Speedway Flyer, Volume 29, Number 12, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 March 1960 — Page 6
Page 6
| | 1619 N. LyaAarst Speedway FASH lONS CBapel 1-8450
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GENERAL CONTRACTOR
NEW CONSTRUCTION MASONRY WORK ROOFING
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AMBULANCE SERVICE BSa|& > Try our Ambulance Service for comfort—lmmediate "Around the Clock" wPr sea eke To any part c< City. State or ept of State. ‘Chapel of the Flowers 99 STEVENS MORTUARY •138 W. 18th Street MEbeae 8-01*8
"The Princess" ■ ( Indiana Bell has introduced a new small, lightweight telephone called “The Princess.” The new phone is available throughout the territory served by the company. It gradually is being introduced elsewhere and will be marketed nationwide about the end of this year. Manufactured by Western Electric Company in Indianapolis, the Princess phone is a compact, ovalshaped instrument that reduces by more than a third the space needed for current desk-type telephones. It has a low silhouette and weighs only 42 ounces. The phone is equipped with a dial which lights when the receiver is lifted or which glows with a soft night lights at the flick of a switch. It come in five decorator collors white, beige, pink, blue and turquoise. Henry Dreyfuss, whose design staff worked with Bell Telephone Laboratories in developing the new telephone, characterizes the appearance of the Princess phone as “light and elegant, with a classic simplicity that stems from a purity and precision of form.
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REMODELING PLUMBING CABINET WORK
The Princess phone carries a onetime $5.00 charge and 75 cents monthly in addition to the basic monthly charge for telephone service.
Good Things Happen This year the Red Cross slogan is “Good things happen when you serve.” The Indianapolis Area Red Cross chapter is looking for volunteers to help make good things happen. There are many services the Red Cross performs all year long with the indispensable help of volunteers. Crippled children are driven to clinics for their regular treatments by Motor Service drivers. These drivers transport vital supplies to disaster areas, as well as take convalescents from the local veterans hospitals on outings and to shows. Much of the chapter's clerical work is done by volunteer Staff Aides. They assist in filing, keeping many kinds of records, answering telephones and doing general secretarial work.
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S.C.A. Officers at l€C has been elected president of the Student Christian Association at Indiana Central College. The association not only is the chief religious organization on the campus—each student is a member of it—but it also is responsible for many of the social activities, entertainment and other events during the college year. David Maish, junior, was chosen first vice president and Tyron Inbody, sophomore, second vice president. Lorene Schini, sophomore, is secretary and Richard Padrick, sophomore, is treasurer.
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Volunteer Opportunities Limitless There are openings for others who wish to volunteer as arts and crafts instructors, as nurse’s aides, dance hostesses or Gray Ladies. Women who like to sew may wish to work in Production Service making comfort items for hospital patients or layettes for expectant mothers; and for women who like cooking, there is Canteen Service in which they cook and serve food and refreshments for patients in veterans hospitals, G.l.’s at Fort Harrison, disaster victims and others. The openings for Red Cross volunteers are ever-present. To volunteer and help make good things happen, call the Indianapolis Area Red Cross, ME. 4-1441.
THE SPEEDWAY FLYER
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Cancer Control An educational program tailormade for any group is being offerred by the Marion County Unit of the American Cancer Society. The subject, naturally, is cancer—especially timely since April is Cancer Control Month. Available free to clubs, churches, schools, student and professional groups are nearly 30 films dealing with cancer research, dramatic case histories, detection and treatment of various types of cancer. These films have been “screentested” by more than 22 million Americans and in many instances have been instrumental in saving lives. Two Eire designed for women audiences only. One is “Breast Self-Examination,” and the other, “Time and Two Women,” discusses cEincer of the uterus. The rest have a message for anyone. Many Eire in color, others are cleverly animated and light in treatment. To supplement the film showings, the local society will arrange for doctors to answer questions at group meetings. Booking arrangements may be made by CEilling the executive secretary of the Msurion County Unit, David E. Livengood, at ME. 7-3581 or visiting his office at 215 East New York Street.
Butler Faculty Publications Three members of the College of Liberal Arts and Science faculty are authors of articles appearing recently in leading publications. Dean Alexander E. Jones’s scholsurly article, “Point of view in The Turn of the Screw,” has been re-printed in a A Casebook on Henry James’s “The Turn of the Screw.” Dr. Roy Msirz is the author of a series of poems in a recent issue of Poetry, the most influential of all poetry magazines. Dr. J. William Hepler, of the Psychology Department, is the author of a scholsurly surticle, “On the Teaching of Experimental Psychology,” in a recent issue of The American Psychologist.
OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8:30 PJM. DAILY 9:30 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
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Industrial Relations Conferences The Industrial Relations Center at Indiana Centrsil College will have four 11-week conferences designed primarily for middle and upper levels of management starting within the next few weeks. The conference on building effective communications will begin Monday, March 28. The managerial economics program will start Wednesday, Msirch 30. The advanced administration program stsurted Tuesday, March 22. The fourth program, liberal arts for management, will begin Thursday, March 24. All sessions conducted by the Industrial Relations Center Eire dinner meetings and the discussion method is used throughout.
Program on Taxes ‘Call them, before they call you.’ that’s the invitation being extended to WFBM-TV yiewers who are approaching the April 15 deadline for filing Federal Income Teix Reports. Wsirren Wright, WFBM-TV Program Manager, has announced a special hour-long program on Income Taxes will be presented on Channel Six at 4:30 p.m., Sunday, March 27. Entitled “Is It Deductible,” the program will afford viewers the opportunity of calling their tax problems to the station while the show is on the air. A panel of ten tax experts will man a special phone battery to answer these questions.
Red Cross Nurses Help Keep America Strong For more than fifty yesurs, Red Cross nurses have been on the job, caring for the ill and convalescing patients in hospitals, giving nursing care to victims of disasters, teaching others how to give nursing care at hame, and performing many other task vital to the well-being of their country.
Second Childhood
Those who wish to return to their youth might like to know that there’s at least one way to feel positively infantile again. Just become a hospital patient. You Eire no sooner tucked into your hospitsil bed, than you surrender many of your rights as an adult. Privacy, for instsmee. Nobody knocks on your door. Everybody just bEirges in. You Eire likely to be poked all over Eind asked highly personal questions by a succession of people wearing white coats and stethoscopes. Without asking permission, somebody wraps a piece of rubber tubing around your upper arm, sticks a needle in a vein, and helps himself to a syringe-full of your blood. No, they’re not feeding vampires in the lab, as you might
Gasoline Alley
GOOD THINGS Ik* Olwi» Tribmm
Thursday, March 24, 1960
„ PERSONALS (Continued from Page 1) annual LU. Sing, scheduled for April 27 and 28 at Indiana University. Co-sponsors of the traditional spring event are YWCA and YMCA. Housing units are currently turning in entry blanks and deciding on song titles for the annual choral competition. Miss Marmaduke, a junior, has been appointed chairman and Miss Piper, a freshman, a member of the judges and awards committee. An Indiana University coed from Speedway has been chosen a new member of Angel Flight, an auxiliary organization to the Air Force ROTC unit on campus. She is Jeanne Piper, a freshman, 1711 Norfolk, Speedway. Nanette Fidger, 2309 Winton, and Marcia Edwards, 4971 W. 15th, both of Speedway, are among cast members in this year’s Jordan River Revue, “The Bandmaster,” a musical comedy hit currently playing at the University Theatre, Indiana University. Miss Fidger, a freshman, has one of the female leading roles, while Miss Edwards, a sophomore, is a member of the chorus. Sixty-seven Hanover College students recently have been named to the “Dean’s list” by Dean E. Mowbray Tate. This honor is received by all students who achieve a grade point average of 3.5 to 4.00. This requires a combination of half A’s and B’s or better. Two area students received this honor. They are: Miss Sue Todd, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Todd, Jr., 1808 Norfolk, Speedway, and Bart Updike, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Updike, R.R. 3, Nashville. Miss Todd, a freshman, graduated from Speedway High School where she was active in musical organizations, dramatics, the Booster Club, and the Spanish Club. She is affiliated with Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Updike, also a freshman, was active in dramatics, Student Council, and musical organizations at Speedway High School. Earl Breech, son of Pam Breech of Pam’s Fashions, has been named to the Blue Key Society at Culver Military Academy. The purpose of the Blue Key Society is to recognize academic achievement during the junior year. A local organization, it offers the highest academic honor a second classman can attain. Earl is grandson of Catherine Yuncker, who is associated with Pam’s Fashions and the nephew of Mr. and Mrs. Gale Nave of Speedway. Mrs. Elizabeth Pierce, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Charles Stoltz for the past six months, returned to her home in Los Angeles, California, last Saturday. Mrs. Stoltz accompanied her as far as Chicago.
think. Your blood is studied to help find out what ails you and sometimes to check the effects of the medicine you are getting. Being sick is an upsetting experience any way you look at it upsetting to your self-confi-dence, among other things. Being put to bed is no fun, but it is calculated to get you well. There are a lot of minor irritations in hospitals. You may be awakened to take your medicine or to have your temperature checked. The medicine must be kept working on you. Its effect lasts only so long, and then it must be given again. And your temperature at different times of the day tells the doctor a good deal about what’s doing on inside you. Anyway, it’s sensible to just take things as they come, so don’t fret. Might send your temperature up.
By King
