Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 May 1947 — Page 13
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$1600 scholarship to the University | they
Monica Lennox has been elected | editor of the 1048 édition of the Shortridge yearbook,
High honor roll students at Shortridge for the recent grading period are: a ol Christine ane fan 3 Barna, wl Blac k a ask Bote se, uerite a Nancy BB Nancy Cushwa, Prank Dalley. Billie Davis, ace Roman nkin, bt Souise ugh, Ti ; Evans, Mary Ellen = Featherwis, Diana "Pisbeck. k Poi Allee Gerieh, Alice Gold-
ane Richa Ham! Hartley, ames Hays, Joanne Ho Reker Sh im HirsehSharon Holwerds, Bail H
Shirley Hungate, Jefirey, Tks: Jeanette Jink Elizabeth Jon James Jordan, Thm Jordan, Patty Joy, Myroa plan, Kurt Kaul man, James Kealing, —— dase Anim. Ronald Kovenor, Lane, Heri ig Teter Dorothy RAT,
ldwin, Bar bly Bell, Jo- , Lois
a.
Dunning, Maleol
ly Esther Mouser, Carolyn Myers, Lawrence Noling, Barbara Nourse! Danfel Nyhari, Margaret Opperman, Richard orm thryn Owen, Edgar Pattison, Richard Powell, Barbara Ramsay, Bloor Redding, .S Quy Ren Rich,
Mar; ans” Raraont. Rober: Russell, igler, Lois Simon, June Simpson, Jean Sith, Kay Stephenson, Jean
Mary Anne Summers, Isadore Talesnick ney Talesnick, Charlotte Taylor, Isabel ylor, Alvin Thomas, Thomas , Barbara VanGe Lois Walker, Marilyn Wie. gant. Pa Patricia Wilson Marthe W Wise, Ellza- . Walter Wolf, Joh Roberta Wood, 3 darjorie Wuiieumier, Martha York, Paul rtman, Kenneth Ziebell,
Soraiding Zuckerberg, Jean Zuckerberg.
Glamour-Land Finds a Spot For Homely Girls
: | house and whistled for her with two
4 im mes
"Return Engagement
By Gwen Davenport GE (Copyright by Gwen Davenport) -
SERIE Cg
fi la ing 3°% AE
' CHAPTER 20 IN AUGUST the nights began to grow cold and by the middle of the month it was impossible to stay in swimming for more than a few minutes, Salty came home for a week-end and spent Saturday afternoon seeing about having his boat put up for the winter, He sald he expected to get orders soon and couldm't take a chance on having to go away suddenly and leave her unprovided for, On Saturday night he took Vicky dancing in Portland with some friends and told her she was getting too thin and ought not to work so hard. On Sunday morning he came out on the veranda of his mother's
ry (fingers in his mouth, Vicky, who was watching him from the window of her bedroom, pretended not to hear. He whistled twice more, then started, across the| lawn in the direction of Gray Shinglés, Vicky went hastily downstairs to sit on the porch with a magazine. . ” » “DIDN'T YOU hear me?” Salty de{manded, appearing at the foot of the front steps. “Oh, hello, Salty!” She laid down the magazine and uncrossed her legs, sitting upright. “Hear what?" “I whistled for you.”
heard something, but I thought it was a sea gull calling to his mate.” “It was me. Come on over.” “Why don't you stay here? Come up, sit down.” He put one foot on the second
"HOLLYWOOD, May 13 (U. P.).—
A top director said today that What | the movie industry needed Was pe my last week-end up here and
homely girls. - "Hollywood is the only city in the country, Irving Rapper said, where all the girls are beautiful, It's great, he said, but it's unnatural,
“When 1 want extras for a street | trying to look ‘ss if nothing could scene,” he explained, “the. only please her better than half an hour girls—I can hire are shapely and|with old “Adam Bagot, except pos~EraGeulT You CAAT tél mre-there'sisibly. a. game of tennis, which she .a street in the country where you |played very badly and did not mueh don't see some woman who wob-| like.
bles.”
He had the same trouble picking | extras for a nightclub scene when | | porch doing a crossword puzzle. He he made “Voice of the Turtle” at rose with grave courtesy when Salty
Warner Bros,
Thete's never a surplus of talent!
said,
in Hollywood, Mr. Rapper
with or without beauty. But if the stream of beauty continues,
foresees a sad fate for the movies.
“Where are we going to get girls , lot of girls really are?” he wondered. “Where are we going to get char-
who are plain-looking like
acter bits?”
TO BE COOL,
AND DRAMATIC TOP YOUR COSTUMES WITH
lhe
1.00% and 2.00*
Choose frothy white pieces of jewelry—necklaces, bracelets and earrings—to contrast your dark clothes,
he
step but came no nearer. “No, I {want you to come over. This may I sort of think I ought to stay with the family. Let's go and see Uncle | Adam. We cdn play a game of | tennis later, maybe.” “All right,” Vicky said brightly,
» UNCLE ADAM was sitting on his
“Oh, was that what it was! 1[P
several days except Ethel Codman, & woman created to make bachelors reconciled to solitude.” Salty sat on the railing, there being only two chairs on the tiny
Boston,” sald Adam Bagot. “It's a great mistake to have a guest room. If you can't see enough of any person in the course of an eight-hour day, then you might as well lvel3 together and be done with it.” *“You'd hate to ilve with anyone, and you kfiow it,” said Salty. “Entirely depends,” answered the old gentleman, Vicky wondered if he had never, in 80-odd years on the planet, found any kindred soul with whom he wanted to live. The thought of all that time alone was appalling. She cast back in her mind for a clue Salty had given her to a longdead romance in the life of Adam Bagot, but could remember nothing | Ds specific. “Perhaps you would like to see my cottage?” said Mr. Bagot. “I don’t believe you have been inside.” » ~ » HE ROSE to escort her through the tiny house, which had been intended as a gardener’s cottage. It
porch. “Aunt Ethel is Mother's younger sister,” he explained toi herd DeMorit "oy Darin fap Jenry, Victoria. Bursar Rytholn, James Barr sock Rule on ei ED A Boots ut SHE 1S the silliest woman in Marin. . “Arooid or Waraabere 3 Ey
The Broad ‘Ripple high school senior class will present its annual at 8:15 p. m. Friday in the school auditorium. The play, “What a Life” ‘is a comedy based on the radio character,
always in trouble. The cast includes:
Helen: J ay, Barbara Ernsting, Joan ut a ited, Janet GHlI and Carolyn Malott are serving with Mrs. Ruth B. -Herin. Promplets will be Eleanor Anderson, Jeanette Davis, Alice France
Land doug Phillips, Miss Jane Oolsher, Mrs, Donna Leigh il Clark were e
Dolling and Virgil faculty committee and Mary Ellen Halgren, Gloria Novak, Anita Belt and Bill ce Dougal were in. charge of properties,
Leading Broad Ripple’s high honor. roll for the second grading period are Charles Aldag, Suzanne Grob and Ruth’ Hubbard,
Others on the high honor roll are:
Carol Lynn Dady, 13 be gidser, Janice McComas, Lois Roe elhorn, Janet Baldwin, Joe NO h, Bh Rynerson, James Alltop, Al Dady Joan Hamilton, oust Hancock, D Leonard, John Rita Ann Taylor, Marilyn Cock, Royce Meranda, Ook. Weigel, Martha Wi Ison, Carls Woods, Loretta Zink, Marjorie Berry, Doris Graham, Sally Hampton, Nancy Lowe, Margaret Pedlow, Rosemary Rau, Paul Ross, Jack Rule, Marilyn Schetter, Jean Shriver, Sue Van Sickle and Tom Barden. Others are: Jack Barnett, Richard Birchman, Ann Cocklsy, a Mitchell, Jo Ann Neff, Ed New Clarence. Niehaus, 4nn Rust, niriey Sith, Ada Tway, John Wyne, Margaret Appel, Susan Bas-
a d, Ms Arnar lian and Phil wilistn W Wri
was crammed with books and maps and Chinese treasures dating back to the days of clipper ships. On| {the wall of the dining room was al large map on which he had folowege the course of the war with Adam Bagot led the way back to his infinitesimal porch. “I'm sorry you couldn't see Goose Neck as it used to be, Miss. Jenkins,” he said. “It is quite spoiled now. These automobiles! © Why, a trip to the village in the old days used to be a day's outing and we went into Portland only once a season to shop.” He went on describing the happy inconveniences of Victorian life and the disadvantages of modern conveniences, his thin old voice
no interruption, ‘. , ‘nm HE'S AS dry as a bone in the! Sniithsonian institution, thought | Vicky. Not at all entertaining, like Granny's old men. Vicky was no! more a respector of persons than & mosquito, being used to the.comings and goings of the great. Even she, however, in spite of
|and Victoria came upon him, offer-|
ing the one comfortable chair to { Bagot's appearance, antiquity and |
the lady. He was a thin, desiccated old gentleman with sunken eyes and
and hands.
bow. “I had been hoping Miss Jenkins would come to see me again,
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{his dryness, was impressed by Adam |
fo mode of life. When they |
left she promised to come back ably old, T doubt If even mother the bones prominent in his face and see him, and whispered %0 knows. Anyway, you must have
Salty as they went Into the gar- made a great hit with him, because “I am honored,” he said, with a den, “I suppose. if your name is|p, — asks anyone to call,
hard" or it. oul we awfully| Aunt Ethel has been trying to get a somebody to live with!| inside his house for 20 years!” {but apparently she thinks she needs | Just ny wouldn't do.” years! an escort. I have seen no one for | He laughed.
-
’
going relentlessly along, brooking
“No, there's some-
Tock 's
Store Hours: 9:30 to 5:00, Monday through Saturday
sett, Jane Hartley, Jean Hebel, Carolyn | Kensinger, Tom KI k c | Se paaa Betty Tway, June Uphaus, and Ruth Wright.
Richard [Warm
Byron Fry Chosen Butler 'Y' Head
Byron PF. Fry, Butler university sophomore, has been elected president of the campus Y M C. A
« chapter, The son of Mr, and Mrs. Ken-
neth P. Fry of Brendonwood, he is an English major and a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity, $5. Other new cers of the orgsnMr. Fry ization are Floyd Alcott, -Greenwood, vice president;
P
Henry Aldrich, a teen-ager who is
{ Harry... Sullivan, Indiavapalis, sec...
ond vice president; Thomas Bemis, |III, Indianapolis, treasurer, and Jack Boston, Indianapolis, secretary. i
{thing more to Uncle Adam's lone{liness than just wanting to be exclusive. - I never did know quite what it was. He's so unconscion-
(To Be e Continued)
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