Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 November 1944 — Page 10
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SPEEDWAY HIGH CROUPS ELECT
Junior, Senior Debating Leagues Start Year's Program.
Flection of officers of the newly organized junior -and senior debating leagues of Speedway high school was announced today by Miss Donna Ruth Couch, debate coach. Senior league officers are Charles Brockman, president; James Nay, vice president; Jacque Schaefer, secretary, and Clark Hendryx, treasurer,” Eighth-grade junior league officers are Dean Senter, president; William Voorhis, vice president; Charlene Stevens, secretary, and Melba Harlan, treasurer, Seventh-grade . officers are John
Guion, president; Marjorie McDan-| 2
fels, vice president; Jane Kennedy, secretary, and Sara Mable Smith, treasurer.
Service Set for Dec. 4
Recognition service for the junior Speedway girl reserves will be held Dec. 4 at the Y. W, C. A, Newly elected cabinet officers are Jean Preble, president; Sara Smith, vice president; Armedia Fry, secretary, Barbara Butterworth, treasurer; Esther Clouse, inter-club council representative, and Dolly Coughlin, song leader,
Name ‘Speedette’ Staff |
Outcome of the election of staff members of the 1045 “Speedette,” | senior yearbook, was announced to-| day with Harriette Elder chosen as| editor-in-chief, Other staffers are Jacque Schae- | fer, business manager; William En- | gle, art editor; Georgia Foster, classes; Charles Brockman, sports; Katy VanKirk, organizations; Edyth Ann Chamness, advertising man- | ager; James Nay, subscription man- | ager, and Dorothy Phipps, photography.
WOMAN DISAPPEARS AS NEIGHBOR CALLS
LAKE RONKONKOMA, N. Y, Nov. 20 (U, P..—Mrs, Margaret Shellas, walking toward the burn-| ing garage of a neighbor, saw another neighbor on the path ahead of her, silhouetted in the firelight. “Hello, Edna!” she called.
Mrs, Bdna Newton turned to an-| their educational and trade train-| cial aviation after the war but add-
“helicopter-in-every-
swer and suddenly disappeared
[three of 69 veterans at the state
(U.S. # These four German prisoners in M 5th Army at Castel Del Rio,
p upon them by Der Fuehrer. &
Italy, have skidded far down the line from the once lofty title of “Master Race” bestowed They prove that war, and grime can be their downfall
SV
XP rm{) photo from NEA) the war camp of the U.'S
mud
a
126 World War Il Veterans
In State Penal Institutions 10 GLOSE BOMB BAY ie:
The first time Cpl. Albert W. | Burnside, 20, Indianapolis aerial | i" gunner, saw Germany in combat ®ve. he was hanging head-down from donghter of Mr
There are 126 world war II vet-| erans confined in Indiana's three adult penal institutions, the governor's office revealed today. In the state farm. at Putnamville, | one out of every 10 inmates is a veteran of the present war, Veteran prisoners are serving sentences ranging from 30 days to one year for minor law infractions, Fifty-
farm have honorable discharges. At the Indiana reformatory, 46 inmates, or one out of every 18, have world war II service records, Of these 19 were in the navy, 24 in {he army, two in the marine corps and one of the coast guard. Despite the fact that men under 30 are seldom committed to the state prison, 11 world war II dis~ |chargees are imprisoned at Michi|gan City, the governor's report stat-
led. There are 70 veterans of world
high
young men . were called into the service before they had completed school,” the governor declared, “It's the duty of the state to see that they are equipped to earn a livelihood upon their release from our correctional institutions. “I am convinced that the military training received by these boys will in no way be held responsible for increased law violations, However, it is inevitable that during the conversion from war to peace there will be some disturbance in our economic system.” He said it is “economical” to prepare for this disturbance by establishing a “good, workable rehabilitation program in Indiana's correctional institutions.”
HELICOPTER UPKEEP SEEN AS EXPENSIVE
HANGS HEAD DOWN
lthe cat-walk of a B-24 Bomber,
force operating from Italy.
Munich.
up with their formation.
| 444, Indianapolis,
22,154 HOUSES BUILT
Rae (vA Rimaerirso in
ei — _ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES A Slump in 'The Master Race"
DEPAUW SIGNS 36 FROM HERE
Total of 1475 Students Listed at Greencastle For ‘Winter Term.
Times Special GREENCASTLE, Nov, 20.—Thirtysix Indianapolis students are among the 1475 pupils registered at DePauw university for the winter
semester, Students from Indianapolis include Doro. thy Giles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, 1. V, Giles. 3630 Guilford ave.; Sally Mitchell, daughter of Dr, and Mrs. Edward L. Mitchell, 3710 Washington blvd; Nancy . daughter of Mr, and Mrs, J. Dan . “26 Maple ct.; Millicent Gemmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Arthur F. Gemmer, 9505 Washington bivd,; James Hall, son of Mr, and Mrs, James F. Hall, 865 Berkley rd.; Louise Martin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sumner L. Martin, 6234 Haverford ave; Betty Lou Mercer, daughtér of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Mercer, 6335 W, Morris st.; Mary Dale Metzger, of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur M. Metzger, 4025 Central ave.; Norma Oburn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George H. Oburn, 5020 Central ave: Marian Osborn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank V. Osborn, 573% N, Pennsylvania st, Others are Martha Payne, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Marrell Payne, 6522 Pleasant Run pkwy., Juanita Pyrits, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Pyritz, 5402 Ross- : Isabel Remy, daughter of Mr, . W. H. Remy, 44 E, 54th st; Helen Reis, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, George E. Reis, 21 Meridian bl.; Miriam oberts, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. W. T. Roberts, 98 F. Maple rd.; Ann Splegel, daughter of Mrs. and Mrs. Rollin W, Spiegel, 128 W, 173d st.; Bally Stewart, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. James T, Ste~ wart, 35 W. 33d st.; Patricia Stutz, daughand Mrs. E. Harold Stutz, 348 ave. Melville Weesner, daughand Mrs. Walker J. Weesner, Jo Jeen Wheeler, daugh-
=z
y ave
His experience in the stratosphere over Germany was reported by superior officers in the 15th air
On his first mission with a bomber crew, Cpl. Burnside was working in the bomb bay when the doors failed to close after the bombs dropped on a rail center near
He hung himself headfirst down in the bay and wired the doors shut, thus enabling the pilot to|c, maintain sufficient speed to keep
He is the husband of Mrs. Genevieve D. Burnside, R. R. 10, Box
war
I, and a lone veteran of the
KANSAS CITY, Mo, Nov. 20 (U.
{Spanish-American war. | Upon recognition of the incar-| | ceration of many veterans in state
er last spring ordered a survey of|
from sight. She fell into a six-foot ing possibilities.
hole and emerged uninjured,
Pointing out that “many of these s
Bo
; I y te
{P.).~W. Laurence Lepage, alrcraft predicted today |penal institutions, Governor Schrick- | that the helicopter would bring im-
company executive, portant developments in commer-
| ed that the
| garage” thesis -was improbable,
reported today
1940.
WASHINGTON, Nov, 20 (U, P.).— Administrator John .B. Blandford | —Compulsory military training for {Jr. of the national housing agency all Argentine citizens of both sexes that September between the ages of 12 and 50 was war housing construction amounted to 22,154 units, bringing to 1,708,238 the total completions since July,
Wheeler, 3867 daughter of | 3864 Guilford
. and Mrs, O. C Park ave: Barbara Wilde, and Mrs. Carl Wilde, are Carolyn Wilson, and Mrs. L. J. Wilson, | 8270 N. Chester ave.; Margaret Buchelder, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold K. Bucheled, 1927 N. Delaware st; Joan Bartley, daughter of Dr. and Mrs, D. A Bartley, 4738 N. Pennsylvania st; Veronies Bowen, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. James H. Bowen, 4027 Carrollton ave. Earl Capehart, son “of Mr. and Mrs. Homer E. Capehart, 5440 N. Meridian st.; Jean Clark, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. John T. Clark, 4045 Carrollton mve.; Dorothy Combs, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bert IL. Combs, 5732 N. Delaware st; Nancy Emerson, daughter of Mrs, Frances Emerson, 5210 Washington bivd.; Barbara Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Evans, 7240 N. Pennsylvania st.; Ann Parquer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pred W. Parquer, 64 N. Tremont ave; Margaret Pish, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Fish, 213 Buckingham dr.; Verna Hanspeter, daughte of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hanspeter, 5825 Illinois st.; Eleanore Havens, My, and Mrs. V. E. Havens, 5452 University ave.; Mary Henshaw, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. William J. Henshaw, 3145 N. Delaware st., and Jean Hixon, daughte of Mr. and Mrs. Orval 8. Hixon, 4620 N. Pennsylvania st.
DECREES TRAINING
BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 20 (U. P).
registered
| decreed by the government yesterday under a new “organic law of |the army,” providing far-reaching
‘ OR ri i A
sional maps—made from rubber
it no task at all to carry a whole after the briefing session,
Constructed from molds cast from original models, three-dimen-
and marine operations in all theaters of war, In the top picture, Lt. John Barclay of Philadelphia puts one of the models to work in a briefing session én route to the Saipan invasion, while in the lower picture, Lt. Dick Klett, air combat intelligence officer, finds
MONDAY, NOV. 20, 1944
GREECE RENEWS
English-Held Island Again Is Subject of Discussions.
Times Foreign Service ATHENS, Nov, 20. —Greece’s ethnic claims against Britain for restoration of the island of Cyprus have been renewed lately by Pre= mier George Papandreou’s news paper Kathimerina Nea. The population of Cyprus is ale most wholly Greek and the Cyprie otes have been fighting on the Italian front. ; “The Cyprus matter lies between Britain and Greece,” sald Kathie merina Nea, in a recent lead edie torjal, ' “since - Greece's historical rights to the ‘island are beyond question. “Whatever happens, the wish of the Greek population there to be united to the motherland will be recognized and the aspirations of this magnificent part of the Greeks people will be carried out.” Britain and Greece last discussed Cyprus in August, 1935, when King George's restoration was being pree pared by the then dictator, Gen, George Kondylis, In event of war with Italy, Britain promised Greece that ib would get the Dodecanese except Cos and Castelrosso, which were pledged to Turkey. At that time Foreign Minister John Theotokis, the royalist lead= . er, asked whether Cyprus would be ceded to-Greece, but the British niidister to Athens declined to dis= cuss the possibility. . Cyprus may play a role in Greece's third mounting of the throne after a plebiscite similar to that of the Dodecanese, in the 1933 restoration, which led to four years of dictatorship by Gen. John Metaxas.
and substitutes—now aid naval
batch of the rubber terrain maps
Times Foreign Service ATHENS, Nov. 20.—How two Balkan kings kept abreast of worldwide affairs, as the allies saw them, by the clandestine use of a Nazi invention under the very noses of the gestapo, now has been revealed in Romania and Bulgaria. Soon after the Nazis moved in on Bucharest and Sofia, they brought new hellschreibers (“plain writers”), a magical machine which transforms certain radio impulses into words. The apparatus was intended to enable official agencies to
| reorganization of the armed forces.
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Copyright, 1944, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
FRENCH POPULATION DECLINES RAPIDLY]
PARIS, Nov. 20 (U. P.).—There
But when the gestapo cat was away, the Balkan mice busied themselves playing—and ' listening
if
|
|" CYPRUS CLAIM
to London, which also has a wellknown hellschreiber. Bulgaria's King Boris (now dead) and Romania's King Michael had
guards posted at their doors to give warning if, the Nazis approached
will be at least 1,000,000 less Frenche men after the war than there were at the beginning, according to Jean Delteil, director of the French Ale liance against Depopulation. He is the father of 10 children.
Deaths have exceeded births in France ever since 1935, and if the dipping pre-war birthrate curve continues, the French population will drop from the 41,907,056 shown in the 1936 census to only 29,000,000 in 1985.
while the news tickers of the Nazis merrily clicked off the details of allied advances. Michael was reading 30 pages a day when the Russians arrived.
Copyright, 1044, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
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WITH ADM.
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