Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 August 1947 — Page 13
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Inside Indianapolis
DOESN'T ANYONE care how | College hits the campliiy this fall? That's what I asked myself after seeing and hearing all the fuss downtown about “College Boards." These boards, composed of girls who know what's the latest thing on campus, operate as if getting Joe a college outfit were no problem at all. Youd ‘thihk a duffle bag of T-shirts and wash pants were all he needed. Now that's not right. When I walked in the fashion office at ‘Block's, Eleanor Waldron, acting fashion co-ordinator, and Dorothy Kersey, secretary, were checking the lineup for their show. : “Everything has to go right,” said Miss Waldron. “How about Joe?” I asked. I got to the point fast, , Model Natalie Griener dashed in and announced that she still couldn't find the right hat for her costume, Marge Dithmer, college co-ordinator of universities, followed and said she had a few more accessories to pick up. “What about Joe?" I tried again.
Co-ordination Plus FRANCES SCARLETT, accessory co-ordinator, approved wholeheartedly with Miss Dithmer’s choice, Some more approval was voiced by Jean Stratton, fashion co-ordinator. There's more co-ordination than you.can shake a stick at in this going-away-to- -college business. v “We're not forgetting the boys,” Miss Waldron finally said, “We have six boys scheduled to appear in the fashion show.” “But no board especially for the college man?” “No, not especially.’ O. K. On the way to Wasson's college center I checked my outfit. Beat up .slacks, suit coat, white shirt and a tie. Oh, yes, shoes. Why not ask the college experts what they could do to supplement or improve my meager bappingst Sons of a test case.
ASK THE COLLEGE BOARD—It only seems that Joe College is left out of the buy-your-wardrobe picture. Board members such as (left to right] Marilyn .Kimberlin, Betty Williams and Nancy Judy have ideas for Joe if he wants them.
! The girls knew what should be worn for the first
By Ed Sovola
The girls were unanimous in deciding my tie wasn't right. There were 10 girls. Each girl had a different tie in mind. Betty Jane Willlams didn't like my coat. Nancy Forbes suggested a brighter one. Something with a little “life.” Then it was decided I would look ghoulish wearing a coat to class. Betsy Arensman and Nancy Judy agreed. Katherine Harris thought dark brown trousers would be fine with the coat on my.back. The trousers would do “something” to the coat. @ “A corduroy jacket would go well with the dark brown trousers,” suggested Marilyn Kimberlin. Mary Jo DeVatz said Argyle socks, yellow, were a must’ with the new outfit. Anne Lytle said that I shouldn't even think of opening a classroom door if I didn’t have a cashmere sweater under the jacket. Lynn McCormick completed the outfit with, “Of course, yoy have to have a pair of saddle shoes.”
Reet, onsthe beam, 23 skidoo. Did I say no one cared
about Joe? 1 wore my old ouffit to Ayres’ But I began to get a little self-conscious. Maybe a new approach to the problem of clothes would bring better results. After explaining to the Ayres’ board what I wanted, I asked where I could feel at home with the outfit I wore. A voice piped up and said “Pendleton.” She was kidding. Jinny Foltz, bless her heart, said I wouldn't be out of place at Dartmouth. Gloria Tuerk thought Butler would be an appropriate setting. “Your shoes could stand some polish,” Griffith,
noted Sue
“And your trousers ought to be pressed before you|
go on campus,” chuckled Barbara Griffith. Boy, I asked for it and I was getting it. All in good fun, though.
The Wardrobe Complete
«“YOU GIRLS GO to schools all over the country. :
You're hep to style. Now what would be a good outfit for the first day of school at Indiana university.” I thought this would be a stickler. mater and I know what they wear.) The college board decided after a little discussion back and forth that for that first day I should have a grey sport coat, dark blue trousers, white shirt, open at the throat, a yellow sweater, yellow socks and saddle shoes. Hum. They had suggestions for a complete wardrobe.
“mixer” dance, the first coke date and the first “heavy” date. Warm weather and cold weather outfits were just as easy to figure out. 7 Dollar signs began to float before my eyes. 1 mentioned the ugly subject to Miss Foltz. “How much would you consider spending on your college wardrobe?” Miss Foltz asked. “Not more than $50.” The college board gasped but did not falter. They
M were ready to get-me-to-sclool-in good. shape on that!
amount. I believe they eould do it, too.
There's one thing the girls should know. The ritzy outfit they planned for the first day of school] ’
was fine. But as I remember my first day, T had on a T-shirt and a pair-of wash pants: Maybe that's why 1 spent so much time in the library, darn it.
A City of Horror
VIENNA, Austria, Aug, 12.—Here in what was once the gayest and brightest city in all Europe, I have just seen a nightmare of human misery. Every émotion of sight, sound and smell lies raw after this latest view of terrifying illness—illness that threatens to disrupt occupied Europe. Here, inside the incredibly over-crowded walls of the old Rothschild hospital building, an utterly new version of'+Europe’s DP sickness is piling up like a log-jam gone mad. Each day it gets worse. This is what is happening in the crazy jumble of eastern Europe today: Out of Sovietized Romania a. great migration. of Jews has been pouring west into Austria. x ey Ae Ao ait ATO at ‘dream of Palestine, at a rate of 1000 weekly, A hundred and fifty more bedraggled Jews came in early today. 3 Already 9000 Romania Jews have reached Vienna, which is so badly over-crowded that it is ready to burst at its seams. This tide of broken lives has flooded Vienna, apparently without any other inspiration than a fanatical desire to escape the anti-Semitism which Jews and many U. 8. army officers say is getting worse hourly.
Deny Propaganda Move ZIONIST SPOKESMEN deny that they ‘have made the slightest effort to propagandize Romanian Jews
in wr tide hde a FR OA
to be borne out by talks with the Romanian DP’s themselves, As for the Soviet overseers inside Romania, obviously they are not putting any obstacles in the way of this epic migration. Whatever has started this amazing trek out of the Balkans, the result, as seen here, is one of abject misery and mounting confusion. ' The international refugee organization, provisionally being made operative by the United States as a - replacement for UNRRA, does not function here. Nor
-long enough for-veutiné questioning. i
* with the dream of a Palestine homeland. This seems
By Nat Barrows
are American, French or British occupying forces" in Vienna able longer to care for DP’s. Thus, only the American joint distribution committee, supported by Jewish funds, is handling the influx. The sub-committee of ‘'UNSCOP touring DP camps in Germany and Austria was shaken to its toes today by what it saw in Rothschild hospital. One secretariat woman was in tears as she watched late-comers being deloused, screened and assigned to a tiny place ih a 47-bed room into which 146 men, women and children had ajreagy been jammed as by a shoe-horn.
We saw them sitting Woore on army cots, packed |
side by side. They stared with blank faces; they pushed about
us until we nearly, smothered: they fought like ani-|
mals when srreaning officers tried to separate them
Cling Close to Bunks SOME ATTEMPT is being made to hold classroom instructions, but this, obviously, can be only a gesture under such conditions. Each day is like another: ‘Cling close to the bunk s0 that it will not be stolen. Cling close to family
(I. U. is my alma
Rial The Indianapolis Times
sr
o Jour “haraymen.”
Terry Schlossberg, Pat<Haynes and Jerry Goldfish.
FUN AT KIRSHBAUM—Sailboating in the Kirshbaum pool is one of the activities on. the sumnier recreation program at the center, Cooling off under the supervision of Counselor Libby Maurer, left, are
KIDDIE KAMP CLASS—Group play is encouraged and it's lots o' fur judging by the expression on the faces of this happy group, (left to right) Brook Mont. gomery, Charlene Greenberg, Dave Cook, Janet Sacks, Ealine Gilbert, Janet Mann, Beverly Logan, Judy Sacks, and~—o» the
Lee Cohen.
CRAFT CLASS any of Kirshbaum! s activities are educational as well as enfertaining. Building useful tovs in the craft session are, {left to tight) Marvin: “Benn, Stephen Cdopar
* Marvin Berman and Jerry Goldfarb. Competent instructors show the
youngsters how to make all sorts of gadgets’ and items that can be used at the cer center and in the homes.
or friends as the only known thing in a - fearsome world. What will become of these wretched exiles? The question poses a most serious problem, by its! own peculiar aspect and by its overlap into the whole problem of DP’s cast adrift. in Europe. * . They are refused admittance across the frontier into Germany. - They won't go home, They cannot | get adequate quarters here in ‘Vienna. [i Furthermore, relief officials expect at least 20,000 Romanian Jews before the end of summer. Two factors determine the number of voluntary exiles pouring into Austria: Hunger and anti-Semitism. If famine increases, the Jews say, they will get the blame as always when political excuse is needed. However, if the Romanian government takes steps to repress outbursts against the 450,000 Jews inside Romania, fear ‘will die down and this hysterical migration may peter out:
By Erskine Johnson
Fight for Fame
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 12.~Larry Parks, who did “THe Jolson Story” like Jolson never did it in real life, has at last bared his claws and teeth in a fight to the finish with Columbia studio. He wants
a fair shake and he’s going to court to get it. I think Larry is right in suing the studio, which let him sit and ‘cool’ his heels after his hit pérformance as Al Jolson. It's too bad he didn't sue long before now, Too many actors fail to stick up for themselves, and their careers go right down the drain. Now that the studio is in the black on their investment in the Larry Parks personality, they should give him a further break. Letting him hold a coat for Rita Hayworth will never make him famous. This is one Hollywood trial I'm going to watch with a great deal of personal interest. I'll let you know what happens when the final score is in between Harry Cohn's boys at Columbia and Larry.
Better This Way NIGHT-LIFE im the old west: For a scene in Bob Hope's new “picture, “Paleface.” Jane Russell goes to bed wearing a very sheer, filmy nightgown. Strapped around her waist she will have a belt and holsters filled , with two big six-guns, Incidentally, how come Bobb Hope was able to stay up to 4 a. m. watching Danny Thomas’ act in a Chicago night
We, the the Women
THIS IS ONE time of the year when the nonSandener begins 10 see some ' Justification: fur’ his laziness.
- Just look at all the pleasure he gives his gardenfriends.
Li". The non-gardener is the perfect listener when the gardener starts measuring off the size of his cuchm-
gardener would insist on topping the story
~ bers. He's properly awed and appreciative, whereas
club on the day before he reportedly collapsed from a bad case of sunburn poisoning? George ft is nixing all fan magazine stories about his recent front-page troubles, One of them was to have been titled, “The Gripes of Raft.” Susan Peters, Hollywood's hard-luck girl, gets 36 wardrobe changes to keep her clothes-happy in “The Sign of the Ram.” All of the gowns have been designed for wheel-chair appeal, and Susie will buy them after the film's completion, Mark Stevens is helping Hedy Lamarr forget John | Loder. He rushed up to Lake Tahoe, after Hedy went into a near nervous collapse when a prowler tried to enter her cabin,
Stardom for Ava AS I'VE BEEN predicting, Ava Gardner is due for a terrific build-up at M-G-M. Her next flim will be [J “Wanted,” ‘opposite Van Johnson. That's a break’ for Van. 1 Kathryn Grayson and Johnny Johnston finally have set the date. They'll be married in Carmel, Cal,’ on Aug. 21, and vacation in Canada. J Frank Sinatra obviously has had a change of heart about fellow workers since his front-page headlines. After completing “The Kissing Bandit,” he! gifted the fllm’s crew with radios. ! Earl Carroll likes entertainment even on the high seas. He's having a a baby grand piano installed on his yacht, a reconverted navy crash boat.
By Ruth Millett
And when the proud gardener invites the ab: stainer to sample his sweet corn, which “has never been better,” the non-gardener is free to accept the invitation with alacrity. But if he'had a garden of his own the invitation wouldn't be quite so tempting. ‘
Canning Problem. BESIDES, he probably couldn't bring himself to 80 off and leave his own garden just as the toma-: toes, or something, were coming on. find. of waurts; is Wite souig ive 10 think avout the canning.
State School Lunch
Fund Reduced
Federal aid funds allocated for the national school lunch program in Indiana for the 1847-48 school year will be 22 per cent less than was available last year, Ben H.
'Roark’s Travels—
hildren Mix Play And Learning it Kirshbaum Summsr Cam
steam roller in the foreground—Barbara
‘STORIES ON "RECORD — Listening %o sipries on the record
Playgr.
‘operated by Marilyn Schlossberg, Teft “foreground; are a
row, eft-torright] Marischa Berger. Doris Muschel ~Eflsn-Kammins and Terry Schlossberg; (back row) Sharon Klain, Libby Smulyan, Natalie
Borin ‘and’ Harriet Kallinger, Selecting a Counselor Becky Wall.
If You Think That U. S. Forest Rangers Have Easy Jobs, You Are Very Wrong
Firefighting Is Just One of Many Tasks— Ask Ranger Hauk, He Will Tell You All
By ELDON ROARK, Scripps-Howard Staff Writer HOT SULPHUR SPRINGS, Colo., Aug. 12.—If ydu think all a forest
of the ski trouble. They are green, but think they can do what the experienced skiers do. People whe crack up are put into temporary splints on the spot, and are brought down to thie shelter house on. sleds,
Watt, state superintendent of public ranger has to do_is ride his horse leisurely along the trails, or to lie in Fe
instruction, said today.
Mr. Watt said, representing Indiana’s share in the $60 million fund voted by congress for the nationwide school lunch program. The new appropriation makes no | provision for the purchase of]
perintendent pointed out, | Last year the lunch program
Hoosier school children, Mr. Watt said that as a result of reduced funds, “participation in| the school lunch program for the
a hammock and scan the horizon for smoke, you're wrong. It's a busy life with a variety of duties, according to Paul Hauk, The new state total is $1,055.508, 1.4 headed assistant ranger for this district of the Arapaho National
Forest, Pighting fire is just one of their tasks.
National forests sell timber. The rangers must cruise the tracts for {sale, make estimates of the board | {feet, mark the trees to be cut, and [weather scientists can figure out how much water the valley ranch- | ‘| kitchen equipment, the state su- | Grazing land in the forests Js|ers, may expect in the spring and | leased to cattlemen and sheepmen. to 6 cents a
see that there is no thievery.
They pay from 5%
rangers check on that. ~ “
~ THEN THERE are the
80 IF YOU ar¢ looking for a lazy job, don’t became a forest ranger. Try sheépherding, Sheepherders stay with the flocks day and
su
In the winter statistics must be képt on the snowfall,
mmer,
And, of course, the rangers must operated in 950 state schools and | {head per season for sheep and from | lassist with the enforcement of the furnished daily lunches to 169,424 16 to 20 cents for cattle. They must hunting laws ‘and must supervise | stay in areas allotted to them. So/the ski courses, That is becoming more and more of a job, for winter, sports are growing in popularity in
public | Colorado.
coming year must either be cur-{camp grounds to patrol and in-
imbursement paid for lunches myst be in a reduced amount.”
Sigma Pi to Hear Illinois U. Head |
President George D. Stoddard’ University of Illinois, will give the keynote address at the golden an- | niversary convocation of Sigma Pi fraternity here, Sept. 5 and 86. { "Dr, Stoddard is a former state] commissioner of | education and! former president of the University of the State of New York, Last he was chairman of the
Dr, Stoddard
spring, United States educational mission
to Japan, He is chairman of the American Council of education and | the author of nine books.
8 Roberts Park W. S. C. S. ol
To Meet Thursday Members. ‘of the. Roberts Park Methodist church W. 8. C. 8. wij meet Thursday at 30:15 a. m. at the! church and go by automobile to the residence of Mrs, W. H. Day, Southport, for an all-day Mmesting and covered dish luncheon
Foolhardy youths whom Ranger tailed or the amount of federal xp- numerable Tpora to be made out.|Hauk calls “knotheads” cause most
night. If a flock is large, there ‘will be two -of them. If small, there will be only one, “All of them {have dogs. So it's a lonely, isolated life. It pays about $150 a month plus ‘grub. “Some collgge boys like it,” Mr. Hauk said, “I've- known professors to take the jobs, too. Gives them time to study and think.” The Colorado River, a clear, rush- | ing stream at this point, is a favorite spot with fishermen. Fishing | right now isn't so good, though. When the state fish hatchery dumps in a lot of trout of legal size,
That's so the
Carnival =By Dick Turner
the anglers catch them in a hurry, As the name of the town in-| dicates, there are hot sulphur |
springs here, and people come to| bathe in the smelly water for relief of rheumatism and other muscular aches. T. J. Dougherty, operatom of the bathhouse, and I were walking up {the railroad track which skirts i | property. We passed a man an
WTDO0RS fn | woman with packs on their backs, VERY TUFS. (8 and they spoke in broken English. THURS. SAT. pod | “He's a Russian newspaper man,” \ (Mr. Dougherty said. They go on ! a L hikes every day.”
Pretty nice for Russian newspaper men who come to this country. They can go anywhere w | ea nobody asks questions.
McQuay Norris Picnic Attended by 500
More than 500 employees and members of their families attended the annual family picnic of the McQuay Norris Manufgcturing Co. at Riverside park Sunday, Feature of the day's entertainment was a “diaper derby,” won by 22-month-old Mike Alex, son of Mr, and Mrs, Pandily /Alex, Coates s ville, The race a T-yard dash for a streamlined box.
FIRST UNION FILES
The labor.
al Mr.
WASHINGTON, Aug. 12 (U.P) — department :
story from the album is
Photos by John Spicklemire, Times Staff Photographer,
Army Seeks Men For European Duty
Enlistments and re-enlistments in the regular army for initial ase signment to the European command (including the Mediterranean) are authorized for persons of the fol« lowing categories: :
have had prior service in any of the armed forces. TWO: Men whose current enlists ments are terminating and who dee sire to re-enlist immediately for initial assignment to the European command. The above announcement was made by Capt. Joe C. Tyler, come manding officer of the u. S. army recruiting station,
Mid-State | Freight Lines | Announce Expansion
Mid-states Freight Lines, Inc., toe day announced the greatest exe | pansion program in the firm's hise tory. The line, newly located at 1202 W. 16th st, now is equipped to handle less than truck load and | truck load freight to Boston, New | York, Philadelphia, Newark and Chicago, according to Richard J, McDuffee, president of delivery service and contract agents. The firm operates more than 30 tractor-trailers from Indianapolis to fully staffed terminal points, McDuflee said.
WORD-A-DAY
By BACH
- KUDOS
(kiz/dos) vow | Gea FAME; GLORY; \ REPUTATION
ONE: Men from civil life whe
