Speedway Flyer, Volume 40, Number 31, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 August 1972 — Page 2

PAGE 2

Know Yonr Indiana Law Hair And More Hair

By John J. Dillon, Attorney at Law In April of this year the United States Court of Appeals for foe Seventh Circuit, which includes Indiana, has seen fit to rule again on the right of the high school student to wear long hair. This case involved an Indiana high school which had adopted a high school dress code through student participation which regulated the length and style of hair for male students. Any student whose parents wished to have him exempted, from this hair code could gain such exemption by appearing before the principal and giving a written consent for the exception of his child from the dress code. The court said the fact that the code was formed by a committee of students, teachers and administrators and adopted by a majority vote of the students did not mean that the dress code stood constitutional muster. The court concluded that the democratic process used in adopting the code did not justify denial of a student’s constitutional right to wear his hair in the mode he chooses. It is interesting to note that the United States Courts of Appeal for the various circuits are now evenly divided four to four as to the constitutional right of a student to choose the length

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of his hair. The numerous cases which have been litigated on this issue has seen various and sundry constitutional provisions brought into play and various decisions by courts of the United States. Many of the courts have said that the question is too insubstantial when measured against today’s great constitutional issues to constitute an important enough question to envoke the jurisdiction of the federal courts. The otter four circuits have held that various constitutional provision including among others the first amendment, the ninth amendment and the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution grant the perogative to each person to choose their hair style as they see fit. Interestingly enough, one case which went to the United States Supreme Court from the Sixth Circuit was rejected by the United States Supreme Court thus sustaining an opinion which said that a regulation concerning the length of hair had a reasonable connection with the disciplining of school students* Thus we find the law in hopeless disarray on the question of the length of hair in the various areas of the United States and the validity of a regulation concerning the length of hair rests upon the geographic area (Continued to page 3)

ELECTROLUX Compact Parts & Service

1500 Main Street - Speedway, Indiana 46224 Published every Thursday in Speedway, Indiana AN O’NEAL NEWSPAPER

JAMES T O’NEAL. JR. Editor and Publisher LILLIAN WEDDINGTON Advertising Director MARTHA HERRICK Speedway General Manager MARY WAITE Production Manager

Rappin’ It Up By Kathy Lyons

If you ever feel you’re not appreciated enough, maybe the best cure would be a trip to Mexico. At least that’s what JOHN SCHOONOVER would prescribe. John explains by telling what happened to two of the boys that were with him on the American Friendship Tour, a group of forty musicians who traveled through Mexico this summer. After one of their concerts, the group was besieged by wild American lovers, who left with one of the boys* coats and a handful of another’s hair. The musicians, who came mostly from the Mid-West, left about the middle of June for a month of performances in many of the small Mexican towns. John lost count of the number of concerts they gave but estimates the number to be somewhere between thirty and forty. The concerts were given in the afternoon or evening, and most of them were held outside in the village square. The group spent the mornings visiting such places as the ancient pyramids, and in the evening they often had dinner with the various governors and mayors. Most of the governors and mayors didn’t speak English, but that wasn’t a problem since the Friendship Tour had its own private interpreter. When John got home he spent a week at a Ball State University band camp along with JENNY BOURNE, GREG COFOID, DANNY BOURNE,SCOTT DILLARD,JANE PREDA, JEFF HOWARD, JIM TUBESING and MARK GRAY. And as if that wasn’t enough, John took off for Europe last Friday for a three week tour with the American Musical Ambassadors, a giant concert band which will give concerts in London, Florence, Venice, Paris, Berlin and other cities. By the time you read this, JULIE KINNEY and JULIE LAUE may have made world history! They started at 9:00 Tuesday morning to set a new ping pong playing record by breaking the standing record of

30 hours.

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THE SPEEDWAYFIVER JOURNAL

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Your new home! Save «||| up to w SIOOO UF or more with a Wick winter discount Here'S a unique opportunity for you which can mean savings of up to MHHBHIE A'XJ $1,000.00 or more toward the pur- ■JI J J 111 [NNm chase of a new Wick Home. The details are simple: special price percentage discounts are now in | ha—rtßMmlWr | effect for Wick homes purchased be- ““““““ . fore December 31,1972, scheduled for delivery (and erection) in January, February or March of 1973. That's all there is to it! This offer is made to maintain factory production levels throughout the winter months. As you help us, we offer you huge savings. ’Be sure to ask your dealer how you can qualify for additional savings m the form of a $150.00 check, payable to you, prior to Christmas, 1972. For complete details on Wick Homes and giant Winter Discount prices, contact your Wick Homes dealer today! Act now this offer may be withdrawn without notice. Wick Homs - Div. Wick Building Systom, Inc. please mail me a free brochure of floorplans please contact me as soon as possible MfSJI TIM THOMPSON 18l R.R.N3 LbIMM, M. MM2 M2-US4 NAME ADDRESS CITYSTATE ZIP COUNTYPHONE

Speedway Library

SCHEDULED EVENTS Tuesday, Aug. 8 - Speedway Sewing. Wednesday, Aug. 9 Reading Club Party. Wednesday, Aug. 9 - 1:30 p.m, Reading Club party. NEW FICTION BOCKS Atkinson, The Reckoning; Franklin, The Money Murders; Creasey, As Empty as Hate; Garfield, Death Wish; Ogilvie, Weep and Know Why; Blish, Midsummer Century; Camus, A Happy Death; Lovell, A Presence in the House; Keating. Inspector Ghote Goes by Train; Ardies, This Suitcase is Going to Explode; Fallon, The White Queen; Barrett, Tlie Shape at Illusion; Ferrars, Breath of Suspicion; Mcßain, Sadie When She Died; Silverberg, Recalled to Life; Baldwin, One More

Mrs. Glazier To Host Masquers Brunch Aug. 3

Mrs. Robert L. Glazier. 430 Golf Lane, will welcome hostesses for the fund-raising fall card parties planned by members of the Masquers of Booth Tarkington Civic Theatre on Thursday, August 3. The planning brunch will begin at 10:30 a.m. Hostesses for the October 31, November 1 and November 2, card parties will include Mrs. Frank Aston, club president; Mrs. Thomas Bash, Mrs. David M. Brewer, Mrs. Robert Christy, Mrs. Harry Harman, and Mrs. Henry Jacoby. Also Mrs. Richard C. Lennox. Mrs. Charles Linder,

Time; Queen, Ellery Queen’s Mystery Bag. NEW NON-FICTION Fann Journal, Homemade Ice Cream and Cake; Beadle, Where Has All toe ivy Gone?; Roseberry, Glenn Curtiss-Pioneer of Flight; Courtney, The Eightt Sea; Fixx, Games for toe Sup erintelligent; Baer, The Second Wife; Berteaut, Piaf, A Biography; Griffin, Motorcycles, a Buyer’s and Rider’s Guide; Bunting, Bavaria; Bartlett, Central Italy; Carlson, Mexico: an Extraordinary Guide; Bean, Methods of Childbirth; Bolding, Installation Services for All Groq ts; Block, What Your Child Really Wants to Know About Sex and Why; Warren, A Republic If You Can Keep It; Bernard, The Future of Marriage; Catalan!, The Low Cholesterol Cookbook.

Mrs. Morris B. Paynter, Mrs. Horace Roberts, Mrs. Carl M. Sauer, Mrs. Robert Stemberger, past president; and Mi's. James L. West. Mrs. Patrick Quinn will serve as chairman when the Career Wing of the Masquers holds its card party on October 31.

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 3.1972

Auxiliary Plans Shoppiig Spree

Air conditioned buses will leave the south parking lot of B’nai Torah Temple. 6510 Hoover Road, for a Shopping Spree in Chicago on August 22. The event is sponsored by the Auxiliary to the Hebrew Academy of Indianapolis. The open-to-the-public trip will begin at 8:00 tun., and buses will go directly to the Chicago Loop. The estimated time of return is 10:00 p.m. Arrangements are being made by the Gausephol Travel Agency and the cost per person will be sls. The reservation deadline will be August 15, with a 48 hour advance notice on cancellations. Mi's. Jacob Frankovitz and Mrs. Stanley Yaffe are in charge of reservations.

Mrs. Edwin Epstein will arrange for the serving of coffee and home-baked goods which will be served by auxiliary members on the bus trip. Others working on the project are Mrs. Robert Suess, Mrs. Maurice Schankerman. Mrs. Gilbert Cohen, Mi's. Joe Epstein, Mrs. Mark Hasten, Mrs. Ronald Gray, Mrs. Gerald Kurlander, and Mrs. Irwin Prince.

Junior Nature Course Set At Eagle Creek

(Continued from pogo I) include explorations of toe park’s ponds, meadows, thickets, and forests, under too supervision of qualified naturalists, Feldman said. Witt the class meeting Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from 10 a.m. to 12 noon, the initial group will be limited to 30, and the only charge is a 50 cent registration fee, he related. For registration and additional information, concerning the is sponsored by the Department of Parks and Recreation, call the Eagle Creek Nature Center, weekdays, 291-5618, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.

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