award. 1
NORSE UNDERGROUND READY LONDON, June 7 (U. P.). — highly disciplined underground army of 500,000 will turn their guns on the German garrison of 200,000 the moment the allies invade Norway, Norwegian sources said today on the third anniversary of the Nazi conquest of Norway,
Pilot and Housewife Killed As 4th Practice Dive Fails
Special War Workers’ OWL SHOW! Wednesday Midnight, June 9th
The force of the explosion threw an automobile in the garage against the back of the house and ignited the Baker home, burning to death Mrs. Baker, who apparently was standing in the service porch at the time. The crash catapulted one of the huge motors across the street, where it grazed Louis Lamer as he was hoeing his victory garden. His injury was slight.
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