Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 September 1946 — Page 21
10, 1946
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TUESDAY, SEPT. 10, 1
3 Day Centenn
Is Planned by Indiana Betas GAMES ST STYMIED
Times State Sgfvice ® BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Sept.
More than 300 members of oo] Indiana university chapter of the |
Beta Theta Pi fraternity will meet | ere for. a three-day celebration, | ept. 13 to mark the géntennial of the ‘Pi chapter, the second oldest Greek-letter -chapter in the state. The chapter was established 'in August, 1845, but the centennial celebration was delayed by the war. More than 200 Indiana Betas were in the armed services. In charge of arrangéments and program for the meeting will be Albrecht R. C. Kipp, Frank C. Dailey, Carl F. Eveleigh, J. Howard Alltop, Eugene C. Miller, Carl J. Wilde, of Indianapolis; William A. Kunkel Jr., Ft. Wayne; Oscar R. Ewing, New York City: Charles A. Halleck, Rensselaer, Sembower, Chicago.
THe celebrations will center around the Well house on the Bloomington campus, built in the
shape of a Beta pin. The Well] house, erected to cover an old cam-
& ry
Gq
GALLANT JOURNEY
| wonderful love
SOIR |
starring |
HT IER
A COLUMBIA PICTURE
Coming te Loew's
Lr. |
> Ca
[| ———
TRADE IN
FOR HIGHEST A ALLOWANCES |
> ser QPRIATNY |
{ and John P.!
| ticket.
an ial Program
pus well of “the '00s, ‘was. given
-| by Theodore F. Rose, "5, of Muncie, |
a trustee and a member of the | Beta fraternity. The Indiana chapter has enrolled | more than 1000 members' in the | last century,
House Shortage Hits Symphony
The soul-searing, sole-wearing | struggle: with the Indianapolis housing shortage will soon be a problem for some 12 married members of the Indianapolis Symphony, v This announcement was made today by. Howard Harrington, | chestra manager, who added that the orchestra's business staff have been bending every effort to find accommodations for the returning musicians. Search complicated by the fact that near{ly all the returning married musi{cians have children, ton “stated. “With .so many doors closed to couples with children, the Symphony members may undergo | real hardships. | Six marriéd musicians beginning their first season in Indignapolis are Philip Huffman, horny Sam | Gordon, bassoon; Edward Ormond, | viola: Frederick Schmitt, horn: Earl V. Schuster, first oboe, and Horace «Gaims, cello. Married members returning from
previous seasons include Fay Jennings, first bass; Jacob . Blatt! { violin; John K.”Mooradian, Sidney
| Szathmary, violin; viol, and Rudolph 1 Uhlik; flute,
Film Star, Esther Swap War. Time Tales
{ | HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 10 (U. P.) —| |
Actress Vera Hruba Ralston and her father today exchanged stories of her movie stardom and his eight years of war privation inh Czecho-
| slovakia.
Rudolph Hruba, who had not seen
his daughter since she left Prague | ar-|
one jump ahead of the Nazis, rived here by train yesterday.
REDS WITHDRAW N.Y. CANDIDATES
{ ALBANY, ‘N. Y., Sept. 10 (U. P.). | =—=The Communist party has with- | drawn its entire slate of candidates in New York—with one exception— |in order to “advance a common | electbral front and defeat the re- | actionary Dewey slate” in the No- | vember elections, Gov. Thomas E, Dewey is seek{ing re-election, with Irving Ives his running mate for the U. S.
I senatorship. Today's Communist ac-
tion meant the party would throw
‘its support to U. S. Senator James
Mead #hd Herbert Lehman who
jare seeking the governorship and
senatorial post on the Democratic!
REPLACES HOPKINS
TOKYO, Sept. 10 (U. P.).—Maj. Gen. Francis H. Griswold, Alex-|
{andria, La., today was assigned to {replace Brig. Gen. Frederick L Hopkins Jr., Yonkers, N. Y.,
commanding general of the 20th air force.
“LOO
International
K LUCKY LADY",
Beautiful Permanents at SPECIAL PRICES
Personal Supervision and Modern Equipment
Beauty ‘School a hg
in its e
P1141 beauty “rs
ad
Tt its CHARI TS passions.
LEE J. COBB ~ GALE SONDERGAARD - Screen Play by Talbot Jennings and Sally Benson - Based Upon the Biography by Margaret Lando
. Starts Tomorrow! J
Darryl F. Zanuck
presents
IRENE DUNNE
REX HARRI
LINDA DARNELL oi | KING gp
104N cho wi
Louis 0. 0. UEHTON
MIKHAIL BASTNNY-+ DENNIS HOEY
pé
or=|
for adequate housing is |
Mr. Harring- |
James Swindells, |
{ Meanwhile, | ments, veterans of the Italian cam- | paign,
{64 staff officers will head for the
| river crossings away from the high- | way.
. TIT0 RENALDO «= RICHARD Lyon
¢' ; @
ARCTIC AR WR,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __ Featured Players on Local Screens
6:03,
stopped dead. Hundreds of men | .
ans sere or mor Tams Mussolini’ s Model Film City
center this summer—are idle. At the last minute, the air forces strategic bombing command discovered | it had failed to consult Canada, | which controls much of the Arctic skies, Today, there is little prospect of clearance before spring. So it is likely that another year will pass before winter flying maneuv ers can
get under way. | miles outside Rome. + Everyone at Fault | A pet project which Tl As far as can be ascertained here, turned over to his son, Vittorio, to it is no one’'s—and everyone's—fault. play around with in the prewar! here Air force planners went ahead in| | years, Cinecitta now is a teeming goal
Now Shelter
By JOHN A. THALE ~ Times Foreign Correspondent CINECITTA, Italy, Sept.” 10.— Dramas greater than any ever con- | cetved by a movie director are being] Jobs.
good faith. Canada is as interested | cantonment. of world refugees, be- refugees here awaiting resettlement. ing cared for by the United Nations! The preferences, he asserted, are the relief and rehabilitation adminis-| United States, British colonies, dnd | South America, and then Palestine. | Most of those being ‘repatriated |
as we are If Canadian and ‘Amer-| ican industrial centers are to re- | main free from the threat of enemy | tration. - planes flying across the top of the War victims of some 54 nationali-| world, northern skies must be con- ties are here, making their plans| quered. Any enemy bombers must |to go back to uprooted homes, look- | be intercepted in the far north |ing forward to starting ‘a new life! before they reach our cities. With {in a new country, or merely living! atomic warfare, the need is obvious, | out their time from day to day, unMaj. Gen. F. F. Worthington, in| willing to go back and desperately | command af Edmonton, had never uncertain about going forward. [heard of the -air forces project. | He immediately began efforts to ob- | tain the necessary clearance. But! It's still a typical movie lot, but somewhere—in Washington or Ot-|the stucco walls are pocked and tawa—the roadblock could have [scarred with bullet holes. | been avoided. The sad and unkempt people All of the picture.is not so dark. trudging the graveled walkways of| Canadian and American troops | ¢ ‘film city” are not extras hired for | have taken part in Canada’s Musk- | 8 super-colossal war epic. They are ox. Lessons learned there are now | People who have lived events which being used by both. | make celluloid features pale by| comparison, Hols Tmportant Post en chance have these peopls Col. Joseph Stilwell Jr, is Gen. of finding that traditional “happy | Worthington’s American liaison |
| , | ending” here? U.N.R.R.A. offi-| with the Western Defense Com-| | cials, doing all in their power, can Fmand in Edmonton. Col.
Stilwell | op) shrug.” Most of the endings, is the son of Lt.
Gen. Joseph Stil- | jike the people themselves, will be well, who heads the American o.,, and indefinite. |
Western Defense Command at San Cinecitta is what is known techFrancisco. | nically as a “transit” camp. Groups | Young Col. Stilwell served with| are formed here for repatriation to his father in Burma. Today, he! | their home countries. Others are
Still Typical Lot
There is a permanent corps of] about 500, mostly Jews. Jon and on, working at various odd !
| played in real life today at Benito| those refugees who won't go back | | Mussolini's “film city” here a few|to their own countries, and for | whom Duce! haven't been made. A British official for U. N. R. R. A.!
{INDIANAPOLISE
“Cuban Pete,”
1.44,
“Times Amusement
Clock
CIRCLE
On _ the stage--Johnny Long, his orchestrasand show, at 1:00, 3:49,
8:07 and 10;31, with Desi Arnas
3 i and his orchestra, at 11:24; 2:13, Joint Canadian . J werden in ni . ' | ® “INDIANA Plans Lack Co-ordinatipn. | « rtd pA te mead s : Andrews, Brian Donlevy and Susan ‘By JIM G. LUCAS : 3 Hayward, 11:35, 1:40, 3:45, 5:50, Soripps-Howard Staff Writer ’ and 10:08 . FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Sept. 10.—| g & COEW'S Joint Canadian-American “defense | & « Pe mn Avan Monigomery, : at 11, 1:45, 4:38, 7:31 and 10:27. | planning in the far north lacks co- i Loon dbo Mi inf A * | ordination. Donna Jie and ro Prake, at “Monsieur Beau- Irene Dunne; starred in “Anna H, an Toy s a result, one of our air force Bob Hope, in ; r A Al's ee Y, one of ‘wl caire,” Jn its last day. at the and the King of Siam,” opening LYRIC u maieuvers, scheduled Jo get U0"1 yyrie! toduy. tomorrow at the Indiana. Magi Mog i i gh der way this winter, has heen| —————————
3:45, 5:40, 7:83 and 9:57
now
at approximately. a _600-a-
month clip are Austrians, Greeks, Poles
and Yugoslavs,
for Retgres
They stay |
This corps is composed of | resettlement
arrangements |
declared Palestine is mot the of a majority of the Jewish
FRED WARING
PENNSYLVANIANS
Tickets on Book Shop, Ticket Agency, 134 Monument Circle. accepted.
BUTLER FIELDHOUSE Saturday, Sept. 28, 8:30 p. m. $3.60
and His
10 Artists
sale now—Meridian
Mail orders
$2.40 $1.80 $1.20
YOU'RE GOING | TO FALL IN LOVE WITH A HORSE!
GALLANT BESS
M-6- M's NORSE WITH THE NUMAN MIND
EN ROUTE TO
acts as ex-officio member of Gen. | processed through in the routine of
Worthington's staff, has access to | being transferred from one camp to his files and is on familiar terms
| another. with his subordinate commander. | Usually, there are about 1200 | “Col. Stilwell could go into one refugees in the camp. About 10 per |
of my divisions and take command | cent of them are children under 14, | tomorrow,” Gen. Worthington said. and men outnumber worffen by | Recently, Gens. Worthington and | about two to one.
x
mutual defense. Arrangements are being made for Canadian liaison officers at San Francisco, with the | Western Defense Command, and at IP. Richardson, Anchorage, with] the department of Alaska. Veterans Maneuver two Canadian regi- |
} adian Pacific coast, Siscussing | | |
Stilwell toured the Alaskan-Can-|
have started up the Alaska | highway on a 60-day reconnais- | sance mission. They will remain in | Yukon territory until winter sets in, learning its terrain, Still later,
same territory on Canada’s Operation North, a project to locate
Gen. Worthington plans to con2 ries. of maneuvers this winter with American troops.
An astounding : the art
SN
| FRANCS LEDERER REGINALD OWEN
§ os
. EXTRA
BURGESS MEREDITH- HURD HATRIELD
win JUDITH ANDERSON FLORENCE BATES - IRENE RYAN
Produced by BENEDICT BOGEAUS " BURGESS MEREDITH Directed by JEAN RENOIR ond from the novel by OCTAVE MUOEAD
Aad Da play by ANDRE REUSE, ANDRE BE LORDE and TMICLLY NORES - Scroanplay by Burgess Meredith - RELEASED THRO OMITED ANISES,
BLAMES. LONELINESS [= FOR 8 BURGLARIES"
VINCENNES, Ind, Sept. 10 (U,
P) ~~Jack L. Dooley, 21, today faced) _*-_
a prison term of 10-t0-20 years after he confessed eight burglaries. He pleaded guilty before Judge
LAST DAY HOPE - HAPPY
SHORTS AND NEWS LAST Jwo DAYS
LLB TIA 111}
a
LE Ld HESTRA Thursday—Stan Kent
kl
7% |
a Crab Cili. PAL TRIGGER
wser-<Freddie “FREDDIE STEPS
Mane Ts Waalt, "hiranee 0
“Lost Clty of dw
iN i I
PRIMITIVE EMOT
»
ILS YL EE SOUARE
LR TONITE—Adults, 5:45 to 6-30¢ Bette Davis—Glenn Ford
“STOLEN LIFE”
Frances Langford “Bamboo Blonde”
_GooL AICI
104% VIG INIA AVE,
TONITE—Adults, 5:45 to 6—30¢ Chas. Coburn—Tom Drake
“THE GREEN YEARS”
L. Bowman, Walls Come Tumbling Down
NORTH SIDE Stratford [0.5 Seer
“LOVE. LETTERS" Plus Selected Short Subjects I — Open 6:15 Aaibott 224% Free Parking Don Ameche—Myrna Loy “80 GOES MY LOVE" Dorothy Lamour—Eddie Bracken “RAINBOW ISLAND" in Color
Neighborhood Theater Director
ia
~ EAST Spe.
5:45 to 6—30¢ Charles Selena COBURN ROYLE
“The Green Years”
Chester Morris—Jeft Donnell
“Phantom Thief”
p— ("om forfadly COOL I!
ThafSCURE |
NEWS
Plus—
SELECTED
"THE DEVIL'S MASK", with ANITA LOUISE
* JIM BANNON
SHORT
4 sm CTS
STARTS
TOMORROW
’
BOOKS OPEN 10:45 AN.
’ : i“ Ne
+
LAE
®
5
INGRID BERGMAN ROBT. MONTGOMERY
“RAGE IN HEAVEN"
“Fit In MR
® ENDS TODAY ® 1
LAST TIMES TONIGHT
Claudette i | MILLAND. COLBERT O'KEEFE Pret SE LA LOVE” adeleine Stiri MacMURRAY CARROLL HAYDE “VIRGINIA R E xX "81st and WA. Northwesiers 0259 Wm. Powell—Fred Ast “ZIEGFELD FOLLIES” ry olor
TALBOTT "io sd
Ladd Veronica Lake “BLUE DAHLIA" “CAUGHT IN THE DRAFT”
8th dnd Centra) HELD OVER-—FINAL NIGHT Rita Hayworth §4 " Glenn Ford GILDA Plus Selected Short Subjects
CINEMA 16th and S:5to 6 {
Delaware .28¢, Plus Tas | Maureen O'Hara—Dick Haymes |
“D0 YOU LOVE ME?"
Pius Selected Short Subjects
1502 Roosevelt gi Hollywood 2 Rose Gall Patrick “MADONNA'S SECRET” “VALLEY OF THE SUN"
5:45 to Charles COBURN
6—30¢ Tom DRAKE
“The Green Years”
Chester Morris—Jeff Donnell
L “Phantom Thief”
PARAMOUNT
rw E Wash 88 at New Jersey Roy Rogers—Dale Evans “SONG OF ARIZONAY gan “NIGHT EDITOR"
an
ary
Ray Milland
“One More Tomorrow”
“Well-Groomed Bride” |.
Ann Sheridan
| TACOMA sd R Aalingua
Bob Hope—RBing Hy. “ROAD TO UTOPIA“ Plus Short Subjects
| TUXEDO
Gale Storm “SWING PARADE OF 1946”
w20 E. New York Veronica Lake—Alan Ladd
“THE BLUE DAHLIA” =r
FINAL NIGHT, 5:45 to 6—25¢, Plus Tax Chas. Coburn—Tom Drake 4 » “The Green Years Lee Bowman—Marguerite Chapman “Walls Come Tumbling Down”
WED Alan Ladd<=Heten Watker - . “LUCKY JORDAN" Dor. Lamour ‘Aloma of the South Seas’
4630
Cool EMERSON .*7i%,
Ann Sheridan—Dennis Morgan “ONE MORE TOMORROW”
Ray Milland--Olivia. De Havilland
“WELL-GROOMED BRIDE”
wm “ss
Bing Coon ris Bergman “BELLS OF ST. MARY'S” Color Cartoon—L ate News
Charles Selena | COBURN ROYLE
“The Green Years”
Chester Morris—Jeff Donnell
“Phantom Thief”
SOUTH SIDE AVALON 0. 00 Bing Crosby “DUFFY'S TAVERN" Richard Arlen “IDENTITY UNKNOWN" GARFI™LD O00 ob a) Ladd—Veronica Lake BLUE DAHLIA
Judy Canova i “HIT THE HAY" 1108 Prospeet
SANDERS "fo Geo, Murphy “BROADWAY RHYTHM" Jack Haley “PEOPLE ARE FUNNY"
Sheldon LEONARD
Pamela BLAKE
| Why Girls Leave Home Leo Carrillo—Tom Neal
“Crime, Inc.”
EAST SIDE | MECCA . 10.
“DARK WATERS | Gilbert - Roland “GAY CAVALIER" =
Merle Oberon’
LAL} COND id [S500 BE. WASH - 5:4 |: DEANNA DURBIN ~GENE KELLY ~ “Christmas Holiday” YVONNE DeCARLO—DAVID ‘BRUCE “Salome, Where She Danced”
‘FOREVER AND A DAY} WED. : “LUCKY JORDAN" 4
PARKER
| ‘Mysterious Intruder’
30 Open CH. E tth S45 6200 Ronald Reagan—Jane Wyman Wayne Morris “BROTHER RAT” Hopalong Cassidy “FALSE COLORS” de ETT 111! 6116 E.WASH* IN-5000 Ist Irvington Showings!
Rita Hayworth “GILDA”
. Glenn Ford
WEST SIDE
SPEEDWAY
DAISY
STATE
OLN TRAIT,
BELMONT
GIRL" Betty Grable “SWEET ROSIE GRADY" |
Chas. Boyer Jennifer Jones “CLU NY BROWN" Chester Morris "PHANTOM THIEF" - ———
2540 Ww Michigan r-0R20
Jas Beware Ral Russell “NO TIME FOR COMEDY" “LARCENY IN HER HEART"
10th & Merle Oberon Holmes Franchot Tone “DARK WATERS" Marjorie Weaver “FASHION MODEL” ——
5700 W. Wash, BE-0004 “JOHNNY ANGEL" ‘DICK TRACY" A Aetmont & Wash, Geo, 4 Montgomery : “CHIN
Geo. Raft Anne Jeffreys *
Gene Tierney
| “cHINA'S LITTLE DEVILS”
Franchot Tone | =O
SUBURBAN !
AYWOOD
Open ‘Air Theater
Dorothy “Lamour--Arture deCordova *
“A MEDAL FOR BENNY”
y Carey—Paul Ki
NOW! 1st Show Starts 7:88
ALAN LADD
I kf
“BLUE DAHLIA”
{LATE SHOW 10 PF. M,
