Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 November 1950 — Page 25
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necessity of meeting the day with a smile. songs about lucky old suns and stern commands’
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Inside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola -
EVERY time a utility truck stops and a work gang hops out anymore, I hold my ears. So much air-hammer work has been going on downtown it's a wonder half of the cliff ‘dwellers haven't blown their stacks. It was a pleasure, however, to run into WilHam D. Seal's crew. He's a cable engineer ‘for the Indianapolis Power & Light Co. His doesn’t believe in air hammers. They don't
many hundreds of square feet of
pavement you“guys going to demolish?” Mr. Seal, a ‘quiet, thoughtful man, said he wasn't figuring on“disturbing concrete. Five of
his husky bruisers man held a long crowb when I tipped my hat to h oe <> ol 3 “LET'S GET the fault finde in place,’ men,” said Mr. Seal. Then turning to me _he explained that a primary electric cable was on_the blink. The defect was someplace between th Junction box, Capitol Ave. and Maryland St. and the Kentucky Ave. power station. “We have to find the break and splice on new section of cable,” added Mr, Seal. By that time three of the men rolled up a two-wheeled trailer which was covered with canvas, Heavy insulated rubber cables were strung out on the sidewalk like spaghetti. A trolley stopped at the corner and passengers pushed their noses against| (the cc aie to see what was
wded around, ys. and he was surprised
going on. I tried to Yook if I knew what an ampere . was. Wo
IN SIMPLE language (which is the only kind I understand), Mr. Seal said he and his men
were going to find the break, somewhere under the pavement, by shooting a current along the
No charge . .". Charles LaMar stands topside and hunts a bum electrical cable underground.
It Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, Nov. 17— Miss Evelyn Keyes, the Hollywood charmer, and I decided the time had come to revolutionize the Great American Interview.
Looking deeply into her flashing eyes and her.
martini glass as we lingered languorously at the Cafe Madison on a recent afternoon, I ventured to suggest that we undertake an “impudent interview." “Miss “T've
Keyes," 1 chuckled. villainously,
interviewed many” glamour pusses but you have’
the laveliest complexion I have ever met. Where'd
you get it—at Gimbel's or Macy's?” “Max Factor's of Hollywood,” she replied,
knocking me flat as, should I say, a pancake?
“Miss Keyes,” 1 glowered, “do you think. men... “YES!” shouted my fair one tenderly.
FRE
“FOR GOODNESS’ sake, wait'll you hear the question!” I expostulated nervously. “What's on the average. Hollywood actress’ men?” . “Other men!” chortled this beauty who comes from down South but looks good up in the North, too. “Your beautiful hair...” My voice became a sultry whisper with the lava of love. “Yes?” she trilled. = “Your beautiful hair has such a gorgeous sheen or whatever the heck they're calling it pow. It's just lo-o-0-o-vely. What color is it~ really?” “It's the color that drives men mad--blonde,” ghe retorted proudly. “What men does it.drive mad?’ “Hairdressersssss,” she hissed.
* I pressed. ’
MISS KEYES then got honest and confessed °
that she was a brunette a husband ago. But for the past year she has been what is called a blonde among other things. She used to be married to John Huston, whom she still likes and admires, but suddenly she started life over—she got a divorce and a dye job. “Do gentlemen prefér blondes because they get dirty quicker?” I leered. Nobody was going to tell me I didn't know some 1925 jokes. “I don’t know what you're talking about!” Miss Keyes stared down her nose at me and when I say her nose, I mean it’s her own .and not some plastic surgeon’s. “But I found that once I became a.blonde, I attracted men of the type I'm not interested in attracting.” “And fewer you were interested in attracting?” “No. They came along too. Men are men.” yee ale
"s’ -
GETTY 6 BACK 10 or + Cin Irterview
I suggested bashfully t6 the gal whom you
Americana , By Robert C. Ruark - BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Noy. 17—The spiritual home of the juke box is in the South: At least they seem bigger, brighter, noisier and shinier down here. Their innards gurgle louder; too, when the records are changing. “Goodnight, Irene,” one of the st dismal tunes with the dullest set of lyrics evr recorded, has followed me relentlessly. So have songs con-
cerned with sad cowboys, sad hillbillies, and the Also,
to be happy if it kills you. - THE AMERICAN ballad or semifolk - song, I do believe, .is the most dolorous, tuneless, generally dispirited art form I have ever encountered. Even more so than the Argentine tango, which combines a weepy rhythm with the general sentiment that life lacks meaning unless two feet of knife is impaled in the singer's back: American folklore song compilers seem peculiarly fascinated with jailhouses, train wrecks, lonesome cowboys, feuds, and faithless lovers. The themes, of themselves, might be pardonable if the tunes were less dismal and the words strung together by an intellect larger than an
But the combination of nasal voice; nasal guitar, nasal chording and uninspired message is particularly horrible when regurgitated by a Juke box.
oN
I GOT to thinking of America's pecutiar penchant for self-annoyance the other night when I was rending a steak in a pretty good restaurant. Some blonde doll was singing something about “Biff, Bam, Alakazam” ,on the television, with gestures and sharp properties to match. The juke
was blaring “Goodnight, Irene” over in a rival,
corner. and from somewhere—the kitchen, I guess, “The Hadacoh Polka: was whining from a radio. o> $
POR A few dreadful seconds I toured that I' had died -and been'sent to a sort of
Sai ht if
One
. mind besides |
EBACE TE
Watches Crews Fix Underground Cables defective cable. The electrical charge or signal would travel to the point of defect. There it
would stop. With tRe use of the Megger insulation tester
and a clip-on ammeter and by crawling into man-
holes, the trouble could be isolated between two manholes.” They simply move from the point
“where the signal is being sent to a manhole down
the street. If the signal is received through the tester, the section is good. If they're lucky, in the next manhole there is no signal coming in. They have the cable by the horns. The fault finder is the instrument which sends the signal. It is hooked to a power line, a transformer on the finder reduces the electrical charge and sends it on its way.
*. ow ow Dg
GAD, WE have clever people fooling around with our electrical supply. Can you imagine anyone being sharp enough to rig up power lines -underground in such a way that when something goes wrong, the line automatically Jisconnects, an alarm rings. in the central power plant or point of origin for a specific set of circuits? Immediately a map is hauled out, thé trouble area is located and before your toaster cools, men like Mr, Seal pull up with trucks,
™~ fault finders, Megger testers to confound every
dewalk superintendent that passes by. ble Splicer Forest E. Swails, his splicer helpers, William Metcalf and Olaf Wattan, disappeared\into a manhole to vip off some lead insulation on\junction cables so the cable engineer could test wich of the .nine different cables he was to work with. When that portion of the job was ‘determined, Jehn Redmond, distribution engineer, armed with his ammeter, started for the manholes. Charles LaMar mann kept an eye on the dials wkich showed how the
intermittent gharges | were goin out.
“THE FAULT finder rinkes it ssible to accomplish in a couple of hours whal would re-
quire a couple of days of searching in ev _ry man-
hole from here to the Kentucky Ave. pla explained Mr. Seal. - In the length of time it takes to drink t¥%Q
Mr anual
beers when you're not particularly thirsty, Redmond was back. He knew between which two manholes the defective rortion of the cable swas. THE ‘NEXT thing on (he agenda was to. cut the cable in both manholes, a section approximately 250 feet long, hook a winch line to one end and haul ’er out. A new section is pulled in,
the cable splicers connect it, cover the ‘splice joints with lead and insulation material and very few people are the wiser. No air hammers, concrete mixers, mountains
of dirt, road blocks, just a fault finder, Megger insulation tester, ammeter, guys who don’t mind getting dirt dn themselves and a whale of a lot of know-how.. ? I'm glad light switches are simple, the onepunch or one-pull kind.
Actress v ndergoes Impudent Interview
remember as Mrs. Al Jolson in “The Larry Parks Story,” and now I hesitated. " “How old would you say you are? “I would say 18 if TI could get away with it, but I'm really 21,” said Miss Keyes, lying in her teeth, as she is close to 31. Amid the waves of unconfined Keyes suddenly said: * “IT ean do better than that. “How old do you say you are?” “As old as you think I am.” “And how old aré you?’ “As old as I know darned well 1 am.” MIDNIGHT EARL: Frank Sinatra will produce his own TV show ; this week following a split with Irving Mansfield, but he hopes to get Jack Donahue from Holly- | wood to take over . . . Justin Gilbert's critically: ill in Rome" with peritonitis. His wife, Jean Gilbert, left a screen test on the coast to fly to him... Sy Bartlet and Lorraine Cugat are a midnitem on the Coast . , . Horace McMahon has become a regular on Bill Gargan's TV “Private Eye” show The Frenchman Deanna Durbin expects to marry is director Charles David . Dancer Rosanne sparkles the show at the China Doll. *
” n oo A WISH I'D SAID THAT: “The ; only trite thing George Bernard
mirth, Miss
Ask me again.”
Shaw ever did was to die” Coleman Jacoby. = 7 "nn TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Lynn Gilmore says ‘Double i Jeopardy’ is what is meant by wearing a strapless evening gown. :
2 5 ” EARL’S PEARLS | . . Maestro Eddie Condon reports, “It’s easy to meet a B'way showgirl. They’ re a dia--mond a dozen.”
B'WAY BULLETINS: The Met Opera's eyeing a site in the E. 50's for a new Met bldg... . A top video comic .worries, his psychiatrist: Lately he's collecting guns. . .. John Steinbeck, defending critics who rapped his. show, says. “I'll be ‘back with another one. Always have.” Mitzi Mayfair and Charlie’ Henderson are quitting as producers of “Stop the Music” to undertake some new’ TV shows. . . . Detective Jack Brickley, assigned to the Mayor during the campaign, is due for a promotion. George Frazier-was offered Slat Bir Crosby. FECOTAR Earl, ~brother. is
That's
Like MacBeth, TV. Jiikes Hath Murdered Rest
everyone else in the room seemed unaware of the dreadful tumult I guess I just must have a special set .of eardrums, as a dog hears noises. denied human ears. 3
“oe ow ge
THERE IS music and art aplenty In the basic blues, and a few of our modern “popular” musicians have contributed songs of lasting worth and beauty. But you don’t get much of either from public dispensers of noise. What you get is be-bop and hillbilly torment, raucous jazz and doleful groans from off-key crooners, girl trios who attempt to emulate steam pianos, and always the one trick song of the hour, be it “Irene” or “Ragmop” or “Nature Boy” —until backward reels the mind. 1 suppose this does not annoy the younger folk, who have béen reared with the radio blaring, and who find it impossible to concentrate unless surrounded by sound. I even know some folks who can watch ‘television while simultaneously
reading and carrying on a conversation. This faculty I envy, but possess not. a QU IET, or at least “soothing sound, is one
of God's greatest gifts to a tumultuous world, and I could use a lot more of it publicly. “ow
THERE WAS a time when you could retreat from street noises and traffic oar by sneaking into ‘a bar or cafe for a quick snifter and a moment or so of blessed calm but radio, juke organ and TV, like MacBeth, hath certainly murdered rest. I wrote, once, of a secret society of terrorists, headed. by me, which would arise at a given . ‘signal and smash all the jukeboxes in the land. The .aim still holds, but has just been _expanded to include public, television-cum-radio. I hope the shade of the late, ‘great Douglas Gilbert is somehow aware of this blood-written oath, Do not , despair, Doug. We will keep the faith. It's Just | that we are waiting. for ¢ color ™v before we get
! i ” A . 2 4 rid Si iE ain ld a
Lh eT
“ 4 the fault finder and.
Coal Oil Stove Explodes,
The Indianapolis Time
FRIDAY, NOV. 17, 1950
Go Into Politics, Pupils
Help Shape Affairs of Indiana,
.. Schricker Says at Assembly
By IRVING “Go into politics.
itics.
In the austere chambers of Ilias General Assembly," student legislators from every city high school Yesterday
listened in rapt attention as their counterparts in real life ‘have rarely done.
“You have enough character,
determination and devotion to
help shape the affairs and destiny of Indiana,” the governor declared. : ve Addresses Assembly He was speaking before. the 2d annual City High School General Assembly.
Few, if any, of the wide- awake youngsters realized that the tired, gray-haired chief executive who was talking to them so solemnly was making political speeches in his teens.
The youngsters came from Broad Ripple and from Howe. Others were from Technical Crispus ‘Attucks, Shortridge and
Each of the city high ools furnished a certain numBor of student state representa-
ves and student state senators.
, was hitting his favorite subj ‘state government. : Urging the bobby up politics as an a government, Gov.. Sc
SOXers to take
Set for Next Fall
Scholarship to Jordan’
To Be Worth $500
| The Al Feeney Memorial Scholarship fund for music study will benefit a student by next September. Announcement of further plans for the fund was made today by Fabien Sevitzky, committee chairman. Dr. Sevitzky said contributions already were coming in by mail, following his suggestion of the Memorial Scholarship . to
{municipal concert. As currently planned by
student chosen competitively by la jury. To Be String Player At. yesterday's committee meeting in the Benjamin Harrison |Home on the Jordan campus, it Iwas decided to restrict conipeti{tion the first year to students of strings—violin, viola, ‘cello or bass. “Al Feeney knew very well lhow scarce good string-players are”. Dr. Sevitzky said: “I think ‘he"'would have wished us to enlcourage string-instrument study.” Present plans provide for the fund to become self-sustaining. A ‘student benefiting from the fund
* will be expected to repay the sum
in installments after he has finished his study and ohtained employment, Will Total About $500 | The annual benefit was ex{pected to. total approximately $500, or the average tuition cost {for a year at Jordan. > Dr. Sevitzky said the idea for
{the memerial fund came to him units of the 28th Infantry Division
{suddenly during Monday's concert, at which the late Mavor had planned to be master of ceremonies. The committee, later to be expanded, how includes, besides Dr. Sevitzky as cnairman, Miss Josephine Madden, secretary; G. V. Carrier, treasurer, and Bernard R. Batty, member-at-large. Inquiries and contributions should _be addre :
¥
Youth Burned to: Death
Elroy Graves, 13-year-old Mor-
'ristown ' youth, died of burns in.
‘General Hospital last night after a coal oil stove exploded and set
“his clothes afire in his home.
Relatives rushed him to the, hospital here, but physicians were unable to save his life,
cent of his body.
The doors are wide open to you.”
This was the advice of an old political warrior—Gov. ‘Schricker, who has spent nearly 50 of his 67 years in poli-
the Murat audience ‘at Monday's
the committee, the fund will provide ,a full year of advanced instrumen- | ‘tal study at Jordan College of [Music for a resident Indianapolis
LEIBOWITZ
ernment shown oy the averagd citizen. The long years of his own government service showed visibly on the governor. The only Hoosier to ever sit twice in the governor's chair appeared tired and worn as he said: “We have debauched. government, We have cheapened government. We have made it a laughing stock. : Hits .False. Claims Appealing to the youths to ‘carry tlis message back,” the governor said simply:
“The old story that you can't trust ‘any politician is false. It isn't as bad as we think. There §
are a great many honest, decent and upright politicians.” He told of the “many faithful, underpaid” . workers now serving the state of Indiana. - Occasionally ‘the governor brightened his speech with humorous remarks. He told the pre- shurt” dominately girl student audience complex.” that he “hoped to live t0' see n But he good looking girl in the governor's chair.” founders He spoke of the state's short- gent a Constitution to withstand comings and its advantages. He the years with few changes.” said he thought the 61-day Gen- The governor's speech was part eral Assembly session was “too of the city educational program
Shelton Bond. Cut Made in Sex Case
$12,000 Posted for
and the government
praised the
ior
* Noisy—
WEEHAWKEN, N.J., Nov. (UP)—Yardmaster Martin costello retired from railg with a bang that still had régidents a little jumpy today. \
- i
J.
When MY, Costello shunted his last engine into the yard Notorious Gang Aid last night aft 5 years of service. his workers “Little Carl” Shelton, charged greeted him Fifteen With a sex attack on a 13-year-
locomotive, 12 old girl he picked up on her way three ferry whistles
salvo of raliroad today.
Shelton is a relative of the notorious Sheltons of southern Illiois. He was released from MarCounty Jail late wh bond aL Indemnity Co. brothers Earl B., (Little
Farm Bureau Hits Brannan Program sli
State Group Reaffirms after Judge William’ D.
Stand at Meeting Criminal Court
The Indiana Farm Bureau to- With kidnaping, so : day ‘reaffirmed its opposition to sault ‘and battery wit
commit rape. the New Deal Brannan Plan. “had been ling
More than 3000 Hoosier farmers Indianapolis a ‘few months attending the 32d annual conven-| police arrested “him June 21. tion in Murat President. Truman's by a vote of approval for its own Police said Shelton admitted then long-range program. It in no way denied the attack. resembles the controversial action| Shelton said he planned to reproposed by Charles Secretary of Agriculture.
Price control measures, uled to be debated by a specia session of “ongress soon, -also were disapproved ty Farm Bureau members, A resolution passed today said price control will discourage production. and cause inflation by creating a shortage of goods. Today's schedule includes election of officers at a meeting in *'the Severin Hotel.
110th Infantry Wins Atterbury Choral Nod
CAMP ATTERBURY, Nov. 17 A glee club competition among
ton gang has been a center of viosched- lence for 20 years.” The Shelton
cent years by assassins believed to be members of rival gangs.
Blackmail Quiz Proof Expected
Chicago Evidence Awaited in Muncie
; Times State Service MUNCIE; Nov: 17'— Detectives ™ were. expected to return today
with written proof of extortion has been won by ‘ d on by a chorus of mem- activities of the
bers of the Ot - 110th Infantry Regi Haute brothers slain here Nev. ment, 6 by Dr. Jules F. LaDuron. The 110th chorus thus earned : “ht A A A trip to Chicago turned up a ‘the honor of being designated the ini foc? i 28th Division Glee Club and also phySician there who .received written demands for money for
won * a $100 prize offered by Maj. ot “ Gen. “Dane!” B. Strickler. comsthe GMer of the pain Raivh Car
‘manding general, wlio Supervised ana ‘physicians .who said either the eontest. *
"The 35-momber. a cappeila ¢hor Ralph or Siebert tried to blackpela; chore mail them, a demand was made
US Mas led by. SFC Paul. B. eek for money-on-the threat of accusJE AXoF. ‘aE dobar aban THERE EPR Re
he Chicago-physician-was-the «only victim fhus far discovered w. S Brockman Heads who received writter demands;
‘Dr; LaDuron, who said he Mi Ik Producers ‘Group Killed the men to end their black-|
_W. 8. Brockman, managers of mail of him, is held with’ his 21the Indianapolis Dairymen’s Co- year-old son, Jacque, on an open operative Inc, yesterday was charge pending grand jury in-
elected a director ofthe National vestigation. . Milk Producers Federation. Dr. LaDuron’s wife, Freda, disThe group closed its 34th an- appeared mysteriously 13 years
They said nual convention in Minneapolis. ago. and has never been found."qropped and a few -have been! poison. Miss Oberholtzer had ace burns covered more than 90 per Mr. Brockman lives at id Man- The old investigation has been re- added to modernize. the. regula- cused Stephenson of raping her,
ker St: ‘opened since the double slaying.
They Are Mulling Over Parents’ Problems
otidon Figh Soro
| i | Montel
|
: o Sy Jones, Dr. Harney: L. Shiblet, Mrs. Meredith Nizholson Jr. and’ Howy M. te ward B. Raub Jr. executive com-
A pare With Miss Louise Brumbaugh, ‘hey will a 9 8p. m. Monday for the los forum of # snes | She: Indiana
gd \ v
Ginger Clark, William Crooks, Caroline Aldrich and Linda McLain (left to right) . . . Shorts ridge High School politicians map political strategy.
“too for civics
state's form the youngsters on the oper“writing so intelli- ation of the state legislature were yjoh added:
to mass, was. ree on $12,000 bond man cost of a normal Army chow- from Minneapolis.
yesterday was posted by the and hig Of families in the Indianapoliv Minneapolis late yesterday award-
Earl) |2Tea-
ame several hours ~20 pounds ef shrimp cocktall, tive warrant and ordered Stephene Bain, 2 ,- redaced bond from $23,500. Shélton is charged my and asintent to
Temple rejected was identified by the girl:as the™ farm program man who attacked her June 20.
Brannan, turn to Fairfield, where the Shel-|
1 ranks have been depleted in re-:
pair of Terre!
| nance will not alter area classifi- || | . {cations currently in efféct under {the city master plan. T The Intiadapufy Tinos
| president; Byron P. Hollett, se¢-!
risecretary; C. B. Dutton Jr., treas-
students. Others who pressed. Sald Carol Coleman of attended the session to help in- Washington High: “People ought to have more faith.” Dilys White of Crispus Attucks “He inspired me Lt. Gov. John ‘A. Watkins and’ But Nancy Browning of Shorte Gov. Schricker's Republican op- ridge High wanted no part of the ponent in 1946, Hobart Creighton. governor's plan for a girl govern The youngsters appeared im-jor: “That's not for me.”
Good Feed Due [play Retum 0f Stephenson
Times State Service CAMP ATTERBURY, Nov. 17 Army cooks figured up their “grocery list” ‘today for the 28th Infantry Division's Thanksgiving Judge Postpones der of 10 tons of turkey. Fugitive Hearing Quartermasters said the meal Indiana officials were blocked would cost about $1.20 per man, temporarily today in their attempt more than triple the 35-cents-per- to bring D. C. Stephenson back
dinner and topped it with an or-
down. Parole and state police officers It looked like a good feed for had been scheduled to leave Indie all. the Atterbury soldiers. Some anapolis this morning with extra1500 of them won't be on base dition papers for the 58-year-old for the event. They'll be enjoy- parole violator.
ing the holiday dinner as guesis But a municipal court judge in
ed Stephenson a postponement of The Atterbury menu included a hearing until Dec. 6 on a fugis - two tons of nuts, 40,000 rolls, son held without bail. 700 pounds of peas, 6300 pounds’ State Police Capt. John J, Bare of potatoes, 1260 pounds of cran- ton this morning said his men berry sauce, 20,000 celery sticks, were ready. to leave by automobile 180 gallons of olives and pickles, for Minneapolis, impatient to gain and 3500 pumpkin ples—with a possession of Stephenson before nl WhiPPed cre cream m topping. /the former Ku Klux Kian chief — ‘lof Indiana could institute any
more legal maneuvers. ina Hearing 2 | May Mail Papers 3 “We want our men to ‘leave as
State Parole Officer J. C. Cope= : land had a different opinion, how.
“I think we'll probably send lour papers to Minneapolis by mafl now, rather- than have the men 4 80-up right away,” he said. “I'm hoping to have the extradition rou oil storage Sa 2 the: ci !warrant ready for Gov. Schrick+ will be held Tuesday at City tral). T's signature before noon.’ Residences and businesses in| Officials agreed the fugitive the vicinity of“the Crystal Flash warrant on which hearing is to . . Petroleum Co. were endangered D® held Dec. 6 could be dismissed this summer when the plant then if Gov. Luther W. Youngburst into flame and several 42hl of Minnesota honors the In« tanks ‘exploded at 358 W. 16th Pl, dlana extradition warrant before
Although the zoning ordinance that date.
has been undergoing revision for Could Force Hearing nearly a year, changes were Possibility was imminent, hows made recently to safeguard lives ever, that Stephenson, who uth and’ property in the vicinity of lized his 25 years in the Indiana such plants. State Prison to study legal tomes, Under the present 28-year-old might file a writ of habeas core regulation, bulk storage sites are pus. The action would force & permitted in. districts zoned for court hearing in Minneapolis on business purposes. However, these! his continued arrest. 3 *districts could include residences Stephenson, arrested Wednes« and nonmanufacturing industries. | day in a Minneapolis suburban The new ordinance would re- Printing shop where he had found strict: bulk. storage to industrial employment, said he was confie ‘locations. dent the Minnesota authorities . Another: safeguard would be a Would refuse to extradite him. section which prohibits new hous- “The st at e (Indiana) sure ling construction in the .industrial rendered its jurisdiction when it REE TR WH Riee - COnReTve bl Ea inetddden to return dwindling areas available for in- ne saidc=Now-it “wants to-reciaim dustrial purposes, City Plan Com- jurisdiction.” 8 misston—members said -teday. “He violated his parole by fleeing Nobie P. Hollister, executive from Cairo, Ill, last August, five secretary of the commission, said months after Gov. Schricker there are few other major| paroled him from Michigan City. changes in the new ordinance to, The former Klan leader was be forwarded to the, City Council serving a life sentence after cone
if it is adopted at Tuesday's viction of murder following the hearing. death of Miss Madge Oberholtzer, - Some sections have been Statehouse employee, who took
tion. Basically, it is. a consoli-
dation designed to enable . the PU RDU. E E STUDENT HONORED average citizen to understand the Times “State Servies ordinance. | LAFAYETTE, Nov. 1 17—Ronald “Many passages in the current F- Nelson 314 Berkley Road, is . ordinance are scattered haphaz- one of 22 Purdue University stud |ardly throughout the document. ents selected for membership in | This. often causes confusion when { Ceres, agricultural honorary soprospective builders attempt to clety.’He is a junior, majoring in { determine where, and what they | agricultural engineering. {can build. Revision. of
the zoning - ordi-!
The meeting will be at 7:30
p. m
F. W: ‘Burns Nominated
For Bar Presidency. : Attorney Floyd W. Burns has’ we been nominated-for the 1951 presi- | dency of the Indianapolis Bar As-| sociation. Others named today by - the nominating committee were: Irving M. Fauvre. for first vice
ond vice president; Cale J. Holder, |
|urer; Robert L. Carrico. and Ed-
PARADE MAGAZINE _ mittee; and Lewis C. Base, James * laa Courtney and J. Huber Patton, |" admissions committee.
