Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 October 1946 — Page 9

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THURSDAY, OCT. 31.

‘NAME: OFFICERS ~ AT SHORTRIDGE

Duties Are Taken Over By Class - Leaders.

Officers for the senior and junior ‘ classes at Shortridge high school ave taken over their duties folng recent elections. New senior offers are

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Bill

Thomas, president; Nancy Howey, | .

vice president; Ruth Reed, secretary, and Don Wise, treasurer. Junior class officers are Ted Steeg, president; Jody Hoster, vice president; Betsy Dithmer, secretary; Art Klein, treasurer; Joan Robinson, yaudeville chairman, and Ellen

The 1048 Shortridge yearbook,

class rating from the Na 1 Scholastic Press association. is the second highest rating given. Shortridge was one.of 12 schools with an enrollment of 2000 or over to receive a first-class rating. Only four of these were awarded the rating of “All-American,” highest possible. :

Choose Joan Spitznagel The staffs and the seven division and department editors of the Bhortridge Christmas Echo were announced today. Joan Spitmnagel was named editor-in-chief by senfor editors of the regular Echo, Othérs named were: Helen McLane and Shirley Cohee, story editors; Janet Trickey and Bill Stephenson, . feature editors; Marilyn Grifith and Ruth Reed, rsonals editors; James Merrell d Barbara Croker, poetry editors; Richardson and Jane Carson, art editors; and Jim Buck and Alan Parrish, sports editors. Parrish also is business manager and will be assisted by Marcia Fink. Werner Haas has been named advertising ediotr,

Nine students have been appointed by Robert C. Black, head of the biology. - physiography department, to assist Shortridge teachers with laboratory work. They are Barbara . Wolfgang, Dick Canida, Harriet Gray, Louis Bornkamp, Jeannette Jinks, Eugene Frush, Edward Mockford, Dean Miller and Don Cassady.

Leass History Club The Shortridge Drama league has inducted a number.of new members into its organizations. They are: Delores Thom, Vicki Yeager, Mary Winfer, Bally Fix, Joanne Farmer, Rose Wohlhieier, Diane

field, Jean Stacy, Smith, Shirley Kallinger, Charles Ep-

Larry Sheppert, ' Harriet Tressler, Mary Ellen Ingle, DoroJ 08, Barbara Lemans, Dorothy Gorman, a Nancy Lewis. Diane Woodward has been elect-

ed president of the Library club. Other officers are Bill Burnette, Bloor Redding and Jacque Farmer. Members of the Shortridge history club recently elected Betty Pearson, president; Donna Jean Bullivan, vice president and proam chairman, Patia Hosea, secreAry, and Kay Stephenson, treasrer.

A Hi-Y club has been organised at Shortridge. -

Newly appointed assistaniés in the Bhortridge ohemistry department include Stewart Gordon, Janet Johnson, Muriel Adams and Liz Armstrong.

Mrs. Cena Morgan has taken over direction of the Junior Red Cross organization at Shortridge. - She succeeds Mrs. Opal Conrad who organized the group in 1936.

Betsy Veit has been elected presfdent of 8. P. .Q. R. Shortridge Latin club, Other officers named are Connie Hurd, vice president; Janet Harshbarger, secretary, and Sue Goodman, treasurer.

INCREASE POTATO GOAL WASHINGTON, Oct. 31 (U, P.).~ The agriculture department increased its 1947 potato goal slightly last night following a review of the original targets by state and federal farm agencies. The new national.

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screen stars Tyrone Power and his wife, Annabella, have decided to separate. The pair, shown above when they a picture, were married April 23, 1939, in Rio de

By GEORGE WELLER Times Foreign Correspondent THEBES, Greece, Oct. 31.-Two

{umn passed this way in retreat, the peasants. of Greece still are hunting for the bodies of those who died before Nasl execution squads The execution ground at the Vrastamita crossroads is now a line of emptied graves. Broken and burned shoes litter the edges, and you can find a belt or two in the wheat - stubble,

were executed for the murder of a single German and a Greek traitress. Fifty were executed, but only 40 died; the 50th crawled away after the Nas firing squads had left the bodies in the wheat field. Families whose men disappeared come here still, hoping to find one grave still occupied that they can call their own. They hear the story: A German sleeping in the mountain village of Vrastamita in the house of a Greek woman. A swoop

years after the last German ool-|f

Here 50 men between 18 and 35

THE INDIANAPOLIS FIMES |Greek Peasant's Search for fl Victims of Nazi Guns Is Endless| tunis

man and the woman.

by, the guerrillas. Death for the Gier-

The pilgrims who have sought |this country and Canada.

" |their own dead in vain scribble verses on the back of each wooden cross, and then go their way.

- QUAKE IN FOX ISLANDS By Science Service WASHINGTON, Oct. 31—Epi-

center of the Alaska earthquake

Thebes, Levadia ang yesterday was in the region of the

Fox islands, south of Unimak island

men. q work of the [in the Aleutians, Seismologists of execution squads at the crossroads. [the U. 8, coast and geodetic survey There are 40 empty graves at the |fixed the spot after examining data Vrastamita crossroads, but no mon [collected telegraphically by Science

Service from seven observatories in

MOTHERS’ CLUB TO MEET “Indianapolis Navy Mothers’ club No. 576, meeting at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Y. M. C. A, will dis~ cuiss the coming visit to Indianpolis of Mother Jones, founder of Navy Mothers’ clubs of America.

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