Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1948 — Page 11

. 25, 1948

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DEXA DR TREE ¢ . S8awchuck, Capitols, an

Insid IF YOU ARE an ice hockey fan, today's effort should make you mighty happy, so stick around a few minutes. . % — If you are not a4 fan of the game, or hate it to the point where you wouldn't go aeross the sreet to see Joe Stalin play left wing with the Kremlin Kadavers against our Indianapolis Capitols, stay with me and get some new ideas on how tough and rough the game really is from a statistical standpoint. . I'm referring to the kind of statistics you ordinarily don't find in sports stories, namely, the number of hits across the mouth with a hockey

. stick, the number of times players get knocked

on their posteriors, etc. Let it be known right off that gathering the data of a hockey game is a difficult undertaking, In the first place, in order to get a good look at what's going on a man has to get close to the ice. That's dangerous, In the second place, one man. couldn't possibly handle the antics of 12 club-swinging, elbowflailing, knee-smashing bruisers. And that even includes me, a bloke with a flair for the unique statistic, 80, what to do? I was fortunate in getting the services of one Arthur Eugene Gilliat, a statistician of no little renown who once as a student at. Franklin College (the story goes), single handedly passed an advanced: arithmetic test.

All £ar-~o in—for Safety

NEXT, in order that we wouldn't be interrupted in our work by a loose puck (there are records of pucks knocking people's teeth out), I procured (through the courtesy of Em-Roe Sporting Goods Co.) two wire fencing masks and two baseball gloves. A catcher’s mask was considered until I found that a puck could get through the slots. You can see nothing was overlooked to bring this repert to you. Mr, Gilliat, who is called “Champ” by his friends, chose to gather the punches and things that had been handed to the New Haven Ramblers last Thursday night. I, chose to watch what found its way to the chins of the Caps.

In case you're wondering why so late with the |

statistics of a game that was played five nights ago, I'd just like to remind you the whole project was new, terribly .complicated and there were times when the Champ and I didn't know whether we were coming or going or playing hockey. . Without further ado, therefore, let us plunge

into our work. Perhaps I'd better inform you that: ,

the Capitols won 6-2, that there were 12 penalties ripping: charging, interference, slashing, Si SPR A 2 gn That

d Emile Francis ‘When we know the above, what do we know? Not much. What does roughing mean? What does slashing mean or interference, or.elbowing? That's WHEE “th Champ aang some im Fes weg ready to go. The Important Statistics

THE TOTALS for the Capitols as 1 saw them through the fencing mask were: Stick across the back, 15; stick in the face, 13; falls (hard flops to the ice), 41: crunchers against the boards, 37; sliding crunchers against the boards, 10; fist fights

Homicide Haven

MIAMI, Oct. 25.—Dade County, the site of most of ‘What they call greater Miami, has always had a healthy percentage of violent departures from this dreary vale. Something in the air down here removes inhibition, to such point that the

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.cops are forever dragging in a corpus delicti.

But the odd thing is that relatively few of them are ever tagged as murdered. This peculiar circumstance has given Birth to a local, grisly jest —to wit, that the safest place in the United

"States to inflict a homicide would be Burdine's

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fk 18-'49 Jorful vies oars wine, Junior

department store window at high noon. : One time they found a nude gent on ‘the beach. He had a bullet through his heart. No gun found, but this was labeled suicide. Another

~time-tiey-found-a -burned-bedy-on.a.lonely. road...

and this, too, was catled suicide.

Celled It Accidental Death

JUST recently, after the hurricane, a mutuel clerk was discovered stark, stiff, and dreadfully

spattered... When. heleft home. he was, filly, clothed.

When they found him, in a ditch, he was wearing nothing but shorts. He left an estate of $45,000— considerable savings for a ticket-window clerk. His passing was described as accidental death This bland acceptance of the unusual exit has stretched to Key West. Not long ago a politico named Fred Eberhardt, unsuccessful candidate for sheriff, was found dead near his front steps. There was a pistol some distance away from him. The first verdict was suicide. It was then pointed out that he bore no powder burns, and that the gun had been fired from a distance of at least two feet, The verdict then was hurriedly switched to “accidental” death. Case closed. They tell me that if the cops do surprise them-. selves by hanging a murder designation on a departed citizen, the culprit is rarely apt to pay

Dogdays Data

WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 - These, it says hgre in the history book, are the dogdays before election. when nothing happens in Washington. That book is erazy and I can prove it with a partial report on what actually did happen here in one week: Tourists gaped and muttered that the man obviously was lying when the orator on the rubberneck bus pointed out the pile of lumber and steel in front of the Capitol for the Presidential inaugural stand in January and said it cost $80,000. I couldn't believe it either, but I checked and it cost a little more than that. Federal Security Director Oscar Ewing gave up his private cook, who'd been preparing special lunches for Oscar, and sent him back to cooking for the patients at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, Osear said he did this reluctantly, but the comptroller general, who believes when a cook is hired to cook in a hospital he should do his cooking there, insisted.

Served in Glass Glasses AN OUTFIT introduced a new kind of nursing hottle, which is soft and can be tossed away like the wrapping of a pound of oleo. The introduc-

. tion took place at a cocktail party, where a genuine

baby drank milk from the collapsible bottle, cocktails were served to the oth glass glasses. - « The Navy finally got around (0 observing that female hemlines aren't where they used to be and adopted the new look for the WAVES. The Radio Corporation of America set up the machinery to transmit the entire text of “Gone With the Wind” three miles across town and did so in two minutes and 21 seconds. This establishes new vistas in

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STATISTICS GALORE — Two expert mathematicians (left to right). "Mr. Inside Indianapolis" » and. Arthur Eugene (Champ) Gilliat watch a hockey game at close range to gather some of the unusual data about the game.

with one or more punch, 8; elbows in kidneys, 34; bloody nose discoloring ice, 1; whack with stick across legs, lost track at 258; flying pucks, 24; dangerous flying pucks, 21; dangerous sticks high enough and close enough to knock a man out, 43; referee in the air for self-protection, 20; referee pushed, 3; referee crunched against boards, 1; broken sticks, 3, and dangerous pucks in the crowd, 3. . The totals for the Ramblers as the Champ saw thém were: Stick across the back, 19; stick in the face, 8; falls (hard flops to the ice), 49; crunchers against the boards, 43; sliding crunchers against the boards, 4: fist fights with one or more punch, 6 (notice the Caps and the Ramblers were tied in this department); elbows in the kidneys, 52; bloody nose, 0 (remarkable, too); whack with stick across the legs, lost track at 221; stick across the back of neck (notice I didn't have any for the Caps), 4, and triple flipover, 3 (three complete turns in the air before a fall which can’t be done without the utmost in co-operation from the opposing team). €? SL ) A word about the collisions or body as they're called in hockey circles. You will notice Flat body sheoks BE ay omitted Both chatep andl AR TRAY: NRE IIE ROE Bs URRY NRRL CR as a body checks administered in a game. That is why we have only the special checks incorporated into the falls department and the cruncher and sliding clincher departments. “After all; we're-only “after The FesUITY,” a tert uwhe® Rsk is the result of a good body check. See there, you have a fall or a cruncher against the boards or a sliding cruncher. Incidentally, both the Champ and I want it to be known that we'll be skeing future. games from anywhere except next to the boards. We're not hankering to become statistics.

By Robert C. Ruark

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heavily for it. One guy cooled out his wife, in what seemed to be a clear case of premeditated killing, and they laughed him off with a manslaughter rap—maximum, 10 years. But rob a tourist? Man, oh man. They put you under the jail. A fellow named Harry Sitamore got crowned with 40 years for jewel heist, and actually pulled 14 years of the sentence. Again, the grisly joke is that the only reason they draped a capital rap on Zangara the fellow who shot at: FDR and, killed Anton Cermak, was because he had the bad taste to pull the gunplay in front of 7500 witnesses. Witnesses who, if called to court. might refuse to swear that Mr. Cermak, had stumbled and injured himself fatally on the curbstbne.

“Electrocuted Mad Dog Named Christie ALTHOUGH Miami has béen right up top in the violent demise department for the last 20 years, only two white men from the vicinity have been electrocuted since 1936. They removed a Mr. | Franklin Pierce McCall on a kidnaping count, in| 598. and Hey eiectrociied-a<mado dog. .named. Vincent Christie in 1940. There was no possible] accidental out for tlie Christie crime, because he gunned a family of three and then fled with a child as hostage, later killing the child. They caught him in Jacksonville, as a matter of fact, and the Miami law had little to do with it. This casual acceptance of summary slaying is disturbing to the citizens here, since Miami ranked 11th among the nation’s homicide leaders in '40— and recently, in '45, the homicide count jumped 53 per cent over the preceding year. And this despite the tendency to label unwitnessed slaying as either “accidental” or ‘‘suicide.” Miamians have a third grim gag: “If there's anybody you don't like.” they say, “bring him here to do him in. Chances are it won't even make the papers.”

~ By Frederick C. Othman

communications, RCA said, and I wouldn't doubt it. - | The Progressive candidate for the Senate in Iowa reported to Washington that he'd taken in| $33°in campaign contributions and spent not ong cent, thus making him the only political candidate yet to make a cash profit on his campaign. | The Republicans charged the Democrats with shaking down federal workers for campaign cash.| The Demoerats accused the Republicans of ‘the same dirty trick, which happens to be strictly against the-law. The shakes, if any, weren't talking. }

Court Studies Special ‘Memoirs’

THE POST Office Department took up the interesting question of how much of a naked woman could be pictured in a nudist magazine, while the Supreme Court settled down to: studying “The Memoirs of Hecate County,” a novel alleged to be obscene because of the amours of a blond with a brace on her back. Gen. Lucius Clay of Berlin flew in and flew out again in a hurry, but took one half hour to tell a House committee about the German scrap iron situation. A New York high school mathematics teacher, testifying before another House corhmittee. had to admit that when he did any counting he needed to use his fingers : More paint peeled off the White House pillars and some folks worried ahout what Tom Dewey, “if “he shouldbe -the.new. tenant. at. 1606 Pennsyl-~vania-Ave... would do with the Franklin D. Roosevelt mementoes in the cellar. Harry Truman’ took in the rocking chairs for the winter from his $15.000 back porch. ..And if all this sounds like| dogdays, I dread the time when the Capitol really| gets lively. i

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The Quiz Master

Where is the Land of the Midnight Sun? Norway Is popularly called the Land of the Midnight Sun. This term is also applied to other high latitudes above the Arctic Circle, here in midsummer the sun does not sink below the horizop at any time within the 24 hours of

the day. . + What is considered the most Important of all inventions? The are of alphabetical writing is gen-

erally considered the most important invention ever made hy man, The honor of its Invention belongs to the Phoenicians but the date'ls not ‘definitely known.

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Test Y

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Q—Do a dog's teeth decay? | A—A dog’s teeth are unlike a human's, They do mot have pulp and nerves and therefore are not susceptible to ‘cavities. If a dog breaks a tooth it does not decay but wears smooth. > 2 Q-—~Where does a flower get its perfume? A—The perfume of a flower comes from within the plant itself and arises from a vol atile oil which the plant produces. a ow

27? Tes

Q -1s fasting peculiar to any one religion?, AFrom early times fasting has been practiced In many religions and among peoples widely scattered over all the world,

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By Ed Sovola nN

“Pull” Out For Police Recrui

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“The Indianapolis

+ SECOND SECTION. r

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MONDAY, OCTOBER '25, 1948

4-Man Merit Board Sifts Applicants For Education, Credit Rating

| By PHILIP F. CLIFFORD JR.

Despite the urgent need for additional policemen, any candi{date who thinks ‘political pull” is the key to appointment wil! get short shrift from the Police Merit Board. . This is the dictum set forth by Police Chief Edward D. Rouls Last week the four-man Merit Board met on the second floor of Fire headquarters at New York es MT m———y and Alabama Sts., to decide on year. Any man who wants to the fitness .6f 20 applicants for join the: force and thinks he's jobs as city patrolmen, This mea- above the crowd because he is a ger handful of aspiring patrol- friend of a friend of a politician, men was the cream of the crop./and can get by with any tricks. They were all that remained of|i8 in for'a rude awakening.” an original block of 137 eager) Four on Merit Board candidates. The Police Merit Board, which During the preceding weeks a screens the young hopefuls besearching investigation under the|fore they are sent to the police |direction of Lt. Michael J. Kav- academy for a 30 days training |anagh, head of the department’s|is made up of three civilians an: Internal Security Division, was| Chief Rouls. lcarried out.- Picked -detectives,| It includes Dr. M. O. Ross, dea

lassigned to Lt. Kavanagh's de- of Butler Univeristy; Dr. J. Wil-

tail, checked the background of liam Wright, Indianapolis ear, leach applicant. His home life, nose and throat specialist, and credit rating, past education, L. J. Bernatz, vice president ir

financial standing and character charge of sales for the Americar! were carefully scrutinized. |Cabinet Hardware Corp. Can't Cover Past Record | The candidates sit on lon In at least one instance, Lt. benches in the second floor ha! Kavanagh said, a candidate tried at fire headquarters. In four sep to cover a past criminal record. arate rooms sit the board mem The offense wasn't too grave, he bers, ‘waiting to interview eaci added, but the man's atfempt to™man. hide this fact set aside any fur-| Lt. Kenneth Luke. head of «the : ther consideration of his applica- academy, calls one of the nervous appointment in the Nov. 3 class of rookies. tion to join the force. jcandidates and escorts him to one In this subject, Chief Rouls is of the rooms to be interviewed severe. After each man has passed a ses“The department is sorely in Sion with the civilian members, ‘Chief he then is taken to Chief Rouls

~~ INFORMATION PLEASE-—Police aspirant Harvey ‘Hartison (back to camera! sces three'members of Police Merit Board. One of 20 men seeking to join the daparinent, Mr. Harrison's answers to board's questions will decide whether he is worthy of Board members (left to right) are Df. M.

O. Ross, president of Butler University: L. J, Bernatz, vice president of American Cabinet Corp., and Dr. J. William Wright. : :

need of replacements’™ 'Rouls said, “but as long as I'm|for the final oral examination. chiefgthere will be no room in our | Before the man entets the pAphE dak MEAs tbents SERLLL Luke, rings 10 tus. AD land political stooges. TRE OMOEA RE

“With a certain amount of pgr-| * Greeted by Chief |donable pride,” he decleared, “we Upon entering the room, the !have--done..a fine job of house-| candidate is greeted by the chief hing shrce-ithie= first of. the dnd Lt Carl Schmidf. chief of the—e ee |depaptment’s personnel and pire | lic relations division.

. . S | As soon as the prospect Is seated, Chief Rouls begins firing a barrage of questions.

| In one instance a candidate {said he was delinquent in taxes [“If you expect to be on the public |payroll,” said the chief, “it's only |fair that you should bear part of the expense.” Another man was in debt to a loan company. The current balance was big. How, the chief wanted to know, did the young {man expect to make ends meet | his obligations on a patrolman’s | starting salary of $2,400 a year? His reply was clear and simple.

May Be Increased

Bill Would Lengthen

Term to Four Years |

Hoosier voters will decide Nov. 2 whether or, not Indiaha’s 97-year-old Constitution ..should be amended for the 23d time. They wil] vote on a prpposed amendment which would lengthen | fhe. 1rms of Sounty sheriffs from yi. was not behind in any of his If a majority of the votes are payments ind had managed lo “yes,” the terms will be for four Juck 3 Jeti away in the bank, he years beginning Jan. 1. 1950. ®He —_— a olean-out youngster In 1921, voters rejected a pro- who gave the right answers. Al- . ’ ! i posal . ‘to extend all two-year ,n,,on he seemed slightly nerv- THIS IS IT—Raymond Broshears, 3744 W. Michigan St., (left) and Joseph E.

‘county offices to four years by : : h : \ 0S a vote of 115,139 to 82,389 jous he giiswereq sl questions in Chestnut, 2909 N. Gale St., prospective candidates for the Indianapolis Police DeNeed Simple Majority |" As he left the office, Chief partment, having previously been examined by three other members of the Merit required a Rouls smiled. Board, now face Chief Edward D. Rouls, the last stop before being accepted as re-

At. that time, it majority of all persons voting in| “There's a good - lad,” he said, . ‘ No : Ia , " the election, whether or not they|“I feel he has the makings of a cruits in the department's police academy. If they get the chief's nod the men will ee... D® sworn in on Nov. 3. ment, to carry. Now, only a| A i mob simple majority of those par-| D 25 Ad oH L ticipating in the constitutional] ess ancer, ¥ ’ mi S ove mage, to increase, the length of [lay terms of county offices. Iri~231§" | i a- A legislatures, the subject was pro- ’ R posed and voted down. Two leg- : . {former dancer, said today Robert L. Knetzer, indicted cornfield Adviser Named |autc dealer; “is the finest, most wonderful man I've ever known” : even though he failed to marry her after she bore him a son, Emendment b For Foreign Students cerns itself only with sheriffs and Pauw University dean of stu- he had a wife and daughter at derful I has the passive approval of both th re his home at Edwardsville, Ill. won eriu major parties: dents, A reas e Ter “If I had known, this naturally known.

vote for of AGAINST the amemd-spiendid-police. officer amendment balloting is required. For Cornfield Auto Dealer islatures - must approve the Miss Kelch, a shapely brunet, said that when her romance! Not a Political Issue Haute Teachers College . 14 never have happened,” she She said that she still was will-/and housing materials remaine 1

chapter of Phi Delta Kappa On said. “But he is the finest, most ing to marry Mr. Knetzer but generally unchanged in Indiar: It has ‘not been mentioned by : : rverinan - metry § a 4 : : -- it either party, however, and is not the DePauw campus Tuesday. » Fo a A) iopuge na during September, although ove: - a political issue. Spokesmen for! In other faculty activities at agent. Arthur F Kramer of Jer all wholesale prices declined, ti"? both Republicans and Democrats Indiana colleges, Dr. Hans Gru se ville m ere \nd} od “| Indiana Business Review of In. predicted today that it would eninger, also of DePauw, was ap charges of noire acy or feraugidiana Universny Bureay of Busicarry. pointed adviser to foreign stu- ) {ness Research showed today. If it is defeated, its supporters dents on the campus. and obtaining money under false; Foods and other farm produc!s

{ must present the amendment to! pr. Grueninger will make all

{were the chief commodities droptwo successive General Assem- arrangements for scholarships Mr. Knetzer's romance with ping in price. The report shov s blies before it will be placed on for foreign gtudents at the uni-

Miss Kelch was discovered by re-/the gradual upward busine: the ballot again. versity Students, Teachers [1 [© ing the investigation. trend, which began in April ani If it carries, a proclamation by pr, Joseph C. Heston, director Pledge Support [Miss Kelch denied any relation-|léveled off in August, and conthe governor will put it into ef- of DePauw's bureau of testing | teachers. princl-|SHiP With him at first but this tinuing to climb in September, fect. But sheriffs elected this fall and research. is scheduled to at-| Public school teachers. p ‘week-end she admitted her love] Indianapolis building permits will serve only two-year terms. tend three educational and psy- Pals

Trend Is Lower

Little Change Shown In Heavy Materials -

Times Stale Service = BLOOMIN GTON, Oct. 25 - {Prices on steel and automobils

{vote pie .. Riggs to Addr Since 1877, efforts have been EHICATG, Oct 25 TUP = Dorothy “Ketel; beautitul 25-year-old amendment before it is submitted This proposed amendment con- Dr. Lawrence A. Riggs, De-'with Mr. Knetzer began several years ago, she did not know that!

| man have ever!

Schools Push Slogan Contest

pretenses,

and students have pledged |for him. also showed an increase durin; Sheriffs elected in 1950 would chologicad meetings in New York their support to The Times Civic| She said she was working as a/the first nine months of this year

SELVES four-year terms. Thursday and Friday. Pride Contest which offers $100 dancer in the Chicago Loop when| 2Yer the same period last year, . Plan Joint Research in prizes. ng 69 per cent.

|she met Mr. Knetzer. Soon after-| _l ds, she gave up dancing to be-| At Indiana ‘University, scien-| 1, a meeting of the Inter-High war B tists of the University of Chicago|gchool Student Council, the group Boys Club Seeks Books “We need books.” That's the

|come his secretary, Romance ...and LL have organized a joint! heduled students to speak be Dissiomed, rapidly after that, R - Fe io ana oR" biophysics fore Parent-Teacher Groups this| ther of her Bo ar bent jo he x glia Aves ors . . ’ J up, wi 8 a v eek in behalf of the contest | June 25, 1947, in Cheyenne, Wyo. (for its young members and would

The organization will meet "11 that is necessary to bid for| | Mr. Knetzer and Mr. Kramer appreciate donations of good

— monthly, alternating between the share of the prizes is to write! 7 Chicago and Indiana campuses. | sold “new used cars” at J - books for boys from 7 Mrs. INDIANAPOLIS residents and 1 int- ars’ at Jersey s for boys from 7 to 20, Mrs. ds or 1¢83 a Slogan Po ville and Edwardsville up until a Edith Robertson, a member of

1 in 15 wor other siers who keep up with Indiana University has filled | Hoo few weeks ago. Their enterprise the Boys Club staff, will be in

Keep Tab on Vote At WISH-Times-Election Party

the vacant chairmanship of its ing ta civic pride in fndianapolis. |

alleged to have failed to deliver Dr their cars or return. their down, payments. ‘ Dr. Herman 'N. Bundesen, Until then. the two men had President of Chicago Board of become famous as the “angels of Health, will speak at a banquet

the election returns Nov. 2 will ; , Entri to be written on a 3 hilos t t ontries are | : be those who join the WISH- DE oven or plain plece of paper and mailed crashed when customers became| charge of the library project. Times Election Party. * Qtallknecht. now head of the to Civic Pride Contest, Indian- panicky because the dealers were re == Bundesen to Talk

The party will open at 6:30 p. m. philosophy department bf Bow- apolis Times, 214 ‘W. Maryland and revised tabulations of votes . national, local and state-wide will be broadcast until the early morning when final returns are

doin College St. Will Attend Opening

From ]ndiana Central College

$30 For Best Slogan The best slogan will earn $50 for the entrant; second, $35, and

in. Dr. Frederick C. Von Wicklen pi" Egypt” by selling practically new Jor fhe Indiana State Board wh ee , ) hi » Al. v . ealth and state office 650 A part of the WISH-Times And Prof. Archie G. Mullins =p tL ust be in The Times cars at list price to anyone who ah i. He wi wet / Election Party will he the coast- Planned to attend opening of the . t ked by | Was willing to lay down a stand- PM. ay In the Lincoin "h 4 offices or postmar Y Next ard deposit—usually $1000--and following an all-day conference

to-coast hookup of the American reseatch and development labor. Sunday midnight.

! Sine of board members and officers, Broadcasting chain providing re- flores 327 She inetair Refining The contest is co-sponsored by then wait for delivery. ER a SEE bums 7 sults on the national scene. F : y. . ; “iy : Indianapolis and ong They will also attend lectures The Times. [He Ago : In. : the broadcast will he direct from of Dr.- Alexandar Todd. Cam- Prine a ors "| 3 ay ummers y 2 7 % ory the “rlews rooms of The - Times: 1 08%; England, on the Notre anapolis newspapers: : TI ’ \ ) Dame campus. f Ee m—— : 3 . each half-hour. Adding to the . ities {Of tk Pr mW m A le election roundup will be broad-! — ‘Medical Fraternities { e ‘OQ oO an Ss n on

casts from headquarters of the|

political parties and from the Butler Senior With my hair. dowri. J ee ia -

to keep up pretenses because you're not after rank’."

At IU Elect Officers Kay Summersby saw Gen.

scenes of political activity. Officers elected to medical fra-|DWight D. Eisenhower during the Prominent political tv. Heads Conference [ternities of Indiana University War as no one else saw him . . .

Rational and local—will be on the| Jack A. Boston, Butler -Uni- School of Medieine for the current from a woman's point of view. air as part of the WISH-Times chool year, include: | That's wh y this WAC captain, Election Party to provide an ron, Eon Taibot Bt, ‘president. Mus & five-star aid to the allied su-

“General Eisenhower stop d stock-still, more military than I

|versity senior has been named ® | y had ever seen him . . . it was the

analysis of the returns. a |General a shal. HE Prances Ny oe." vice. presi. premie commander, tells in first and only time he was to bee ————— dent; Miss Elsie E Flint, Wolcotiville, prepNiproWER WAS MY BOSS, the German chiefs . . . I bent aver | wide planning | recordin, jectatary; Mrs. Marian E E 8, » Sponsor Square Bacon, 1415 W. 26th St. corresponding| what no one else could tell about/™Y diary to take his words down.

Dance | conference secr etary, and Miss Ruth Foster, Bloom-| ss = » The Indianapolis Council of the student Interna- ington, treasurer. the war hero. “Privately he sank into ‘the

a Nu: Dan B. Kahle, 414° Here are some of thé things American Youth Hostels Inc. wily| tional Relations Ourroliton Ave. president; Douglas White depths of despair When the Alf sponsor a square dance at Brook-| Clubs and Col- Rascos Mier. 100s Wate ‘Be ators she ky sg A Force messed up a #

and William Brandt,” Ft. Wayne, secre

side Park Community House atl léglate Councils “Times next Sunday: assault . . . killing some of our

for the United

7:30 m. tomorrow to o eh | own funds for establishment of wc Nations to be | ofl a, Pi: Kenneth Grow. 1001 w.| General lke never appeared ow 8» jo in Marion County. held on the bull, vice archon; Prederick Bigier, Goshen, downcast, disheartened, or even! “Lying awake in bed that night, irae ee mrp n campus Nov. 6. Mregetary. and William Hiatt, Bluffton, disappointed in_ public. Occasion- I gradually realized what an Wns Ad M Mr. Boston is ali on} Max HW. Newman Jr, De- ally he let down his guard around usual week-end it had for an to Speak president of WS (oe ite DreiiBam. Misses Joes Wings | the Inner office and in the evening an ordinary A 8 Walter Jackson, Indianapolis Butler's Inter- vr Boston iiage, secretary, and. Elmer Habegger bridge sessions (with, Kay Sum- British girl at that, to pi wom ¥ ig advertising man, will address the national Relations Club and is phi Rhe Sigma: Daniel Rothenterger,|METSDY and others of his staff at served sandwiches by a ral members of the Lions Club in/mid-West director of the Col. M0! Shelly Bi, president. Phillip 8thair (his London retreat). ‘You're one'named Eisenhower, enjoying a their Wednesday noon luncheon legiate Council for the United |W inh Br raaent: Ralph Hopp, J4S|person.” ‘he sald to me one dayipicnic beside the President of the INations. ) I Marion, behaurer, 1 ANY rlyn Grant. in a low mood, ‘who ever sees me|United States!” RL: \

meeting in the Claypool Hotel,

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