Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 February 1945 — Page 3

, : ! ® n . me ce : a 4 , wy | Son Doesn't Want to Emulate| Unit Leaders Plan Red Cross Drive | Women Are Found More Skeptical Than Men O R \ a o o By Science Service "teacher or ‘professional occupa-| with many more raised eyebrows: lead aruso gs peratic Inger SYRACUSE, N. Y, Feb. T—Are[tions. ~~ % | “Two hundred fifty pounds of ; ’ Fh you am easy mark for the person| Middle-aged people from 45 to 60 Srgey ors prepared for Tuinkss with N By MARIANNE . PACHNER His manner is polished, straight- who spreads ‘Tumors? -- years old believe the rumors more! 8 ving er at the army base. hited od » NEA Siaft Writer | «forward and energetic. He likes to An* investigation conducted at readily than do younger adults. Only = eight men . appeared to Ran) ex» CLEVELAND, O., Feb. 7.—Singer|talk and talks well, although he ; h the la Some rumors travel much farther oat it.” A : nkers. Enrico Caruso Jr., son of the world-| Will “mug” eloquently to put a story Syracuse university, ere, with. the Yan others, - Here is one that gets Soft drink manufacturers get so0|tives or personal friends in combat, president, J famous Italian.opera tenor, has no|a8cross, bringing both face and ald of the morale seminar of grad-|aceented: much tin for making bottle caps ...|If you have someone close to you , and Dr, i burning desire to become an oper- [hands into play. He ‘peaks Eng- uate students has revealed what] “A certain prominent govern- that it is meaningless to ask citizens overseas you are more likely to be« oul. of ton | atic star, At 29, he has made: bis lish, French, Spanish and“Italian, kinds of persons are likely to be-|ment official” so goes the rumor, '© Save their tin cans for™the war|lieve that others feel as you do— OR ha an ' _ mid-western debut here, playing a Dut says he can make love in any lieve rumors and -pass, them on|“has three cars and a large under-|**{0Ft: tant this fs everybody's war. ler the di igh z : language. There is a caressing lift & | + ._| « Forty-four out of a hundred peo- 1 ch tiv ‘ ¢ AULHEF nightclub en | land what sort of runiors are readily |8r0und storage tank filled with gas-| 3 Although such motives as’ these : gagement, to his voice. oline for his own use.” ple believed the first of theseigre powerful in influencing think po By The heir to the Life With Father believed. But the following are greeted| “Ors; only 13 out of a hundred|ing the person who believes rumors le nd greatest name id f that h Iways stood Details are reported by Prof. believed the other two. is not likely to be aware of how his _ operatic annals fy Soliissses hat Ds = Floyd H. Allport and Milton Lep-| BISHOP DENNIS LISTED! The People who tend to belleve own emotions make him suspicious . feels that com. awe o ou rumors of waste and” privilege, it|or gullible, the investigators come sier amental father, whose behavior was kin in the Journal of the Abno Was foul. ans u : y just as unpredictable at home as in and Social Psychology. AS FIRESIDE SPEAKER a I NY, onshier the valiites ; 2 : (U. Pla public. As children, neither he nor Despite the rumor that women iat i fai Hi re, 8 his brother would approach the are more addicted to gossip than Eshop Bred I Dennis of 'the Nhe a an is ST. JOHN’S SENIORS : 4 great man before first checking with men, this investigation showed that Northwest United Brethren area hostile, toward something OF somes a welding ll [2 secretary to find out the mood he men tend to swallow rumors of| Will address the Christian Fireside] fog pe yo wine coacy to neneee| FAN SKATING PARTY] + . steel LB wed was in, : heat) RE waste and -speclal ‘privilege to{Council for men Friday at 7:45 unfounded statements to the dis-| ‘The senior class of St. John's wll N to sing there, Enrico Jr _He recalls the iii ey Five hundred women are being recruited for the area division, one |3reater extent than do women. That|, m in the Purdué University Ex-|credit of that person ur thing. academy will hold a skating party biity ) Moreover, he feels that he didn‘t|mornings in the Ske n tin-toe| Of the major divisions, in the $1,145,500 Indianapolis Red Cross war |May be, however, because men hear | tension center. 2. Those who lack faith in their|{at 8 p. m. Monday at Riverside nt of the start the study of singing ear! one Saal sfourh = ti fund campaign to be held in March. Mrs. Charles A. Huff is division |More rumors. Paul H. Harlan, first vice presi-|fellow Americans. Belief in rumors|rink. ios eel insti- cr|and i Wilapes ii rH ‘chairman. The volunteers will solicit prospects in Marion county out- | Workers in. skilled trades be-|dent of Baptist Men, Ine, will give|is then an expression of general| Officers of the class who will be 0 of Cus- ’ chimed at 9 o'c wake and living side of Indianapolis. Shown here are four of the division leaders mak- |lieve such rumors more readily than (the devotions and C. H. Hopper, | cynicism. : in charge are: Virginia Tredway, ome steel preferring that he become a naval [the titan was now & normal basis. ing plans for their part of the drive. They are (seated) Mrs. Huff, do housewives and people of ooth council chairman, will preside.| 3. Those who are inconvenienced president; Betty Geiger, vice presie producing engineer, could proceed on & (left) and Mrs. Ted O. Philpott. (Standing) Mrs. Glenn Supple (left) [these occupations seem to be more|Charles Rogers and Mrs. Daniel R.|by the scarcity or rationing. The|dent; Lois Lohrman, parable 10 en I sing, people don't listen a got jole show sulitiess 18 and Mrs. H, E. Newby. gullible than are individuals in the |Ehalt will have charge of the music.|man for whom the gasoline short-|and Florence Zener, treasurer. y They listen early twen m— ) down on funds, he accepted a

3 : 3 Are Given Purple Hearts S 5 SAE SEAL o=4f ! Y : 2 » 2

“dle ones. S0 you see—" And he

- take him for an Am

" Cpl. Norman G. Hirschberger, son

.

WEDNESBAY, FEB. 7, 104

that.no two people hear the same thing. Why, after a performance one critic will come up to me and say: ‘You -have your father's top notes all right, but not his bottoms.’

“Another will congratulate me on|

my father’s bottom notes but will shake his head over the top ones. And a third will console nte with the fact that while I have neither my father’s top nor bottom notes, at least I do fairly well with the mid-

spreads his arms and shrugs his shoulders in the actor's gesture that means there's nothing more to be said. More Romantic

Caruso's son is far more romantic than his father. He is of medium height and heavy-set, but without the overweight of the great tenor, His dark hair has faint waves, his complexion is swarthy, and his face is expressive. Except for the very slight accent that creeps into his

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Discussing the opportunities open to’ a mature singer today, Caruso points out an interesting if menacing gremlin, -

Points Su ‘Difference

And that {is the ° “mike-condi-tioned” audience which is unable discern the difference betw 2 singer whose voice-range covers three octaves and is the result of years of study, and a run-of-the-mill crooner whose anemic three or four note range is amplified : by the microphone

He hastens to add that neither Bing Crosby nor Frank Sinatra fall

words which summed up tire profession. They were—

speech now and then, you would erican. ’

Four Marines From Here

ler st, and Cpl. Gerold G. Howard, son of Mrs. Lavera Howard, 220 8 Walcott st.,, were presented their medals at a South Pacific base. Both were wounded on Guam and have. returned to duty,

of Mrs. Fern Hirschberger, 1244 BE. Washington st., was presented the purple heart and a gold star in lieu of a second purple heart for wounds recelyed at Tarawa and Salpan. He was shot in the leg and “suffered shrapnel wounds in the back.

work! work!

surrounding a pillbox. During this battle. he received & head concussion from the muzzle blast of one of the:large guns firing on the pillbox, z Chl. Hirschberger, a veteran of 28 months overseas, is a student in the motor trancport school at Camp Lejeune, N. C. Cpl. Robert KE. Everett, son of Mra. Alice “Everett, 314 N. Audubon rd, received his purple heart at. his base in the South Pacific, He wounded on Saipan. x

Syria and Lebanon Raise

Obstacle

By GEORGE WELLER Times Foreign, Outrespondent / CAIRO, Feb. 7.~—Two :foundling republics of the Levant, Christian Lebanon and Arabian’ Syria, are showing signs of bringing the same difficultiés to the Middle East as Greece and Yugoslavia have brought to the Balkans. 3 Carved from the Ottoman empire by secret Franco-BritisH treaties during world war I, both baby republics gained hope of independence through Wilson's insistence at Vi sailles, which they are now implement . under the charter, : :

The issue at stake today is|and

whether France shall maintain control of their armies and be allowed to revive its Levantine prominence by sending new units of Charles “De Gaulle’s lend-lease armed divisions thither, 4 : Lebanese and Syrians? speaking from both London and the Middle East, have announced their. inten. tion of maintaining “ ence” by voting army credits into the budget. yf * Although divided by religious dif-

in Middle East

could have done so’ with British

su, rN ’ 5 on rough the .'Anglo's American landings in northern Africa and France, and through his alliance with ‘the Soviet Union, Gen De Gaulle - has : recaptured politically three sides of the glant quadrilateral’ of . France's prewar power. Whether France can reassert its influence in thé Levant will be de-

Syria and Lebanon seem to be heavily on British support, possibly. American, in their demands. The British 9th army still ‘dominates the Levant situation, as it did when a Nazi invasion of Turkey was threatened. o The British pipeline from Mosul reaches the coast at Tropoli, in ‘Lebanon. But Britain is still doing a straddle on the question of the

+ I Lebanon and Syria are among the “liberated” countries being dis-

treaties with Prance though they

A ‘The Indl Times 1945, by The Suapoiis 3

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