Speedway Flyer, Volume 34, Number 1, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1965 — Page 3

Thunday, January It 1965

WINTER SCHEDULE Winter term health, - physical and recreation activties begin at your Indianapolis Young Women's Christian Association the week of January 18 and continue for eight weeks. Now is the time to learn to swim. Be prepared this year when summer arrives by taking a swimmining class at the YWCA. Day and evening classes, Monday through Thursday are available for adults. The courses are designed for all levels of ability, from non-floating novices to the more advanced swimmers course. Saturday is childrens day with swimming classes for girls 6-11 years of gae and for boys 6-8 years of age beginning January 23. “Junior Janes” held on Saturday mornings from 9:45 to 12:15 provides an opportunity for girls 6-11 girls of age to participate in ’a variety of physical and creative actvities. Novice, beginning or advanced swimming classes are also included in the morning activities. Synchronized swimming, a program of water techniques, movements and stunts set to muisc, is available for girls 13-16 years of age on Thursdays. Ballet and interpretive dance for girls between the ages of 4 and 10 will be held Saturday afternoons. This term, not only will be a Ballet I class be offered, but also a Ballet II for girls who have already had some training. Other physical activties for women includes Trimnastics, a program for music toning and physical improvement, fundamentals of tennis; defensive judo; and "‘gym-swim,” a halfhour of exercise in the gym followed by a dip in the pool. Both men and women are invited to take social dancing, including steps from the Waltz to the Rumba on Tuesday evenings. Dance practice sessions held before and after classes provides participants an extra opportunity to perfect the new steps they learn. Your YWCA, 329 North Pennsylvania Street has not only the activities above but, many other programs hnd clubs designed to meet the needs of the women and girls of Indianapolis. For further information about the varied program available, call ME. 5-5471 or drop by.

PIANIST GUEST SOLOIST Rudolf Firkusny, the celebrated Czech-American pianist, will be the first guest soloist of the New Year when he appears with Izler Solomon and the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra on January 9 and 10. Firkusny, who was only six when his mother enrolled him at the State Conservatory in BRNO, Czechoslovaks, is today a formidable virtuoso who commands the respect and admiration of audiences on five continents. Not only is he considered one of the foremost keyboard artists of his generation, but the greatest pianist his country has ever produced. The pianist came to America for the first time in 1938, but it was three years later, in 1941, that he won America’s concertgoers by "playing with the poise and maturity of a master,” according to Time Magazine. Today Firkusny is one of the most popular pianists in America. This will be his fifth appearance with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra. For ten straight years the pianist was a soloist with the New York Philharmonic, something of a record. He usualy devotes six months a year to concerts here, three months to Europe, two months to South America and one month to a holiday. Recently he added Australia and Asia to his itinerary, playing recitals in Hong Kong, Singapore, and Honolulu, plus all the major cities of Australia. Firkusny became an American citizen ten years ago and makes his permanent home in New York. For his appearance with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra on January 9 and 10, the pianist will play Brahms’ Concerto No. 1 in D Minor, a selection he has not previously performed with our Orchestra. Also scheduled by Izler Solomon for this program are Schubert’s “Unfinished” Symphony and Respighi’s Pine* of Rome. Tickets for both the Saturday performance at 8:30 p.m. and the Sunday afternoon concert at 3:00 p.m. are now on sale at the Symphony Box Office in Clowes Hall.

ART ASSOCIATION An exhibition on “Chinese Woodblock Prints” opened to the public on January 1 at Herron Art Museum of Art, 110 E. 16th St. Woodlock prints are important because woodcut prints, discovered around the Bth century in China are the earliest of the graphic processes. The prints exhibited are from Herron's permanent collection. The public is invited at no charge.

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INDIANA BELL CONSTRUCTION Indiana Bell crews are placing more than $400,000 worth of new telephone cable in the Indianapolis area in four construction projects now in progress. The new cable and associated equipment in telephone buildings will accommodate residential and business growth in the AXminister, Liberty and Victor calling areas to the north and in the STate calling area on the south side. C. R. Barkman, division manager for the company, said the projects will provide the equivalent of 36,570 miles of new telephone lines to serve telephone users in the area. The expansion of STate cable facilities was prompted in large measure by the completion or planned construction of new apartment buildings in the area. Underground conduit and cable will be placed along Thompson Road from Shelby Street to Highway 31, and cable will be added from the Bell building at 2941 Shelby south along Shelby to Southport Road. In the AXminister area, underground cable will be placed from the telephone building at 5230 Moeller Road to 38th, 56th and 62nd Streets and along Coffman Road from 62nd to 71st. Buried cable will be added to serve new housing developments in the extreme northeast and northwest parts of the exchange. Much of the new Liberty cable will be along Emerson Avenue from 38th to 46th Streets and along 46th to Park Forest Drive. This will serve new residents along Arlington Avenue north of 46th. Near Carmel, underground cable will be added along 106th and Pennsylvania Streets, and both buried and aerial cable will be placed from 96th Street and Ditch Road south to 91st Street and then west to a new housing development.

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THE SPEEDWAY FLYER

LONG DISTANCE CHARGES ISDUCH) Indiana BeM today announced reduced long distance charges on telephone calls within the state, including a, bargain rate of 40 cents or less on nighttime and Sundays calls. Roy C. Echols, Indiana Bell president, said that on the basis of present estimates Hoosiers will save about $2.5 million annually as a result of the intrastate reductions and lower interstate rates recently anounced by the Federal Communications Commission. The company and the state's 106 other telephone companies filed new tariffs covering the changes with the Public Service Commission of Indiana. The new rates will be effective February 1, the same day long distance charges on calls crossing state lines will be similarly reduced. Echols said the reductions generally will result from lower rates for evening, Saturday and Sunday calling and from bargain night rates which will apply an hour earlier than at present. The nighttime intrastate rates which will become effective after 8 p.m., instead of 9 p.m., also will be offered all day on Sundays. This will permit three minutes of station - to - station conversation between phones anywhere in Indiana for 40 cents or less after 8 p.m. and all day Sunday.

Echols also announced reductions in many evening rates for 6 to 8 pm. calling—and said these rates also will apply all day on Saturdays. As a result, there will be reductions as high as 25 cents in the initial three-minute charge on some Saturday daytime calls. ~ . . The telephone companies also will adopt more precise methods of calculating distance between cities, taking into account the curvature of the earth. This will result in five-cent changes on only more than 10 per cent of the rates between Indiana points, with the large majority of the changes being reductions. The charge for handling collect calls will be increased from 10 to 20 cents to compensate for the extra operator time and billing procedures involved. Echols pointed out that this charge does not apply to calls billed to telephone

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credit card numbers. Indiana Bell was the first Bell System company to introduce bargain rates on nighttime calls. Since 1958, Hoosiers have been able to talk six minutes for the price of three on calls placed after 9 pan. The new tariff adopts for nighttime calls the traditional threeminute initial interval which applies to day and evening calls and establishes a maximum rate of 40 cents after 8 pan. or on Sunday. For calls between phones less than 172 miles apart, the charge will be even less. The reductions in evening rates —those which apply from 6 to 8 pm.—affect most intrastate calls in the 71 to 244 mile range. Charges for the first three minutes of conversation will be reduced five cents in seven mileage categories, and overtime charges will be reduced proportionately.

OUT OF THE FOG Words, words, words. Thousands, millions of them have tumbled from the printing presses

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about cigarette smoking and its dangers. The printers are still at it And so, sad to relate, are many smokers. Cigarette sales did take a mild nose-dive about a year ago after an expert advisory committee turned in its reports to the U.S. Surgeon General. Its findings are well known. Cigarette smokers die earlier than nonsmokers; cigarettes are a major cause of chronic bronchitis and lung cancer; their use is associated with lung-crippling emphysema; and so on. But such is the hold of this habit on the human body and psyche, that as yet all the publicity given the findings has brought no dramatic change. Industry reports show cigarette sales back at that earlier levels or higher. The best advice of doctors and health educators the

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best intentions of many smokers, tend to get lost in a fog of cigarette smoke. Early Setbacks are inevitable, it seems in the nationwide effort to reduce cigarette consumption. A longstanding habit of many years is hard to break. The best of books, pamphlets, classes and clinics by themselves cannot have a very successful effect on many grown-ups with such a lifelong smoking habit A few have been helped and more practical aids are in the experimental stage. But the best answer still lies in presuading young people never to start the practice—so that in the future the habit can be expected to die out Specific programs along these lines are being developed. And further news, especialy on how to lead youngsters away from the cigarette urge, can be expected.

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