Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 March 1952 — Page 6

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Dick Highbaugh _lIs Singing on “His Way Up

By BERNICE DAVIS Crispus Attucks High School Correspondent

With a song in his heart, a song on his lips, and college and the concert stage on his mind, Richard Highbaugh sings merrily on his way. A music major at Crispus Attucks High School, Richard | §

plans to study voice at Knoxville - College "in Knoxville, Tenn.

The January: 1952, graduate's : vuniors a

singing career began about four

years ago when he was a high Shortridge Top

gchool freshman. “We were just sitting around the classroom waiting for ma All Other Classes teacher, Mr. Merrifield, to come in. The junior class of Shortridge and start class’ ' The young High. School ran off with

mst ips as tests

suit to wear to the program. Non! suit-—no song.” Since his musical quiet baritone has soloed on many ocacsions. ¢ Dick once entered a vocal contest sponsored by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra and was the only high school student to reach the final four. A member of the A Capella Choinr and the Boys’ Octet, the young songster studies music because he likes it, not just for

credit. ¢ A favorite with the students SUMMer Jobs

at Attucks, Richard also entered Shortridge Topic

the Disc Jockey contest sponsored by local radio stations last| Academic requirements for voyear, {cations and advice on summer To Be Judged jobs will be given Shortridge stuThe song, “You'll Never Walk dents Wednesday. Alone,” was a hit with the judges.| The Business and Professional It won for Richard first place in| Women and Kiwanis Clubs join the male vocal contest. nortridge school in sponsoring, This record, with others over the conference, the nation is being judged to see| Indianapolis men and women) which promising male and female |FéPresenting several professions! vocalist shall be given the op-|2nd businesses will speak. portunity to make a record with! Topics for discussion were se-| a top name band for national lected from a list submitted by distribution. sophomores, The husky singer also is a = mr ————— . wo : . sports enthusiast and played on/Manual Students With the Dolly. : It's part of the annual all-school production.

the ‘Tiger varsity football squad, , Professor's Art Shown

singer smilingly recalled. “I was “smarty” honors for the first six playing around, singing the blues week's grading period. | —“Jimmy's Blues.” It was just] With 80 members listed, they at that time that Mr. Merrifield were well above their nearest came into the room. challenger, “He must have been pretty an- A hot race developed for sec-| gry with me,” the promising vo- ond place with the freshmen win-! calist continued. “He threatened ning 66-65 over the sophomores. to put me out of the class because The haughty senjors finished last! of that song; but, Lady Luck was with 59 students on the ist. riding with me and T was allowed}, Juwiae Julith Jones ea ion Melodies," will be staged at the school Thursday and Friday. to Jig Kidding omore Philip Weinstein, \i& 2 % ’ J # me 4 “After that, I stopped kidding = = L7 Ea i 8 x around with my music and got . Yo ‘i down to some serious study * Godfrey Heads | YE the subject. { § “I sang on the Junior Vodvil Honor Group that spring. It was my first sing-| Culver Godfrey has been elected ing solos in public although [President of B8hortridge High had had one previous offer.’ School chapter of the National Viola Myers and-Marian Smiley, Honor Society. } two pals at School 19, had asked| Elected to offices also were ' & Dick to sing a solo on the grad- Jane Owen, Diane DeArmond, | uation program. {Phil Woerner and Judy Jackson, . “I was going to sing for them, vice presidents and Sue Storer, he confides, “but I couldn't get a Secretary-treasurer. [4 | Bixty-five Shortridge seniors / 1 were selected by the faculty as = debut, the N€W members of the chapter. {They are chosen on basis of char-| acter, service to the school, leadership and scholarship. § The school office announced the|f senior honor roll headed by Barbara Walker, On the part-time honor roll for students enrolled at Shortridge for three months was Margot Lusche,

EN

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JUKE-BOX HEAVEN—Eighth-graders John Rusche and Gyn-

But out of his music has come a Win Science Prizes

four-year college scholarship. | Two Manual High School N Band - |3eniors, Sylvia 8pecker and June| Times State Service animal life in the Kennedy Galn |Hilgemeier, have ° recently re-| GREENCASTLE, Mar. 15-— leries, N Y avy a celved awards ‘in science. The Works of Raymond French, as- ew -York, We Eradley

Bausch and Lomb award in phy- sistant professor of art at DeTo Be Heard sical science was won by Miss Pauw University, currently are 'n Peoria, IIL, CRANE, Mar. 15—Tickets now!|Specker, and Miss Hilgemeier won| being shown in three national/nual Northwest Printmakers e may be purchased from the U. §./the Wade chemical essay contest exhibitions. (hibition at the Seattle, ¢ Naval Ammunition Depot here With an essay on alchemy. |" Prof. French has engravings of! Art Museum. for two concerts by the Navy| % Band in Indiana University audi-| torium, Bloomington, Apr. 17. | Brought to southern Indiana | I py the welfare and recreation] poard at the Depot, the band will give programs in IU auditorium| ,at 2:15 and 8 p. m. Tickets for the children’s mati-| nee will he 50 cents for adults| and 25 cents for children. Eve-| ning prices will be 60 cents, 90! ROEBUCK AND CO cents, $1.20, $1.80 and $2.40. Mail requests may be addressed to U. 8. Navy Band, NAD, Crane, Ind.

Decatur Student Heads Red Cross

Dean Blank, representatvie :

Pecatur Central High School has been chosen president of the Marion County Junior Red Cross School Board. 3 Officers of the Decatur group are Phyllis Baker, president; Larry Cummings, vice president; |§ Phyllis Westerfield, school repre- | 338 sentative to the county board. The council has six meetings 2 a during the school year in the]

chapter house at 1126 N. Meridian |* St.

Freshman Follies At Arsenal Tech

talent show given by first year | students of Arsenal Technical High School, will be held Mar. 27, [38 10th period in the Forum. | 8 Thé Follies will be co-sponsored | this year by the Student Affairs ® Organization and the Drama] Club, with Mrs. Ressie Fix in| charge of. auditions. The Drama | Club will direct the production.

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

THE GREAT WHITE WAY~—The high school sophomores will give out with excerpts from Broadway musicals, The sophisticated scrubwomen are (left to right) Joyce Brannen, Martha Geiss, Donna Armitage, Goraldine Soronsen, Joan Ross and Marilyn Metzger. The big production, "Moods and |

~ [the parts.

eth Sprunger of Warren Central give their interpretation of "Dance |

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| By United Press |* TOKYO, Sunday; Mar, 16—The

Chinese Communist radip stepped up its “germ warfare” propaganda campaign against the United States to unprecedented volume today and announced for-

mation of a 70-member commission to investigate the ‘“Amerliean crime.” Wordage put out by Peiping on {the charges has not been matched by any single subject since the days preceding Chinese entry into the Korean war, when it accused [the Americans of aggressive intentions against China. The charges that germ-laden insects have been dropped by { American fliers have been denied {by the U. 8. and the United Nations command as utterly false. What the Communists intended to accomplish was not clear. ,

Ibe trying to shift blame for epi-

indicated more

outpouring 4amaneuvering,

portant - political truce talks.

were:

Brass Shown

As Cause of re drop Irritation “huge demonstrations” were being

have {types of

photographs of containers”

By Science Service ‘elsewhere in China to denounce BOSTON, Mar, 15—Brass has the Americans.

capable of causing skin trouble can planes flew over Tsingtao, in in persons working with it, Proof of brass as the cause of aden insects Mar. 6 and 7. red, itching rash with blisters in| five cases

cause this metal has never before

trouble, the cases were not at first |

1 Red Anti-US. * 4 Tirade at Fever Pitch

At first they seemed merely to

{demics to the U. 8., but the latest § im- | 8

lobservers here felt. They have J |said little about germs in recent §

Included in the latest blasts a

ONE—A claim that the Reds 8 “various carrying g [“mosquitoes, flies and fleas” that 8 jwere dropped-by American planes. | ps i Announcement that

held in Mukden, Manchuria, and g

for the first time been proved, THREE—A report that Ameri-| |China proper, and dropped germ-| iC FOUR—Announcement that a!

is reported by Dr. “commission to investigate the!fS George E. Morris of this city. Be- American crime of germ warfare” | SUBUBON

S. ‘Germ’

has heen . organized .and left Peiping for the Korean front Saturday.

U. S. May Demand Inquiry by UN

UNITED NATIONS, Mar. 15 (UP)—The, United States said today it may demand a United Nations inquiry into ‘‘false” Soviet charges that the U. 8, has been waging germ warfare in Korea and China. American"United Nations Delegate Benjamin V. Cohén called a ipecial news conference to an-

awer the charges made by Soviet! Delegate Jacob A. Malik and

said: “We do not intend to let him get away with it. We will not

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