Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 December 1947 — Page 8
this chronicle.
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THE FIRST READER : .. By Peter Hansen : Histories of Combat Units Substantial Reminders Of War-Time Experiences
Infantry Journal Press Publisher of Several Books on Famous Fighting Divisions | WHILE THE BODIES of America’s young fighting men rest under white crosses at the ends off the earth, the survivors are getting substantial reminders of their common experiences in the form of excellent histories of combat | units. The latest, and one of the best, is “Ours to Hold It | High,” the history of the 77th, - -
SOE of Muskogee and Tulsa were gone Infantry. Division, called the torever.” Liberty Division -and distin-| The 88th helped to liberate Rome, guished by "its insignia of, the battered Cassino, and moved against atue /, holding aloft her he mines and machinegun nests a of Libeny, h 8 of the Gothic line, “Bayonet, blood Other new arrivals are “The Blue nd guts” ae the Work. ve Bath Devils in Italy,” the story of the WAS a part of Gen, Mar ark’s 88th Infantry Division, and “The 5th;Army and left over 600 dead and 91st Infantry Division in World Wounded on the bleak Apennines. War IL” All are issued by the In. It Was a tiresome job, going after fantry Journal Press, Washington, Krauts over the Po and all the way D. C, for the organizations. (85 Up to the Brenner. After the sureach.) render the 88th was one of the oc-| Here is a slice of American cupying forces in Venezlh Giulia, | history we don't dare forget, Here is the match of the young men— { from civilian jobs, from school lowed the hard route in Italy, mov-| work, to the training camps and ing against the Gothic line and the| then, via ships, to the battlefields Po, and winding up in Trieste, Ma). | of Europe and the Pacific. Step Gen. Willlam G. Livesay command- | by step we follow them, across ed. “The 91st Infantry Division in
“ 4 » J LIKE THE 88TH, the 0ist fol-|
terrain under - machinegun fire, World War II" is by Maj. Robert up heavily defended beaches, A. Robbins, It is an excellent comthrough jungle underbrush and bat history with fine illustrations,
the gritty volcanic ash of but it does not give easily accessible summaries of casualties. I have not yet found where the figures are
over torrid islands. Sometimes the pletures recall fatal incidents, such as the one that shows “a demolition buried team, later wiped out by the explo-| The 91st had the green pine tree sion of a mine” {for its Insignia and was known as Many young Americans will pon- the Powder River Division, from its der the lesson of human incapacity predecessor in World War I. It to live at peace that is implicit In trained In Camp White, Ore, and helped guard the Morgan Line op- | posite Tito's men.
“While 80 Serving,” by Eleanor
CORRECTING PRO
. * lall. SINCE DRAFTED men came from everywhere, the Army did not al- Heart and Harriet Welling, is a locate divisions to states. But pictorial representation of life with there were plenty of New York men the WAVES. From the evidence in the 77th Infantry Division, Ma}. Gen. Andrew D. Bruce commanding. It carried on the proud title jie with the sailors never very of the Tith of World War 1, which far away. Hardest of the Jobs| had accounted for Ma). Whittlesey's shown 1s voluntary laundry work. gycce Lost Battalion and fought the Ger- Adm. Louis Denfeld expresses gratimans through the Meuse-Argonne tude of thie Navy in a foreword campaign in 1918, (Robt, W. Kelly Co., $3). Its history staff includes Lt. Col! “The Blue Ghost,” Is by Edward Max Myers, editor; Anthony J. Steichen, Captain, USNR. Any man fy, Frezza, associate editor, and Wil- Who served on a flattop must relish liam N. Ronin in charge of art; this pictorial record of life on the while the committee in charge U. 8 N. Lexington. Here is eager, includes George Brett, Robert K. alert Ameriean youth at work and Haas, Meredith Wood, Max Myers, relaxing. Shots of men taking off, Winthrop Rockefeller Jr. and Wil- Warding off air attacks, removing liam N. Ronin. damaged ple >, attending services
It was Lt. Winthrop Rockefeller
of Co. H of the 305th Regiment ; who improved on his grandfather's other vessels clearly shown. Re- Apolls in the IU Extension Center
By HENR
ful writing requires.
and the teacher who tries to help
vears, there would be a far now, the proportion of people who succeed in - fletion is painfully small,” Miss Orvis says,
” » ”
Miss Mary B. Orvis, Indiana University Extension creative writing, thus sums up the dilemma of both weuld-be writers writers is to learn as much psychol-
SHE SPEAKS from more than 25
for the dead, awaiting orders. At. YEArs of experience in teaching fictacks by Jap planes on this and tlon-writing, mainly here in“Indian-
OFS—At work on page proofs of her forthcoming book, "The Art of Writing Fiction," is Miss Mary B. Orvis, Indiana University Extension teacher of creative writing. Her cat, named Oedipus, likes to sit close by while Miss Orvis works, "The Art of Writing Fiction" will be published next month by Prentice-
Price of Success in Writing Comes High, mown we concise ne ue 60 A scarfs Veteran in Education
Y BUTLER
MANY PEOPLE want to write, but few are willing .to do the work the direction of psychological in-
teacher of
them,
“If all the people who have ability would stick with it four or possible, in addition to reading great acteristically American, wholesome
higher percentage of sucess, Right than those who actually attended
classes,” she says. Miss Orvis has put the fruits of her experience in teaching and criticizing writers into a book, “The Art of Writing Fiction,” which Prentice-Hall will publish next month, The forthcoming book, not just another textbook, is “an effort
to bring out whatever narrative she transferred her activities to!
dime by giving every man in his fueling at sea from a tanker reveals Of the many hundreds of students ability the student may have,” Miss
company a silver dollar during the what a complicated business it is, Who have been in her classes, the With running narrative by the ones who have succeeded in market-
1042 holidays in camp.
author, ( " ir their writing have been those The 77th got its training at Pt. Harcourt, Brace, 43.75), Ing their g Jackson, 8. C, and on the hot . . ' » WwW work—regular, systematic work. sands of Camp Hyder, Ariz, and NE PICTURE BOOK— { va y
sailed for Guam July 1, 1944. There was little rest after that. The assaults on Mt. Tenjo, the taking of Barrigada, the crossing of “the toughest reef in this war” followed, Always the ratio of Japs to Amerfcans killed was about a dozen to one; often it ran higher. The 77th and attached units lost 2132 in action, had 14,000 casualties, It was the 77th that fought across Leyte and. Ie Shima and on Geruma Shima “raised the first U, 8. flag on a Jap home island.” On Ie Shima the 77th lost a buddy—Ernie Pyle—
| 948 1 P . Cyd Rigketts Sumner, for example, authoy of “Quality” (Bobbs-Merrf\y ! 5 rize or Laura Long of Columbus, success"U.S. CAMERA, 1948" Edited ful writer of, children’s books. “Corby Tom Maloney New York respondence students sometimes . ( rs a ; " Duell Sloan & Pearce, $5.95. have shown more determination
IN “U. 8. CAMERA, 1948," there Is a striking group of pictures rescued from the past that - brings home a lesson for the present, In 1888 Jacob Riis, the little: Amerlean from Denmark who cleaned
Some of her best students, Miss
'W.S. C : Orvis says, have taken the fiction- . ® amera, writing course by correspondence—-
Orvis says.
” Ld ” IT IS DIVIDED into two parts—
few who realized that writing means the first dealing with creative proc-
esses, with what the writer does: and the second giving an analysis of techniques. in contemporary writing. Miss Orvis has included copious quotations and illustratioms from great fiction of the 20th Century to illustrate her critical discussion A point she stresses is the writer's need of broad education. “The contemporary tendency in first-rate
Public Ignores Critics’ Nominations, Selects Own 'Best Books of the Year
_+__ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
-
a
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PORTRAYER OF LIFE— | Nicholson's [Fame to Last, [Says Savant
By CECILIA H. HENDRI
Assistant Professor of English Indians University
THE MEASURE of a man's contribution to his own day is not hard to evaluate. Meredith Nicholson's prominence as a diplomat is clear. His significance as a lecturer needs no comment. As a writer he was depended on all over the United States, not only for entertaining stories and novels, but as a por-| trayer of life in the Middle West | during the first quarter of the 20th century. To evaluate a man's performance beyond his own time is not easy, especially when the pgpolem includes not only his native state, but a wider range, and when his writings must be discussed in terms of literature,
. » = THE FACT that Nicholson has made his way into standard histories of American literature, that his books are included in recurring volumes of American essays, and that his fiction has placed him among the recognized national story-tellers of the century indicates that he has held and gives! promise that he will no doubt con-| tinue to hold an established place in American literature. His scholarship is considered sound, The Cambridge History of American Literature, in discussing western dialects, quotes from “The Hoosiers” Nicholson's analysis of {midwestern speech as representing
PREFERS PLAYS—Joseph Hayes, Indianapolis-born author and playwright, glances over his story, "Thank You, Mark Caldwell," in the December American Magazine. Mr. Hayes writes stories as pot-boilers, concentrating his major interest on plays.
Writing Plays Looked Easy, So Hoosier Became Success
accurately the spoken language. “WRITING PLAYS looked kind of easy, so I thought I'd try it.” His romantic portrayal of small- That's how Joseph Hayes, son of Mr. and Mrs, Harold J. Hayes, { town life is recognized as setting a 5806 N. Oxford St. explains his start as a playwright. | pattern for ‘the later evaluatign of Mr. Hayes, who has a short story, “Thank You, Mark Caldwell,” in this contribution to Americaite. the December American Magazine, is about to sign a remarkable vy 4.» | writer-director flve-year contract with the Herd Theaterical Corp. of PARRINGTON’S “BEGINNINGS New York. l ee of Critical Realism in America”| That contract climaxes several under option te Producer Roland points out that in the development years of industrious writing in the Haas. ; . of the literature of the Middle West course of which Mr. Hayes has had, Mr. Hayes’ contract with" James “notably did Meredith Nicholson, 13 plays published. Most of them Herd will first result in the BroadWilliam * Allen White, and Booth written in collaboration with his Way production next fall of his Tarkington portray the village wife, the former Miss Marrijane latest play, “When the Wind Blows. neighborliness, its wholesomeness, Johnston of Indianapolis, have been It also will give him free rein to its spirit of democracy,” and that comedies especially designed for Write the way he wants to write, “the romantic interpretation of the school and college production. He describes “When the Wind small town, derived from Riley, and| pe {Blows” as having a “vaguely Ine defended by Nicholson” sets 8& wR HAYES started writing plays diana” setting. The play concerns theory now accepted of “a land of ahout five years ago when he held 8 17-year-old boy in a small but [fiction 1s away from plot, more In economic well-being, uncursed by an editorial position with Samuel growing Midwest town back in 1921, poverty and unspoiled by wealth; a prench, New York play publisher, A prolog and an epilog bring the land of ‘folksiness,’ the village a «1 gay so many manuscripts come Story to the present time, Ey a Oriel that 1 GA TA vie 8 ack) oo wEALtotS orate SS, ; w self.” Ss ogy, sociology and philosophy as middle-class and therefore char-1™ Vice ope effort granule of Tochnioal High Saino) : and Indiana versity, 18 creative literature. land human in spite of its prosaic called “Leaf and Bough,” Was working on a novelization of his 2 nis | shortcomings: the home of Amfri- bought by the Shuberts. “It sold 80 «1eaf and Bough.” “I'm hoping to MISS ORVIS, who hails from can democracy, dominated by the quick it scared me” Mr. Hayes/nold it down to 100,000 words, or Madison, Wis, and is a University SPirit of equality, where men are Says. The Shuberts held on to it jus average length,” he says. “Leat : ? measured by their native qualities.” fOr & while, at fey wanted 2 and Bough,” incidentally, is going ange and inject some melo=- by a student theater Perfiaps He Host, Iseting os ality drama Mr, Hayes did not like. The 0 Se pu a aT of Chiof Nicholson's work, that which is Dramatists’ Guild sustained him in xt spring. “The Broadway ° likely to give him a permanent cago next spring y his objection ta the proposed people will be out to see it,” Mr,
sight and philosophical interpretation,” she says. Her advice to young
a play
of Wisconsin graduate, first came | to Indiana some 30 years ago to help start and publicize Indiana University's Extension Division.
. place. in literature, is the fine - » After a few years in Bloomington, dignity of his writings. His topics changes, “Leaf and Bough” now 1s Hayes says. : the Toon lis Center. where she 2'® human interest ones. He writes ; a A Settled in the East since 1941, Mr, e Indianapolis Center, where for the general reader, the average | bai { land Mrs. Hayes and their 2%-year-~
|was an administrative officer as |well as teacher until three .years ago. {
| Of her students who have subse- never descends to a low level of quently succeeded in writing for. 1anguage He brings his reader to
publication she says, “I can't claim 4. hi lev any part in their success. Success own high level, folksy, but
in fiction comes from the writer, T0lesome, [i not from, the teacher.” ! But it is gratifying to her to Sales of Pocket Books i have had such students as Joseph Hit 200 Million Mark Hayes, Indianapolis playwright and . { story-writer discussed elsewhere on! Robert Fair De Graff announces i this page, in her classes. (that 200 million Pocket Books have | on — {been sold up to December of this : |year, a total representing 475 reprint titles. This cumulative figure exceeds a combined total of all American best sellers published since 1880,
old son, Gregory, now reside in © | Brookfield Center, Conn., within ‘4 commuting distance of New York. "They currently are spending the |holidays visiting their families in Indianapolis,
{First Post World War Il. . ‘Novel Out Jan. 20 :
| “That Winter,” a first novel by * Merle Miller covering the immediate aftermath of World War II in this country, will be published Jan, i 20 by William: Sloane Associates. d , | According to the publisher, the ; «+ book has received enthusiastic ad- . lvance acclaim from important crities.
citizen, as shown by his titles, “The ° Man in the Street,” “The Hoosiers,” + “Old Familiar Faces.” Yet he
Le Ee Co scurity by a competent writer is not including all major book club selec- iE . as the farker states.. The boys Ul Mulberry Bend, went into the THE pong a 8 Des old hime of telling the Feauing pulic ote of Iw Bien Cebu or. tions and all reprints other than ; bk New Thirkell Novel , ay p wupied Sums with a: camera and a flash. What are the best books of the year and the public is snickering up its " o k - 3 7 v W = = es > moved over to Cebu and occupied > 3 Sts Pocket Books: “Priv " Hokkaido after the Sra 1t l8ht—then a. new device—to get sleeve . Frederic O: "Msioher hi ThE eet WINNER Ol; Private Enferprise 4 Dew Ane was at Hokkaido that the sig) pictorial evidence of bad housing For fn this year of 1947 the public, which seems to have enjoyed Middle of the Journey,” by Lionel ee gt AWARD-WI — Oliver 'gela Thirkell novel of Barsetshire, as okkaldo- that the sign at New First Book Raps
the railroad station read: “Golden and poverty.
i , est. I had to t this Pd tend} ‘ 2 . Knopf. Gate” Special: San Francisco and 118 4 by 5 glass negatives are critics | , lake Wis by the Religious Prejudice economics and sociology at son Jan, 19 vy Alfred A. Evopf. points east.” now housed in the Museum of The best-seller list has checked . 3 | Spoonful. My brain is not the equal » Ralkov: Tegbive writ : C S 3 They could fight, but as Col. Tan- '¢ City of New York and from up,Huge totals for historical ro- Top Books of 1947 of Mr. Trilling’s, nor am I a’Freu- tee ED Hoare N oe. Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, || “Penn-Mark’s the SPOT to Find zola of the 305th combat teuin said them Alexander Alland has made mahces such as Tom D. Costain's Fiction dian, : : World-T PD m, attacks religio Ala: and winner of the George BOOKS Satisfying Heart & Mind” “My men can fight another cam prints that disclose the slum life “The Moneyman,” Samuel Shella- Mr. Trilling was describing the rid-1elegram, gious
of 60 years ago. They show how barger's “Prince of Foxes” and Ben thoroughly ‘Mr. Riis worked to get Ames Willlams' “House Divided,” documentaries” before that word none of which got anywhere with was In use, and how the fight the critics against the slums began. The latter were very dubious
. un u ) about: Mr. Williams' story, which ROGER WILLIAM RIIS, son of has a huge slice of Civil War his
paign, but I'm not sure they can stand another rehabilitation period.” Vets will indorse that, This 1s an excellent history, full of photographs, indispensable to any veleran, Better edited than most books, it contains a fill roster of
personnel Jacob Ris, donated Wiese NERA tory stuek right in the middle, on ! ' } tives to the museum. The repro- \ =... of bulk i 8 EN duction of some of them shows . » THE MEN WHO fought In Italy what valuable historical material
WELL, the public took that bulk
tll speak offsit as the forgotten , ontain front Peek hist as HH h : Dt they must contain to its heart as it did “Gone With tron skories . Ss & wy! Q ‘3 ap « "ic po > | hy » H- tel ) torch . use U. 8. Camera, 148” is edited by the Wind Ben Ames William Will tll the word it isn't so. The Tom Maloney and carries a trib- SPIWY , 8t) 1 . ’ today leads a bigger army of read 88th Infantry Division of Blue yte to Edward Steichen, who has . eu devil ” AR ers than his chief character, Gen Devils lost 15173 officers and men formally left the annual's staff, iled and w . . James Longstreet, ever had killed and wotinded in 344 days of but actually still sits “in at the Highly sular. too. were tl n ¢ . ghly YO ar, 00, € he combs and that's not the result conferences While news pictures y. Dog { cle or ma _ novels that fought intolerance I. cleaning up back areas dominate the book there are Sinclair Lewis’ "Kingsblood Roval” TR { » . 1 1 ‘Wis RS ( The Blue Devils in Italy” is the many with different subjects, Ws ; $ ; Work _ ' struck a blow against whites who ork of John P. Delaney, The in- showing how active photographers fudiced athst the Negro i are we ju o( ans S INCRT( signla was a four-lobed device, and are with thei increasingly efi A . n : 7 Hobson's “Gentle l 4 an aura Z ybson's te ey the appellation devils scame from cient medium EC a y { ) hit anti-Semi 3 i Man ART *m 1 al “oe the Germans. Maj. Gen. John E A 8» . nat kreemen Sloan was in command. Boys from THE WAR has taken a back seat En both best-sell New York and New Jersey were but its after effects linger, James F The public made bo 8 4 oe y fey 11h , ontns ne critics, early recruits. Byrues sits opposite the tmper- [OI about five month 3 1 critic ! y tn nee © ent 8 The division trained in the blaz- turbable V. M. Molotov—what's be- Who had to balance goo gi op Ing sun of Camp Gidber, Okla, and hind that mask? There's a good Against literary merit, ought
books rated
when ft reached Casablanca the one of George Marshall and Mi Beither of ihe ! in Yery the boys already there asked why it/Molotdv, too. Vito Marcantonio N&h as Works of Betiow eluded was late. The soldiers discovered’looks like a youngster. Francis A few, however, have include
that Africa could be cold and that Cardinal Spellman sits enthroned. ‘hem In their lists of the 10 best French eau de vie tasted and burned The Eisenhower brothers are shown STANDARDS ol judging novels like kerosene. Although veiled Arab as informal as Americans ever get are fairly elastic these days. There women were around “the easy days when they relax. And the Duke of is friendly hospitality for the sin-
|Windsor takel his Scotties for a cere young writer, even if ‘he has a
walk few rough edges. FOR
Although science must be served,! There is a willingness to give a the human element is always tops plus mark for good intentions, even Choose From Largest Selection Indienapolis
n “U. 8. Camera” Some of its if the result is only $0-s0. readers will relish the fishermen in’ It seems to me that practically the trout stream; others will be every new novel gets a boost from thankful for a bit of cheesecake some reviewer, somewhere. If Or|alley, but the book does not tell us| If New York is hostile, Atlanta n {where it is located. Sports fans will applauds, especially if the author - enjoy the spectacle of a prizefighter lives in Atlanta. MESH. i {about to land on his coccyx, still in # % mid-air, Maurice Rosenfeld’s pic- BUT WHEN, at the end of the tort sue windward mark is here. Two an- 1947, you can't follow the box-of-Also Available cient plates give us unkown pictures fice .figures. Nor does your judg- | in Our Neighborhood Stores of Abraham Lincolry and Toulouse- ment always tally with the rose- . s . Lautrec. » ate declarations of the personable A217 College. * 5539 EL. Wash, | Altogether, it is a prize package CCIE 3th
ture of Atlanticus fouling at the year, you size cup the books of
nicely posed in the Diamond Horse- ville Prescott turns thumbs down. . 8 i young women: who represent the Ry, of wonderf:
shoe. There is a wonderful bowling David Appell turns thumbs up. pictures, appealing to publisher. “
Mail Orders Prompth professionals, amateurs and just, You still must take literary acplain gasersH. H. complishment into account and that
itself, ran away with a lot of novels that get hardly a nod from the 1rilling as one of the year’s fin-
The Big Sky, by A. B. Guthrie. \ Christ Stopped at Eboli, by Carlo Lexi. J Knock”“on Any Door, by Willard Motley. The Mountain Lion, by Jean Stafford. About Liddy Thomas, by Maritta Wolff, The Garretson Chronicle, by Gerald Warner Brace, The Victory, by Vincent MecHugh. : Tales of the South Pacific, by James. A. Michener, Non-Fiction Inside U. 8. A, by John Gunther, Speaking Frankly, by F. Byrnes, Ordeal of the Union, by Allan Nevins, The James Family, by F. O. Matthiessen, Laing Reports from the Commission on the Freedom of the Press. A Study of History, by A, J. Toynbee, Postscript Lloyd Morris American Memoir, by Henry 8. Canby. Cuban Counterpoint, by Fernando Ortiz. The Walls Came Tumbling Down, by Mary White Ovington,
James
to Yesterday, by
is what critics and reviewers ultimately do. My nomination for the leading
' [their
| C. Cox, Ph. D., professor of England, is announced for publicae
readjustment of intellectuals who Prejudice in “Eagle At My Eyes,” ‘Washington Carver literary had gone out on a party limb and a first novel to be published next ,. . 41. his sociological study, *| were creeping back. It is an earnest Friday by Doubleday, we " and justifiable study, but ideas alone. The novel concerns a Jewlsh- Caste, Class and Race," to be do not make a novel, Gentile marriage and problems re- published Jan. 5 by Doubleday. sulting from it, according to the : Sirs
Penn-Mark Book Shop 5%
2124 W. Michigan St. Indianapolis 22, Indiana FRanklin 7854
” " 5 THE PRESTIGE of French letters often imposes on insecure
publisher, Americans. In 1947 it sent us a $ philosophy of defeatism called ex- Fortnightly Club
istentialism, backed by ballyhoo To Meet Jan. 6
from Jean-Paul Sartre. The regular meeting of the |
I have read “The Reprieve” twice g . '| Fortnightly Literary Club will be] the second time to make sure I was held at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday; Jan. 6, |
not batty. It fails to justify its au- t———— : y fh | : - thor’s learned pretensions that he is in ‘the Propylacum, 1410 N. Dela
St. describing isolated men who live py | Vare " e instincts he vulgarity of| Miss Florence Morrison will speak
|some of his passages is beyond be- | 0 the topic; “The Indo-American
lief, in view of his claims in intel- "n ze ' D° lectual accomplishment. Mirabeau Biography The technique is a telescoping of “Mirabeau,” a .new biography of Jules Romains’ style in the Men of the great 18th-Century French Good Will series, and by compari-|statesman by Antonina Vallentin, assistant sec (ab.) son makes the latter a classic, lauthor of “Leonardo Da Vinci” is retary of state 5 Baseball term a ol do not inoue “Kingsblood |announced for February publication Il Qetop 6 Writing fluid’ oyal” or “Gentleman's Agreement” | X t In my 1947 list it is not Semen i Yicing | 14 Nested boxes Ties (Roman) disparage their influence. Both have | | 15Type of fur 8 Parrot
Flowers Telegraphed
OF INDIANAPOLIS
CROSSWORD PUZZLE
Answer to Previons Pussle U. S. Official
HORIZONTAL 3 River (Sp.) 1,5 Pictured U.S. 4 Lone Scout
Outer Edges’ in June
books of 1947—(let's drop the wom: best) —are given above. I'd like to comment on a few not mentioned) therein, ¢ of {
» o . { SOME OF MY colleagues think highly of “Under the Volcano,” by Malcolm Lowry—including Joseph Henry Jackson, John K. Hutchens and George Halberry., To me, the fumes of that volcano are chiefly | alcoholic, ‘. | What great lesson of human con|duct the chief character is trying {to impart was lost for me in his (alooholic mumblings. Intentional pb-
8 Hy
17 First man 9 Sea ducks 26 Carmine 36 Bristle done much for tolerance and their | ? popularity proves many Americans “The Outer Edges,” a new novel 13 Foot tab Oi" 10 Beasts of " Os ot Behold! are sympathetic, |by Charles Jackson, is tentatively 21 Ostrichlike burden 30 Daze 44 Interest (ab.) For nonfiction 1947 was a banner | announced for publication next ird 12 Type measure 3) come 45 Observe year. I haven't listed half the books/ June by Rinehart. It is described 22 Endure 14 Island 32 Makes rigid 46 Symbol for of “biography, history, Amerimanalas the story of a murder and its 5% Ages 168 Whether 34 He succeeded actinium and criticism that I prize—H. H. efféct on a community. 25 Compound 18 Meditate William === 47 Compass point - — | ether 23 Doctrine 33 Mountain 49 From ° . 27 Antiquated 24 Noblemen crests 51 Exclamation Winter Term Begins || #5 neon 20 Either Monday, January 5 30 Satiated Prospective students, businessmen-—all callers—are being | 39 Medioval lyric received at our new location in Indiana Business College [| $7 Waste Building (formerly Meridian Street Methodist Church), 802 | allowance North Meridian Street (St. Clair entrance). “Central is the 38 Withered | 89 Footed vase INDIANA BUSINESS COLLEGE Il 10 foaled valt of Indianapolis. The others are at Marion, Muncie, Logans- | o3 Sine | port, Anderson, Kokomo, Lafayette, Columbus, Richmond, | 48 Portico and Vincennes—Ora E. Butz, President. Interested persons | 47 Girl's name are invited to contact the schools of their respective prefer- Purchaser a ences, or Fred W. Case, Principal. : 50 Light boat . 52 Revere ? lia | . | §3 Poultry ntral Business College || “mea. : 802 North Meridian Street La J Indianapolis, Indians id
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