Speedway Flyer, Volume 23, Number 35, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1954 — Page 3
Thursday, September 9,1954
Christopher Catholic Church - (Continued from Page 1) old stand-bys, are beautiful. There are'many electrical items, and a new pattern in dishes, as well as two others which have been offered before. And of course beautiful blankets, and the * sheet blankets with the rose patterns are darling. Oh, and there were a lot of things which we can’t remember right now, but if interested, and you are not contacted, call Mrs. Helen Houk or Mesdames Mazie Bender, Mary Zaepfel, or Carl Otte. But call them right away. You pay as you go remember, and maybe if youire lucky, you don’t pay anymore. Tuesday morning, Peter Ronald Martich, the son of Peter and Ann Martich, a graduate of St. Christopher school last June, left to begin his studies at St. Meinard Seminary. Frances Wolfla, a former graduate of St. Christopher school, now living in Pittsboro, will begin his third year at St. Meinard this fall. Michael Cleary, also a former graduate of St. Christopher school, who has been attending Cathedtal High School for two years will leave September 16th to continue his studies at St. Mary’s of Kentucky. Your prayers are especially asked for these three boys, that they may be given the grace of God to continue in the good work which they have begun. Mighty hot these days and we don’t have much of an appetite, but wait until Sunday, September 26th, when the Altar Society are going to sponsor a SMORGASBORD DINNER. Circle this date on your calendars, so you won’t forget. Serving will be from 12 Noon until 5 pan., but like we always tell you, don’t wait too late to come and be disappointed. Remember the old saying, the early bird catches the worm. Only this time, it won’t be worms, but turkey, ham or roast beef with all the trimmings? Mrs. Anna Marie Rosner is in charge of the dinner. Helen Freund is co-chairman, and Mrs. Kay Eddelman is publicity chairman. School opened at St. Christopher Tuesday morning with a High Mass. We have eight Nuns with us this year because of the extra room added. The first vacation scheduled is Tues- « day, October 12th, Columbus Day. The Knights of Columbus are offering many free booklets of instruction and enlightenment on the Catholic faith at a booth in the Manufacturers’ Building at the State Fair. Do good to thy friend to keep him, to thy enemy to gain him. —Franklin. The fruit of justice is sown in peace by those who make peace.—James 3:18. Pray daily your Rosaries for peace in the world. Nora Bray
Speedway Christian Church (Continued horn Page 1) 7:30; Children’s Chorale Monday, September 13th at 3:15; Chapel Choir, Thursday, September 16th at 7:00; Cloister Choir September 16th at 8:00. Dorcas Circle will send used eye glasses to the Schell Memorial Hospital in Vellore, India to be distributed by the doctor to the needy. Those in the other circles who are in- —* terested in contributing, please bring your old eye glasses to your own circle Missions Chairman at your first meeting or contact Mrs. Walter Dugger, Cy. 0125 to have them picked up. There are several articles that have been left in the Kindergarten Department. They may be picked up before Promotion Sunday, Sept. 26th. Baptismal services will be held on Sunday, September 19 at 4:30 p.m. for those who have recently united with us by confession of faith. The Steering Committee of the Christian Men’s Fellowship will hold an important meeting next Monday, September 13 at 7:30 p.m. in Fellowship Hall. Revisions and plans for the new fiscal year will be discussed and every member of the Committee is urged to attend. The first program meeting of the Fall for the C.M.F. will w be held on Monday, September 27, beginning with a delicious dinner at 6:30 p.m. A splendid program of entertainment is being planned, and the speaker of the evening will be Mr. Phil Eskew, Supt. of Schools at Sullivan, Ind. Mr. Eskew is widely known over the State for his interesting and inspirational talks. All the men of the church are cordially invited to share in these series of fellowship meetings held every two months during the year, as it helps to get better acquainted with each other. For tickets, see your team captain, or contact any member of the steering committee, or if in doubt call the church office, Be. 2000. PAPER DRIVE! The Senior High C.Y.F. is going to have a paper drive Saturday, September 11. Please have your paper out on the street for the young people to pick up. The drive will begin at 9 a.m. The young people will meet at the Masonic Temple and go out from there. All parents who are free Saturday morning (and have nothing else to do) please come and help, we can sure use you. SENIOR HIGH YOUTH ATTENTION! Let’s carry our Retreat spirit over to this Sunday morning and come to Sunday School. If we let down now all we did at Retreat will be in vain. The Freshmen will meet with Mr. Ted Rosebrock as their teacher. The topic will be “Youth As Christians.” The Sophomores will meet with Mr. Darwin Allen and discuss the topic “Making Our Friendships Christian.” The Junior-Senior High Class will meet with Mr. Charles Nay and the topic will be “Your Church and Your Community.” Come on down to the church, the Executive Committee will be there to show you to your classrooms. Members of the Chancel Choir and their husbands and wives will be the dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hecht, Wednesday, at 7 o’clock at the Marott Hotel. Old and new Chancel Choir members are asked to inform Mrs. Hecht if they plan to attend. The dinner is complimentary. Junior High Executive Meeting, Tuesday evening after school at the home of Mrs. Ralph Rahm.
BUTLER RUSH WEEK Approximately 140 prospective Butler University coeds will participate in formal “rushweek” activities on the campus September 7 to 11, it has been announced by Dean Elizabeth Durflinger, dean of women. This is the largest number of girls to be enrolled for rush at Butler since 1950 according to Dean Durflinger. The week’s round of events wjtl open with a formal tea by each organization from 2 to 5 p.m. on Tuesday. Rush week registrations will be accepted in the Dean’s office until 1 p.m., Tuesday, Sept 7. . Sally Huber, Butler’s Panhellenic president, will head a welcoming committee of sorority rush captains greeting the 49 out-of-town rushees at the Sigma Chi and Phi Delta Theta fraternity houses where they will be housed for the week's activities. AU houses win be open to the rushees for informal calls Wednesday through Saturday from 9:30 to 1 pm. In addition tp the informal calling periods, the organizations win entertain individually with one afternoon or evening\ party at the chapter houses. Rush captains from Indianapolis are Sharon Billing, Alpha Chi Omega; Marjorie Smith, Delta Delta Delta; Karel Kingham, xlppa Alpha Theta; Claire Anderson, Kappa Kappa Gamma;
and Eleanor Hackemeyer, Pi Beta Phi. Others are Carol Wilson, Zeta Tau Alpha, of Flora and Diane Shoemaker, Delta Gamma, of Greencastle. Individual entertainment wiU begin on Thursday when the Tri Delts receive rushees aboard their “Showboat” from 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. Mary Ann McArthur will be “Captain” of the ship as the Tri Delts entertain on board with dancers, comedians, and minstrel players. Delta Gamma will fete the rushees at the next party in Hawaiian style. Guests will arrive via passport invitation to sway with hula dancers and feast on pineapple delicacies. From 8 to 10 p.m. Thursday evening, the Pi Beta Phi’s will receive the coeds into their “French Case.” Beverly Baldwin is “Mademoiselle Hostess” of the sidewalk case in which the guests will be seated among the checkered tablecloths to watch the floor show. A carnival will be in store for the girls at the Zeta Tau Alpha party from 2:30 to 4:30 pm. on Friday. Rushees will be invited to “Come to the Fair” where they will see side shows with tap dancers and gaily costumed entertainers. The round of parties will be continued at the Kappa house, 4:30 to 6:30 pm., as the girls visit the “Past, Present, and Future.” Their Kappa hostesses will re-
ceive their guests into the past where they will feast in an old Roman atmosphere. The rushees will then be ushered into the present at Hernando’s Hideaway where the tango will be in progress. As visitors to the future, the girls will be introduced to “Kappa Land.” Alpha Chi Omega members will greet the future coeds from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. on the lawn of their new sorority house. Matching the splendor of their new quarters, the Alpha Chis will be dressed for the “Southern Plantation” party in summer formals and picture hats. Shirlee Smith, Beech Grove, will assist the rush chairman as hostess. As the last round on the Friday party list, Kappa Alpha Theta will receive the newcomers from 9:30 to 11:30 pan. According to the Thetas, “Rush is Like a Circus,” and they will provide pink lemonade, clowns and trapeze performers to prove it Pledges will be notified of their new Greek affiliations between 8 and 10 p.m. Saturday, after which the sorority groups will welcome their new members at the houses. Another event which highlights the fall rush program is the annual Panhellenic Dinner at 6:30 p.m., Wednesday, Sept. 15. As honored guests for the occasion to be held at Atherton Center, the new pledges will hear Mrs. Christine Yerges Conaway, Ohio State University’s dean of women, speak on “Pledging Your Future.”
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QpeedwaV THEATRE 1 THURS., FBI., SAT. SEPT. 9-10-11 “KNOCK ON WOOD” TECHNICOLOR —STARRING— Danny Kaye Mai Zetterling a —PLUS—“ALASKA SEAS” —STARRING— Robert Ryan Jan Sterling Brian Keith SATURDAY MATINEE SEPT. 11 Doors open at 1:15 pm. Show starts at 1:30 pm. “ALASKA SEAS” CARTOONS “KNOCK ON WOOD” “BATMAN” Serial No. 2 Show out at 4:54 SUN„ MON., TUES. SEPT. 12-13-14 “THE BIGAMIST” —STARRING— Edmund Gwenn Joan Fontaine Edmond O'Brien Ida Lupino —PLUS—“MONTE CARLO BABY” —STARRING— Jules Munshin Cara William* STARTING WEDNESDAY SEPT. 15 John Derek in “THE OUTCAST” and “UNTAMED HEIRESS”
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Dean Conaway was elected president of the National Conference on College Fraternities and Sororities in May, 1953.
Cancer’s Seven Dangerous (But Friendly) Signals Cancer’s Seven Danger Signals so-called could well be re-named: Cancer’s Seven Danger Signals. “Friendly” not because they may spell out cancer for you. But “friendly because they alert you and your doctor to conditions which, if treated in time, could mean greater safety for you not only from cancer but other possible diseases. For a free copy of Cancer’s Seven Dangerous (but friendly) Signals, just write the Number “7” on a postal card, and mail to the Little Red Door, 1101 West 10th Street, Indianapolis, or phone Melrose 5-7371.
PITMAN-MOORE NEWS The appointment of Leland W. Dyke to Pitman-Moore Company’s biological staff has been announced by Dr. S. R. Bozeman, director of the laboratories. A native of Clearfield, lowa, Mr. Dyke received his education in Sterling, Kansas and was graduated by Sterling College in 1946 with an A.B. degree. He received his masters degree in bacteriology from the University of Kansas in 1954. Mr. Dyke served in the armed forces from 1942 to 1946 and as a civilian with the Department of the Army in Germany from 1946 to 1948. He formerly was an assistant bacteriologist for the Kansas State Board of Health and associate bacteriologist at the University of Kansas. He is a member of the Society of American Bacteriologists and Phi Sigma, national biologists’ society.
SENIOR HIGH C.YT. PAPER DRIVE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 9 A.M.
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CROSSROADS REHABILITATION CENTER / The final phase of the Crossroads Rehabilitation Center’s building fund drive starts today with the mailing of 55,000 copies of a progress report to individuals and organizations in central Indiana. William R. Kraft, general chairman, announces that $150,000 of the $350,000 goal already is pledged. The total goal is divided into $200,000 for the new building costs and $150,000 for modern equipment for the treatment of crippled children and adults who are referred to the center by their physicians. The report includes a letter from Dr. Russell J. Spivey, president of the Indianapolis Medical Society, throwing the weight of the medical profession behind the drive. Says Dr. Spivey: “The value of Crossroads to Indianapolis, Marion County, and the entire state of Indiana is becoming more apparent as the need for rehabilitation assumes larger proportions. That you have rendered such service in your present outmoded and inadequate quarters bespeaks the great new horizons of opportunity lying ahead for Crossroads.” Crossroads, which is a member organization of the Indiana and the American Hospital Associations, is an out-patient clinic, operated on a non-profit and nonsectarian basis. It is staffed by professional physical and occupational therapists under direction of Roy E. Patton, executive director. Before coming to Crossroads in 1950, Mr. Patton was director of vocational rehabilitation for the State of Oklahoma. The new building, to be located along the southern bank of Fall Creek, at 3242 Sutherland, will provide adequate playground and recreational facilities, for the first time, for the crippled children of our community. The center owns 3.24 acres of ground at the new site and has just acquired a 20year lease for an additional 8.74 acres from the Indianapolis Park Department, Mr. Patton reports. The building will house, be-
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sides treatment rooms, a curative workshop where patients may gradually learn new skills. A $27,180.91 fund left to Crossroads in the will of Mrs. Edna B. Munn, has been allocated to the workshop by the Center’s board of directors. This action was announced today by Robert S. Ashby, president of the board.
Junior Symphony Group Schedule of Activities for 1954-55 September Duet Teams and Junior members participate in Symphony Season Ticket Drive. Committees and plans for Symphony Ball announced. October 15th “Gold and Silver Waltz” —Woodstock Club. Committees, plans and rules announced for Children’s Art Contest. November* ,7th Sevitzky’s to entertain Junior Board at dinner (tentative). Bth-12th Winning entries of Children’s Art Contest (statewide) on exhibit in Wm. H. Block Company auditorium. December Maintenance committees announced. January Junior members participate in Symphony Maintenance Drive. February Morning coffee for new members of Junior Group. Approximately 75 new members invited. (Date and place to be announced later). 19th Junior Board entertains Blanche Thebom at dinner (tentative). March 16th Election of officers and appointment of new portfolio chairmen, April General Report Luncheon and Style Show of Junior Group Meridian Hills. (Date to be announced). For further information contact Jan Finney (Mrs. George T.), 1 West 28th Street, WA. 4-0766.
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