Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1949 — Page 13

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Inside Indianapolis ~~ sytasees CT

“CLOSE THE doors, Charlie, we've hit rock * Head Coach Tony Hinkle was mighty happy to see me report for the first Butler Bulldog football practice yesterday. I could tell that from the

“The Old Man is sure sharp this morning, isn't he, Charlie? I quipped to Charlie McElfresh, “Imagine him saying, ‘Close the doors, Charlie, we've hit rock bottom,’ when I walk in.” “What are you doing here and why?" Good ol' Charlie. . ¢ “Don’t you ever learn?” added Jim Morris, trainer, who two years ago worked on a shoulder and last year on my feet,

I'm a Veteran

“THIS MAKES the third football practice for me. Jim. I'm a veteran.” “I'm going to close the door.” snapped Charlie. As usual he was in fine fettle on the opening day. “Stay out of the new equipment,” he flung over his shoulder. “You can't talk like that to a three-year veteran, you little squirt,” I said to myself and headed the new box of shirts, . It was great to be a veteran and get back to #fight” for Butler. While searching for a brand new pair of shoes, nostalgic scenes from that first practice in 1947 drifted ' back. How different things were now. Now I knew the difference between a shoulder pad and a kidney pad, a football shoe from a basketball shoe. Future bone crushers milled around the training rooms exchanging small talk. One veteran asked another how to stop a baby from sucking its thumb, . “I'm having a heckuva time getting my kid to stop doing that.” “Why don'tcha paint his thumb with bright

¥ingernail polish? | That's what my wife did to

DAT kid.” I Yes, sir, It sure was great to get back to the smo} of leather, fighting talk and action. “Come on. Curt, let's go out and get it over aid a fellow footballer to Curt Kyvik, ard.’ ; Bill . Kuntz, tackle, came through the room yelling, “Let's go.” John Mwsgphy. tackle, shook the basement of the fieldhousé with a slight variation of the verbal “Let’s\get in there,’ he was shouting. In 1947 I-want out for the quarterback spot. Failed. ‘In 1948 the goal was the fullback position. Prancis (Mage) Moriarty, veteran of all veteran Bulldogs, beati me out. In 1948, get in the line, was my motto)\ Linemen, the backbone -of a team. Just like thh infantry. queen of battle. Assistant Coaches John Rabold and Jim Hauss, line bosses, were running the boys through ‘preliminar® drills. \ “You must have spring you must have that spring so keep vour feet wide, tail down, head up -

with.” regnlar Capt.

charging

.and make the first four or fike steps short. - Re-

member that, all right, let's goX . More than 30 huge men shRok their heads, slapped one another on the back and repeated, “Let's go.” Same old stuff. After a few forward charges fmaginary foe. Rabold asked me to the way before you get hurt.” He h there. “Getting stepped on by a guy Hinkle, 220 pounds, could be serious.

against an

Snyder Lonely V

WASHINGTON. Sept. 7—It's kind of a shame that Secretary of Treasury John ‘Snyder has to be in on that dollar crisis confab that starts at the State Department today. He's the only guy in the cast who isn't a character. Mr. Snvder looks and acts like a country banker from Missouri, which is what he is. But the others—wow! There's Secretary of State Dean. Acheson, for instance, who looks more like a British lord than a British ‘lord does. Also Sir Stafford Cripps,

‘Britain's chancellor of the exchequer, who takes

cold baths at 8 a. m. And British Foreign Minister Ernie Bevin, who-used to have a-ginger-beer route and has a tough time keeping his union suit from crawling out of his socks.

EVEN THE question of what to have for supper is going to be full of ‘complications in a crowd like that.” The Messrs. Acheson, Bevin and Snyder probably will be glad to ‘take pot luck, being healthy cusses with good appetites; but Sir Stafford’'s stomach will be a problem. It's so weak he doesn't even dare to look at.a menu that has steak on it, and most of the®ime 4ie keeps body and.soul together with a nice raw carrot topped with assorted weeds. He has been known to sneak a well-boiled egg. however, and that ought to be a help. ’ - Sir Stafford is the richést capitalist of the lot, having inherited a lot of dough and then married the heiress to an epsom salts fortune, but he doesn’t act like it. He believes in the government running everything and in everybody being austere. gs-all-get.out.and.is. so. much of a Socialist that even the Secialists are griping. ! Trouble i=, the guy always practices what he preaches. Even Winstop Churchill had to admit that when he pointed to Sir Stafford one day and cracked: “There but «for the grace of God goes God.”

Reaction Time

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.

e Indianapolis Times | WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1949 -

: a : A Dollar Crisis: on the Campus—

Li ¥ ® a

Operating Costs ' Above Income

This is the last of two articles about the dilemma which, as ex-President Herbert Hoover said in his birthday speech, exposes independent schools and colleges “to the risk of becoming dependent on the state” By BRUCE BIOSSAT Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Sept. 7-

The great university and the. small college are partners in distréss in the financial crisis now building up in America’s privately endowed schools. As an example in the sma# | {school field, there is Antioch Col- . | lege, tucked away in Midwestern Oooof! . . . Tackle John Murphy, 222-pound farm country at Yellow Springs, Butler Bulldog. stops_a body block thrown by a 0. It typifies the country’s indi“veteran” with extreme difficulty. Notice the vidualism in edueation. 3 ained expression | It is devoted to an idea—that P P ’ {a good way to get an education |{is to blend study on the campus i {with first-hand experience In KYVIK'S reaction time worked well during whatever the student favors, one practice play and Hauss said, “Nice going, |g,ch as politics or labor relations. Curt.” | Antioch’s experiment has attract“Aw, it's nothing,” said Curt, shaking his mod- a4 national attention. = est burr-head. : : Today it is in the same finan- one of $1 million to $1.5 million Council it seeks to spread the One K thrown against John Murphy: burly: cial fix --as-are-—most. private this year, ...Its...non_- educa- word of Yale's achievements ana tackle, was enough to last for a fair portion of gchgols, “Income is not keeping tional operating costs have dou- future hopes all over the land. the morning. What made the block tougher Was pace with rising cost,” says an pled. Administrative salaries have raha to take the fact-that not one of the four coaches Antioch official. The pinch al- pisen 25 per cent. These are re-| BUT IF THE great moneyon the Tield ‘was ‘looking. - Beat -your brains out.ready has affected faculty -sal- flections of the price-wage in- raising effort now being genand no one cares. That's football. - aries, new building construction, fjation. {erated should fall to pay off, Yale The boys. looked great. Let Hinkle ory In his equipment needs and research Faculty salaries now cost Yale will see its great influence as an box of scorecards, this is going to a great year work, 50 per.cenf more than before the educational leader slowly wane. . . - to now Antioch hasn't 10st war. The rate of increase for For it is firmly set against any formed by a commencement procession at Yale as colleges “Pick a dummy and hit him hard,” was the any top faculty men—a blow that teachers of various grades has! government help, 7 try to bear load of peak enrollment with shrinking endowments. signal-for me » wave 90. Sell EHdsie Roodlye. strikes a. small school especially ranged from 20 to 50 per cent. Privately endowed colleghd. aretand. individuals with special ire, But the commission doubls tip What is Wore inspiring aa makiug Ha ard. h a {with lower echelons getting the making a bold bid for a bigger terest in particular educational new techniques can supply all of - a a | obs been J0siier han oder biggest percentage boost. It slice of the gift-givers' dollar. |projects. via |it that the private schools will : > @ @ {where two department heads were pit Chem leashes abreast of| Tne time-honored “presidential, To pursue this aim well calls need. It believes federal scholar h : : , " "i {miethod” of raist 't for { up-to- -i#hip aid is going to be necessary, “You, Too” has many friends at Link-Belt Co. lured away by state universities. . Meantime, enrollment has pA he Job. ing OBEY amt | for wmble use of Jpto-ale sel on BN I king ec a,

Ed Ex wrote and said he got «the -inspiration| ss 8 8 bounded from a prewar 5200 to/ : | . : J { ‘a > = the preside f ed! for iberal dose gy. cost of new school dormitory conwhile sitting in the Link-Belt cafeteria. Well, he; BUT LIKE many another, An- a last year total of 9000.* To help oa Be eh oti The ne : 81 Seycholdey, struction. ; n

scored a touchdown by recruiting 117 persons to tioch can only pray that its spe- pear this load, the faculty of the explained: what his school's needs exactly obsolete if it has the rn.

A

Presidential method perfect for lke.

as lis

Symbolic question mark facing nation's private education is

back the writing of my book. It's 1691 votes now. cial appeal to teachers will offset arts and sciences was increased . . =F 3 . Pi ’ " ‘ . . v were, perhaps cas q ye warm hum peal beh \ Goal—30,000. 1 keep saying to myself, “Let's go.” the pulling power of big public|gy per cent. were Faups sast 8 Weather eye a an og Ding uot MANY institutions say they tte eee et tg hi mee ~~ | institutions until it can some- » > ’ n y don’t want _this ‘help; they'd

: : But the gain in the top ranks i . bia's Eisenhower, {ow pay better salaries. 'was just-20 per cent, against 125 en, ach oo, , By Andrew Tully | Last year Antioch got $150,000 per cent at-dower levels. ‘This the institution some money \in gifts from private sources and means Yale's most prized teach- ? :. % — $33,000 in government aid for re- org are hot Mr. Acheson, on the other hand, is’ a swell search. That was far {rom gerpaiq. ixer and can gnaw on a filet mignon or toss off enough to do the kind of job it se wid slug of bourbon with the best of them. He's wants to do, so the schopl is vyaApLE'S classrooms. ldboraalso a handsome cuss. with the most diplomatic knuckling down on money-rais: yories and residence: halls are have cut the crop down. muktache off a Hollywood set and he wears those ing. ik Ee © filled to overflowing. Vital buiid-! College finance experts Meantime, the school

(rather go it alone and preserve

ke Harvard, Yale, Columbia, trol, - One . reason this plan doesn’ icago, Princeton, Dartmouth, | h, overworked and un-_y my too well any Fi a _ Roo Stanford .and! Others will take it. perhaps bethe select company of million- Smaller institutions like Antioch, |3use they see no other way, : aires has fallen off. Heavy taxes Carleton, Williams, DePauw are Though the schools distrust telling their story in terms that S0Overnment aid, all the big ones esti. draw people close to them and are taking it for research. At give them a sense of participa- Most of them it undoubtedly sup-

striped pants and Homburg like he was born in won't ing needs in science, for one, Mate about three-fourths of p 11] h bulk und: ) close the door on any federal aid v : The ph i tion in the school's vital’ educa-| FIs Mie Seat ” . Jor em. y have been too long deferred. The Philanthropic grants come now! . .....'. ies that purpose. Without it the

Mr.\Acheson is also up to his ears in back-ithat might be forthcoming for university's newest science struc- {rom people with ground, keing the son of an Episcopal bishop from scholarship and new, construction. tyre js 25 years old.

incomes ‘of work wouldn't $5000 or less a year. In the a nw he. done.

. : 3 3 ‘here | . : / a { INT wl M ‘would be Connecticlt. 4nd never had to worry about where A fourth of its students now get| All: manner of scientific’ and, 1930-40 decade this group supplied -$OUNTL ~ schools haven't aybe the money wo his next pod of caviar was coming from on account college financial help and the educational projects are shelved, just half. : |touched thigfmotion yet and many, turned down {if the endowed colof his mothex was the daughter of a rich Canadian trend of this burdensome expense awaiting, funds. Government By their own admission, edu- 9hery ore = starting. But from Jeges hag Hore hl Sel owas: Hut hooch-maker.\ As a youth, he worked. as a sec-|is- up. " contracts pay for §2 milli cators were slow to realize this ig ase ny, Re ries “the ord it's available is great. It will be tion hand orn X Canadian railroad-and-slept-be-|1{ the aid.comes and the school | worth of experiments in science| change and to modernize their! oo; It WOrks. Harvard fora? oon ling should more hind the bar in a saloon, but-that was just for the takes it, BALio. *2n only hope! and medicine. But the untouched fund-raising techniques — CCOTd- mitten a your in rt a d ci Voted rotor rey na hell of it. When ‘he got down to business, he col-|n0 Sirings are atlached. bu €| projects continue to mount. . | ar in an - : A veterans. the| REY: But now they're alive tol guests; last year it got more than construction,

he . probl Groton and Yale, but to Harvard as well. will have been lowered, and even- cramped conditions, the Weary meery Folem amd he bending $12 million, and it expects to| If the mass appeal plan falls

To : tual government control might | faculty, all these make “for al . . & = [ANoFage well above that aeven-. of the goal, government is British Change, Too |prove difficult to fend off. [restlessness and confusion for-| yup NEW approach is a Millioh-doliar figure under pres- the only JopouEse. Yor Sutin C C \ way . , ; feign to the leisurely, intimate, lag / X : Jiees are a eir practical top ACCORDING to the\way all the books have ON A broader plane, these are atmosphere of learning Yale simple idea. It is to broaden, A small Midwestern school "OW and most schools want to be

it, Mr. Acheson should 18pk like a clod next. tothe. problems of Yale University! the British Foreign Minister, but times ‘have at New Haven, Conn. Measur a wane bo MY te Stugents: ‘changed and so have Brirsh diplomats. Mr. by almést any standards, Yale 18 pic? It is ply i Enout All Bevin, now, looks like a double-decker bus and among the top five universities inlinto the a ng a on 50a has a voice ike a foghorn, besides having a ter: the land. It is a national institu- money E Be ng ove \ v -~

contributors. Once

the base of their appeal to take poosted gi 11 t i gift income 166 per cent,|Smaller rather than bigger, so in the small givers in ever in-'from 50 per cent more donors they don’t count on large tuition creasing numbers. And to hit than formerly. al 4 every Jund 8 giver shat 0g Certainly - enough ground has To avoid that final recourse, on ya y -be in eres ac ? €On- heen won to suggest. there is real the private colleges are putting o Wilak, ‘ Ln Be a uting money. .to the colleges, {hope in this idea, The President’'s/all their chips on the broad ape nstead of going to a e it schools, like 48 states last year. again, the mass appeal is being’ That means alumni, parents of Commission on Higher Ed l—the G! I B » ; ¢ . p g n Higher Education pea e Great Idea. ritish statesmen are supposed to do, he went t6, .In 1948-49. it had an operating put to. work. students, friends, private founda- is fully convinced of the plan's work on a farm when he was 10 years old and deficit of $700,000 and it expects Through the Yale University tions, corporations, organizations merit | worked his way up to become England's greatest : - ——— Te if tebe sey — - ee - m————— == — . labor leader. Once he talked for"11 houxs without;

tome Se vm oon on one BIitich Arrive Shirley to Visit Paris And Then Leave for Home

Ernie tossed him into the Avon river AS . With all this color around him, it's going to be tough--on-a-guy-like-John..8nyder.who's. just. gone. Of 0 ar S ) . . . British” Press Assails Plucky Girl For Publicity on Channel Swim Try 1ippman aud M. B. Lippman. Kaz At State Exhibit

his*happy. normal way running well-heeled banks. | | : By ROBERT S. MUSEL, Unifed Press Staff Correspondent | Peters, Indianapolis FHA admin-First-prize blue ribbon winners

: : from an fion, drawing from nearly all the circle of

E THE END New Apartment

: P * , rize Winners Given Approval ~~": FHA. approvat of a 35-unit| 3 rental housing project to be. built air 0 Lat -6100 Compton. Dr. by Leo A. , .

| Lippman and M. B. Lippman, was! ’ . Judges Select Victors

Gobbledegook

Maybe he'll feel more at home if he can get th . boys into a poker game, though; they say he ow Bevin Won't Ask what practically amounts to a glint in his eye \ when he's got queens showing and something fat WM re u. S Money. | DOVER, England. Sept. 7—Shirley May France, America's|istrator today. oar. LY LEC WILSON unsuccessful Channel swimmer, will go to Paris tomorrow for a| The project to be called WinderBed Press Stall Cutrenpondent two-day vacation and leave London for home Monday, it was mere Apartments, will consist of In judging today at the Indiana ltwo two-story structures with State Fair:

in the hole. i WASHINGTON, Sept. T—Brit-"ieciosed today.

WASHINGTON, Sept. 7—The fall and winter season of the U, 8. government seems to have opened with a soft thud. Nobody home. The Senators are taking their ease on a vaca-

~ tion that legally never happened. So are the mem-

bers 6f the House. Numerous administration bigwigs still haven't got back from their long Labor Day week-ends and all through the capital nothing is stirring. except the British. They're rolling in for 4 session with our diplomats on how to get some more spending money; namely: Dollars. ! ) Important this undoubtedly is, but the statements and the interviews with the fiscal experts sound like gobbledegook to me, I .don’t understand the deal and rather than confuse you on the subject, I took the day off and went shopping. First I jacked up the hardware man abeut my cider press, which still hasn't arrived, though my apple crop is getting redder by the minute. Then T dropped by_the oculist’s for a dingus designed to keep the reading glasses of my bride around her pretty neck. !

Fit Over Ear Pieces

THIS IS A blue ribbon with rubber buttons on the ends. The buttons fit over the ear pieces. When she takes off her glasses, she can't forget where she left them, because they stay with her. The price was $1, plus sales tax, and if I'm saved from running upstairs and down for a female's misplaced spectacles, I'll consider it money well spent: : Down the street I bought two radio tubes, numbers 6SL7GT and 6SN7GT, The man sald, very unusual. He rummaged around down in the cellar

»

The Quiz Master

. — . * By Frederick C. Othman ish Fofbign Secretary Ernest| The 17-year-old Somerset, Mass. student, who was pulled out four units of U% rooms and 31/pSuwine (Chester White_L E. Faken, Bevin said\ today the idea of of the Channel ‘seven miles from her goal and 10 hours and 39 units of 4%; rooms. The $283,500 WM. Anderson. Attica: Porter Catlaban: { s N basbthaioiilduinl ta (Mitford, Ill; Parner Newsom, Columbus;

Spe i. = [minutes out of France, made her | mortgage will be held by the Mer- Roger Coats and sons. Wihehes Craig Rice 1] \plans as the London - Daily Ex-|cantile Mortgage Co. under FHA [fon acento | org

ter: O, C, port; Storge Ore {press leveled a mild attack at! Title VI. (ville; Tip Top Farm. ora Pah, Ys

The project will be built for wiiten CHI {Ino he Parnaciyn Farms, anso .

finally before he found 'em. He wondered what Britain being allowed to spend kind of radio IT had, anyhow” Marshall Plan\dollars anywhere I told him they were for my electric blanket. “sounds rather good.”

Qustet ; § her If he'd laughed, I'd have hit him. The troiible here \O Suicide Try. Seen aly 2] v op is that the last couple of nights have been cola, I Mr. Bevin and ‘Chancellor of ry | The Express said that Shirley World War II veterans and brings| cham 2? Moh iB lolli

) ly Zxched i NICA, Cal., Sept. 7| to 99 the total vetera Iti-|nersyilie: L mel: Coops ot ‘my electronic bl 4 the. Exchequer Sir Stafford Cripps) SANTA MO |originally intended. to swim the eterans mu s yEsikood Parms, Carmel; Coops g ’ onic blanket, snapped the switch, and {(UP)-—Mystery writer Craig Rice. channel in the nude but donned family rental housing projects ap- Shermans Raviesyue dersld B 1) n,

L er, crawled ‘in. The sheets hardly had got warm be- arrived here after an‘\overnight : 5 : 4 | AY an telter, fore my blanket's control box began to scream like trip from New York to participate io, agin Shilicsl condition lossy a.batHing suit because she had|Proved by the Indiana. Insuring FTenipste; Neeres, Sn, Oren a siren. I hope the new tubes, price $4.60, silence it. in the dollar crisis conference Tom Wha police ca appPar- to advertise the film “Black Office under the FHA Veterans, swine (Poland China) — Clair Tuttle,

ic ¢ , " . y Avilla: Orvill : ; So} suiviye a deni, Magic,” produced by one of ‘her Emergency Housing program, Mr. oviile "plain City. ©. Edwin ©. Rhode, . a Dab ada She -was release backers. { Peters said. Chenoa, Ill: Faith B. Meal, gain and was pleased to note that this season . . . \ eral Hospital only last week after, ) { Re art atetr—————— oer and neckties can be bought with small ‘spots on ‘em The Foreign Secretary was told" threatening to take her life So Shirley. finally wore a | Riggs, Shirley: Malcolm Anderson and as well as Grand Canyon sunsets..I bought two, that Canadian Finance MinisteX pr Vincent DePaulo, her physi- bathing suit with the name of l e S fons Pine Village; Lewis Francis, Crawa. - 0 X . ’ y 8 . ordsvill one tan and one blue, Douglas C. Abbott yesterday said \njan at Santa Monica Hospital, the 22 inscribed acroes her (Dairy Cattle (Molatein-Friesians)—Archis he would favor Britain having a said the novelist was in a coma chest, e newspaper said. puttieman. ‘West Salem. Wis: M free ECA dollar to spend any- and he suspected it was caused

ake Forest where by some sedative.

~ nl. . yr . y . L m; : Cites ‘Boy's Example Pre are for Fall och, Iii hustell E+ Meneus Kimmel ) s Newman Holstein WP s i - At the same time the London fons and son. a nes Bitten

= §

I also picked up a couple of shirts at a bar- With the United States apd: Can- from Gen-

Like Upended Sauce Pans fine

"THE OMINOUS THING on the retail front is

x ¢ like to ve a talk iss\ Ric last wee : 1 ie the feminine shop windows. All the dummies are with ould aN io ba a sai isc e tou Folie 1a § eek Daily Mirror compared Shirley's Ji ianabolis: eo peThermAn spr E wearing hats that -look like upended sauce pans. ro Ea ‘ ; i attempt with the successful swim ville;” M. Stookey and son. Milford.

sounds rather good.” with an overdose of sleeping tab- ’ Thousands Expected Draft “Horses (Percherons)—L. C. Hay

Their skirts are a good deal shorter than lately of the 18-year-old British school-: 1d A & 8 ately } . . S WAS ? ; > n a . 8 - - Ar son, Loudonville { hn W. Taft and it looks to nie like the ladies’ styles are on Won't Add Anything lets as an attempt to w te nach boy Philip Mickman. In Next 2 Weeks gy LT) i i 20 ' hush A rms, : 0

/ é 2 i . , her estranged fifth ne ay Datk to these of 1929. 18 His is hg they'll Bevin sald he could add writer Henry W. DeMott, 29. BLOOMINGTON Sept: 7—Prep- hon H Rumme, Ti. A Ranhder, On the way home I picked u noo o of Cake nothing - to his ‘remarks made BE Ns a : { Mick i arations were being made today Chester Umiits Ear pars” Réloh Pear. of dog food Yhame ) ked ong Supls of Fates Fie) hs arrival on the Maure- Girl, 9, Dies of Grief | Young fckman but that Shirley qo thousands of Indiana Univer- 5%, Girihase, C. 0. Hine Arcadia: ! ania from England last night. : | “started amid a shower of rockets sity students expected to arrive! Horse Sh rion . the startled proprietor of 11 dogs. My apricot-col-,A¢ that time he said Britain was Over Father's Death -- ‘and was pursued by a U. 8. PUb-| quring the next two weeks for the grick "Davis, Charleston Ti" Mars Tred: ored poodle, Emma, presented us with<10 pups tie f h _ oe heity armada.” . uring the a the McGrath, Chicago: Joan Callner; Chicagy, other night. Half were black. half weré tan and not asking for further grants on| , pp ANTA, Sept. 7 (UP)—[ "CY } - {fall semester. in Oak Stable. oygton. Fea be SR all were hungry. Identity of their Leer iS 2). Zid busta, |Nine-year-old Mary Virginia Long| ‘“Ten-and-a-half hours - later, Although registration and the alu Spoils My: a Sars “Homes. Rno idea. . | Mr. Bevin and Mr. Cripps left wept bitterly when her - father,|her hopes and those of her pub- beginning or orientation programs dlanapolis; St omer a ; Y-aiyboly Wants to offs |Union Station immediately for Hiram Long, 65, died Mond ay|licity navy were dashed” the will not start until Sept. 21, Cer-| Charles Myers. i. pup of uncertain D8 a good home 3 breakfast at the British Embassy. after several months’ illness. The Mirror said. ““[tain campus activities for new son. Sh I can get one free. Otherwise all now where he They are expected to make a|father’s body was brought home| The newspaper did not point|students will. begin next Tues- | roll, : 8 Le, erwise, all is peaceful onicourtesy call later at the State yesterday for burial. Mrs

The Mirror sald that there were “no bands, no ballyhoo” for

Mr.

He or OH out that Mr, Mickman is the son|day. A series of tests, lectures iit, JoUPiine, & ati ich 1 tuat, will Departinent ! Mary Virginia knelt by the cof-|of a weaithy Yorkshire indus-(and. physical examinations are O, Bonham, Indiagepo : : ut of a Job. | p.resentatives of the three fin and sobbed, “Daddy, I don’t|trialist who financed his son's scheduled. |amac; Qeotee, Sadler, governments Will meet -at-moon want-you to leave me. I want to/swim and ‘hat Shirley is the| Directing the orientation pro- "EL [pe NICHte

[dd

Who defended the British soldiers who participated in the Boston Massacre?” vl John Adams, who later became our second President, anxious that justice should be done, served as the lawyer for the defense of the Brit-

_ ish soldiers who were arrested after the Boston

Massacre, y - La * ¢ 2 : ‘ © Where was the first button factory in this, ‘country? - “r

The first American button factory was estab-

lished at Waterbury, Conn. about 1800, “ “subjects of everyday. life are treated

dent counselors. Why doesn’t asbestos burn? \Burglars Get $135

When a thing burns some of the elements in Off it unite with oxygen. Wood, for example, con- In ce Robbery Burglars who forced open jn

ks) the staff of trained full-time stu-H T Bain. Bride n n, Ve Purdue P teen-ager; said the Paris vacation| First o# the required meetings] row. EB bool bege sists largely of carbon and hydrogen and when $s Fur us | ost - Gresmensile Ble v -—

peli J ; | 3 ; ABE < rill be De Pressly 8 hauler (D - Brorein, i . for the first plenar {go with you.” Then she collapsed. dAUghter of a gas burner repair- gram. w an Pressly 8. wapakenets, Bw, \ Test Your Skill ??7? the ea i Rieeting 8 She ry rushed to Grady Me- man. who needed outside backing | Sikes, of the junior division of Manchester gt Se wet eee eee morial - Hospital, where she was|to get her to England. Tidianan ain. Bri port, a Plonoeq das. Sue and he Defends His Action student leaders will ei in the Bs Birimes, Dinesh 5. ~ father will be buried together. Walter: France. father “of _the|work. | don Hoke vaner. Bou .|would be the first for his daugh- for the 'frdshmen will be Tues-|Theoline B wood burns these combine with oxygen from the office door of the Indianapolis Cut| [AFAYETTE Sept 1 -— Prof ter since she started training for/day tvening: when instructions : air to form carbon dioxide and water. In asbes- Stone Corp. 5354 Winthrop Ave. Henry W. Gilbert tor extern the channel grind six months will be given for those.who will OES Group fo Meet tos, the elements of which it is made, such as last night obtained an envelope gion “landscape “architect at the ago: jieside nthe University's Tesh} 1 pl : : Accompanying Shirley and ‘her dence halls. . |" The Nettie Ransford Chapter,

Susioesiuin, Stic and sajciun, 416 already wiited| fontaining $125 and. $10 from a University of Illinois, has ac- father to Paris will be the girl's) The regular fall semester OES, will observe Obligation Whe al De yaen: they ‘tan easily noid. ‘Sv it" cash box. : cepted a similar position in the teacher-chaperone, Mary ~ Lou|ciasses. will begin Sept. 21, im- Night during a meeting at 8 p. m. . Ed + + + | Donald Melton, 54. of 712 E. 53d department of horticulture at Pur- Walsh, and her ~coach, -Harry mediately “after the traditional Sept. 14 in Calvin Prather Temple 2 |8t.. president of the firm, told due University and will begin his Boudakian. ~ » n

\ceremony at 7:30 a. m. on the 42d" St. and College Ave. Mrs,

In art, what is meant by genre?, . ‘police stamps of undetermined duties here Sept. 1, Dr. Laurenz = Mr. France defended his action steps of the Student building|Gladys Kachel is worthy matron

It is a class of art, éspecially painting, in which value also were taken. A’ filing Greene, head of the Purdue- de- in forcing Shirle | ; i inv ! ere \ hi y to quit the where all new stude is. realistically. cabinet vas hammered open. partment, announced today, channel, quit A Mody students will be and i Hugo i018. Worthy

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Great University, Small College Are Caught In Financial Rut ~~

So, increasingly, big schools | their vaunted freedom from con-

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