Speedway Flyer, Volume 31, Number 2, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 January 1962 — Page 6
Page 6
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Indpls. Symphony Orchestra The eighth pair of subscription concerts will be presented by the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra, under the direction of Izler Solomon, Saturday, January 13 and Sunday, January 14, at the Murat Theatre. The soloist will be Pianist Claudio Arrau. Mr. Arrau is currently making his 20th consecutive U. S.-Canadian concert tour. He is considered a “musician’s musician” because of his exceptional mastery, memory and repertoire. Mr. Arrau is celebrated
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today on every continent of the globe. That an artist could arise in our time, however, boasting a virtuosity without limit, a sense of style that is literally fabulous and a feeling of music’s form that “is masterly and endless,” is truly unique. His appearance will be considered a season highlight because he’ll be performing the Brahms Piano Concerto No. 2 which he performed with Mr. Solomon in Israel three years ago. His performance of that great concerto was so outstanding that Mr. Solomon requested that he perform it in his appearance here.
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Arrau has appeared with our Orchestra twice, the last time in 1951. Other selections on the program are: “Design” by Ned Rorem and Haydn’s “London Symphony (104).” Rorem is a young composer that has never been heard here before. The London Symphony is Haydn’s final symphony and marks the climax to the career of the most prolific symphonic composer of all time. Tickets at $1.50, $2.00, $2.75, $3.25 and $4.00 are available at the Symphony Box Office, ME. 59596. Soloists To Be Heard With Indianapolis Civic Orchestra The 53-piece Indianapolis Civic
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Orchestra, under the direction of Victor B. Danek, will present its second concert of the season Jan. 15 in Ransburg Auditorium at Indiana Central College. Featured on the concert will be the sopranos Linda O’Dell Jones and Madelyn Anne Smith. The orchestral portion of the program will include the “Overture and Allegro” by CouperinMilhaund and the “Soiress Musicales” by the English composer Benjamin Britten. After the intermission Mrs. Jones will be heard in Rachmaninoffs “In the Silence of Night” and the “Alleluja” from Mozart’s “Exsultate, Jubilate.” Miss Smith’s selections will be “With Verdure Clad” from “The Creation” by Haydn and “My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice” from “Sam-
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son and Delilah” by Saint-Saens. The sopranos will then unite in singing two duets: “Qui Kst Home” from Rossini’s “Stabat Mater*’ and “Mira,, O Nonna” from Bellini’s “Nonna.” Miss Smith has been heard on the Indiana Central stage as the Mother in “Amahl and the Night Visitors” and as Sylvie in “Oklahoma!” Mrs. Jones also appeared in “Oklahoma!” as Ado Annie and in “The King and I” as Anna. Both singers are choir directors, Miss Smith at Garfield Park Baptist Church and Mrs. Jones at Rosedale E.U.B. Church. Both also are music majors at Indiana Central College, preparing to be music teachers. The concert, beginning at 8:30 p.m., is open to the public with no admission charge.
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Thursday January 11, 1962
jaycee service Mwara The Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce invites all local churches, businesses, and organizations to nominate a young man between the ages of SI and 35 for> the Distinguished Service Award by noon January 15. The Distinguished Service Award is presented annually to a young man, not necessarily a Jaycee, who has rendered the most significant service to the community during the past year. Nomination blanks may be obtained through the Jaycee Office, 812 Indiana State Teachers Association Building. The recipient for this coveted award will be selected by a panel of five judges consisting of Ottis T. Fitzwater, president of the Indianapolis Power and Light Company; Otto N. Frenzel, president of Merchants National Bank and Trust Company; Bruce C. Savage, owner Bruce Savage Company; Thomas W. Moses, president of the Indianapolis Water Company, and Erie A. Kightlinger, Armstrong, Gause, Hudson and Kightlinger, and recently elected president of the Indiana Bar Association. The Distinguished Service Award and a Good Government Award will be presented at the awards banquet at the Murat Temple, January 27 at the climaxi to Jaycee Week, January 21-27. Principal speaker for this year’s Distinguished Service-Good Government Awards Banquet will be Secretary of Labor Arthur J. Goldberg. Toastmaster will be Clarence H. Jackson, board chairman of the American United Life Insurance Company. Tickets for the awards banquet at $6 each or $45 for a table of eight, may also be obtained through the Jaycee Office.
COLLEGE RECEIVES SIBB,OOO IN GIFTS Contributions exceeding SIBB,OOO to Indiana Central College’s $3,000,000 development program were announced today. The largest gift was SIOO,OOO from the Indianapolis Foundation, Edwin G. (Ted) Plum, general chairman of the college’s Development Program Committee, announced at a luncheon of workers, bn the campus. Forty business men, mostly from Indianapolis, constitute the group. Chairman Plum is vice president and comptroller of Indiana Bell Telephony Co. and a trustee of the college. Other contributions announced were $30,000 from the Baxter Foundation, $22,500 from the Indianapolis Power and Light Co., $15,000 from Indiana Bell, and miscellaneous gifts totaling $21,625. Dr. I. Lynd Esch, president of Indiana Central, stated that these gifts bring to $604,125 the amount contributed toward the $3,000,000 goal. The remainder is composed of $340,000 given by Mr. and Mrs. Herman C. Krannert of Indianapolis toward Krannert Hall, a new women’s dormitory opened last fall, and $75,000 by William H. Trimble, Indianapolis business man, to rebuild the interior of Trimble Hall, the other women’s dormitory, last summer. The building of a separate Science Hall and a Student Center and the remodeling of the old Administration Building into a Fine Arts Center are chief items in the development program. Other items are the liquidation of debts on Academic Hall anck Physical Education Building, both opened in the last four years, and the complete renovation of the remaining dormitories, Buxton and Dailey Halls. ■<
Journalism Honorary Formed At Ind. Central The Gamma Eta chapter of Alpha Phi Gamma, national honorary coeducational journalistic fraternity, has been installed and charter members initiated at Indiana Central College. Eleven undergraduate members and the faculty adviser, Leonard E. Pearson, were initiated under the leadership of Dr. John A. Boyd, director of student publications at Indiana State College who is the immediate past national president of the fraternity. A dinner in the college’s north dining room preceded the ceremony, and Dr. Boyd spoke afterward of the significance of Alpha Phi Gamma and the opportunities for college students interested in entering journalism as a career. Jim Sweet is president of the new chapter. Joe Rankin is vied president; Martha Edmonds, secretary; John Stackhouse, trees urer, and John Alexander, balUf. The adviser is director at Uc relations at Indiana chairman of the Faculty-Student Publications Board and instructor of journalism. Besides the officers and Mr. Pearson, those initiated were Kendall Hottell, Judi Mcßride, Glenna Apsley, Dave Brady, Sherry Wayman, and Jim Foote. There will be anaßwr bNMI ,in of members before the end of the current college year.
