Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1950 — Page 21
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IT™8 NO laughing matter to loss your first sectional basketball game, A lashing with a horsewhip wouldn't hurt so much. : ‘Take that Shortridge-Sacred Heart gante last : night at the Butler Fieldhouse. Fine players on . both teams but one had to lose. Sacred Heart went : down fighting, 52-38. ! Led by Ray Riley, Sacred Heart took an early , lead which didn’t disappear until the clock showed ' 5 minutes and 29 seconds in the third period. Bill ' Ralph tossed one in to put Shortridge ahead. After that the curtain began to fall relentlessly on i Sacred Heart. Shortridge couldn't be stopped. : With the final horn pandemonium broke loose , In the house Tech Athletic Director C. R. Dagwell, as tournament boss, filled. Sacred Heart players, i heads bowed and with tears showing in some eyes, pushed through the crowd to the dressing rooms below. I followed. . i On’ the ramp, Spartan Harlan Petty kept re- { peating under his breath, “Man, 6h man.” ‘His © teammate, Ed Butler, who went out on fouls in the "| elosing minutes of the game, was crying. The tears | were coming from down deep where a game heart “i was still pounding. i The boys in-red and white moved swiftly and ; silently toward their end of the locker room. Riley paused long enough in front of Big Bill Ralph to say, “Nice game, Bill.”
‘Blue Devils Have Plenty of Time
© . “ THE VICTORS were slower in getting out of { their basketball clothes. Sacred Heart Coach , Harry Caskey told the noisy group of Blue Devils + they played a great game. There was a chorus of i “Thanks.” 5 J The Spartans didn’t pause with their undressing : as Coach Caskey appeared. They looked up and in a - + their-eyes he-saw more than words. could. express. ; He tapped a couple gently. They did their best and a coach could ask no more of his players.
! Student Managers Jerry Kruzman and Bob “Zoller packed uniforms in trunks as soon as they : could get their hands on them. Zollner chewed a - big wad of gum nervously. Dallas Kelsey was missed. Someone said he ‘was in the training room getting a charley Horse rubbed out. Oh. Riley, Butler and Petty were in , deep thought. Riley’s gym shoes seemed to fas- , cinate him. His whole body was limp and his arms .dangled’ loosely as he stared at the rubber and canvas. ~ * Butler flipped a towel over his shoulder and , shook hands with Riley before he headed for the shower. No words were spoken. Petty followed ' Butler. John Dwenger and Alvin Rucker were the first to start dressing. Three Sacred Heart rooters found Riley. sitting
EE , bE alone and called out that he played a nice game.
They had sense enough to leave immediately. Riley finally stood up slowly and went to the shower | room. Several Shortridge boys watched him pass ! and the chattering subsided. . Butler came out. of the shower looking. re1 freshed although his eyes were still red. He dressed
No More Villains
Inside Indianapolis ~~ 8y Ed sovole "
x -
— .
Indianapolis Times
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1950 PAGE 21
Old-So
35 Members Join Local Chapter
: By CARL HENN MOST INDIANAPOLIS ex-GI's couldn't begin to qualify for mem{bership in the latest veterans’ organization to appear here. If the applicant doesn't wear ‘skirts, there isn't a chance. | Perhaps that's why membership in the Indianapolis chapter of [WAC Veterans Association has
Not defeated yet. . . . In Hoosier basketball you're not beaten until the final horn blows. | Here (left to right) Spartan John Dwenger, Blue Devil Jack Axline, Blue Devil Alvin Walker and risen only to 35 so tar, There faut Spartan Ray Riley mix it up. ‘aren’t a great many former WACs
with a little more life. So did his teammates. The in town. ; strain was wearing off. | ' But when WAC Velerans meet in e or yar Memorial on All Over But the Shouting {every third Thursday night the KELSEY HOBBLED to his locker and asked conversation always comes around where the trunks were. He was told they were to old-soldier reminiscences, such packed and upstairs. His uniform fell to the floor as: . and without a word he went to the shower. Small. “If you think your company matter: “The sectional -was-over-for-him. {commander was-tough, let me tet The Blue Devils were happily going over the you about . ..” “Remember the game, Well-wishers joined in the merriment. The sudden inspection ‘we had pulled clinic was wide open. on us in ...?” “The chow we had Couple eof Spartans, fully dressed, borrowed was terrible!” . combs. They didn’t ‘spend’ much time in front of| o® om the mirror. Who was riding home with whom?| CURRENT president of IndianLet’s get going. Got everything? I'll see you. |apolis WAC Veterans is Mrs, Riley was the last to dress. My attempt to make Agatha Bobbitt, 2206 N. New some conversation didn’t work. All he said was|Jersey St. She is one of three that Sacred Heart was beaten by a good ball club,| Women who worked to organize it “That's the last game for us,” he said flatly, |here in October, 1948, and atAt the water fountain, Rutler and Riley met|tended the national convention: in Ralph, the top scorer of the game with 19 points, | Cleveland that year. igen dan “Good luck to you guys,” said Butler. Ralph| We. organized to assist "exthanked both and said they played a great game. Service girls who need help and On the way out, Coach Caskey introduced Riley, fOr social reasons,” Mrs. Bobbitt
Butler and Petty to Butler Athletic Director Tony Says. “We've helped others, Hinkle. . |though, such as ex-service men
_ The Bulldog coach remarked to. Petty, who fsfaNd_ children: who. needed cloth.
only a sophomore, that he’s going to be a big boy | i tn An someday. Petty grinfied and rubbed his wet head.,| A 1 D® 8roup has a party occaThe Fieldhouse was quiet except for the noise|Sionally for ex-service Bitle- Jn ofthe cleanup gang. The last three Spartans DILDNgs General - Hospital, Ft. 1 walked out into the cold night. From the looks on their faces it was going to be a long‘night. Defeat! is—no-laughing matter-for-a-Hoosier basketbatier:
ans members make visits when possible. ~~ Mrs. Bobbitt, a practical nurse
there a
tered Navy service. After basic
By Robert C. Ruark os (training and a course at Cook and (
: NEW YORK, Feb. 23—The trouble with ‘the ' times, according to Mr. Alfred Hitchcock, the big suspense vendor, is over-dramatization of the every "day occurence, to such point that an honest manufacturer of spy thrillers is fresh out of McGuffins. " Also villains. © We will take up McGuffins first. In Mr. Hitch- | eock’s argot, a McGuffin is the hidden booty— atomie formula, key list of spies, gems, gold, any- ! thing—that all the dramatic shooting is about. . When you are a director of swiftly paced dire «dreadfuls, for which Hitch has become famous, you got to have a McGuffin.
Truth Puts Fiction to Shame
: THE DERIVATION of McGuffin, for a gimmick, is obscure. Mr, Hitchcock's best explanation is also obscure. “There is a bloke on a train,” says the English director. “He sees a package, and asks what it is. Man says jt's a MeGuffin. Other man asks what is a McGuffin? Other cove says a McGuffin is an apparatus for trapping lions in the "Adirondacks. Te Te ” 3 ' “ ‘But there are no lions in the Adirondacks,’ ! pther bloke says.” ) “ ‘Then this thing is no McGuffin,’ second lad says.” , “My trouble is plots,” Mr. Hitchcock continues, In a rather simple explanation.of our Fevered Fifties. Whom can you use for a villain now, after "the .atom stories and ‘this fellow Klaus Fuchs? : King George running a Communist cell in Buck.ingham Palace, with a footman hid out in the cellar? )
subhead would say, and that would be that” |
eee Frmp— | Baker School she went to Pine I it's rough. When’ they've already. pinched. the Bluff Arsenal, -Ark., where she I atom secrets, I have real McGuffin trouble. What remained until discharged in have we got bigger than we can hide for my peo- December, 1945. EN plé to 8nd?" a : : | . s = _ =u Mr. Hitchcock, in fine mood, went on to say BECOMING interested later in |
that if the Martians invaded us today, after the the idea of a veterans’ organiza- . ..¢ store,
glut of sensation to which we have been sub- tion for women, Mrs. Bobbitt jected, it would cause no stir at all. {Joined Miss Jo Ann Graham, now “The London Times,” he said, “would handle |Dational chaplair. of WAC Veterit in one paragraph. ‘Arrival of Martians,’ the 2ns, and Miss Betty Fleming in
headline would say. ‘Statement of Martians,’ the apDiying for an Indianapolis
er et Miss Graham, an Indianapolis native, took her WAC training at Beaumont General Hospital, El Paso, Tex. She was in charge of 1 morning reports on the 2500 to 3000 patients carried as attached J unassigned personne! on the hospital roster. ee Now a. dictaphone operator at Methodist Hospital, Miss Graham lives in 1117 N. Gale St. She has’ completed business school and is
Mr. Hitchcock has a new movie going now,! called “Stagefright,” in which his backlog of villains has so dwindled that he is reduced to employing Jane Wyman to trap Marlene Dietrich, using the drama as the McGuffin. This js the ebb of villainy into’ which a master of hounds-and-hare like Hitch is now tumbled by the times. The fat-—or rather, once fat—genius of the who-shot-cock-robin had it pretty easy when all you needed was a Nazi spy with the secret biueprints; but-his desperation today is real. Asa man; who calls actors “the cattle,” his career depends on believable super plot construction. And the fact is that actuality has topped him. {diana ey Adi) Education
1
There is not much, today, that you can put on| the screen which has not been outdone by Our national WAC Veterans chaplain real-life thrillerdillers. thought of hiding my McGuffin in a pumpkin, like pMjjwaukee, she is secretary of the this Whittaker Cambers did. I would have thought rndianapolis chapter. it foo corny for belief,” Hitch says.)
Alfred Out-Hitchcocked
i |
» ” ” THE LIFE of Mrs. Ruth Quinn,
S
ton
RAE ASN A
'S
t cotton.
on. 7-Inch izes small,
“Harry Truman is really a spy in disguise, maybe? Or is he a counterspy? How about this Hiss? Maybe he is really no Communist at all, but a + counterspy himself, and Secretary Acheson almost tipped the mitt when he stood up for him. “You're looking for a good villain today, for ; movies, and it's got to be either King George or your mother. I guess the Eskimo will be the last believable spy, because they all look alike anyhow. i “My business is getting so tough, in face of the facts, that I will have to make a hero out of a | double schizophrenic, just to top this atom thief, Fuchs. The Hyde-side is the nice side. I tell you,
fession of secret-selling, the Judy Coplon foolish- source of ness, the mercy killings, right and left, the Ros- gthers, sellini-Bergman doings, the spy trial of our native,. Mrs. Quinn, 52, of 1523 WoodRobert Vogeler, in Budapest, have all out-Hitch- awn Ave,
amazement to
discs, and spy sensations have reduced daily living was graduated with them. to such a fuzzy unreality that nobody would bat
LaGuardia. We have exhausted villainy, and de- girls’ basketball team. pleted the bizarre, and if somebody tells me today
whips Mr. Hitchcock it beats me, too. mother of four when she was dis-
Annual Madhous
charged in October, 1945. t
She swims, plays basketball and Son. Robert, 18 lives with her fn liam Clark. 4 who “likes to go-
@ By Harman W. Nichols {iy Sine nie 80
eral times lately gone roller skat- nesota St. had the longest serv-
WASHINGTON, Feb. 23—About 30 years ago,
"wishes he hadn't, put said: s / “We. cannot tell a lie. We've got a lot of junk oh hand and hereby offer it for sale at great + discount.” From that simple beginning sprang what now 'is known as the Washington Day rummage sale, held annually on George's birthday. It's an annual capital nightmare. ; People stand in line all ‘night to get a tele-.q-Vision. set .for.77 cents, a. typewriter for.99..cents... and a fur coat for $3, and clerks go nuts. Yesterday, it got so bad that a lot of mer“chants had to let the people in a few at a time. +I peéked into the window of a cheap ladies’ wear | place and learned why. A couple of “ladies” were ' giving a pair of 12-cent pink panties the business tin a tug of war. The elastic on the top gave away, the pants were ripped leg apart and the two women dropped the project and went on to the . mext counter.
Free Chow for the Line THE MERCHANTS keep on offering their “bargains” year after year and the Washington ‘ Star put out 108 pages, crammed with ads, the ' day before the sale—one of the biggest editions in ' its history for a week day. 3 : An arm-chair restaurant, looking for business § later in the day, distributed free coffee and dough- | nuts to folks standing in line for one of the cheap : television sets.
an ad in a local paper. It
ing with her son and daughter. Rain or shine—and it has rained on the holiday
ernment workers have the day off. A look at the ads in the paper will give you a term.. look-in on what goes on in Washington on the day that the capital is a little more nuts than ; usual. : . About People— One store advertised, for a come-on, “smart spring dresses” for one dollar. Another had wall-
mere nena Missouri Agriculture Leader To Address Farm Bureau
- ‘roll.' An auto outfit offered $24.50 car heaters for
$9.95 and seat covers for $1. A DEPARTMENT STORE advertised -a set of lieves “Farmers- Can Run Their
F. V. Heinkel, president of Mis- t
: . " Ann Sothern today wearing his pants at the time. Miles, R. R. 6. 27, to fill a hollow segment left dishes for $1.49 and a 24 plece, 22 karat “gold Own Business. ‘waé reported recovering satisfac- 4d s # = by a cyst in Jimmy's broken arm, trimmed and initialed” set of glasses for $9.88—50 phat will be torily from a delicate. throat op- Johann Scoastian Bach will be pop “patients recovered” satis cents down. his lecture topic feration to remove a growth on § honored at a recital on the bicen- (ov doctors said.
A camera shop pasted a sign on the window ,¢ he gpeaks at —*“roll of film, nine cents.” the annual meet- 4 One jewelry store offered diamond rings at $1, ing of the Indi- j but there was a catch to it. The ad said that four ,mga Farm Bulucky numbers drawn had the privilege of buying pea. Co-Op here a dianfond “selected by us” for a dollar. You had par 7 and 8. to buy something to get a number.. Delegates from A shoe Btore attracted a lot of ladies with an gs county farm ad that mentioned buying one pair of shoes for pyreau co-ops the regular price and getting a second. pair for g1s0 will hear M. a dollar. J. Briggs, genA fur company sold fur jackets—‘regular $79 eral manager, K. Mr. Heinkel value beaver dyed coney” for one dollar, “while 1, Miller, treasthey last.” They didn’t last long. Everybody had a come-on except the banks. 1 H. Hull, president of the state They were closed for the day. | co-op.
{
= = =
The Quiz Master
' What college is given credit for being first to ! identify football players by numbers? The Washington and Jefferson team of Pitts- . burgh is given credit for being first to place num“bers on players. That was in 1908. The plan "+ was dropped for a time by W. and J., but the Uni- ' versity of Chicago numbered -its players in a , ame against Wisconsin five years later and other eplleges took it up after that. * ¢ 4
' What'ls the length of the longest. moving , Stairway in an office building? = - The longest moving stairway ride In an- . office buflding anywhere in the world is in + Boston, Mass. The 18 stairway -units run from | fhe basement to the eighth floor and ‘down agaim Bad contain 1083 moving steps. ‘
: {
: : . m|assistant Oscar Menis is one of \ ‘ ; ??? Test Your Skill ?92?7% scientists enrolled In a special (© 0 0 | The celebrities who have D® had just visited was chasing pag contained - exactly nine : Z |radioisotope course at Oak Ridge, po y ‘worked 25 or more years: in "a diapers for her baby daughter— Tenn. igh ian, movies chose Greta and Ingrid rhis is what is knawn' as ask- nothing else. ; What is the shortest distance, approximately, A tant in the ana, with Bette Davis and Olivia de; or work } # = = t dis pp y.! Mr. Menis is an assistan will be toasts Havilland af otra: ing for work. Donald EB. Mumford, superine
between Russian and American territory? IU chemistry department, work-
About five miles. In the Bering Strait between ing toward a doctorate degree in master * at
3 system, will speak on Siberia and Alaska, Russia owns an island called chemistry. 3 golden JSanjvers tor, they said, trailed by Ronald it, housing and other municipal Central OY emi an at the Big Diomede, the United States one called Little " = = SRIV Co ebration Coleman, . Laurence Olivier and worries, designated Feb. 27 to meeting of the Indianapolis’ Kis Diomede. * Ralph Ray of Groesbeck, Tex., of IU’s famed Spencer Tracy. “Gone With the Mar. 4 as “Write a Letter to the: anis Club at noon tomorrow im
rw tsaid he wouldn't go to court to
Where is the oldest continuously inhabited community in this country? Oraibi, Arizona, in the Hopi Indian Reserva- Casey, Brooklyn, N. Y. tion, is believed to be the oldest continuously in-
occupied sinée some time before -A. D. 1050. fn i E - = time parking Jan. 18, Thtough What three demands must a word meet to be | Texas Sheriff Bill Green, Mr. Ray | In good usage? . we . .|replied that his car was stolen |i Present use, reputable use and national use. -|from Groesbeck Jan. 3 and asked | -— = fi ey, CY : By Gi Ne ~
7
Tinge When WAC
Harrison. Individual WAC Veter- bounce and vitality of a teen-ager tells with glee of the day when
~ ljoined the WAC in -April, 1944, WAC Veter, after her son, Joseph Bobbitt, en- Mrs.
December, 1945.
one She works in ladies’ alterations at
bury
pital, doing work she learned in| Beaumont Medical Paso.
most leave she managed to secure in
killed while a member of. the 3d Infantry Division in
Mrs. Simpson enlisted.
taking a pre-med course at In- , i 4 the return to the United Boyer, 1444 N. Pennsylvania St. States of her husband's body.
In addition to her election A8 y ave visited military cemeteries She is alone in Indianapolis and (“I should never have a¢ the 1949 national convention in °Verseas.”
dead to stay there. The cemeteries are beautiful.”
- . «One -of -the -newest-WAGC- Veterans Simpson-has corresponded -regu-called-Clarice-after attending the. THE STARK melodrama of the Fuchs con- members here. is—a -eontinual-larly with the Frenchwoman who Vegue School of Dress Design. "the keeps Pfc. Simpson's grave strewn with
| went through high son is Mrs. Ethel Kirkpatrick, ancocked Hitchcock. This has mostly been true since school here and in Monett, Mo. other WAC veteran and widow. “the end of the war, where weird weapons, flying with her son and daughter, and
While in Shortridge High Mrs. in a war plant for two years bean eye if the Martians decarted some night at Quinn was named to the all-star fore enlisting together. They took basic training together but were She was a grandmothér of three Separated later and went to difthat the moon is made of green cheese, I will just when she enlisted™n the WAC in ferent camps. Mrs, Kirkpatrick say “pass me a slice,” and let it go at that. If it' August, 1944, and was a grand- did not get overseas.
ice term of any Indianapolis WAC Aa And she intends to -enter Mis- veteran. : 2 Washington clothier and. papis presser,. wha. the Jast two. ¥ears—the people {lock 40. town, GOV slonary. Bible Inst ititec: Los Alc Shelolt: Nok Job at. dhe RC Ax 1298 Ha Elan: Slo 00d MES CME Kaos Alice. Clack and. son. Jobo... A. who. finds. the. meeting... ..... geles, in September forthe fall Victor record ptant here to enlist attends Dwyer School of Business - - i ‘on Dec. 4, Mrs. Quinn doesn’t look within charged until June, 1945.
“EOUrT FAFmers ASSocTation; be- any other stickers-on-it-
her thyroid gland. ”
"= = Sunday at Gobin P.-E. Goodrich, president-emeri- Church, DePauw University. “foxy” wasnt talking about the tus of the board of trustees of Featured soloists will he Anna gray fox Farmer L.. F. Snider of Hanover College, was honored by Lee . Schmidt, soprano, senior Ursa, Ill, found sleeping on the the college as it selected the from Evansville: Charles H. Hea- couch in his front room. {name Goodrich Hall for the new ton, Centralia, Ill. organist and Neither sly, nor fast nor very {$430,000 science “building. The . Irving Weinstein, Los Angeles, alert, the fox slept on while Mr, violinist. Snider discovered it, tiptoed out
name .was chosen {n recognition of the services and generosity of
e ! | teen-ager gave ..4 the neighbor slipped back in Mr. Goodrich, a resident of Win-| Oklahoma City, Okla. traffic . hit it over the head with a chester, who has served Miss ’ [10 Pit it © .served on the Miss police a new answer to think yar board since 1921 and as president Garbo Bergman | yor : Mrs. Nan McKee of Columbus,
urer, M. J. Bradley, secretary, and from 1930 to 1948.
attorney and India , Indiana University. graduate anney na University lywood's greatest actress of. the
composed t h e
Marching Hunpay the fine but he was glad to dred at a ban receive an overparking summons quet Wednesday from the court of Judge Frank in Hall. wr ] | Mr. Ray yesterday received the ker wrote the school song when girls are charter members of the habited community ‘in ‘this country, having been otter informing him he had until he was student. band director newly installed chapter of Alpha -.| Feb. 24 to pay the fine for over- from 1911 to 1913.
Idier Talk Has Feminine
Veterans Meet
WAC Vet. president. Mrs. Agatha Bobbitt swears in new members {left to right} Mary Elliott, Mary Boyer, Ruth Quinn. The semb circle of members includes (left to right) Ann Judge, Jo Ann Graham, Ethel Kirkpatrick, Elsie Simpson, Rosemary Hoffman, Constance Vinson, Alice Clark.
0-years of her. age, She has the .
MRS. JUDGE, a WAC. baker, nd unfailing good nature. she fell face-first into a large Mii isin cake she was putting into the ONE OF the few Indianapolis gyen, £0 to go overseas was Mary Elliott, 1258 Burdsal ’kwy. She was stationed in New yuinea and in Martila, Philippine] sland, before her discharge in
It seems -she was startled and lost her balance when the WAC commanding officer suddenly strode into the kitchen and called “Attention!” Mrs. Judge lifted her dough-smeared face from the cake pan to see an Inspecting general glaring at her. : TE Mrs. Judge's hushand, Ralph Judge, now works in the same department of RCA-Victor that she They have one boy, Ralph
. Mrs. Elliott is a widow and has _son, 3-year -old Stephen.
he Wm. H. Block Co. depart
Mrs. Elsie Simpson, 1409 Brad. Ave. is employed in- the does. egistrar's office at Billings Hos+ Jr. 3. Misg Rosemary Hoffman, 2028 School, El N. Pennsylvania St. served in a _ : WAC Public Relations Office in’ Another overseas WAC, her Ft, Oglethorpe, Ga. She was anvivid memory 1s of the other who enlisted while the women's branch still was known as WAAC. Tes Miss Hoffman now works in a laboratory office in Methodist Hospital and has nearly completed her work for a B.S. degree from Butler University. » . .
Miss Mary
taly to visit her husband's grave ust outside Epinal, France. Pfc. Kenneth Simpson was France in 944. If was after his death that
o » LJ TT i: 5 " MRS. SIMPSON has not re-| ANOTHER student,
|attends Dwyer School of Business “I think. if more people could | When not working in a law office.
Mrs. Simpson says, finds WAC Veterans a great would ‘have allowed their source of companionship. Mrs. Constance Vinson, 3763 Broadway, today conducts her own Mrs. tailoring business for ladies,
they
Since visiting Epinal,
Chicago, under the GI Bill. Mrs. Vinson, like Mrs. Bobbitt, enlisted in the WAC after her son, Leonard, went into service and her daughter married. Mrs. Vinson’s hushand had died several yéars before the war, Mrs, Alice -Clark, who drove trucks and busses as a WAC, met her husband-to-be while at Pine Bluff, Ark. “He rode my bus" she says. They were married Apr. 22, 1945, and now have a -hoy, John Wil-
flowers, Living next door to Mrs. Simp-
” ” ” THE TWO worked side by side
She works as a hospital atendant at Billings Hospital. Her
with his mother to WAC Veterans meetings. The girls like to have him there, too. They say he's their mascot. Mr. and Mrs. Clark now live in
411 Bradbury Ave,
Mrs. Ann Judge, 1819 'E. Min-
trifle long.
1942, and wasn't dis- Her husband is an independent contractor. v
he judge to keep an eye out for burglar entered his hotel roomiand Mrs. Charles Lemen, “rand removed $112 from the pocket University —Ave Gloria lof his pants. Mr. Page
5954 operate on both mother and son. Miles They removed a piece of pelvis # = =» was daughter of Mr. and” Mrs. J. C. bone from Mrs, Mary Skidmore,
Actress
tennial of hissdeath at 3 p.m
! ~ n ” . Memorial Whoever coined the -word
#2 a =n to call a neighbor and while he A speeding
| First Garbo, then Bergman. | He stopped as soon as he heard o = wonders if R a 8 » . | That was the decision of 200! their siren and saw their blink- .+ hed her handbag last night tussell P. Harker, Frankfort movie oldtimers in choosing Hol- Ing red light yesterday. He was _ "\ 1aves that crime doesn't speeding, he -said, because he
thought the boy friend of a girl
the guy who
who pa
y. } (half century. The 21-year-old mother said the
San Francisco Mayor Eimer E tendent of safety of New York
the Charlie Chaplin was the best ac- Robinson; already beset by trans-
Wind" was named best movie, D. Mayor Week." W. Griffith best director and Irving Thalberg best producer.
Mr. H ke 4-2 4 Ha r. Harker |
Claypool Hotel.
» ” - ~ Cordova, Alaska is without an rr . : embalmer today. 30 Die in Eritrea Riot .
’ » Rollins, the city’s only mor The, following Marion’ County Hoan ae when the city im- ASMARA, Eritrea, Feb. 322 : pounded his dog yesterday. [{UP)—United States and Brite an ” lish troops patrolled the blood~ Omicron Pi social sorority at| Four-year-old Jimmy Skidmore stained streets of Asmara toe * =» =» {Hanover- College, .Ind.: . Carolyn of Evergreen,” O. broke his arm night as the toll of casualties Carl Page. of Vancouver, Brit- Good, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and both he and his mother went during two days of political riots sh Columbia, is a solind sleeper. Johan A. Good, 1203 Dawson St.: to the hospital. mounted to 30 dead and 130 He slept undisturbed while a Mildred Lemen, daughter of Mr] Columbus, O., surgeons hat wounded. El SR
IU Alumni
Mr.
