Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1950 — Page 21

vel

Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to three little shep-

herd children six times, fréin May through October. During the six appearances was revealed a “peace plan from Heaven.”

Predicts Russ Evil, Error

“OUR LADY OF FATIMA predicted unless people prayed Russia would be the source of evil and error,” said Rev, Goossens. “History has shown she was correct. Today we believe if Catholics and Protestants and Jews pray for peace even greater disasters may be averted.” Five minutes before the services were to begin, the huge church was full. The congregation wasn't made up entirely of elderly people although gray heads could be seen. Three soldiers walked in and bowed their heads and prayed. : ‘Handsome young couples, several with one and more youngsters were there. Middle-aged couples, old enough to have had sons in World War II and the Korean War knelt in the pews. Youngsters not old enough to ynderstand the full significance of the services sat beside their mothers and fathers and found it difficult to keep their attentions to the front of the church. Teen-age boys and girls took piaces next to their elders. Occasionally a patriarch walked in and you wondered what thoughts lay behind the furrowed brow. Men in the prime of life who looked like the type you would expect to see behind a huge desk of a large corporation bowed their heads in humility. : At exactly 7:30 p. m,, the church bells rang out. Inside the church the strong, clear sound made me think of the Liberty Bell. When the organ sounded and the low tones mingled with the toll of the bells, there seemed to be strength in the air from the mere fact every particle ‘of our freedom was still an open thing. People from every walk of life could cangregate and pray to their God and ring bells and join voices in community worship. The heritage Americans cherish had not become clandestine. It was still an individual's choice whether he prayed or didn’t pray, whether .he acknowledged 8 greater power or denied it. Shortly, Fr. Goossens was in the pulpit. His voice and words were calm. A few minutes later

Boost for Booze

4 Prayer for peace . . . “Unless people prayed

Woman Gets Quint. Display Musical Prowess

Russia would be the source of evil and error.”

he led the faithful! in prayer. It struck me his voice was like a voice in a wilderness until he was joined by the congregation. Then there was power and it came from the unity of purpose.

Compare Sound to Waterfall

occurred to me that 500 or 600 voices carried more|

power than 40,000 yelling spectators at a football Take It Off

game, You might compare the sound being made

in churc¢h to the steady rumble of a waterfall. Fernando Barrera Gonzalez

And the sound of a mob or spectators to a bolt of | lightning. . ‘ I tried to imagine what a million unified voices would sound like in the ears of our enemies. What, effect would the combined voices of all freedomloving people have in the cause of universal peace? The thought is staggering in its potential scope.

Just looking over thé faces of those who de-most tossed back a 100-pound voted an evening to prayer for peace, you can’t hunk of something he picked up doubt that there is a moral uplift from beseeching in the ocean about five miles off

a greater power for wisdom and strength.

Maybe men of the cloth have something. May- when it suddenly occurred to him| be we could go farther along the path of peace if what the gray, wax-like mass we took stock of what is inside of us. As much, looked like, Today he waited for| at least, as we pay attention to what is visible, final word on whether it really] |is a $50,000 piece of ambergris, It's something to think about. Especiaily in|valuable whale secretion used in| making perfume. It had passed! nine analysts’ tests. {

what can be traded, exploded, destroyed.

times like these. on |

NEW YORK, Oct. 20—They say we are a nation of heavy alcoholic tendency, and I believe it, because I am always seeing a testimonial to the effect that very special Old Panther Peérspiration fs a unique blend of nutritious, health-giving essences guaranteed to grow hair and get you into the Stork Club. . People of great distinction pose with the amber glass clutched firmly in the well-manicured paw, against a backdrop of dead animals or live movie stars, and the blush on their cheeks and the glint in their eye cannot stem from rouge or murine. It must be that booze is permanent with us, or otherwise prohibition was a petty skirmish whose overthrow was scarcely worth the winning.

Feels Guilty When Sun Sinks.

I NEVER put much stock in the bone-building fes of alcohol, taken into the system lavishly, having been raised on North Carolina corn with the fusel oil unrendered from the fruit jar. But I never saw myself as much a problem to the community, either, until the last year or so, when somebody—I suspect the shade of Ella Boole, or at least Mrs. D. Leigh Colvin, the present head of WCTU—has been trying to voodoo me into an admission of alcoholism. I am beginning to feel guilty every time the sun sinks, which, golly ned, is the nicest time of the day. People keep experting alcohol. You don’t want a drink, they say, your system has a salt deficiency, and all you crave is a pinch of salt. If I craved a pinch of salt IT would buy a pinch of salt. It is cheaper than Johnny Walker black, or even red, and does not resemble Scotch, gin or bourbon even remotely in its taste. It tastes like salt. Salty. I admire a little snort once in a while, and it fs not because I am "fighting a deep psychic inferiority, either. I am not mad at my boss, my mother, or a little red sled. I do not drink to hide my head. I just like the way it tastes and feels, as some people like steaks and milkshakes. I also like steaks and milkshakes; so don’t put me down as having an ingrained antipathy to cows, Moo to you, Mrs. Colvin. : But mostly I weary of the questionnaires designed to steal all pleasure from a normal knock from an unashamed decanter, that sits on the

TV Rhubarb

sideboard for even the preacher to see. I am tired | of the second guessing, such as a piece the other] day, whose headline asked me nastily: “Are yeu) alcoholic? Here's a test.” i Some doctor with time on his hands, and very possibly a vicious head from blending stingers with bourbon, tells me that I am probably alcoholic if I answer yes to two or more of his questions. Sample: Q: Do you crave a drink at a definite time daily? A: Only when I want one, and whose business is it?

: Do you drink in the morning? A. No. I! : 8 > ng: Best Laid Plans

don’t get up in the morning.

Q: Do you lose time from work due to drink- | Philosopher John Dewey, feted

ing? A: No. I don’t work. I write for a living.

Q: Do you get the “inner shakes” when you party last year, today celebrated continue drinking? A: No. I don’t continue drink-|,t home in New York with a cake ing. Except over a period of years. Do you sleep gecorated by his

all the time, Doc?

Q: Has drinking changed your personality? 5iq adopted son. Mrs. Dewey ports along the Jrench Riviera the Sayest.

A: Yes. Made me more lovable.

Q: Does drinking cause you bodily complaints? | ..hvags the neighborhood for A: Ever know anybody who was Immune ffom| candies to put ag the cake. or 5 i

the common hangover? ; Q: Have your initiative and ambition decreased since you started drinking? A: You are looking at | the next president of the United States, kid.

a boy and need experience.

Maybe not the next, but pretty soon. I am Just|ing grandmother” slept late at the most well known vacationing and lipstick for the first time on the eshortage by relieving nurses Switching Engine

Q: Do you turn to an inferior environment ,.. .. =» 4 | es to Port Hur { since drinking? A: Mind your tongue. Only the ;,, =p ..¢ 5 “just In | resort area to play the roulette fewer privileges here than when Use of nurses’ aids accomplishes

other night I was out with Gen. Eisenhower.

Experts Will Drive Us to Drink

THAT'S A SAMPLE. The Doc goes on to say that drinking is not a habit or an activity but a disease. This may be true in many cases, and is, of course, very sad. | But I choose to believe that I am grandpa's|

sympathetic aid of the jug, against all sorts of things like cancer and a querulous wife. - Only trouble I see is that these experts, with their questionnaires and such, will eventually suc-| ceed in driving us all to drink. Including the)

boy, and he held out for a pretty spell with the| i

Eskimos that the WCTU is always worrying| |

about, who are about to deliver us to the Russians, result of consuming too much beer. —

WASHINGTON, Oct. 20—Halp! Gents of the television industry, will you kindly lay off the telegrams. the phone calls, and the bitter handouts

"about color TV? Already my wastebasket's over-

flowing and a few more loads of your literature will turn my house into a fire hazard. " Fact is, fellows; I don't even own a television set. It doesn’t much matter to me whether TV pictures are in technicolor, varying shades of gray, or sepia. Just the other night a neighbor of mine asked me in to see his new set. He snapped it on and what do you think came out on the 18-inch screen? Midget wrestlers, big as life. Kicking each other in the teeth, jumping on each other's faces, and committing mayhem all over my friend's living room. :

No Private Rhubarbs

WHETHER this would have looked better in color I do not know, although one of the performers did get a bloody nose and I. suppose crimson gore on the viewing tube might have been even more spectacular. What I mean, gentlemen of the video trade, is that you're not going to get me involved in your own private rhubarb over hat brand of color pictures eventually is going to look the best. All T know is that I followed last summer's

hearings by the Federal Communications Com-

mission carefully; I took in all the demonstrations of the various kinds of color machinery. It may be, as some of you say in your lawsuits, that the FCC made a mistake in approving the Columbia Broadcasting System's color set. Perhaps, as you charge, it is a mechanical monstrosity, ~— The one beauty of it is that the durn thing works. And works perfectly. Beautiful blondes still are beautiful CBS television

on i dogs have big brown eyes and Standard Oil trucks are

the proper shade of red on this device with the whirling disc.

I also had a good long look at the Radio Cor- of men Theddore Zillman, Who..." Ave: Edward J. Reed, air- at the foot of the staircase in her

poration’s color dingus, which generates its own

rainbow inside the tube, instead of without. Some the plan, added he was inclined) Gyison 4722 Evanston Ave.; Nor- terday afternoon by a caretaker. of the engineers said this was far. better; only to agree with her.

trouble was that it didn’t work so well. I saw one|

lovely on it whose hair changed from orange to ciology Professor Howard B. Gill | 534 N Elder Ave.; Richard L. Millay's desk and the living room who proposed benches be set up Kitchen, seaman, son of Mr. and floor were littered with copies of The experts said this was because it still needed for lovemaking “under reasonable | yc 7 yy Kitchen, 2434 Sheri-/a group of new poems which were “a little perfecting and that when the rough spots|supervision.” Student Board Pres- 4,, pq. joseph R. Collins, sea- to be included in a forthcoming were ironed out, it would work far better than the|ident Karl Stieghorst, Wauwa-| ..°~1a8 o Neal St.: Charles A. collection of her works. There CBS system. Now some of my mail indicates that tosa agreed, saying: “Right now g.,; oo. seaman apprentice, son was an ashtray in Miss Millay's this color won't be good enough for a couple or campus policemen go sneaking ,.'ar ang Mrs, Gus Ettinger, 431 hand.

green before my very eyes.

three years yet. pos

So the FCC approved the CBS widget, simply we're more interested -in prevent- o t dead six or eight hours. because it's here now and ready to go into produc-|ing students from going off the akes, seaman apprentice, Route g

tion at once. That sounds fair enough to a bystander like me, Fact of the matter is that the one man in America who is responsible for this color whoopla

hasn't even been drawn into the fight, Fellow by| the name of Big Ed Johnson, U. 8. Senator from,

Colorado and the same man who took on Roberto Rossellini and Bergman for what they did on the steamy isle of Stromboli.

Senator Was Amazed

SEN. JOHNSON saw one of the early CBS, demonstrations and, like most other people getting their first look at it, he was as amazed as he was gram

delighted. When it developed that the system had been available for nearly 10 years he blew up. He accused the Communications Commission of dillydallying and he said if the commissioners didn’t get off their handkerchiefs and make color TV available to the people, he'd Investigate 'em. brought action. Now we've got lawsuits. Me,

I'm not much interested. Instead of watching|ter. s

midgets tramp on each other's noses tonight, I'm going to read a book. : hi

{a fruit jar. He tossed a rock

'ran into the woods, still wear-| _ ; Sf SE 2 id i IN THE REAR of the church the thought ing half of the glass jar. : 4 i, ; Fj

|in his belt with an ice pick with-|

Good Catch

By Robert C. RuarkBanned in Boston Lo]

exercise.”

L. A. Lukenbil! Honored been engaged in extensive fleet

; On, Wisconsin . : By Frederick C. Othman _uaiversity of Wisconsin's dean .pucotts Ave.: Richard J. Ragan,

of girls Mrs. Louise Troxell today airman. h | , husband of Mrs. R. J. |nixed a proposal for supervised pogapn 7777 W. Washington; Wil-

about 25-miles-an-hour, “misine laround trying to catch students, | RE aa opapely IR Her physician said she had been terpeted” a switching signal and . ’ . rammed the rear of the small

Just Ask Us

Can the President of the United States declare

Questions from readers on ANY subject will be ho i answered here. Mail quesfions to The Times. weé:or. Club_ghirler Rayle and Sandra wyorrington; Norman C. Ferguson, but in later years she turned to/y,onq more and more of her time i {Martha i Hi { |raised by South Bend

Article net 8. Dre . Janet, Greenwood, destroyer

George Scudder, when a policeman flagged down her station wagon. “Oh, no,” she

a plaid shirt and bluejeans,” as

Skunk Under Glass

Sue Sanders. aedile; June en«' ‘political themes. fat ‘ quartermaster second class, 953 politic at her farm with her husband, ; ; A eS oh dob sel N. Dearborn, fleet oiler USS = Miss Millay was born in Rock-ipygen Jan Boissevain, a New Local No. 130 (AFL), Those op~ secretary. rer. ' Paweatuck; Floyd E. Marinee Jr., land, Me., and won acclaim at the york importer who died last year. erations, however, were unsuce : . s erson St., destroyer es- m, ‘‘Renascense,” ch she ] ; ' : { y {poe {I1, she attacked totalitarianism in STEALS 5 BEAGLE DOGS

Wo

. “FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1950

An Orchid for Her Driving

Wails Because She's Wearing Plaid Shirt, Bluejeans

“Oh, no,” exclaimed Mrs. Philadelphia,

wailed again, “and here I am in

the policeman pinned an orchid on her shoulder and told her she'd been singled out for a “courteous driver” award.

Last night in Duluth, Minn. policeman David Mattison spotted a skunk with its head caught in

shattering the jar but the skunk

® = = : 3 1 : i F iE : eo

Timas-Acme Telephots. The famous Dionne quintuplets (left to right), Yvonne, Annette, Cecile, Marie. and Emilie, raise their voices in song with Il of was hospitalized in Mexico City] goo. ojacsmates from the Villa Notre Dame High School near Callander, Ont., Canada. They sung at the Alfred E. Smith Memorial

today. He tri to h h Ray § tHed: io Punch a hole Foundation dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York.

Singing Session Over, Dionne's Go Sightseeing pico, par Inmates Bought

Francis Cardinal Spellman Acts as Official Host, Stolen Pistol for $40

Takes Famous Quints on Tour of High School By ELIZABETH TOOMEY, United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct, 20—The Dionne quintuplets and 11 class- ) mates—all dressed in gray wool suits exactly alike started a day An Indiana State Reformatory of sightseeing today by visiting a high school and a hospital. guard was scheduled to be arAfter early mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral, the girls got on a raigned here today on charges of bus and were taken to Cathedral High School by Francis Cardinal selling a stolen Army pictol to a Spellman, their official host, Next came a visit to St. Vincent's prisoner who escaped. Hospital. i — em | FBI agents who arrested him Their official appearance as since they're chaperoned by two Yesterday said Benjamin Harrisingers at last night's Alfred E. nuns, and a nurse, plus a pro-,5on Madison, 24, New Castle, adSmith. memorial banquét kept tective squad of policemen during mitted selling the fun for $40. them busy rehearsing, primping every move here They said he also admitted stealand resting yesterday. Annette, re ing it from Camp Atterbury, . . where he trained this summer with the 38th Indiana National Guard Division.

Cecile, Emilie, Marie and Yvonne, Rz : |all sporting simple new hairdos, Births Increased The FBI said Madison sold the un to Louis Barnes Jr., 24. On

- nd blue taffeta formals (their first) . Pvt. Reddy Pvt. Mills land wearing pink lipstick and a At Methodist 2 Two Tadiatapolis men have res ight, qusting a? gy Th Methodist Hospital is doing its gent 27, Barnes and another in|cently completed basic - air _ in- crowd, bolstered by the voices of Share toward boosting Marion mate, Gail Locke, 26, escaped (doctrination courses at Lackland 10 of their classmates, County's population. from the Reformatory. In his semi-annual report to the Capture Prisoners {board of trustees today, Supt.! The gun was not used in the

out taking off the belt. 3 Hoosier Heroes—

Fisherman Eric Hogstrom al- Two Local Men - - a LJ LJ San Clemente, Cal, yesterday Finish Air Training

Ready to Be Assigned Specialized Work

| |

Actress Martha Raye will be arrested next time she sets foot in Massachusetts, a Bos- & ton Judge ruled yesterday after| she failed to appear for trial on

trafic charges. ,.. porce Base, Tex. They are Marie Has Best Voice

Martha Raye She was reported Pot, Thomas C. Reddy, son of Martha ‘iMrs. Raymond Reddy, 1815 How-| All of the famous Quints are : . S82 » are Bt vt. Robert Mil |Robert E. Neff, sald births at escape, authorities said. Locke . ~ BO 8, 800 | musical, but according to one of was arrested here the day after of Mrs. B. A. Smith, 946 N. Tibbs. | . Methodist Hospital are expected yo escape These men are now ready for their classmates, “Marie has the to top the 1950 total of 5006. Baines PW ice and Annette is the best “| as apprehended the {entrance into Air Force technical best vo This year's birth, heading for a same day after he kidnaped a training and for assignment in ail-round musician. new record, already total 4388. Red Cab driver and forced him specialized work. | Rita Oblin, a bright-eyed 18-| Mr. Neff also pointed to the to drive to Marshall, Ill. He was |year-old blonde who described the rising number of patients. In the sentenced Oct. 2 to the U. S. Hitting the high lights of the girls, said, “Yvonne and Cecile are first nine months of 1849, the penitentiary at Terre Haute for Cevile loves to tell hospital handled 17,467 in-patients| kidnaping. { and 18,838 out-patients. The first, Madison was hired as a Reare 26 Hoosier Navy men, 20 of © Outwardly, the Quints are se- nine months this year saw 17,710|formatory guard May 1. {them from Indianapolis. They|rious and unsmiling. Papa Oliva in patients and 21,402 out-pa-/ a will visit the beach playgrounds Dionne, who accompanied them tients. | 1 and gay cafes of such cities asion the trip from their home in “Many more graduate nurses) [ ain ams Cannes, Toulon, and Golfe Juan./Callander, Ontario, gave permis- are needed,” Mr. Neff reported. Along the French Riviera are sion for them to wear high heels However, the Hospital is easing |

£

at a big public 90th birthday

10-year-old | adopted daughter and his 8-year-|

overruled the decorator’s plan to!

Felt Like Walking Mrs, Sylvia Carlen, the “walk-

her home in Detroit today. |spots in the world. These men are this trip. {of routine duties so they can] t oh She, ot being sent to this beautiful] Otherwise, they actually have spend more time with patients. |

29 Persons Injured rs In Railroad Yard Wreck

CLEVELAND, O., Oct. 20 (UP) ~Twenty-nine persons were ine jured, four of them requiring hospital attention, when a slowlymoving New York Central passenger train rammed a switching

wheels, however, They are serv- they're attending high school, this, a ing in the Mediterranean Sea T

with the Sixth Fleet which has Death Writes Last Verse—

* » | exerases 10 protect the united ECiN@ Ste V t Mill _— 8 A Le el a 8 ed ha > incen : ay, Poet, Dies of Heart AHac |engine in a railroad yard last

of Link-Belt Co., Body Found Crumpled at Foot of Stairs, night.

IndianapoMs, has , been named re-| Having earned their few days . aye . . | The injured Included 13 pasHad Spent All Night Writing Poetry ove Tarel [moided Ig has Cut, if you will, with sleep’s dull knife

gional vice pres-| relaxation in the showplaces are, jdent of Afmli- Albert R. Woden, aviation boat-| {and four pullman employees on Each day to half its length, my friend; the 14-car Chicago-to-New York The years that time takes off my life :

ated Colu mbia swain's mate third class, husband Clubs, composed of Mrs. A. R. Wooden, 1856 Gent! “Pacemaker,” and the engineer He'll take off from the other end. -and fireman of the electric switch —Edna St. Vincent Millay.

of alumni of Co-| pve : Thomas T. Barnhart, elec-| engine. Other passengers remained

lumbia Univer-| : 3 {trician’s mate third class, son of _sity residing inj d Mrs. Cl E. Barn-| uis Lukenbill 60 major cities. |} = a oy Ne e: a lard L. Melton. aviation structural AUSTERLITZ, N. Y., Oct. 20 (UP)—A coroner's report said aboard the train and it continued | mechanic third class, husband of [042Y. that Pulitzer prize-winning poet Edna St. Vincent Millay died its eastbound run after a twoMrs. R. L.- Melton 6620 Massa- Of & heart attack after writing poetry all night with the same dis- hour delay. regard for sleep that she showed in her verses. Derails Pacemaker

Earn Relaxation

” » * Coroner Lawrence J. Andrews said the frail, 58-year-old poet apparently suffered coronary occlusion as she started upstairs to student necking on a faculty-;.. o Muff bed yesterday at dawn. 3 > | . , airman, husband of J sponsored Lover's Lane. And dean yr. Dorothy M. Muff, 2636 + Her body was found crumpled

The collision derailed the Pacemaker's electric engine, a baggage dormitory car containing dining car personnel, and an empty sleeper. . | Raillread spokesmen said the hospitalized included one passenger, and three crewmen but none were hurt seriously. They were detained at Glenville Hospital for observation of bruises and an Xe ray checkup. for other possible injuries. . The Pacemaker,

saidhe’'d like to know more about an. son of Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Berkshire Hills farm "home yes-

Dead Six or Eight Hours

{bert L. Champion, fireman, husThe lights were on and Miss

The proposal came from 80-,..,4 of Mrs. Sarah A. Champion,

moving ‘at

switching engine, according to Frank Kuchenriphen, 60, Elyria, |0., the switching engine engineer. | © The passenger train had stopped jat the Cleveland station and was {moving into the Collinwood yards

. 5, Box 700, Indianapolis; Robert = Friends said that although Miss dep sud than. lying In wall for iw, Warren, seaman, Brownsburg; Millay lived alone and rarely left them. Paul H. Hile, fireman, Camden; the Berkshires, she still lived the

: James C. Smith, yeoman third irregular schedule she fell into Ripple Clubs

class, Danville; Jack E. Kersey, during her “Bohemian” years in -

{fireman apprentice, Plainfield, New York's Greenwich Vilage. 3 L ! Elect Officers {and Robert L. Baker, seaman, Co-| Miss Millay was generally ac- on the east side of tha city to ex» lumbus. lclaimed by critics as America’s change its electric power unit for

ia diesel engine for the rest of its

Broad Ripple High School clubs 1 : : t. They often pple Hig All are serving as crew mem- leading woman poet.. y run to New York, a railroad

have elected new officers fOr yo. of the aircraft carrier USSS Placed her with Sappho and Eliz- Edna St. Vincent Millay

950 : spokesman said. : os Yo and new officers are: Coral Sea. sheth BA ug in the top house in Greenwich Village and p————————————— h Club—Donna Knox, president; Frank E. Kelly, firemau appren- history. became a leader of the clique Bartenders Raise Fund

which did much to make the "20s The primary theme in all her the “era of flaming youth.” She To Aid Blind Girl war

writing was “to seize “upon life * ik fearless with both hands, even if Was described as. a “frivolous| oop; penn 1g Oct. 20

Rita Rie . vice president; Sally Stiles, sec- tice, 124 8. Lyndhurst Dr, is eA, Go an gine, oro sevving as a crew member of the chairman. destroyer USS Lloyd Thomas;

Ripple “Hi-¥—Peter Bridgeford, presi- : ; Bobb A . . ’ ; ge d, Jordan. "ge, president: tos Cabby a a laeon. aman, it hurts.” Her most quoted line YO ig. wt *% (UP)—Members of a bartenders’ Art Glub—Enien Warner, president; Peter USS Grand Canyon; Cloyd Wish-| Was “my candle burns at both, uth like a valentine.” union today gave the last third Spaulding, vice president; Helen Warner: mire, machinist’s mate first class, | Acclaim Nation-Wide Of a $3000 trust fund they raised K pk. soci chairman, and Kathi: 1928 W. New York St. destroyer| wis Bulligt Drie not! At first poetry did not pay and for 3-year-old Sharon Swe Clubb . OURY A 18 ay she turned to acting and hacklD the hope that she might see.

Thes; ndra McCrory, president; escort USS Harwood; Wilfur Bar-| blished 3 vol £ verse. since | guste Boranet, esident: 2s- low Jr. stewardsman, 3415 Pros- PY a volume of verse since Uo co. magazines. Gradual-| The money will pay costs of the decretary, and. ondgt Jae, *: pect St, destroyer tender USS 1943, the position she established Iv pri edn gazin wi de acclaim Ei! =: fight to San Francisca next

er. Student Council—Clordon Smith, i- Yellowstone; William H. Gandolf, for herself when she won the 5, "0" 1906 the MetFopolitan Ane ah Fi ary. end” Spence; seaman apprentice, 1401 E. Ver- Pulitzer prize with “The Harpo..." ojected her to write the Possible operation by an eye sen, treasurer. orestdent; mont St. the destroyer USS John Weaver” in 1923 never was chal, for Deems Taylor's opera, Specialist. hars Granger. + Dresldent “Donna R. Plerce; Richard Hall, seaman, lenged. Her early works gained .py, ging’s Henchman.” { Sharon, blinded by infantile : : 554 W. 26th St., destroyer USS her the title of “The Lover's Poet” 1 4p. early '30's she began olSlavcoma, Sieady. hoy Dad four y money ers’

SBF 958. 3955

Da, t: cort USS Rich; Jackson L. Bea- began when she was 18. ~ After her poetry and spoke out for : man, boilerman third class, radar her graduation from Vassar Col- American intervention in Europe. | A dognaper pussy-footed preside: prest- picket destroyer USS C. P. Cecil; lege in 1917 she went to New York| Her last major poem was a bit- the back yard of Otis

treas- William A. Sampson Jr. seaman, “to write to sell.” RE - iter memorial to the victims of 1518 W. Minnesota St. USS War-| The copper-haired, green-eyed the Nazi massacre at Lidice, five beagle hounds last « lgirl- lived In a pjne-foot-wide Czechoslovaki ‘The

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