Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1950 — Page 3

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. State employment or fired ag:tion on relief grants to Com-,, Wl rs” ; i elected Mr, Gilllom president re-

gal Aid Soctety, Ine,

States president of the society, anto re. 8F® pending from the total 1478

\munists as well as other data on

A letter, written by Pennsyl.| Communists teaching in the pub-|Ccently and re-elected other of-

vania’s Deputy Attorney General

Robert L. Kunzig,

the first time in that : De . tory a law ie I9 Chat state's bis. Deputy Attorney General - Nor. urer.

lic school system, on the state/ficers, They are Jullan A. Kiser, vice president, Joseph N, Myers,

y payroll or on election ballots. said that for secretary, and Roy Falvey, treas-

Indiana’s rékponse, prepared by

groups from receiving relief oon J. Beatty, sald that the| : -

~grants-was to be t

specie. problem of relief graniag. ig, in Cycle Creshie1 ested. to Communists had never Tap Die:in C il Be . Public assistance to an alleged |in Indiana. | Communist in Pittsburgh has| He added that the state had no

HAVRE DE GRACE, Md., June 8 (UP)—Two Army privates were

been discontinued, he wrote. {est concerning any such prob-|killed yesterday when their motorThe law under which Pennsyl-| lem. ieycle crashed into a truck. STRAUSS SAYS:

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MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS (LI. 1561) FILLED

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- Elbert R. Gilliom, newly-elected "=~

Council of Social Agencies,

| Indianapolis has ceived approximately $61,500 from the government for three projects. The loans, earmarked for advance planning by various cities, are to be paid back as soon as bonds are floated, = Must Get Board OK All applications. for loans must. be first submitted to the State Pollution Board for examination and later to thé General Services Administration, a federal agency, for final approval. pia Other cities which have applied for sewage loans are Beech Grove. Hammond, Fort Branch, Jeffer-!

Evansville, Sullivan, Boonville, Bloomfield, Lapel, Shoals, Loo-| gootee, Greenwood and Clarks-| burg. |

Marketing Stolen Pigs | Lands Youths in Jail

Times State Service een

two young self-admitted rustlers in Warren County jail today.

police. . {

111, and Lafayette for a total of} $217, officers said.

¥

Rotary Club to Hear Dr. Richard Struna

Dr. Richard Struna; physician and lecturer, will address the Ro-| tary Club's “Ladies Day” program| Tuesday noon in the Claypool Hotel on “Life of Women and| Children Under Communism.” Dr. Struna was an industrialist|

. | American citizen a few years ago.

| ‘YOUR TRIP ABROAD’

in Czechoslovakia before coming! to this country and becoming an

SUNDAY TIMES

}

e 8 §

Learning Yechnique under the watchful eye of Marguerite de Anguera (left) are student balleri- |total of $34,000. sonville, New Haven, Bluffton, nas (left to right) Jean Perry, Luan Buckhorn, Mary Ann Wilkinson, -4Princetan,.... Covington... Milan... Sally. Noble and Mavie LaRue. oi

Starlight Choreographer Cites Glut of Young Talent

1

By HENRY BUTLER

irs Marguerite de Anguera, who will create the ballet numbers for| LAFAYETTE, June 8—Five this summer's Starlight Musicals believes local young talent should! ‘stolen pigs went to market, and think twice about going to New York, “Kids from a city like Indianapolis have no idea of how many who took them there were lodged talented youngsters already are in New York,” she explains, | “New York is over-run with kids from all parts of the country Charges of grand larceny were really talented kids. You ecan’t| ~~ = == "rr placed Ea 3 Jace 1 and drag them away from New York. in A Stadls : She Juures With 18, both farm hands in the West|They stay there till they break Anne Hunt Fullwood at 1423 HN. Lebanon area. They were arrest- their hearts, or fall in love and Pennsylvania St. ed yesterday by Warren County get married or just get old and Sheriff John Kane and state embittered.”

As a former assistant to Agn

State police said the pair admit. de Mille, a Jooss Ballet alumna ted stealing a two-wheeled auto- and an experienced actress and ‘mobile trailer Apr. 20 and using! singer, as well as dancer, it on successive nights to rustle Broadway productions and night two pure-bred Hampshire barrows| clubs, Miss de Anguera knows the. and three large sows from neigh-/ Broadway picture. boring farms. They disposed of what “Connections” mean, wh the stock at yards in Danville, “fixed” auditions are; >

Knows ‘Run-Around’

1 | p against classical She knows how Broadway, with Joos’ prejudice agal ; os "a glut of talent for a continually | ballet taking lessons and praes=;- =:

Fa

tightening market, has devised an| elaborate “run-around” system to give boys and girls from the ‘provinces the illusion they're get-

ting somewhere.

And 80 she stresses the im-

She knows|

Ballet Held Foundation | Her dance pupils also receive estinstruction in voice and acting. {But the stage training doesn't mean superficiality - in dancing. She believes classical ballet furnishes the necessary technical foundation for modern dancing. “After all, you can't teach medern music without teaching clasatigical music,’ she says. And she told me that members of the {Jooss Ballet used to flout Mr.

in|

iticing the old stuff on the sly. She's all for local support of| cal entertainment ventures} {pointing out that the performers {are loyal. Two of her girl dancers

portance of versatility. “You don't patter pay than they're likely to audition just for dancing in Néw| get from this year's Starlight MuYork any more. You have to KNOW | gicais 50 per cent guarantee. They how to sing and act,” she told me elected to stay here. 2

emphatically.

And she would like to see a big!

Since her return to Indianapo-|project started here so that “kids lis last November, after havingicould have a chance, instead of

_ibeen choreographer, leadin

1948 “Stars Under the

series, Miss de Anguera has been | cent about discussing heart-break. conducting experimental classes

But she does~-¥emember a ribbreak that proved troublesome.

« Again improved «Higher «Long in mileage «+ Gre:

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tin power

AT YOUR STANDARD OIL D

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. On the second night of “The | Vagabond King’ at Butler Bowl in August, '48, Miss de Anguera, playing the tragic Hugette, got an over-enthusiastic prop-dagger stab from villain Thibaut. It landed her im the hospital and the

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Employment Security Aet.

|by John Hoosler employers pay nearly 3 per cent of their payrolls to the “|stats to maintain the unempiloy~ ment compensation fund. Under provisions of the ’ .|Act, employers who maintain in« ‘dustries where workers remain on the job for long periods are ree warded with, reduced contribution rates, 5 Lower rates for many employa SEAS thats contribution to 1 per en raat cent, Y Actual Rate 2.7 Pet.

.In 1940, the year the merit program went into efect, almost 300 ] Hoosier employers had earned re ! duced rates which saved them a

Joanie Soeurt, Peggy Sturgeon, | The actual rate Hoosier em- . : Sh iDloyers are required lo pay isc erate sree] Su] POF cont. Of the taxable pay : = | newspapers, but she managed to roll, 1 finish the fuf’ of the operetta. By 1048, more than 9700 firms ‘In New York, some weeks later, had qualified to pay reduced rates a second x-ray revealed a rib frac-| saving them a total of $48 mile ture. “It was quite some time|lion, before 1 could dance well again”! More than 10,000 firms reshe told me the other day, with ported and paid reduced contribu the humorous patience of a vet- tions ‘amounting to about $35 eran trouper. Imillion last year.

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DITION WITH A. TOUCH OF TOMORROW!

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Father would enjoy a goed * sock-ing! s Father's Day—June 18.