Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1950 — Page 27

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‘Features

Eitoriaiepolifis| The Indianapolis Times

SUNDAY, APRIL 30, 1950

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"Terry's Pool Room," by Gene LaRue.

Museum.

Prize-winners in this unusually substantial show were chosen by a jury of three out-of-state artists: William Thon, New York seascape painter; Paul Sample, artist-in-residence at’ Dartmouth

College, and Carl Mose, head of “Washington University’s sculpture department in St. Louis. Jury members were selected by a committee of five Indiana artists.

Sharon Lea Dye (inset) munches a

Painting by James Wicks Takes $300 ‘Most Meritorious’ Prize

By HENRY BUTLER NINE PRIZES totaling $1225 have been awarded in the 43d

annual Indiana Artists Exhibition opening today at Herron Art

cl % "Woman's Head,"

by David K. Wn

L or Ee i > BR. | onc NETIPRECY VORRLN « by Richard A. Genders.

"Across to Indiana,"

-

SL 8

Winter in the ity,

Indianapolis Artist Wins Exhibition Sweepstake

by Norbert

Smith. RAAT IT

and Bread,': by

Monday.”

won the

Family.”

2 » - : TOP PRIZE of the exhibit,

uick sandwich after a kindergarten train

ride from Indianapolis to Lebanon. At lett, John Shuman and Margaret Berlin are escorted from the coach at Lebanon by two trainmen as Mrs. E Edward Berlin super-

28 Kindergarteners

Journey to Lebanon By CLIFFORD THURMAN LITTLE EYES sparkled. It was a big day for the Pied Piper Kindergarten of New Augusta. Twenty-eight little shavers, all under school age, were taking a train trip to Lebanon and return on New York Central. For most of them it was their very first train ride. Others— those over 5, this is—were having an old experience. Mrs. Marie Brenneman, teach-

_er, and a wide assortment of

mothers (who were having a big time, too) assembled at Union Station. Sour-faced passengers roused up from their reveries us the 28 Pled Pipers trooped into the coach.

r ” o “GREAT HEAVENS,” exclaimed one rather buxom

“woman, “wouldn't you hate to

buy tickets for that family.” “Mést of these kids have never been on a train before,” announced San Lea Dye, yp 81, a8 she settled down ‘the trip. ve. I went to Chicago

Larry Ubterback ¢ and J. C. Forgan welch the fi olds roll by. SHARON LEA was typical of half a dozen little girls. Some

for his oil painting,

Clara W. King, Dayton, O., Board of Directors $200 prize for her oil painting, “The Black Gloves.” Albert Miller of Indianapolis, was given the Keeling & Co. $150 prize for his oil, “Swamp

Other oil winners are: Gene LaRue, Indianapolis, the J. I. Holcomb $100 prize, and Gene Alden Walker, New York, the

short. The Pied Pipers

“Easter. Simper, Ferndale, Mich., the Mrs. Edgar H. Evans $100 prize; Richard A. Genders, In-

dianapolis, the Junior League $100 prize, and Norbert Smith, Valparaiso, the Art Association $50 prize. In sculpture, the Morris Goodman $150 prize went to David . K. Rubins, Indianapolis. The jury also.selected seven entrants for honorable” mention: Lois Berghoff, Indianap-

“the Art Association $300 award Alumni Association $75 prize. olis; Edwin Fulwider, Oxford, for the most meritorious work ® s O.; Will Lamm, Indianapolis; in any medium, was given IN WATER COLORS, the Ellen Martin Menard, Notre James Wicks of Indianapolis, three winners are: Frederick Dame; Constance C. Richard-

? ¥ Photos by Lloyd B Walton, Times Staff Photographer.

son, Detroit, Mich.; Paul Zimmerman, New Haven, Conn, and Anthony Lauck, Indianapolis.

” » - THOSE ARE the statistics. Now for some comment. This is a good show. It's solid and reasonab!. conventional, without being either stodgy or sentimental, There's room in it for some fairly weird things like the evidently allegorical oil by Jack C. Kennedy of Lafayctte, “Nobody’s Taller Than Me,’ and the same artist's water color, “Petulance,” a head-and-shoulder fe-

All Aboard-Pied Pipers Get Train Ride

1

¥

vises. At the right, a group of mothers and kiddies take a tour of the train. From back to front, Mrs. Berlin, John Shuman, Mrs. Norman Lentz, Stephen Lentz, Mrs.

Grace dathe, Mrs. Michael Petrovich, Babs Beck and Janet Petrovich.

Carol Cox, DeWitt Brown, Babs Beck and Bette Bhenmimion await train time at Union Station.

The roll was called frequently. No chances were taken of anyone getting lost or left behind. Here's the roll: '

observant. The girls, as always, ~ Margaret Berlin, David Cran: were quieter and more orderly , ® fill, Sharon Lea Dye, Stephen than the boys, Several cowboys COMING BACK the trip was Schneider, Bo Danner, Johnny made the trip, complete with much the same. There was no Vicki Wood, ‘on pistols and bojsters tour throtigh the train this time Wood, Jack Hunt, Bette BrenneThe trip to Lebanon was all -—it was mostly baggage cars.

Peterson, Vicki Pe-

Lentz, Susan Robbins,

ARR i A frien An

terson, Melane Glore, Janet Petrovich, Mary Brown, 8tephen Larry Utterback, Leonard Alexander,

J.C. Ferguson, Stephen Jacobs,

Carol Cox, Babs Beck, Robert Mason, Alfred Sleezer, Sue Shrigley, DeWitt Brown and Johnny Johnson

das a

EE RM Sn

W. male study that looks like the

psychologists’ Rohrschach tests, Aside from the skillful but still rather academic things like Clara King’s prize-winning “The Black Gloves,” with its Renoiresque feeling, there are a couple of trends that particularly struck me. One is the quasi-Freudian, subconscious-dredging you see in Mr. Kennedy's “Petulance,”

the water color aready mention-

ed, or still more in “Betrayal Kiss,” a tempera by Keith D. Kitts, Urbana, Ill. The latter painting is even more painfully

Teacher's a Gun Moll—and Model

Hoosier Girl Has Many Roles in N. Y.

By EARL Wusox: he Times' Broadway Column

NEW YORK, Apr. 29- This town’s most unusual Sunday school teacher is a slim, 19-year-old blond named Dolly Martin, of Lizton, Thd. Often’ on Sunday mornings Dolly finishes with her class of youngsters at St. James Episcopal Church and rushes to to Radio City to rehearse her role in Bob Monroe's radio show, “High Adventure,” Monroe's other show, Steele, Adventurer.” heard in Indianapolis. And when Monroe makes a movie in New York late this summer, Dolly will have an important role in that, toon. ” n ” “USUALLY on those radio shows,” -Dolly told ‘me; “I play a gun moll, a very tough type. “The little boys in my class heard about it and listened in one day. Next Sunday after class they said, ‘We're going to the park to play cops and robbers. You come along too, Miss Martin—and bring all your guns!”

One-member-of the class-is - the grandson of the late Gen.

John Pershing. Dolly taught Sunday school at the Christian Church in Lizton and the Christian Church in Brownsburg before coming east. “Lizton is "a pretty small town,” Dolly explained. “There were only 13 in my graduating class from Lizton High School. Our reunions will be rather private affairs.”

» » » DOLLY'S been busy ever since she came to New York to enroll at the Academy of Dramatic Arts. In addition to her radio and Sunday school work, she’s a model—she was a finalist at thé Newspaper Guild's Page One Ball—and a part-time secretary. Dolly's dad, Earl Martin, is a

Manual High's

FORTY-ONE years ago today, gn Arbor Day of 1909, the senior class of Manual Training High School ceremoniously set out an ivy plant, starting a

tradition that has endured through the years. Successive senior classes have added ivy plants, marking them with stone tablets, and the triangular building on 8. Meridian St. is loaded with vines. The late Miss Beatrice Foy, who was then senior class adviser, suggested that .he graduating class of 1909 inaugurate Ivy Day, with a view tn beautifying the bleakness of the red brick building. Ralph Finley, class poet, set to work to create a suitable

poem, which was then set to music as the original “Ivy Song.”

The ceremony took place at the close of the day's classes,

“ a Si co a Se % ~ 8p Pp Ny

full of subconscious meaning than the former. With wiry drawing, Mr. Kitts has somehow contrived to externalize the human nervous system in the figures of Judas and Jesus. ¢ » = o THE OTHER remarkable trend is the obsession with urban ugliness. It has soclo-

logical as well as esthetic significance. Most of us jearn to ignore sordiness.. We have to in Indianapolis, or, for that matter, in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington

Dolly Martin, of Indiana and New York

farmer near Lizton, I wondered if he would be glad to see her in the movies. “I'm not sure,” she said. “My parents haven't seen many movies. “They have a television set, though, and when I was on a TV fashion. show recently the neighbors came running to tell them I was on the screen. I guess they liked that, but about the movie—I don’t know!”

A couple of weeks ago a turn out all right.”

Ivy Day Started in 1909

dianapolis, class historian, still

. has his “official record” of the

birth of the ivy tradition.

5 ” » THE SENIORS emerged from the Merrill St. entrance, formed a four-abreast column, and marched around the Meridian St. corner to the main entrance, singing the “Ivy Song” The class assembled on the steps, while the vice president, Clara Hadley, put the first trowelful of dirt on the ivy plant. Then the presidents of the following classes, Ernest Hunt and Edward Kenny, took turns adding dirt. Class President Edwin Cullity gave the Ivy Day oration, after which Principal Charles E. Emmerich spoke. Robert Elliott read Gov. Marshall's Arbor Day proclamation, Marion Stride recited an original Ivy Day poem written by Glenna, Ran dolph.

or dozens of other cities, We overlook the ghastliness « of slums and factory-bordefing wastelands with the hopeful thought that such things -are temporary. . Artists see things differently, And while the artists represented in this show have seen

neatness, tidiness and even magnificence, many of them are irresistibly drawn to. slymmy. : subjects. They render those subjects - well. Better than verbal ree porters, they give us insight into our society.

New York paper ran a of Dolly in a bathing suit. . “I was a little worried about that, because of what people

might say on Sunday, at church,” she said. * when someone showed it to the bishop.

“He smiled and told me, ‘Well well, nothing like this has ever happened at St. James before.’ They were all thrilled by it. “Yes, I think

halls singing “Oh, Manual, Oh, Manual.” A member of the class when the June’ ’09 ivy was planted’ was a young athlete with pomp adour haircut and pegtop trous-

ers, Al Feeney, now Mayor Feeney. 2

PHOTOGRAPHS in Historian Nagley’s files show the girls wore shoetop length dresses and large hats heavily loaded ! with flowers. The best dressed boys wore snappy felt hats, low aed with narrow. brims. Some wore derbles with a" devil-