Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1946 — Page 13

PT. 19, 1946

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THURSDAY, SEPT. 19, 198

DePauw, In 110th

For veterans only. . . . Seventeen pre-fabricated houses DePauw university for married ex-G. L's, ;

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Veterans Comprise 65% of

Enrollment:

By VICTOR PETERSON Times Staff Writer

GREENCASTLE, Ind., Sept. 19.— For the 110th year DePauw university has opened its doors to in-

coming students. However, back in the year of its founding, 1837, it was called Indiana Asbury university, named after Francis Asbury, the first Methodist Bishop in the United States. The name was changed in 1883 to honor Washington C. DePauw, New Albany, Ind, a benefactor. This year DePauw looks much the same as it did before the war except . . . and the exceptions are enough to change the whole scene. Freshman men and women wander the—campus, one eye on the school, the other on the opposite sex, The women have the teen-age look, the men are three years older on the average. Most of the yearling men are veterans, and officials estimate that probably more than 65 per cent of the males enrolled saw service. Faculty Members Added

Nevertheless, the 2100 students, largest in university history, still are collegians. The Double-Decker, popular smoke and coke shop, is doing a thriving business as is the stu-dent-operated “Barn.” Profits from the latter are being nested for a new }campus Union building. To handle the increased registra{tion above a normal 1500, the university has added some 15 members [to the faculty bringing the total to !date to 115.

| Housing became a prime problem

| with the record enrollment, and the {presence of married veterans with {children complicated matters. To {handle the family situation the unijy has erected 17 pre-fabricated homes with from one tosthree bed{rooms on Observatory Hill. Quonset Huts Converted Former “barracks, not all com- | pleted to date, will hotrse 45 more couples while six Quonset huts have been turned into two-family | apartments. A former residence { hall, Johnson house, has been con-

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Classes Monday

Upperclassmen are scheduled to register tomorrow with classes carded for Monday. Over the week-end, however, the campus will be alive with activity as the 12 fraternities and nine sororities put on their best bibs-and-tuckers in the annual membership drive. The first of the week will then see a different student body as it buckles down for another academic year. With it, though, will come the football and basketball games, the dances and dinners and hamburgers and cokes which round out collegiate life.

GRAND JURY PROBES LOCAL DOPE RING

A former federal narcotics agent and three physicians here are un- | der investigation by the grand jury |in connection with a loeal dope {ring operated over a four-year span. U. 8. Attorney General B. Howard Caughran submitted the case to the grand jury after police court testimony charged Bernard Peterson, the former agent, had instructed «doctors to prescribe drugs for known addicts. Peterson resigned his federal job here two months ago and went to Kentucky. At the time he was implicated in the narcotics plot, five persons were arrested for obtaining drugs on prescriptions, then reselling them,

GRAND JURY MEMBER IS NAMED BY BAIN

Judge W. D. Bain, criminal court, today appointed Mrs. Olive GG. Foley, 310 Berkley rd, a member of the Marion county grand Jury. Her appointment fills a vacancy on the jury caused by the resignation two weeks ago of Walter D. Putt, 1835 Spann ave. The jury, which has been in recess for more than two weeks as a | result of a vacancy, will resume de-

{ liberation on criminal investigations

next Tuesday, according to Leo Brown, deputy prosecutor in charge.

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have been erected on Observatory Hill at

WARN TRANSIT FIRM ABOUT OVERLOADING

The safety board issued a formal warning to officials of the Indianapolis Railways, Inc, against overloading of vehicles to the point where operators’ views are obstructed. Safety board members said in a| letter to utility officials that mem- | bers of the city council had cited a law passed in 1939, prohibiting public vehicles from being overloaded. The board's letter to the railways said the police department will be instructed to begin the enforcement of the overcrowding law immediately.

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INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

ear, Welcomes 2100 Stu

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53

Leisure moments. . . . The “Barn,” a student-operated smoke and coke shop on the campus, is a popular hangout. Among early patrons this year were (left to right) Janet Lurie and Carl Sutton, Evansvillej Lee Martin, Royal Oak, Mich.; Marjorie Viner, Rockford, Ill; John Maley, Hammond, and Beth Denton, Evansville.

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ON RECEIVING END IN DISH-TOSSING BRAWL

A dish-throwing brawl in a restaurant at 740 Massachusets ave. ended at 2 a. m. today with the knockout of Delbert Naylor, 28, of 700 Massachusetts ave, Earlier, two unidentified men came in and started beating up an

old man, witnesses said. Mr. Naylor stopped them and the pair left the restaurant. Presently, they returned, grabbed dishes off tables and threw them at Mr, Naylor, knocking him out

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before he had a chance to fight back. The assailants fled and Mr, Naylor was taken to City hospital for treatment, He was not serie ously injured,

SET BILDILLI RITES FOR TERRE HAUTE

TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Sept. 19 (U, P.) ~Emil Bildilli, 34, former pitche er for the St. Louls Browns base ball team, will be buried at Terre Haute, his relatives said today. Mr, Bildilli, a Muncie city fire man, was injured fatally in an aue tomobile accident Sunday near Hartford City, He died on his 34th birthday anniversary.

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