Speedway Flyer, Volume 29, Number 4, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 January 1960 — Page 6
Page 6
Indiana Road Information That’s what motorists were promised today as the Indiana State Police inaugurated a new telephone answering service to promote driving safety. A current, recorded summary of the general situation may be heard by dailing Indianapolis CH. 1-6321 for the driving situation in the north half of the state. CH. 1-3244 is the number for the south
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CoL Harold S. Zeis, State Police head, suggested that citizens memorize the two numbers or write them down for easy reference. “Travelers may plan their trips in accordance with the conditions they will face,” he pointed out. The road information summaries are vital to street and highway accident prevention, Colonel Zeis said. Thousands of Hoosiers now motor long distances each day to their jobs in every part of the
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state. In addition, Indiana’s geographical location results in a heavy movement of transient motorists. The recorded bulletins will deal with general road conditions as observed by State Police troopers on patrol. Detailed information will be limited, unless an unusual situation develops.
Evening Division J.C.C. The Evening Division of Indiana Central College has announced extended hours during the registration period this week. Registration for second semester classes will begin Thursday, January 28 and continue through February 3. The Evening Division office will be open for regte-
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THE SPEEDWAY FLYER
tration from 9:00 ajn. until 830 pan. on Thursday and Friday. Saturday registration hours will be from 9:00 aan. until noon. Harry A. McGuff, Director of the Evening Division, also announced today the addition of a course for Elementary Education majors. The course, A Direct Approach To Reading, will cany two hours credit and be taught by Mrs. Pauline Banks. It is designed to assist teachers with pupils who have problems in reading. Mrs. Banks is well known for her work in the area of the phonetic and word analysis approach to reading. The course will meet on Saturday from 9:20 to 1130 a.m. Information on schedules and registration is available from the Evening Division office, Room 111 of the Administration Building on the University Heights campus. The Office may be reached by phoning ST 7-1303.
Princess lleana To Visit Indianapolis The forthcoming visit to Indianapolis of Her Royal Highness Princess lleana of Romania has stirred a great deal of interest in this city. The local Eastern Orthodox churches have been swamped with telephone calls requesting information where tickets may be purchased and the cost of the tickets. Miss Dorothy Chekoff, 3701 W. 16th St., ME. 7-0617, is ticket chairman and Mrs. Paul Craciun,
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1364 N. Somerset, ME. 6-9942 is co-chairman. Princess lleana, daughter of the late Queen Marie of Romania and great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria of England, will speak on “Orthodox Christians in Today’s World,” on Sunday, Feb. 28, 1960 at 7:30 pan., in the Riley Room of the Claypool Hotel Renowned as one of the most democratic members of royalty, she founded the first school for social workers in Romania and headed both the YWCA. and Girl Scout organization in that country. Her last years in Romania during World War IL was spent working as a nurse in her castle which she had converted into a hospital When the Communists overran her country, she was forced to flee and amid many hardships found a new life for herself and six children in Newton, Mass.
Her widespread reputation as a brilliant speaker and author has made her popular as a ,lecturer, both in the United States and Europe. Being devoutly; religious, she is the author of/many religious papers, and books, “I Live Again” and ‘-’’Hie Hospital of the Queen’s Heart.” Friends who greeted Princess lleana and her distinguished mother in 1926, when the royal family visited Indianapolis, are looking forward to meeting with the Princess again at an informal reception immediately preceding the lecture.
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Telephone Hour Ethel Merman, Benny Goodman, Beatrice Lillie and Ray Bolger will appear together on the Bell Telephone Hour on Friday, January 29. The four stars, each from a different field of show business, will join Donald Vooorhees and the 57-man Bell Telephone Orchestra for this hour-long colorcast on NBC television. This will be the first time the four stare have been brought together on one program. Each will have an individual segment of the program to present a group of numbers for which he or she is famous. Miss Merman’s contribution will be ragtime. She has been singing rhythm tunes ever since she introduced “I’ve Got Rhythm” in 1930. Beatrice Lillie will feature the musical clowning which has delighted a generation of theatergoers. Benny Goodman, the undisputed king of swing, will play clarinet, and Ray Bolger will demonstrate why he is a top song and dance man in his field.
Scholarships For Pharmacy The establishment of pharmacy scholarships at Butler University through a grant by a Lake County (Indiana) pharmacy organization has been announced by Dr. Karl L. Kaufman, dean of the university’s Pharmacy College. Butler students from the northwest Hoosier county are eligible to receive the grants donated by the Pharmettes, a women’s auxiliary of the Lake County Pharmaceutical Association.
To qualify, applicants must successfully complete their freshman year at Butler, according to Dean Kaufman. Selection by the University Scholarship and Student Aid Committee will be on the basis of scholarship and need. “We are deeply grateful to the Lake County Pharmettes for the grant which is another example of •its deep interest in the pharmacy profession as well as students interested in careers in pharmacy,” Dean Kaufman said. Mrs. Paul McCoy of Munster is president of the Lake County Pharmettes, and Mrs. Wally L. Sielski of Gary is chairman of that organization’s scholarship committee. Effective with the 1960-61 college year, beginning pharmacy students will be required to com-
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plete five years of study for a pharmacy degree at Butler. Butler offers study opportunities in the areas of community pharmacy, hospital pharmacy, manufacturing pharmacy, pharmaceutical journalism, anidytical and inspection duties for governmental agencies, and' medical service representation.
Butler Organist Butler University’s Jordan College of Music will present Ken List at the organ of Christ Church Cathedral, 121 N. Meridian St, at 8:30 p.m. (CDT) Friday, Jan. 29. Son of Mr. and Mrs. K. N. List of 3019 N. Ruckle St, Mr. List is a junior organ major and pupil of Kenneth Roberts of the Butler music faculty. He is organist and choir master at the Gethsemane Lutheran Church. Selections will include Pachelbel’s Ciacona in d minor; Walther’s Partita; Langlais’ Priere Point d’Orgue; Karg-Blert’s The Mirrored Moon, Op. 96, No. 6, and Adriessen’s Sonata da Chiesa.
The Weary Pursuit There’s one sure way to feel really old. And that’s to follow all the advice you come across on how to keep feeling young. For instance, take that business of “Keep in a young crowd and you’ll feel young yourself.” It sounds good. Only thing is, it just doesn’t work. With a group ten years younger, you go out for cocktails, then for dinner, on to a theatre or a movie, and afterwards somewhere else for pizza. You sag home dizzy with weariness at one in the morning, collapse into bed and find yourself too tired to sleep. For the next three days you feel positively ancient. Face the facts. A younger crowd can . cover more ground, stay up later, expend for more energy than you can. And when you’re ready to drop, the sight of aH those radiant young people, ob; viously able to keep going for several hours more, doesn’t do much to make you feel young.
Of course you want to be around young people part of the time, but mainly you should keep in with a crowd your own age. And don’t feel you have to use all your leisure in a frenzied round of social, educational, and civic activities. When these are overdone, they tend to become obligations rather than satisfying ways to spend your free time. There’s nothing wrong with loafing at home with your feet up, reading, watching TV, listening to music, or just day-dreaming. And it’s so restful.
Eggs: The January Protein Buy Large, fresh eggs are the January protein buy. You’ll stretch your budget by including more eggs in your food shopping and you’ll find more ways of using them to make pleasant nutritious meals. For example, some time soon, serve an omelet for dessert. Make it fluffy by whipping the whites and yolks separately; make it sweet by spreading it with jelly or jam and then sprinkling it with powdered sugar. They Keep Well Dried fruits will keep well for several months if given proper care. They should be kept dry. Store in a tightly covered container. ’ PIZZA BAKE JANUARY 30th Speedway JOB’S DAUGHTERS
Sen. Hartke Leads Dimes Drive
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Sen. Vance Hartke, of Indiana, leads off the 1960 Now March of Dimes with his contribution to Mary Park, 314, in Washington, D. C. Mary was born with an open spine, one of tho birth defects which March of Dimes funds are fighting in addition to arthritis and polio.
Thursday, January 28, 1960
American Natl. Dank Promotes Two Officers H. Prentice Browning, president of American Fletcher National Bank and Trust Company, Indianapolis, has announced the promotion of 2 officers and the elevation of 3 staff member* to officer status. Newly named assistant vice presidents are William C. Farrell, Jr. and John M. Mulvihill, both formerly assistant cashiers. At the same time, Donald C. Agnew, John B. Armstrong, and Richard T. Whittington were named assistant cashiers.
MR. FARRELL Mr. Farrell joined the American Fletcher National Bank and Trust Company in 1947 as a messenger, later becoming a teller and assistant manager of the credit department. He was elected assistant cashier in the correspondent banks department in December, 1957, where he is presently assigned. A native of Indianapolis, Mr. Farrell attended Indiana Business College and has completed 12 courses of the American Institute of Banking.
MR. MULVIHILL Mr. Mulvihill entered the banking field in 1927 when he joined the Fidelity Trust Company. With the merger of Fidelity Bank & Trust Company and American Fletcher National Bank and Trust Company, he was named assistant cashier and is in charge of the Circle Office. A native of Indianapolis, Mr. Mulvihill served in the Army during World War 11, being the first man to enter the service from the Fidelity Trust Company. A member of American Legion Memorial Post 3, he has long been active in Legion affaire.
Mr. Agnew was born in Indianapolis, and is a graduate of George Washington High School. Following in his father’s footsteps, he entered the banking field in 1945 in the transit department, and is now in the depositors’ services department assigned to the American Office. Mr. Agnew is active in the Northside YMCA.
Mr. Armstrong, with the installment credit department, is a native of Indianapolis and holds a B.S. degree from Butler University, Class of 1950. Armstrong began his career with the bank in 1955, after being with another financial institution until that time. Armstrong was active in the Junior Chamber of Commerce, and has been Team Captain in the United Fund Drive.
Mr. Whittington, well known for his work in music, is a graduate of Otterbein College and the University of Michigan. Joining the bank in 1953, he is presently a member of the business development department. In addition to banking, Mr. Whittington engages in Masonic work, that of the Indiana Multiple Sclerosis Society, and music. He is a member of the Scottish Rite Symphony, a director of Woodruff Place Baptist Church Choir and the American Fletcher National Bank Choir. Attention Job’s Daughters* of Bethel 38 are having a Pizza Bake on January 30. We will start serving at 6:00 pan. and end at 11:30 pan. Everbody come and have a dinner of Pizza. All you teenagers that are going to the Speedway-Wash-ington game, be sure and come afterwards. The address is 1620 N. Lyndhurst.
