Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1952 — Page 9

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FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1952 _

EARNING to work marionettes isn't unlike learning to

"7 play an organ. parently simpler to master.

In fact, the organ technique is ap-

And a marionette technique expert is what guests

will see Sunday at the Indiana Chapters” National ety of Arts and Letters benefit performance in Riddick’s Auditorium. Pvt. Daniel Hornasius, Camp Atterbury, who claims New York, Los Angeles and London as his home, will be the star of the event, He will present “The Follies Bergere of Marionettes.”

Of nontheatrical parents, the

26-year-old private has been in

23 motion pictures and has been guest star on the Ed Sullivan, die Cantor and Ken Murray shows and also the Lux Radio. He has also written a number of Broadway plays, two of

which are under option there

now. Sunday's program will include a variety of acts: A Spanish fiesta novelty scene will feature costumes adorned with real light bulbs. By means of pumping with the feet and using his hands to work the antennas, he will manage to give a colorful effect. If you've never seen the Ziegfeld Follies, Pvt. Hornasius has an act with girls coming down a circular staircase made even

ore effective with bubbles.

-.

An“exotic {ouch Will be seer

“in the Oriental Fantasy which will ‘highlight a goddess sur-

rounded by smoke. Other acts will include a Shakespearean actor, an ice skating team which is the only one of its kind in the world, and a holiday in Holland. Proceeds from the show will be given to the NSAL's scholarship fund. - ” » ” IT "ISN'T EVERY daughter who can show her mother a thing or two. But in" the case

of Miss Diane McMahan, \daugh-

ter of Mr. and Mrs. William J.

St. such'is the ca pry “The McMahans will" leave next week for Mississippi to at-

tend their daughter's gradua-.

tion from Gulf Park Junior College. From there, they will go to New Orleans. It seems Diane knows the front and back streets of the French city so the McMahans will really see the town. Instead of “My Mother Done Told Me,’ Mrs. McMahan will be singing, “My Daughter Done Told Me.”

» » NOTHING COULD be finer than to be in Carolina this time of year. And Mr. and Mrs. Knox Easterling, 949 N. Bolton Ave, are taking advantage of this. The Easterlings are staying in Oak Hall Hotel, Tryon, N. C,, in the Blue Ridge Mountains located in the western part of the state. : That's living pretty high.

r ” ” IN THE SPRING, a young man's fancy, slowly turns to thoughts of—well, in this case, it's flowers. , But his horticul- _ ture love seems to come in small doses. A well-dressed man has been going into a downtown flower

shop dally for the past nine .

days purchasing a single flower.

He pays for the one stem to be delivered to his wife vith anenclosed endl vi TREY ‘sefec

‘tion each time.

It seems the florist has been troubled with his customer's. behavior. And yesterday, after much meditation, he decided perhaps the man simply could’. not afford to buy a whole bouquet at once. Quite generously, he added other blossoms to the one ordered and had them delivered. A few hours later, an indignant woman entered his store reprimanding the owner for his act. “It. seems the flower a day is the punishment the husband is

meanor-on his part. It’s not the price but rather,

‘the work involved in this that

hurts.

DePauw Commencement Notables to Be Guests

Times State Service

GREENCASTLE, June 6—President and Mrs. Russell J. Humbert, DePauw University, will entertain with

A dinner tonight for members of the board of trustees will be followed by an open house in the Humbert home, ' After commencement exereises tomorrow in Blackstock Stadium, Mr. and Mrs. Humbert will entertain with a buffet supper. - ” -» ” HONOR GUESTS will include the five recipients of hdnorary degrees at the commencement and the four retiring department heads. Among the other guests will be the commencement speaker, President Homer Price Rainey of- Stephens College, Columbia, Mo., and the invocation speaker, the Rev. 8. Wilson Francis, St. Johnsbury, Vt. ” ” - - HONORARY degrees will go to Ear! B. Barnes, Indianapolis

“both a dinner and a buffet supper in connection with the university's 113th commencement activities.

~

attorney, doctor of laws; the Rev. John O. Gross, executive secretary of the Methodist Church Board of Education, doctor of humane letters, and Dr. Herbert E. Carter, University of Illinois chemist, doctor of science. The Rev. Robert E. Badger, superintendent of the Rushville district of the church, and the Rev. John H. Hanger, pastor of Trinity Park Methodist Church, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., both will

receive doctor of divinity de- |

grees.

T h e retiring’ department |

heads to be honored include Dr. Fowler D. Brooks, psychology; Dry Lester M. Jones, sociology;

Dr. Raymond W. Pence, Eng- | lish, and Dr. O. H. Smith, physics.

Methodist Hospital School To Graduate 83 Nurses

R OBERT E. NEFF, Methodist Hospital superintendent, will present diplomas to 83 graduates of the Method: ist Hospital School of Nursing at combined baccalaureate

and commencement exercises at 8 p. m. Sunday.

Trianon

"TRIANON Sorority of Butler University and the local alumnae chapter both plan special sessions soon. An initiation banquet of the university group at 6:30 p. m. today in the Warren Hotel will be followed by a dance, also in the hotel. To be initiated are Misses Mary Ruth Gillespie, Joan Buch and Laurel Kettlehut. Chaperones. will be Dr. and Mrs. Earl F. Means and Dr. and Mrs. James H. Peeling. New officers of the organization are Miss Doris Herbert, president; Miss Katie Simmons, vice president; Miss Judy Holtman, treasurer; Miss June Wolfe and Miss Nan Lon King, recording and corresponding secretaries; Miss. Dixie Scifers, rush chairman, and Miss Janet Siebe, marshal.

” ” » THE JUNE LUNCHEON of the Butler Alumnae Chapter of Trianon will honor five seniors of the university chapter grad-

uating Monday. Honor guests at the 1 p. m.

party in the Hawthorn Room

will be Misses Marilyn Benson, Deloges Julian, Barbara Jackson Kendall, Katherine Nor man and Nancy Potts, New officers of the organiza-

{ion are Miss Beverly Junken,

president; Miss Marilyn Hotz,

vice president; Mie Ann But-

fer, secretary, and Miss Marge ,{treasurer.

It will be in the Broadway Methodist Church. Assisting will be Mrs. Shirley Fowles, assistant director of the school. Dr. Robert Pierce, pastor of the host church, will speak on “Training—and What Else?” Miss Fredericka Koch, director of the school, will introduce the class. ” ” » DR. CLAUDE McCLURE and Dr. Ralph Pearson, hospital chaplains, will open. and close the exercises. Dr. Robert D. Howell, president of the hos-

pital’'s medical staff, and Mrs. | Ellsworth Sunman, president of |

the school Alumnae Association, will present annual awards to honor students. The school’s Choral Club, directed by J. Russell Paxton, will sing. The White Cross Guild will entertain seniors and

their guests at a reception in

the church assembly room fol-.

lowing commencement. Sunday

noon seniors will be guests of the hospital at a luncheon in the White Cross Sefvice Center.

~ Graduates from Indianapolis |

include - Mrs. Lulu Crick Wieland and Mrs, Mary Margaret Snapp, Misses Dorris Lee Horton, Mary Margaret Schroder and Betty Olive Wise. ¥

ONE WOMAN JOB—Miss Camille Schneider collects peonies for |

the Marian College alumnae and all-school dance from 9 p.m.

rant a

Dance Will Graduation

A WEEK of graduation

activities in Marian

College will be highlighted

by the annual alumnae and all-schopl dance from 9 p. m. to midnight today in the school gymnasium.

Bt: Joserk, raged. to. nay enn. soded Sempre ofshestanc;

will play ‘for ‘the party. " committee includes Misses — mille Schneider, Norman Sanchez and Joyce Bréen.

* The commencement exercises

are set for 4 p. m. Sunday with .

. the Most Rev. Paul C. Schulte, Archbishop of Indianapoli, conferring the 27 degrees. The speaker will be the Rev. Fr. Francis J. Heine, STD, New Albany, formerly head of the religion department of the college. : » » s LOCAL GRADUATES include Misses Joan Blaes, Maxine McIntosh Ferguson, Wini-

La

to midnight today in_the school gymaasiym, CS

Highlight Activities

fred Matthews, Barbara Reder, Marienela Urrutia, Joan Boersig and Mary Wassel. Miss Boersig and Miss Was-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Office Building to Employ Only Redheads

By ELIZABETH TOOMEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, June 6—

.

~ Pardon me, sir, you'll have

to stop riding up and down

in the elevator and go to work. Yes, all the girls have red hair, All 18 of them. You can ride down in another car at lunch time and see for yourself. So the fellow totters off to his brand new office in the elaborate midtown office building which didn’t -stop with steel, marble, soft lights and air conditioning to make the tenants

happy. ~ = .

MAYBE THIS SCENE hasn't happened yet, because this is a pretty sophisticated town and ‘successful businessmen like to think they can react calmly even to an innovation like a beautiful redhead in every elevator. But it's a good bet that at least one man a day will get off at the wrong floor when a new 21-story building (at 260 Madison Ave.) opens all" its floors later this month. The girls aren't red heads by nature, but because a firm

Cool

sel lead their class in scholastic.

averages ' for the past four years. Keys from Kappa Gamma Pi, natiorial honor society covering activities and leader-.

TE aswell FRE CaOlasties

- standing among. graduates of

.Catholic women’s colleges, will'-|

go to Miss Ann- McCarthy, Washington, and Miss Reder. Other honors will go to Sister Rosemary, S8S8J, Tipton, and Miss Mary -Ann Larson, Vincennes, Delta Mu Theta Soror-

ity, national Catholic music honor society. Additional events on the’)

campus this week end include |

bacculaureate at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow with the Rev. Fr. Marquard, OFM, speaker, and induction into the alumnae asso-

ciation at a reunion tea at 2:30

p. m. tomorrow.

COW MANURE

Sterilized—Dehydrated |

Ideal for Roses, Shrubs and Flower Beds

EASY TO PLANT, SURE TO GROW

* * FINER SPRING , COATS! SUITS! AND TOPPERS! ® (hat were usually $49 to $89 © ’ 2 | ? ) » . ® Gabardine! ® Suedes! ' ® Fleeces! Checks! ® Plaids! Solids! ® . 2-Tone Combinations! * ® Slim, flattering siripes! ® |n all sizes from @® Shia . * : Every Summer Suit Greatly Reduced! © Lagery 5 Topper and Suit now ® 5 next falll A small deposit ® will reserve your selection! 4 :

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called Brown, Harris and Stevens, Inc. decided the new building, which they manage, was going to be “the most magnificent office building in the world.” “We did this to call attention to the fact we really care about this building,” explained Wylie F. L. Tuttle Jr, in charge of rentals for the company. “We spent more money than anybody ever spent fixing up an office building and we did it with taste, The ceiling of the lobby was purchased from the Metropolitan Museum for $50,000. Under most fluorescent lights everybody looks like an underripe banana. But not ours.” But the red heads, Mr. Tuttle. ” - » “THE THING- that made companies great in this country was having men spend a little extra money on their product to see that it would last,” Mr. Tuttle continued calmly,” “And it's the thing that will make buildings great.” “Aaaah, Mr. Tuttle” “Yes, the girls, 1 was getting around to that,” he said, “We didn't want one girl to have brown hair, one blonde . . . we

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wanted them to be uniformly beautiful.” The 16 girls, picked from 500 applicants, had to sign agree-

ments to have their hair tinted

red. The building pays for a trip to the beauty shop every two weeks and agrees tec pay for restoring their hair to the original shade if they're fired for any reason, “We knew we would have a problem with mashers, with all the pretty girls, so we hired a man starter,” the rental manager said, and for the first time an uncertain look crossed his

face. “He's a red head, too,” he blurted. “But it is only coincidence.” “He has five children . —all red heads.” he added desperately. The starter, Daniel J. Han-

non, stepped up and removed his cap, his face the same dark red shade as his hair.

. ” » . “ON THE POLICE force 22 vears 1 was and just retired.” he said. “Every word is true. And the girls are all real ladies even if they're not real red heads.”

EXCLUSIVE WITH BLOCK'S CORSETS, FOURTH FLOOR

Miss Senn To Be Wed

The approaching m Miss Dorothy Senn, 2 No Dearborn St., to Wayne Clark is announced by the bride-to-be’s parents, Mr, and Mrs. Ro. land Senn, Marengo, The couple will be married at

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2:30 p. m: June 29 in the Bast ‘

Park Methodist Church with the Rev. Dallas Church officiating. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Clark, 1226 N. Downey Ave. are the parents of the prospective bridegroom.

3 8 ow. ov ATTENDING the couple will be Mrs. Ralph Hannah, matron of honor; Misses Betty Ruth and Shirley Ann Senn, Marengo, bridesmaids; Linda Jo Clark, flowergirl; Max Clark, best man, and Ernie Cook and Mr, Hannah , ushers.

The future bride will be honor guest at a kitchen shower at 8 p. m. today.” Mrs. Max Clark, 1928 N. Emerson Ave. will be hostess.

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