Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1945 — Page 14
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|Local Woman Is Feted as . Promising Modern Writer
By SHERLEY UHL Indianapolis litterateurs, more {popularly known as people who read things other than newspapers and [trolley bus ads, paid homage yes{terday to a native daughter. | She is shy, demure Miss Mar|guerite Young, Indianapolis - born (author and a graduate of Butler university. | An-attractive* young woman with (bangs, Miss Young stood around Imodestly while peoplé praised her. | To borrow a phrase from those {book-jacket blurbs; Indiana ap(pears to have another literary star
or TIP pe.
| Industrial Union council two terms.
BENNETT ELECTED ©
President of Allison local No. 933, United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, C. I. O,, is John E. Bennett Jr. He defeated Ray (Mack) MeDonald in a run-off election held last night. Mr. Bennett has been a vice-president of the Indianapolis Elected second vice-president was| Cale Dick, who defeated George Cooperider. :
ALLISON UNION HEAD.
1d
A
x oo
Ste SPRIDAY, MARCH.30,1865
is held. Harold Todd was recorded |in April
Thy state-wide member
as receiving one more vote than|ship will carry on its work in com-
Maurice Goss, also was in doubt, with Harold Collier ‘receiving four more votes than George Ramsey. Other officers elected were Charles Beaver, first vice-president; Robert | Lipp, sergeant-at-arms; Miss Reva! Saucier, recording secretary; Maur ice Price, bargaining committee chairman, and Chronicles Blanks, George Brooks and John Craft, executive board members.
MEETING CANCELLED Due to government request for
Winner of the financial secretary= treasurership race may not be de- | termined until a run-off election!
curtailment of travel, the Indiana Council of Mathematics Teachers will not hold its annual convention |
The post of guide |mittees or by mail.’
CONFIDENTIALLY ARE YOU A HAS-BEEN?
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(flaring across its horizon. Anyway, [that was the opinion of most everys= body present. | Reputation Established - | Miss Young's reputation is -al- [Tt Will be released soon. \ready established in eastern book- | That's what the cocktail reception ish circles where she's rated as one! was all about. Miss Young is on her of America’s most promising writers! way down to New Harmony, Ind.
n tl "es ; ] - Fos li progressive and ultra-modern with Mr. Taylor and a couple of Life ‘
| All those gathered in the Clay-|™a8azine men. New Harmony, and | pool hotel's Louis the Fourteenth | the experiment in socialized living | room were eager to talk about Miss| Which blossomed there more than a Young, except Miss Young. She century ago, is the subject of “Angel | didn't say anything much. Ati!D the Forest.” |frequent’ intervals she was hemmed MISS Young explains simply that in by admirers, literary critics (and P the novel she is striving to show | reporters) who competed in a tor. the inter-connection between all rential outpouring , of literary things at all times. terminology. . “The fact that Jonah was swalEssentially a poet, Miss Young lowed by a whale probably has some | | writes : in what ‘is known as the | bearing on the present, if you could
n > ” i Imagist or symbolist style, which is follow the sequence in time,” she [another way of saying her material 2 Sa > : {is more or less out of this world. | Miss Young's mother is Mrs. John {Even her publisher, Frank Taylor | Allison of Dana, Ind, Ernie Pyle's
home town.
REPORTS ZEPPELIN DESTROYED BY NAZIS
Mr, Taylor, who attended yes-| WITH STH INPANTRY DI iterday’s affair, said Miss Young's | VISION, March 29 (Delayed)— {writings were deeply philosophical | U. P).—A German engineer dis{with profound undercurrents. He | closed today that the Nazis blew up {said they were democratic. He also!ipe famed Gr {sald she was a confirmed Democrat. ! Miss Young discreetly describes
Marguerite Young . .', “My style is rococo.” Sh
Association of University Women.
lof the Reynal and Hitchcock publishing firm, admits her stuff is inothing for the average, casual reader, to pick up on-a warm day. ‘Deeply Philosophical’
af Zeppelin, together
with its hangar, in 1939 and melted down the metal framework.
An... Easter Message
from the VICTOR FURNITURE CO. by Gilbert Forbes . . .
v
N ideal was born two thousand vears ago,-filled
with promise for all thosé who could grasp its full meaning.
Thru the vale of tears, it passed thru “the valley of the shadow of death,” emerging victorious over the abysmal darkness of ignorance and greed.
Time and again the “stone” has had to be rolled from the door of the “sepulchre” by the power of man’s aspirations toward decency. Catclysmic as the current struggle has been—and promises to be for same time to come—the soldier has never lost faith. His grasp
of the Great Ideal is strongly personal.
His understanding of
decency, in the midst of a holocaust, is marked for its clarity and devoid of ostentation.
He knows suffering for a purpose and is even willing to pay the supreme cost of providing a .decent, enlightened ‘world for his children . . . or,”having none, for his neighbBor’s children.
Taught—as he had to be—to meet the foe of the Great Ideal—" the soldier's understanding of Easter is profound, yet simple. Perhaps he doesn’t put it in so many words, but this defender of decency has had passed to him a “cup” that is bitter and one which
contains the shattered hopes of generations gone!
But, with it
has come to him a new wisdom, a stronger belief in the higher values of living, so that others may be spared the dying.
Around him are the white crosses so symbolic of Gethsemane—but ahead —the victory and the Cross to which he and all others might
cling.
The Rock of Ages . . . sturdier because the soldier kept
faith with the Great Ideal.
. use Directly Oppotite Slateho
:
The Victor Furniture Co. . presents Gilbert Forbes in “Hi-Lights at Hi-Noon” -.over WFBM every Sunday. -
her- style as a “mixture of Biblical | metaphor and realistic detail.” She!
says it is “rococo.” Ornate an : fancy to vou d engineer on the Graf Zeppelin and . hi {Germany's two other great dirigibles,
A contributor to magazines since i ee “the Von Hindenburg ‘and Deutschshe was 18, Miss Young graduated gE b
from Manual high school ‘and Butler university, where she says her | J : : greatest influence was Mrs. Alice emon viceRecipe
Wesenberg, an instructor. While at
| Butler, she was a member of the Checks Rheumatic | poetry club. Pain Quickly
| Later she _taught English and ther s Shortrid other subjects at Shortridge high| 1 you suffer trom rheumatic, arthritis or school. She received her M A Rutius Jun, wo Beis simple inexpensive home . al ousands are using. Get - degree from the University of Chi- |age ot Ru-Ex Compound. a two-week Supply | 4 : . ra ¥ Mix it with a quart of water, add the | cago in 1936 and will be granted 8 juice of 4 lemons. It's easy. No trouble at | Ph D. at Iowa university, where 3204 oleasuit, You ated only 3 tablespoon- : mes a ay. ften t she studied philosophy on a fellow-| — sometimes overnight — spiendia. resulta irs ship, this year, } pbtaineq, If the pains do not quickly leave : and if you do not feel better, return the Her first novel, “Angel in
the | smpty package and Ru-Ex will cost you nothForest,” was penned on a $1500 fel- | an guarantee. Ru-Ex
wy as it is sold by your dr i 3 2Doiute. meticn-Diol | uggist under 'S / rt] | Com lowship awarded by the American! grug stores everoonorie 42d recommended by
The incident was revealed by Wilhelm Fleucht, former assistant
(land.
ER 2
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