Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 January 1946 — Page 8
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MacArthur, who is the cele-
, playwright and huselen Hayes, came in
§
to
FLEE
Tries for Nylons “I've been waiting two he said. “Once legs just like yours get ou , but it turned out to be Iderly lady. You are the most _by| wonderful woman in the world, and 1 will get you some nylons.” Lillie squealed mildly, with Mr. MacArthur said he he was not crabbing the
hours to I saw a t
ped
MacArthur ventured that ble to|life out in Nyack, where he lives, is hectic, since Helen bought a dwarf Sicilian donkey for their been issued in}little boy. ; \ “Oan't keep him out of the house. revealed | Everytime the postman comes, the In{ donkey rushes in the door. He ate prewar up half the Christmas tree, and is tteries| yery untidy around the house. One of my friends suggested that this year the MacArthurs were dreaming of a white wing Christmas.” “What color is the donkey?”
g
INDIANA CENTRAL REGISTERS TUESDAY | "hat coor
Registration for the new semes-| “Oh, sort of donkey-colored,” reter at Indiana Central college will|plied Mr. MacArthur. . begin tomorrow, according to Rob-| The phone rang, Mr. MacArthur 4 answered it. “Fire house 22,” he said, and hung up. “Stop it, Charlie,” said Miss Lillie. “I have a good reputation here, up to now. You'll get me thrown out.” : Somebody, most likely me, asked Mr. MacArthur how his 25-year ca-
Bea Lillie . . . “Charlie's 8 wonderful man.”
“You've got the wrong word. It's innocuous, not iniquitous. But En-
which I have always remembered as demonstrative of the impossibility of arguing with a legend.
with big Jim Colosimo, a Chicago hood who also liked to eat cheese. Caruso was telling us one night about how he hated to sing Senta Lucia, which everybody always wanted to hear. “One night, as an encore, the audience yelled for “Santa Lucia.” Caruso got the worst tenor in the company, and hid him behind a screen. Sp, while Caruso opened his mouth and made the gestures, the bum tenor actually did the singing, The audience howled approvingly and clapped like crazy. Audiences, Well . . .. “ ‘Audiences!’ sald Caruso. ‘That's an audience for you.'” The talk got around to Germany and fraternization, and Mr. MacArthur recalled his own experiences there after world war I. “How was the fraternization then?” we asked MacArthur, “Instantaneous,” he replied, It came time to go. Miss Lillie sald goodby. Mr. MacArthur said goodby. “I hope I didn't spoil your talk with Miss Lillie,” Mr. MacArthur
reer of iniquity was getting along.
4
said,
Buge: rico Caruso told me something once
“Caruso used to'like to eat cheese|
~ 4
Dean Dirk
Roberts Park Church, :
8. ndel Shake, Invitations—Carl Zinn, chairman, Miss Ann Paisley, Ray
I L. Clark, Louis Bin Man tion—Ra man, Mr, and Mrs. and Mrs. Thom
rk, chairman, Miss Norma Oburn, Mrs. Thomas D. Cook, Mrs. Philip Berns, Betty Boink and Miss Ann Paisley. Pre-am-—Russell James, chairman, Adrian ilhote, Robert Crouch, alumni-secre-tary and Parker Jordan. Nominations—George IL. Clark, chairman, Mrs. Fred Barrows, Miss Virginia Benham and Fred Tucker. Public ip Mrs. June Moll Wilcox, chairman, 58 Marybell Bramhal, Miss Phoebe Alice Yeo and Miss Margo Stark. .
SONDERMANN GETS. ARMY PROMOTION
Fred A. Sondermann, son of Mr. and Mrs, Walter Sondermann, 2832 Park ave, has been promoted from technician third grade to technical sergeant. Sgt. Sondermann is assigned to the operations section of the South Pacific base command in New Caledonia. He has been in the army since July, 1943.
FIRST ORGAN B. C. WASHINGTON. —The first real musical organ, some claim, was built by an Alexandrian engineer in the third century B. C.; its pipes were supplied with air by a crude piston-type compressor driven by
s to Speak in
Miss | Children,” will begin Feb. 19 at
ni
|Artificial ‘Mesons Made at “G. E. Laboratory,
4 2 ~ NEW YORK, Jan. 28 (U. P).— Physicists have succeéded in artifically producing mesons, one of the chief constituents of - cosmic rays continually bombarding the earth from outer space, it was reTo produce the mesons, physicists at General Electric research labora[tory in Schenectady used their most |powerful tool—the 100,000,000-volt atom-smashing betatron, Last October, the veil of wartime security was lifted from the betatron, which propels the 100,-
Reminiscent of the zany prewar days is this picture of Paul Chutter, University of British Columbia student, about to swallow a live goldfish, He's making good
smashing the atoms by brute force. on a promise after a veterans or-
DUPLICATE PART |OF COSMIC RAY)
000,000-volt X-ray into a target, |; Although it opened up for labora- | 8
ganization passed the hat and [tory evploration a new energy|Jsnet Weaver, Mary Jo Cassady, Ma thema filed it with contributions to the |range—between 40,000,000 and 100, (BON. Barbara Meyer, | dora Richter, ui international students’ service [000,000 volts—the betatron output Catherine Stevens a fund : Just reaches the lower limits of the |, [ih Leo, Gene Voughn, Pied Sears ing cosmic ray range. Energies of the |ley, Anton Holevas, John Leisure, Dani Se Eateiatnment § s cosfic\ rays go up to billions of |Relchner, Carl Reifels, Walter Reinacker,| day Its. re She A omas Ressler, under the direction of vO chy, Joseph Mascari, Ronald Dorn-| Roseann’ Rider, pianist, and Miss Angouncement of production of feld, chard McMahan, Jack Bdwards meyer, trombonist.
.
Manual High Sch
AY, JAN. 28, 194 olastic and
~ War Stamp Honors Liste
~~ Manual Training high school an-{and fiounces awards for war stamp sales|" and the names of students excelling in scholarship for the semester
/ Albert Leyy presented senior high | meer roll room 1 and junior high roll| and P
room 332 -with war stamp sales awards, - Of the - $8500 netted in stamp . sales this semester, $6000 was used to equip two hospital centers. Also, two new stars were added to the school minute man flag. : Thomas Bernhardt, James O’Nan,| Albert Levy and Janice Mathews led the senior high school * ard tenners” with straight “A-plus”|s grades. ;
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Girls Sollowing Miss Mathews are Clee har Bm aneta Staten, Nila Jo Hawkins, Pat Hoffhein, Celia Passo,
Anona Wade, Phyllis Miedema, Joan MAY:
the artificial mesons was made at a meeting of the American Physical Society, in a series of four papers. The papers were by Dr. George C. Baldwin, - A. James Hartzler and Dr. G. Stanley Klaiber, all of the G. E. laboratory, and Dr. Marcel Schein, comsic ray expert at the University of Chicago, and consul tant to the laboratory.
QUILL AND SCROLL TO INSTALL 6 MEMBERS
Quill and Scroll will install six members of the Warren Central high school journalism department at 8 p. m. Wednesday in the home of Clyde Nice, journalism adviser. Probationary members are Margaret Higginbotham, associate editor; Doreen Sanders, publicity editor; Ann Goold, copy reader; Jacquelyn Kirby, girls’ athletics “reporter; Kenneth Tuxhorn, sports editor, and Glenn Gilstrap, business manager, . The ceremony will be in charge of Wanda Morris, president and feature co-editor; Mary Winslow, secretary and copy editor; Joann Wachstetter, G. I. editor; Virginia Bremer, feature co-editor, and
T0 START FEB. 19
Four weekly forums on the “Your
School 67, Mrs. Lola 8. Eller, principal, and Emmett A. Rice, director of special youth services in the Indianapolis public schools, announced today. Justin E. Marshall, head of the health and physical education department of Washington high school, will lead discussion at the first meeting on the topic “Your Child's Body; Its Growth and Care.” All meetings begin at 7:15 p. m. Forum leader on Feb. 26 will be Elizabeth O. Hester, Washington high school science teacher, who will speak on “Your Child's Mind; What You Can Do For It.” “Understanding an Adolescent” is the March 5 topic. Ellis B. Hargrave, vice principal of the high school, will be in charge. Conducting the last meeting on March 12, Rowland Jones, Washington’s basketball coach, will speak on “The Job of Being a Parent; Can You Take It?”
Ex-G. |., Native of Ft. Wayne, | ~ Signs as Radio Show Comic
By JACK GAVER United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, Jan. 28 (U. P).— The ‘Central high school crowd out in Ft. Wayne, Ind. ought to get an extra kick out of hearing Herb Shriner on the radio because he’s an alumnus of eight years ago. The same goes for ex-G. Is because Herb is an army alumnus of three months ago. Herb, who was coming along pretty well for a young fellow before the war, has had no trouble|a year ago last December fo sneaking back onto, the civilian|his outfit to leave Bastogne ih pay roll, where comics always are hurry, with the result that he aban welcome. {doned several excellent German After a few warm-up guest shots | made harmonicas which he ha on the air and some after-dinner managed to collect. appearances, Shriner felt sufficient-/| However, Herb got one prized ly at ease to put his name on a|possession out of Europe — a Gerd contract for the Philip Morris Fol-|man motorcycle. He found it aband lies of 1946. The singing star of doned in Cologne and proceeded td this new show is ex-G. I. Johnny dismantle it. He mailed it hom Desmond. {to Hollywood, Cal.,. a piece at
blond chap whose comedy is lin with current events. His delivery 1s somewhat on style of the late Will Rogers; h definitely not in the Snappy nig club comic groove. He writes his own radio materis depending pretty much on t newspapers for inspiration for h monologs, He started out as a xid harmonic) player in Pt. Wayne, still uses th instrument in his act. His bi regret is that the battle of the bulg]
water.
There is no charge for the forums. | Jackie. -Hertweek, editor-in-chief.
And Give Chantilly Perfume Lilting, romantic CHANTILLY perfume (by Houbigant that tells her how
capricious . . . how delightful she is... how everything about her goes straight
. Perfume oa £3, 6.50, S10 and 16.30 plus tax
to your heart . :
>." A - Se itt .
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* Mr. Shriner, now 27, is a tall, time, about 15 packages in
'Wasson's Toiletries, Street Floor
of
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paper
fired, with the re often with a brig a crowing rooster
. he'd told some Re
bought a & rooster on it. | Herb likes it so w almost have to p
Trapped in a
TRAPPED LIF was the situation
101 ¥
WINNIPEG, ( can Negro who si in a Canadian ve memories of a cr pleasure. Somewhere ne
he cooked for a rescue of Gen. C “We found his the arrows in his In SpanishHE COOKED as they prepared the Spanish-Ame record that he er force in 1914, a forced him to co By Mr. Brook: cruiting officer w “I'll put you agreed. Fabulous as at the Deer Lodg
large portions of he has told the
Aviat
BETHPAGE, sturdy amphibia. wealthy sportsm Aircraft Enginee it. Corporations, sales managers 3 entire Western h craft. Several sc hooks prove thi The United 8 lakes and stream a natural flying hig businessman for business pu something like t of-the-way hunt amphibian can I “Few people ! the safest busi country flying of said Leroy R. C
Versotile Lq
“WITH WHE and take off fro up it can land c of trouble, the : ing in brush or to the plane anc Coming off tl the two-engine: capable of carry tances’ of 640 t aimed to transy
LONDON, Js with Foreign M Commons. We walked t oldest part of t Rufus, It was sj though the secti of Commons sat I think this g uildings In the greatest single, Europe, Senato! together, were Ww tination, when dently was also rescue. He took corriders and sti I had often but never happe tefrace has alws a book, and lur was an entirely the bombings t down into these much whether f{ dows look out ©
Reminded c
LUNCH WA Bevin and Mr. | gate from Mexi of the old days children to the lawn, .» We both ho would begin age It is a lttle hu
