16
ALUMNI NEWS Volume 17 April, 1966 Number 4 The Trustees, Faculty, and Students of INDIANA CENTRAL COLLEGE Cordially Invite You to Attend the Dedication of THE LOUIS SCHWITZER CENTER at Two o’Clock, Saturday Afternoon April Thirtieth, Nineteen Hundred Sixty-Six in Ransburg Auditorium - Academic Hall Indianapolis, Indiana

ALUMNI NEWS - University of Indianapolisarchives.uindy.edu/digitized_docs/alumni_news/1960-69/1966-4.pdfALUMNI NEWS Volume 17 April, ... pected to draw mostly from Short- ... This

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

ALUMNI NEWS Volume 17 April, 1966 Number 4

The Trustees, Faculty, and Students

of

I N D I A N A CENTRAL COLLEGE

Cordially Invite Y o u to Attend

the Dedication

of T H E LOUIS SCHWITZER CENTER

at Two o’Clock, Saturday Afternoon April Thirtieth, Nineteen Hundred Sixty-Six

in Ransburg Auditorium - Academic Hall Indianapolis, Indiana

Indiana Central to Seek Top High School Seniors Indiana Central College has an-

nounced plans for a program which would invite superior Indianapolis area high school seniors to take a course at the college a s a form of “educational stimulation.”

Although the college-credit pro- gram would be open t o seniors from all city high schools, it could be ex- pected to draw mostly from Short- ridge High School because of the high- standard academic curriculum the school assumes in the fall, ICC offi- cials said.

ICC President Esch said the crea- tion of an all-city college prepara- tory program a t Shortridge stimulated the proposal.

Harry A. McGuff, president of the Indianapolis Board of School Com- missioners and head of the ICC Evening Division, said an informal poll of School Board members dis- closed approval of such a program.

No formal action would be taken by the board, however, until complete details of the program, such as quali- fications, schedules and fees are ar- ranged, McGuff said.

“This could not s ta r t before the fall of 1967, and probably not even then, because of the great amount of planning needed,” Dr. Esch pointed out. Dr. Esch said the pupils, probably

100 to 200 a semester, would have to pay their expenses, approximately $85 a course. However, a partial scholarship arrangement will be dis- cussed in the planning, he added.

The high school pupils could attend classes with college freshmen, or be enrolled in several groups of excep- tional seniors. This would depend on the schedule worked out, Dr. Esch continued.

The seniors would attend classes on the college campus. “This has the two-fold advantage of providing the campus atmosphere, intellectual and social, and making college facilities, such a s the library, available,” Dr. Esch said. The pupils would get credit and perhaps have a semester of college attendance later, he noted.

He added tha t this type of program has an advantage over programs in which superior pupils enter college full-time after the junior year of high school.

Too often, he said, the senior year for the bright pupil is boring and little more than a repetition of ma- terial from the f i rs t three years.

This new way, they would ge t the college experience and still do not miss the important adventures every high school pupil looks forward to as a senior, Dr. Esch said.

George F. Ostheimer, superintend- ent of city schools, said the college would set the requirements for attend- ance, a s well as fees and schedules.

Thought Provoking Drama Given

On three nights, March 10, 11, and 12, an unusual thought provokihg drama was presented in Ransburg Auditorium. The best criticism can be given by quoting the column from Charles Staff, the theater critic of the INDIANAPOLIS NEWS, written after the f i rs t performance:

“Theater, like love and gold, is where you find it.

“Tonight and tomorrow evening, i t can be found a t Indiana Central with Professor Lawrence Fisher’s produc- tion of Samuel Beckett’s startling “Waiting for Godot,” which opened in Ransburg Auditorium last night.

“The two-act “tragi-comedy” is one of the most discussed and least un- derstood plays of the last decade or so. Like a complex abstract painting or a piece of music by Pierre Boulez, one cannot hope to get i t all the f i r s t time around.

“While Beckett undoubtedly plant- ed concrete ideas and concepts in every word, action and reaction, the play, nevertheless, can engage the viewer on whatever level he chooses, or not at all. The over-all theme, however, appears to be man’s un- happy but ridiculous state. He waits, filling up the hours with trivia, unable to get too close to the others around him who are also waiting, all the while vaguely clinging to a hope tha t the answer will come, if, indeed, there is one.

“Fisher’s black-and-white set, sense of movement, cinematic character touches, feel for the fantastic and the handling of his students are brilliant.

“Except for a certain stridency in delivery and forced quality in pacing, only occasionally, the four young men, Lynn Kinkade, James Ellars, Jack Caster and Thomas Tozer, per- form as if they not only understood precisely what their director wanted but also exactly what Beckett meant. A talented youngster, Gary Burris, rounds out the cast.’’

1935 Alumnus Commencement Speaker

Wayne E. Babler, a 1935 alumnus of Indiana Central, will be the speaker for the sixty-first annual commence- ment June 5. Mr. Babler, a University of Michigan Law School graduate, 1938, attended Otterbein College one year before coming to Indiana Central in 1933. While attending the Univer- sity of Michigan he was a member of the Order of the Coif and editor of the Michigan Law Review. After several years of private practice and teaching of law, he joined the legal staff of American Telephone and Telegraph Company, New York City, where he worked principally on the first Federal Communication cases relating to the development of television. In 1955 he was appointed General Solici- tor of Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, in 1963 was elected Vice President and General Counselor of Wisconsin Telephone Company, Mil- waukee, Wis., and in 1955 was elected Vice President and General Counselor of Southwestern Bell Telephone Com- pany in St. Louis, a position which he now holds.

He is a member of Missouri, Michi- gan, New York and Wisconsin Bars, a member of the Board of Directors of St. Louis Society for Crippled Children and a member of St. Peters Episcopal Church. Wayne’s wife is the former Mary Blome. They have three children.

Vol. 17 April, 1966 No. 4

I

ALUMNI Nnws Published in October, December, February and May by Indiana C e n t d College. 4001 Otterban

Avenue, Indianapolis, Indiana 46227. Second class postage paid at Indianapolis.

Indiana. Printed in U.S.A.

Virginia Cravens, Editor and

Executive Secretary

OFFICERS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION President

Vice President John Mullen, ’48

Paul K. Smith, ’39 Second Vice President

Robert Theil. ’67 Secretary-treasurer

Mrs. Mary Calvert Shambaugh. ’58

BOARD OF DIRECTORS Term ending 1966 Mary Rose Flemiflg Dill. ’50 Gordon France, 33 C. Edwin Pellett, ’49 Geraldine Gilliatt Rodebaugh, ’40 Paul IC. Smith, ’39

Term ending 1887 Ruby Carmony Cord, N36 Jlutin Marshall, ’23 J.mcs Miller, ’65 Blanche Penrod, ’26 Ruth Nicodemus Perry, ‘42

Term ending 1968 William Fisher, ’ Pauline Milh0use.~?61 Mary Calvert Sbambugh. ’68 Robert Theil, ’67 John Trinkle, ’50

Term ending 1969 Richard Hilfiker. ’67 Mrs. Hazel Hopping, ’31 Dr. Max Hoffman, ’60 Eugene Mogle. ‘40 Dr. Dwight Smith, ’40

ALUMNI TRUSTEES Blanche Penrod, ’26, 1966 Dr. Craig Brandenburg. ’30. 1967 Dr. Sherman Cravens, ’42, 1961 Ralph Coddington, ’4s. 1969 Justin Marshall. ’23, 1969

Dean Director

M. of

Ransburg, ’64 Alumni Relations

Please Many of you alumni who read this

will be moving and changing your ad- dress before the October issue of the ALUMNI NEWS. Please send your new address to the alumni office as soon as you know it. Doing this will insure your getting the October issue and save the alumni office ten cents for each of the dozens of wrong ad- dresses that are returned af ter each issue of the NEWS.

Will the members of the class of 1966 please send your September ad- dress as soon as you know it.

DEDICATION PROGRAM Presiding: President I. Lynd Esch

Organ Prelude ..................................... Miss D. Colleen Johnson

Invocation ......................................... President I. Lynd Esch

Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The College Choir

In Appreciation .................................................. Students

The Act of Dedication ................................... .Dr. L. L. Huffman

The Prayer of Dedication ............................ Dr. Robert W. Koenig

Conferring of Honorary Degrees

Virginia Cravens Doctor of Humanities

Donald F. Carmony Doctor of Laws

Harry T. Ice Doctor of Laws

Louis Schwitzer Doctor of Laws

Benediction ....................................... Dean Robert E. Cramer

Reception of Guests-Open House

FRONT PAGE The Louis Schwitzer Center, to be

dedicated April 30, 1966, is designed to be the center of student non- academic life at Indiana Central Col- lege. It was made possible by a gift from Louis Schwitzer, Indianapolis industrialist.

The center contains:

Main (first) floor: High-ceiling dining room seating 600; faculty dining room and adjacent lounge, three other small dining rooms sepa- rated by folding doors; rooms for 12 overnight guests; meditation chapel seating 75; large foyer-lounge area with fireplaces near both entrances to the building.

Ground level: Bookstore; post of- fice; self-service snack shop; recrea- tion room; concourse where students can rest or study, which can be con- verted into a ballroom; six conference rooms, five of them connected by fold- ing doors; an alumni lounge adjacent to the alumni offices; and offices for the student government, student pub- lications, the deans of students, di- rector of development, and director of public relations.

Upper (second) floor: Three large conference rooms which can be en- larged by opening folding doors, with fire places in the two end rooms; three smaller connecting conference rooms; and a kitchenette.

1:31

College Science Honorary National Meeting Held

Sigma Zeta, national science hono- rary fraternity, hed its annual na- tional convention at Indiana Central College Thursday through Saturday, March 31-April 2.

Delegates and chapter sponsors had a social gathering Thursday night af ter registering. During the conven- tion several students presented scien- tific papers.

The opening session Friday includ- ed a business meeting, and in the afternoon the young scientists visited Allison’s Powerama. Dr. Robert Kry- ter, Indianapolis chemical engineer, was the main speaker a t the banquet Friday evening. His subject was “The Challenge of the Space Age.”

The convention ended after another business session and the presentation of student papers Saturday morning.

Richard Rodebaugh is president of Indiana Central’s chapter of Sigma Zeta, and Dr. Robert M. Brooker, chairman of the division of Science and Mathematics, is sponsor.

The papers presented by ICC students included “Spectro-chemical Consideration of the Principle of Con- tinuity of States,” by Rodebaugh; “The Albino Factor in Mice,” by Judy M. Nicholson; and “The Function of a Siphon in a Vacuum,” by Susan Mer- rick. All three Indiana Central stu- dents are Indianapolis seniors.

Angus Nicoson Elected President

Angus Nicoson, director of athletics and head basketball coach at Indiana Central College, was elected president of the National Association of Inter- collegiate Athletics at its business meeting in Kansas City March 11.

He had just completed a year as first vice president and has been a member of the NAIA executive com- mittee for several years.

As a student at Indiana Central, “Nick” became one of its great ath- letes of all time. Five years after his

graduation in 1942 he returned to his a h a mater as bas- ketball coach and again made an en- viable record

A t Central he earned a bachelor of science degree in physical educa- tion and social studies after com-

pling a fabulous college athletic ecord. He was named to the all-state basket- ball team one year and the all-con- ference team two years. In his senior year he captained the Greyhound bas- ketball team which won 16 consec- utive games and was ranked fifth in the Midwest and ninth in the United States. That same year he was cap- tain of the baseball team also.

Upon graduation from Indiana Central he became basketball coach and athletic director at suburban Franklin Central High School. His cagers won 98 games and lost 28 for a .766 average. The school, then known as Franklin Township, won the 1945-46 and 1946-47 Marion County championships, and i t was Capital District champion in 1944-45, 1945-46 and 1946-47.

In the fall of 1947 he returned to Indiana Central as basketball coach and physical education instructor. Two years later he became director of athletics as well. He still is head hardwood and track coach and athletic director, and associate professor of physical education and chairman of the Department of Health and Phys- ical Education.

Nick’s Greyhound coaching record at the end of the 1965-66 basketball season (not counting the team’s elim- ination in the NAIA tourney at Kansas City March 8) was 331 games won and 162 lost fo r a percentage of 673.

Nicoson’s Greyhounds have been in 12 District 21 playoffs for the right to represent Indiana in the NAIA national tournament, and they ad- vanced to the championship meet at Kansas City four of those seasons.

His basketball teams have won the Hoosier College Conference title seven times and placed second eight times since the league was formed in 1947- 48. Central’s athletes, under Nick’s tenure, won the HCC all-sports trophy eight years, placed second six other times, and never finished lower than third place.

In his early years of coaching at Indiana Central Nicoson also directed football teams which won the confer- ence championship twice. The base- ball team has earned six HCC titles under Nick’s athletic directorship.

Many honors have come to Nick. They include his selection fo r 14 con- secutive years to coach the Indiana High School All-stars who play a similar Kentucky team each June in a basketball charity series. He has been voted Hoosier Conference basketball coach of the year seven times, and he was the first person to be honored as coach of the year by NAIA District 21, in 1963-64.

Master’s Program Ready The curriculum for the master’s de-

gree program is now ready and wait- ing for approval by the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Though inspectors from the Association will be on the campus sometime during the month of May, i t is not expected tha t this accrediting agency will meet before August 1. Even then some changes may be made in the curriculum.

This is a master’s degree program designed primarily to meet the needs of students seeking to fulfill the re- quirements for permanent profession- al certification in the s ta te of Indiana on the elementary level. As it is now planned, i t is designed for the needs of classroom teachers.

A sheet giving full information is being sent to all ICC alumni holding a bachelor’s degree and living within a radius of 50 miles of Indianapolis. Any one desiring fur ther informa- tion, either within or without the radius of 50 miles, should write to:

Dr. Robert McBride Director of Graduate Division Indiana Central College Indianapolis, Indiana 46227

34 Nursing Students Received Caps

On February 8 thirty-four fresh- men a t Indiana Central College re- ceived caps in a ceremony symbolic of their satisfactory completion of the first semester of the two-year associ- ate-degree nursing program.

The Reverend William Hogsett, chaplain of Community Hospital, which cooperates with the college in training nurses, spoke at the program at 3 p.m., Sunday, February 20, in Ransburg Auditorium on the Indiana Central campus.

One of the students is a boy, Donald Carrell, of Beecher City, Illinois.

Those from Indianapolis who par- ticipated in the capping service a re Pat Blume, Rosella Shrader, Donna Steffen, Judy Survance, and Gloria Wilkinson.

Cap recipients from other Indiana cities: Linda Adkins, Clay City; De- lane Bone, Portland; Linda Reichard, Portland; Kathryn Buse, Seymour; Kirby Carey, Pendleton; Pamela Davis, Pendleton; Georgann Carpen- ter, New Albany; Trudy Catron, Frankfort; Ruth Cooper, Wabash; Donna Forney, Etna Green; Ruth Gahman, Craigville; Mrs. Janet Golla- day, Lebanon; Karen Owens, Lebanon; Susan Hillsamer, Anderson; Charlotte Jones, Westport; Carolyn Kelsey, Crawfordsville; Linda McClure, Am- boy; Mrs. Patricia Miller, Acton; Mrs. Helen Norton, Greenwood; Cheryl Overholser, Elkhart; Linda Plummer, Greenfield; Susan Spence, Galveston; Carol Stoops, Richmond; and Wanda White, Fountain City.

Students from other states, besides Carrell, who received their caps are: Nancy Bowers, Columbus, Ohio; Kay Cook, Fisher, Illinois; Donna Dial, Decatur, Illinois; and Jeanne Touby, Annandale Virginia.

Miss Virginia Sims, director of nursing education, and other members of the Nursing Department faculty took part in the capping.

Alumnus Becomes Citizen John E. Katsaropoulos ’63 was

sworn in as a U.S. citizen before the District Court of Judge Cale Holder March 22, 1966 with Dr. James A. Weber as witness. John was born in Aigaleon, Athens, Greece. Mrs. Kat- saropoulos is the former Mary Geb- hardt, ’61.

1 4 1

I

I

Special Training Program For Professional Youth

Leaders To Be Inaugurated A new program designed to train

young people fo r professional youth . .

leadership wiil be inaugurated a t In- diana Central Col- lege this fall in co- operation with the American Hunian- ics Foundation.

Indiana Central is the fourth col- lege in the United States and the first in a metropolis t o

be selected by the foundation to offer such a program. The others are Mis- souri Valley College, Marshall, Mis- souri; Salem College, Salem, West Virginia; and High Point College, High Point, North Carolina.

Young people selected to enroll in the program will take basic courses in liberal arts, sociology and psychol- ogy and also receive special training in such areas as social work, adminis- tration of social agencies, group dy- namics, inter-group relations, commu- nity welfare organizations, financing social agencies, institutional relation- ships, child and adolescent develop- ment, social group work theory and practice, field methods and statistics, public relations, recreational and camp leadership, rural and urban so- ciology, and social psychology.

Graduates of the foundation’s pro- gram already are serving as profes- sional staff personnel in Boy and Girl Scouts, YMCA, YMHA, YWCA, Boys’ Clubs, Camp Fire Girls, Junior Achievement, 4H, probation work, cor- rective institutions, rehabilitation, children’s hospitals, church youth camps, and public park recreation.

The foundation supplies faculty and underwrites an accompanying pro- gram of field trips and professional relationships. I t also gives loan fund assistance to upper classmen who cannot complete college without such help. The four-year program leads to a bachelor of arts degree. Dr. Robert E. Cramer, academic dean of Indiana Central College, said in commenting on the establishment of the new hu- manics program:

“The program of the American Hu- manics Foundation fulfills an impor- tan t need in our society. We need professionally trained, ethically sen- sitive, and socially dedicated young

men and women to assume roles of leadership in the various voluntary youth organizations of America. The course of study for this program is excellent. It calls for a liberal arts core as well as a major in human re- lations. We feel honored that Indiana Central has been selected as one of the few schools to offer this course.”

Professor Ross Ludwig has been ap- pointed to direct the program and joined the Indiana Central faculty on April 1. He holds a bachelor of arts degree in health and physical educa- tion and a master of arts degree in education administration, both from West Virginia University. He will di- rect preparation for start ing this new program in September. Since 1931 Ludwig has been working with youth in various ways, as high school teach- e r and coach, as juvenile probation officer and as Boy Scout director for 19 years. During World War I1 he spent four years in the Army, being discharged as a lieutenant colonel.

Taken From Indianapolis Goodwill News

“Miss Mary Ellen Grace exempli- fies the spirit of workers who re- habilitate themselves at Goodwill with the facilities provided by the public . . . people who ask, ‘not charity, but a change.’ Miss Grace supervises the material collection de- partment where you often hear her friendly voice when you telephone for a Goodwill truck.

“You don’t cry today . . , tomorrow . . . or ever . . . because you have been sentenced to a life in a wheel chair. You enjoy the good things and count the blessings they bring you.

“Miss Grace has been selected as Indianapolis Goodwill Worker of the Year for 1966. It is an honor bestowed on tha t person who has done the most to overcome his (or her) handicap on his own.

“She had completed two years of teacher training at Indiana Central College, (from which she graduated in 1937), was on a regular job at Indi- ana Bell Telephone Company, when -in 1944-she was stricken with polio.

“She came to Goudwill on her own and said she was willing to take any kind of job assignment. . .

“Through various jobs, although handicapped herself, from her wheel chair she trains other people for a useful life.”

Wide Variety in College’s Annual Fine Arts Event Four musical programs, an illus-

trated lecture on a r t , three one-act plays and an art exhibit constituted the varied events in the 11th annual Fine Ar ts Festival at Indiana Cen- tral College.

The festival opened Sunday, March 27, and ended Saturday, April 2, ex- cept fo r the recent paintings by Mar- t ha Slaymaker of Indianapolis, which were on display in the Art Gallery through Friday, April 22.

The paintings were on display in the A r t Gallery in the Leah Ransburg Fine Ar ts Center of the Administra- tion Building.

Students of the Music Department gave a recital a t a convocation in Ransburg Auditorium a t 9:35 a.m. Monday, March 28, and a t 8 that evening the Symphonic Ensemble, conducted by Lowell Boroughs, chair- man of the department, with soprano Miriam Ramaker as soloist, per- formed. Miss Ann Abbinanti, curator of education a t Herron Art Museum and art critic of the Indianapolis Ob- server and Courier, gave a lecture with colored slides at Wednesday’s 9:35 convocation. Her subject: “Your Generation and an Old Frank Sinatra Song.”

A t 8 p.m. Wednesday, also in the auditorium, the Indianapolis Civic Or- chestra presented a concert with Mrs. Dorothy Munger, assistant professor of music at Indiana Central and pian- ist fo r the Indianapolis Symphony Or- chestra, at the piano. The orchestra is composed of campus and commu- nity musicians and is directed by Professor Boroughs. The Wind En- semble played again Friday morning at convocation, at 9:35 a.m., in the auditorium.

An Evening with Edward Albee closed the festival at 8:30 p.m. Satur- day when three one-act plays were presented by the Department of Speech and Drama and directed by Lawrence F. Fisher, an assistant pro- fessor. Students appeared in “The Zoo Story,” “The Death of Bessie Smith” and “The Sandbox.”

All of the events during the festi- val were open to the public and all were free except Saturday night.

Secretary Joins Alumni Staff

An addition to the secretarial staff of Indiana Central is Mrs. Wanda Stohry, who joins the Alumni Staff.

Honorary Degrees Given To Four David, who will attend ICC this fall;

Katherine, a sophomore a t Syracuse High School; Norman, a freshman at Syracuse; and Rebecca, 8th grader in Syracuse Junior High.

One Doctor of Humanities degree and three Doctor of Divinity degrees will be given a t commencement exercises June 5.

Dr. Cleo W. Blackburn will receive the Doctor of Humanities degree. Born in Mississippi, he has spent most of his life in Indianapolis, where he has worked tirelessly for the bet- terment of the disadvantaged, not only of Indianapolis but of the nation. Through his tireless efforts, Flanner House Homes, Inc., a non- profit corporation, was formed for the purpose of helping people build their own homes a t lower cost.

Believing that education is one of the most important factors in a person’s upgrading himself, the Board for Fundamental Education, under Dr. Blackburn’s direction, has pio- neered with techniques for teaching adults the basic communications quickly and inexpensively.

Dr. Blackburn obtained his A.B. degree from Butler University in 1932 and his M.A. degree from Fisk Uni- versity in 1936.

National attention has been called to Dr. Blackburn’s work through articles tha t have appeared in

SURVEY GRAPHIC, READER’S DIGEST, CORONET, FORTUNE and CHRISTIAN HERALD.

Dr. Blackburn was president of Jarvis Christian College, Hawkins, Texas, from 1953 to 1964, when tha t position was abolished through the affiliation with Texas Christian Uni- versity.

Dr. Blackburn, whose wife, Fannie Scott Blackburn, passed away in November 1965, makes his home at 4032 Rockwood Avenue, Indianapolis.

The Reverend Virgil J. Hague, ICC 1933, Bonebrake Theological Semi- nary, 1936, with B.D. Degree, will receive the Doctor of Divinity Degree. While most of his servce has been given to the ministry, during the early forties he spent some time a s field man for Indiana Central and was la ter Vice President and Business Manager of York College, York, Nebraska. After 15 years of service to the True- blood Memorial Church of Decatur, Illinois, he has been since 1964 pastor of Robinson First Church, Robinson, Illinois.

Virgil has served and is serving as chairman and member of church and civic committees too numerous t o write in the space allowed.

He is married to the former Rose- mary Dehus, x38, Otterbein College. They have one son, James C., Film Director of CBS, Rockford, Ill., and one daughter, Joylyn F. Hague Tozer ’65, now teaching in Junior High School, Carmel, Indiana.

The Reverend David C. Hancock, ICC ’38; D.B., United Theological Seminary, ’41, has taken short term courses a t Purdue University, Yale University, and the Institute of Ad- vanced Pastoral Studies of Reuel Howe. He has held several pastorates in the EUB Church, the last a t River- side Muncie, where he has been since 1955. He has also been active on numerous committees, councils and boards, among them the Deleware Council of Churches and the Delaware County Chapter of the American Red Cross.

He is married to the former June Krey of Sylvia, Kansas. There a re two sons, Richard Allen and Don Ray.

The Reverend Merrell D. Geible is a member of the Indiana Conference North of the EUB Church with resi- dence a t Syracuse, Ind., where he is Director of Program and Christian Education of the Conference. After being graduated in 1944 from Indiana Central with an A.B. degree, he attended Bonebrake Theological Sem- inary, f rom which he received the B.D. degree in 1947. After spending 18 years as pastor of three churches, he was elected to the office mentioned above and which he now holds.

He is married to the former Lois E. Fulton, x46, Indiana Central. In the family are five children: Elizabeth,

~

College Raises Fees for Room and Board

Indiana Central College has an- nounced an increase of $25 a semester for room and board, effective next September, but added tha t tuition would remain unchanged.

The room charge was increased from $125 t o $135 and the board cost from $200. to $215 for a combined total of $350 a semester or $700 for a year. Tuition remains a t $500 a semester or $1,000 a year.

The tuition covers 12 to 17 hours of credit, most course fees, health serv- ices, health and accident insurance, and other miscellaneous items.

Leo S. Miller, business manager, who announced the new ra te schedule, said the cost of attending Indiana Central was “still quite modest when compared with other colleges and universities around the state.”

Miller added tha t the college would be able to expand its student aid program next fall.

78 IC Students in Supervised Teaching

Seventy-eight Indiana Central Col- lege seniors are engaged in supervised teaching in Indianapolis and nearby schools this semester. Twenty-one of them are in elementary schools and 57 in high schools.

One semester of teaching in an ac- credited school under an approved supervising teacher is required to qualify for a teachers’ license after graduation from college.

Add One The name of Dick Rodebaugh

should be added to the list of 18 Cen- tralites who made Students’ Who’s Who. Dick is the son of Myron x45 and Geraldine (Gilliatt ’40) Rode- baugh and the grandson of the late Dr. D, H. Gilliatt ’26 and Mrs. Ethel Gilliatt ’28.

Future Centralites Keith Jay b. December 24, 1965, t o

John and Susan (Fischer ’63) Karnes. One brother, Christopher, was born February 13, 1965, and was a t home to welcome Keith. The Karneses live a t 1143 East Dudley Avenue, Indian- apolis.

Jennifer Lynn b. February 7, 1966, to Dave ’64 and Marcia (White ’63) Huffman of Post Office Box 64, Den- ver, Indiana.

David H. b. February 14, 1966 t o Mr. and Mrs. Jae Kuk Chung, ’59. He was welcomed home by one brother, Paul H., who was born January 13, 1964.

Bradley Dale, b. January 8, 1966, to Reverend and Mrs. Dale Harner, ’59, of 4105 Bowman Avenue, Indian- apolis 27.

Larry Edward, b. August 12, 1965, to Lt. and Mrs. Harold Vaughn (Grace Maze ’59) of 115 Malloway Lane, Monterey, California, 93940. Larry joins Linda 2, Michael 4, and Clara 5.

Stuart Holmes b. March 13, 1966 t o Gordon ’60 and Susette ’61 Montgo- mery of 3942 Gateway Ct. Indianapo- lis.

Douglas Earl b. February 16, 1966 to Philip and Brenda Lou (Brane) Van Breeman ’61 of La Mirada, Cal- ifornia.

Bart Edwin b. March 18, 1966 to Don ’57 and Mary (Calvert) ’58 Shambaugh of 5117 Beech Drive, In- dianapolis. One brother, Bret was a t home to welcome Bart.

Trent Wade arrived April 8, 1966, Good Friday a t the home of Philip ’59 and Marcia Clark ’60 Strader. The adopting parents live a t 3240 Loretta Drive in Indianapolis.

We Apologize We do make mistakes but t ry to

correct them when they are brought to our attention. Another contributor to the 1964-65 Roll Call was left off the annual report.

Mrs. Mary F. (Hermann) Gillespie should have been listed under the class of ’58.

We shall t ry to do better next time.

An Evening With Edward Albee

The finale of the 11th annual Fine Arts Festival led the audience into the theater April 2, 1966 a t Indiana Central College. An Evening with Ed- ward Albee perhaps can best be de- scribed in the author’s words a s “the unusual, the unlikely, and the un- expected.”

The f i rs t three one-act plays of Albee were presented by the Indiana Central Players. An evening of stir- r ing educational theater, “The Zoo Story,” “The Death of Bessie Smith,” and “The Sandbox” proved to be an excellent climax to the week’s activ- ity on Central’s campus. The combi- nation of these three plays is an edu- cation in itself. Although they are not directly related there is much conti- nuity from one to the other. Because they are about life and death and the human situation in between, they t reat the same general theme. Further continuity is Albee’s experimental technique.

In “The Zoo Story,” for instance, he abstracts the element of communi- cation and the middle class compla- cency which he sees a s a wall to the sensitive person who tries t o under- stand and be understood. “The Death of Bessie Smith,” although centering on a severe racial problem and a study of racial attitudes, is even more ex- citing a s a technique of trying t o see how much exposition can be obtained by implication. Through eight rapid scenes, the audience concentrates on a character tha t never makes an ap- pearance on stage.

A totally abstracted approach to theater is seen in “The Sandbox.” It is an attempt on the par t of the play- wright t o shock an audience into a brief study of a prevalent attitude toward the proper way of death. The last of the three dramas is a brief, 14-minute play in memory of his grandmother.

“The Zoo Story” featured Joseph D. Huse a s Je r ry and Jack L. Caster a s Peter. Cast in “The Death of Bessie Smith” were Robert Coleman as Ber- nie, Thomas Tozer a s Jack, Dixie Evans as a nurse, Lynn Kinkade as an orderly, Barbara Bean, a second nurse, and Thomas Williams a s an in- tern.

A cast of five-Huse a s the Young Man, Sue Merrick as Mommy, James Williamson as Daddy, Sharon Bitzer as Grandma and Alice French a s the Musician, appeared in “The Sandbox.”

Directed by Lawrence F. Fisher, An Evening with Edward Albee was pre- sented at 8:30 p.m. in Ransburg Audi- torium. Mr. Fisher is associate pro- fessor of drama and speech a t ICC.

Evening Division Has Enrollment Hike in

Spring Semester Harry McGuff, director of the

Evening Division at Indiana Central College, has announced that 1242 stu- dents a re enrolled for classes in the spring semester.

The largest single area of enroll- ment is business and economics, with an increase of 10 percent over the spring of 1965. Science and mathe- matics, now the second largest area of study, gained by a phenominal 30 per cent. Third on the list is held by the area of English language and lit- erature. McGuff said the increase in enrollment stems largely from the greater emphasis being placed on edu- cation by the business community. Larger high school graduating class- es, increased interest in adult educa- tion plus new and expanded facilities a t Indiana Central have also contri- buted to the gain in enrollment.

The most stimulating factor, how- ever, may well be the practice of vari- ous business firms of providing a tui- tion refund program for their em- ployees, McGuff stated. When a course is completed successfully the em- ployee is reimbursed for all or a por- tion of the tuition fee.

Said McGuff: “Such programs serve not only to strengthen the em- ployee, but also to provide the com- pany with a more qualified work force. This is a good indication of the value of education as a measure of success.”

Davis Goes to Ohio State Department of Education Chester L. Davis, class of 1947, has

been since 1954 in the Audio-visual Education Division a t Miami Univer- sity, Oxford, Ohio.

On April 1, 1966 he became Educa- tional Consultant in the Division of Instructional Materials with the State Department of Education, state of Ohio.

The family will be moving from Oxford t o Columbus, Ohio about July 1, 1966.

Four to Receive Honorary Degrees at Indiana Central

Building Dedication Four honorary degrees will be con-

ferred at the dedication of the new Louis Schwitzer Center a t Indiana Central College on Saturday, April 30.

The ceremony will be held in Rans- burg Auditorium of Academic Hall a t 2 p.m., after an invitational luncheon in the spacious main dining room of the new building, which will be the center of much of the non-academic activities of students.

Louis Schwitzer (pronounciation: short i a s in Switzerland), Indianap- olis industrialist whose generosity made the Center possible, will be honored with a doctor of laws degree.

A retired veteran of the Indiana Central faculty, Miss Virginia Cra- vens, will receive a doctor of humani- ties degree. Doctor of laws degrees will be conferred also upon a historian and teacher, Dr. Donald F. Carmony, and a n Indianapolis lawyer, Harry T. Ice.

Four students will voice the appre- ciation of their associates instead of having a visiting speaker for the occasion. They are Stephen Maple of Speedway, retiring president of the Central Council, the student govern- ment of the campus; Mrs. Marydee Meyer West, formerly of Corydon but now of Indianapolis; Miss Michelle (Mickey) Stoneburner of Indianapolis; and sophomore Gregory Michael of Hartford City. Dr. I. Lynd Esch, pres- ident of the college will preside and offer the invocation. The college’s Concert Choir will sing, and Miss D. Colleen Johnson, assistant professor of music, will be at the organ console.

Dr. L. L. Huffman of Dayton, Ohio, chairman of the board of trustees of the college, will conduct the ritual of dedication, and the dedicatory prayer will be spoken by Dr. Robert W. Koenig of Terre Haute, an Evangel- ical United Brethren Church confer- ence superintendent. Dr. Koenig is a former minister of the University Heights EUB Church, and on July 1 he will become executive secretary of the Church Federation of Greater Indianapolis.

After the benediction by Dr. Robert E. Cramer, academic dean of the college, there will be an open house and reception in the new $1,250,000 center, with tours for visitors.

Mr. Schwitzer, whose name the

Center will perpetuate, founded the Schwitzer Corporation, which manu- factures precision products fo r the automotive industry, a f te r World War I. He came to the United States from his native Austria before the war, in which he served on the engineering staff of the Motor Transport Corpora- tion.

As a young man Schwitzer was in- terested in automobile and motorboat racing. He participated in the first 500-mile race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in 1911, as well as earlier and shorter contests on the then new track. He became a member of the Speedway’s technical committee in 1912 and was its chairman from 1919 to 1945.

Schwitzer pioneered the super- charging of internal combustion en- gines and was responsible for many developments in turbocharging. His interest in the fine a r t s was shown by his being a eo-founder of the Indi- anapolis Symphonic Choir and a pa- tron and a member of the board of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra.

While the exact amount of Mr. Schwitzer’s gift to Indiana Central never has been announced, i t was stated tha t i t was the largest single contribution ever made to the college.

Miss Cravens, now a professor emeritus, was dean of women and assistant professor of (English from 1927 to 1949. Before tha t she had taught in schools in Washington County, Bloomfield, Orleans and De- catur, and was high school principal at Redkey and Hardinsburg. She earned a Phi Beta Kappa key and a bachelor of arts degree at DePauw

University in 1910 and a master of a r t s at Indiana University in 1938. Upon her retirement from teaching and administrative duties 17 years ago she was elected executive sec- retary of the Alumni Association, a position she still fills.

Dr. Carmony has been a member of the faculty of Indiana University since 1939. A t present he is professor of history and editor of the Indiana University Magazine of History. He also is chairman of the Indiana Ses- quicentennial Commission, and is writing a book, “Indiana in the Pioneer Era,” the third volume in a series commemorating the state’s 150th birthday this year.

Carmony received his bachelor of arts a t Indiana Central College in 1929 and his master of a r t s and doctor of philosophy degrees from In- diana University in 1931 and 1942, respectively.

He taught history at Indiana Cen- tral from 1929 to 1939. He is the author of other historical works and eo-author of a two-volume history of Indiana.

He is a member of the American and Mississippi Valley Historical Associations and a past president of the Indiana History Teachers Asso- ciation and the Indiana Association for Adult Education.

Mr. Ice has been a partner in the law firm of Ice, Miller, Donadio and Ryan since 1934. He received a bache- lor of arts degree from Butler Uni- versity in 1926 and a bachelor of laws degree from Harvard University in 1929.

He is chairman of the board of trustees of Butler University, a trustee of Christian Theological Semi- nary, and secretary of the Board for Fundamental Education. He is a former president of the Butler Alumni Association and of Flanner House, an Indianapolis social service center, and an ex-vice president of the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce.

Ice is a member of the boards of American United Life Insurance Company, Merchants National Bank, WIBC, Central Indiana Council of the Boy Scouts of America, Indianapolis and Indiana Chambers of Commerce, the United Fund of Greater Indianap- olis, Indianapolis Civic Progress As- sociation, Indianapolis Hospital De- velopment Corporation, and the Na- tional Municipal League.

Personals ’59. Mrs. Grace Maze Vaughn

writes from Monterey, California, t ha t her husband, Harold, is working toward a B.S. at the U.S. Naval Post Graduate School. She is busy at home with the children. Larry, their fourth, was born August 12, 1965.

* * :::

’18 & ’26. The M. P. Kindreds, and the Clarence Liechtys, as usual, spent the winter months in Florida.

:$ ::: * ’20 & ’23. Reverend Willard F.

Brown and Mrs. Dorothy Fields Brown have returned from a long visit with their children and grandchildren, Dr. Paul and Lucille Brown Alexander ’49 and daughters of Tiawan, For- mosa, and Margaret Brown Morrison (Mrs. John H.) ’45 of Salt Lake City, Utah.

:> :c I;

’32 & ’27. Othniel and Alletah Eash Catt, who have been spending the winter with Othneil’s brother in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and enjoy- ing their f irst year of retirement in the beauty and sunshine of the South- west, are returning to a permanent residence a t Adams Lake, Wolcott- ville, Indiana.

:2 * ::

~ 5 4 . William L. Gzell graduated from the University of Colorado in June, 58, and has been employed with the Oceanographic Office since Feb- ruary, 1959. He and Gudrun Leon- hardt, x54, a German exchange stu- dent a t ICC, were married in June, 1956. They have two children, Chris- t ina 8 and Eric 4. He is now an ocean- ographer with the U.S. Naval Oceano- graphic Office, Suitland, Maryland. Their address is 5904 Mentona Street, Hyattsville, Maryland.

* * :::

’57. Charles Denbo has resigned a s basketball coach at Brownstown High School, where he has been for four years.

’59. A recent letter brings us up to date on Jae Kuk Chung. He was mar- ried to Linda R. Peterson on De- cember 8, 1962. He received his M.A. in political science from the Univer- sity of Cincinnati in 1963. (Other in- formation in FUTURE CENTRAL- ITE COLUMN.) Jae has been em- ployed at the Bureau of Government- a l Research in Cincinnati since June of 1964 and lives at 660 Straight Street, Cincinnati.

* * 8

’60. John Howland has been pro- moted to district manager of the Cin- cinnati office of the Formica Corpo- ration. He and Mrs. Howland (Sandra Byrum) live at 10375 Deerfield Road, Cincinnati, Ohio. * * :::

’62. Mrs. Susan Weybright is now serving with her husband William at the Mission Girls’ Compound, Ankles- var, Broach District, India. * * i;

’62. Mrs. Gloria 4 n n King Rix re- ceived a master’s degree from the University of Iowa on February 5, 1966.

’64. George Bohlin, is coaching and teaching business at Shortridge High School in Indianapolis. He is assistant football coach and head wrestling coach. In his f i r s t year of coaching wrestling his matmen had a 10-2 sea- son, placed second in the city tourney and won the sectional and regional titles. He had one individual cham- pion in the State Meet.

i; ::: :::

:> :E :::

’33. Robert C. Enyart is working as a librarian in the Denver, Col., Public Library. His address is 2607 S. Madi- son Street in Denver.

::: * :::

’60. Gloria Brewer is now cata- loguer in the library of Ohio Univer- sity at Athens. She earned her mas- ter’s degree in Library science at In- diana University in 1962. Her address is 42 112 Van Vorhes, Athens, O., 45701.

:: :c :::

’35. Pat ty Shea Saxton (Mrs. La- mont) is now living a t 14 Barkley Square, 1335 Montecito Ave., Moun- tain View, Calif., 94040. Her husband, Col. Saxton, who had been with Lock- heed Missile and Space Division is now back with Lockheed in a Techni- cal and Administrative position, after having resigned as Commandant and Principal of Millard Preparatory School of Bandon, Oregon.

... * ::

x62. John M. Cawein writes from Vietnam: ‘ I . . . I did not finish at ICC because I stopped in 1961 and came into the Air Force. I was due to grad- uate in 1962.

“Right now I am stationed in Viet- nam on a big sandpile for a year. I have spent almost two months of that year already. I married a wonderful girl from Florida on April 3, 1965 and have a child on the way. Out of the last year I have spent only three months with my wife.

“I find the ALUMNI NEWS inter- esting because this is my way of keep- ing track of fellow students. I hope some day to come back to ICC and fnish my education.”

Opportunities to Serve Youth To Be Outlined By College, Foundation

Two dozen or more prospective students who are interested in the youth leadership training program to be inaugurated at Indiana Central College in September were guests of the college and the American Hu- manics Foundation Monday April 4.

Professor Ross Ludwig, who was director of the program on the campus; Miss Margaret Halstead, administrator of the program in the foundation’s headquarters in Kansas City, and James L. Roberts, a Boy Scout executive who coordinated prep- arations for the program before Ludwig came to Indianapolis, repre- sented the foundation.

Indiana Central was represented by Dr. I. Lynd Esch, president; Dr. Robert E. Cramer, academic dean, and Don E. Fleener, admissions director. Also invited to be present were Gregg and Harold Ransburg of Indianapolis ; Garrett Troff of Kalamazoo, Mich- igan, and John S. Lynn of Lilly En- dowment, Inc.

The student visitors registered a t 4 p.m. and heard talks by Dr. Esch, Dr. Cramer, Professor Ludwig and Mr. Fleener. After a campus tour and dinner these speakers and others ex- plained various facets of the youth leadership training program.

Indiana Central is the fourth college in the United States t o be selected by the American Humanics Foundation to offer such training, which is designed to prepare profes- sional leaders and administrators for youth-serving agencies.

- ATTENTION

All classes, especially those whose numbers end in 1 or 6. Have you marked on your calendar the dates, April 30 and June 4 and 5? April 30 is the date of the dedication of our amazing new Louis Schwitzer Center. Our “biggest and best” Alumni Day comes June 4 with Dr. Emery ”41 as convocation speaker. June 5 brings the commencement exercises fo r the second largest graduating class in ICC’s history. The commencement speaker will be another alumnus, Wayne Babler ’35.

1 9 1

McFall Baccalaureate Speaker

Dr. Merrill B. McFall, pastor of the F i rs t Methodist Church of Columbus, Indiana, will give the baccalaureate sermon June 5, at 11 a.m., in Rans- burg Auditorium.

Born in a Methodist parsonage in southern Indiana, he graduated from DePauw University in 1927, Magna Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa.

After half a dozen years in business, he entered Garrett Biblical Institute at Evanston, Illinois, to prepare fo r the ministry. After graduating from there in 1935 with a Bachelor of Divinity Degree, he served Meth- odist Churches in Crown Point, Bloomington, Indianapolis (Irving- ton), and Columbus. He has served the Methodist Church in many other capacities than the ministry, such as being Goodwill Ambassador of Meth- odist Churches in Indiana to Meth- odist Churches in Germany, being currently president of SANE Founda- tion for Indiana (State Alcohol Nar- cotics Education) and being delegate of leading Indiana Conference Delega- tion to several General Conferences.

He is now a trustee for DePauw University, Member of Rotary and Masonic Order (Blue Lodge, Chapter, Commandery, Scottish Rite).

His wife is the former Mary Eliza- beth Glossbrenner. They have four sons: David, Jonathan, Richard, Charles.

Golden Anniversary Class Jessie Hanger Ellwanger worked in

the college administrative offices and taught in the English Department of Indiana Central College until her marriage to Walter Ellwanger in 1928. For many years she taught in Alabama Lutheran College, Selma, Alabama, where her husband was president. Recently she retired. The Ellwangers have three sons, two of whom are Lutheran ministers, one in Georgia, and the other in Alabama. The third son recently represented Alabama in the White House Confer- ence on Natural Beauty.

Anna Hardy Myers, soon af te r her graduation, went to New Mexico as a teacher in the mission schools sup- ported by the Evangelical United Brethren Church. When she returned to Indiana, she married Walter Myers. After his death in May, 1932, she moved to Plainville, Indiana, where she now lives. There she has been a very active member of her church and other worth-while organizations. The two children a re former students of Indiana Central College.

John, x45, B.S. in Chemistry, Pur- due University is laboratory super- visor with the Whirlpool Corporation and lives in Marion, Ohio.

Frieda, formerly a member of the Music Department of Otterbein Col- lege, is now in Ethiopia with the Peace Corps.

Lucile Cummins Eaton, after teach- ing two years in the public schools of Indiana, married Dr. D. L. Eaton, chairman of the Physics Department of Indiana Central College. Mrs. Eaton now lives in De Kalb, Illinois, near the campus of Northern Illinois University where Dr. Eaton taught until his retirement. Since her hus- band's death, Lucile continues her work with students and in church and civic organizations. The three daugh- ters of the Eaton family, Marjorie, Alice, and Jane, a r e social workers, Robert is a professor of Economics in Elmhurst College, Elmhurst, Illinois, and James is an electrical engineer in the Beldon Wire Company in Chi- cago, Illinois.

Sibyl Weaver, a f te r graduation, taught English and Latin one year in high school, did one year of graduate work in Indiana University, and then returned to Indiana Central College as Principal of the Academy. In 1921 she was appointed Chairman of the

English Department. Through the pe- riod of thirty-eight years in which she worked in tha t capacity, she contin- ued further study in the University of Wisconsin, Columbia University, the University of Colorado, and the University of Chicago. She retired June 4, 1959.

Wedding Bells The name of Judy J. Slater, '64, is

now Mrs. Judy J. (Slater) Wildman of 2424 East Tenth Street, Indianapolis.

Miss Sandra Lee Bertel, '62 and Tom Wager were married April 30, 1965. They live at 4223 Burkhart, Pat Plaza Apartments, Indianapolis.

* * *

* * * Nancy Hilgert '62 was married to

Weldon McClure on March 20, 1965.

Arvel Hornback '64 was married to Leona Ruth French of Fillmore on February 4, 1966. The couple now reside at Milan, Indiana where Arvel is a social studies teacher in the public school system.

* * *

* * * Miss Pauline Joyce Milhouse '61 and

Arthur Gaule Vermillion will be mar- ried May 29 in the University Heights Evangelical United Brethren Church. Pauline is the daughter of Dr. Paul '32 and Frances (Noblitt) N31 Mil- house of Kansas City, Missouri. Mr. Vermillion is the son of Professor and Mrs. M. T. Vermillion of Athens, Ohio.

Pauline is now on the nursing faculty of Indiana Central and this year is completing her master's de- gree in Nursing Education at Indiana University.

Mr. Vermillion was graduated from Ohio University and received a mas- ter's degree at Christian Theological University and is minister of Christ- ian education at Speedway Christian Church.

Address Style Changing In preparation for the use of auto-

mated mail sorting equipment, the Post Office Department has prepared a standardized two-letter state abbre- viation for use by mailers. Since much of our alumni mail goes out in bulk, we have started to convert our ad- dressing to the new state abbrevia- tions. Some alumni will note tha t their addresses have been changed and others will soon note the differ- ence. This may help to explain why some state name abbreviations look incomplete.

Emery to Speak to Alumni Dr. Donald G. Emery will be the

speaker for the Alumni Convocation of June 4. His topic will be “Where I s Education Going?”

Dr. Emery was born in 1919 and grew up in Indiana. Son of a college president, he has devoted his pro- fessional career to public education.

During his career he has served ably as an elementary and high school classroom teacher, a graduate dean, principal, college professor and su- perintendent of schools.

His Ph. D. degree was earned at the State University of Iowa in 1949. He earned the M.S. at Butler University and the B.A. at Indiana Central Col- lege. He devoted t en years to public school teaching and administration in Indiana and Iowa before joining the University of Omaha in 1951. At Omaha he was instrumental in devel- oping the College of Adult Educa- tion’s national reputation. He also served as graduate dean and assistant to the president.

In 1960 he became Superintendent of the public school system at Shaker Heights, Ohio. In 1965, after inaug- urating several nationally recognized educational innovations a t Shaker Heights, he accepted the superintend- ency of one of the nation’s finest school systems a t Scarsdale, New York.

Dr. Emery fo r many years has been in demand for addresses to profes- sional and civic groups. He has writ- ten for a variety of professional and popular publications. He has held a number of professional and civic posts. Among these are: President, Iowa Guidance Association; President, Missouri Valley Adult Education As- sociation; Vice-president, Nebraska Association of Universities and Col- leges; and Director, Association of University Evening Colleges. In 1960 he conducted educational workshops in England and Spain at the request of t he Strategic Air Command. In 1964 Dr. Emery was a member of a team of superintendents making a special study of educational organiza- tions in France, Switzerland, and England.

Fo r several years he served as a member of the Board of Directors of the nineteen-state North Central As- sociation of Colleges and Secondary Schools. He was chairman of the NCA television committee for five years and was secretary of the NCA Com- mission on Research and Service. Dr. Emery was a member of the Commis-

sion on the Improvement of Instruc- tion fo r the Ohio Education Associa- tion. He has served as a consultant to the U.S. Office of Education and is a past president of the Greater Cleveland School Superintendents’ As- sociation.

Dr. Emery has been a member of the Advisory Board of the Greater Cleveland Research Council and a trustee of the Cleveland St. Luke’s Hospital, the Cleveland Health Mu- seum and the Educational Television Association of Metropolitan Cleve- land.

Dr. Emery has sustained a special interest in the media for teaching and school libraries. He is married to Dorothy Hopping of Indianapolis. They live at 1 Butler Road, Scarsdale, New York, with their son, Mark, and daughter, Martha.

He has also been trustee of Educa- tional Records Bureau and on the Board of Advisors, Encyclopedia Britannica Films, Inc.

Appreciation I want to express my sincere appre-

ciation to all alumni who have an- swered the Roll Call. Your putting some of your treasure into ICC shows tha t you are also putting your heart into it. I know of no place more worthy of both. Every dollar tha t you contribute to Roll Call will be used f o r the improvement of faculty sal- aries. The improvement of faculty salaries should keep pace with the improvement of the physical plant, which every alumnus must be proud of. Thank you sincerely.

Virginia Cravens

In Memoriam Mrs. Etta Thomas Walton, N29,

died February 11,1964, in Long Beach, California, where she had lived since 1950.

* * :::

Rosetta Mae Atkinson, x48, of Paoli died September 26, 1965.

* :.: ::

Charles T. Borchers ’31 died Feb- ruary 10 in Robert Long Hospital after a prolonged illness. Fo r 35 years he had been a teacher at School 34 in Indianapolis. He formerly had been principal at Bridgeport and Drexel Gardens Schools in Wayne Township. He had received a master’s degree from Butler University.

Funeral services were held at the J. C. Wilson Chapel of the Chimes, and burial was in Crown Hill Ceme- tery.

Survivors include the widow, the former Mary Allee x51, three sons, and a sister, Miss Irene Borchers.

* * :::

Mary Catherine Marshall ’26 died in her home at 2611 Lawrence Court, Indianapolis, Monday, March 28, af te r several weeks of illness in the hos- pital. She had taught English in Southport High School for several years before her illness.

Memorial services were held in Abdon and O’Riley Funeral Home with burial in Mooreland Cemetery in Henry County. Survivors include the mother, Mrs. Sarah Marshall of Indi- anapolis, and two brothers, Justin Marshall of Indianapolis and C. Donald Marshall of Sepulveda, Cali- fornia.

* * ::

John S. Yeftich ’54 died April 5 in Methodist Hospital. John was co- owner with his brother Tom ’53 of the Sports Spot.

He was a graduate of Ben Davis High School and a past president of the “C” Association of Indiana Cen- tral College.

Funeral services were held in Conkle Speedway Funeral Home with Burial in Floral Park Cemetery. Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Marilyn Joan Yeftich; two sons, John A. and Curt T ; a daughter Angela Marie; the mother, Mrs. Angeline Yeftich of In- dianapolis; and two brothers, Alex and Tom, both of Indianapolis.

c 11 1

Hunter Goes to Emory University

Dr. J. Paul Hunter ’55 has been named associate professor of English at Emory University. Dr. Hunter has previously held a teaching position at Williams College at Williamstown, Massachusetts.

He goes to Emory from the Uni- versity of California at Riverside, where he is presently serving as an assistant professor of English. Dr. Hunter’s field of special interest is in the Literature of Daniel DeFoe.

He is a native of Jamestown, New York. He earned his B.A. in English at Indiana Central, his M.A. in Eng- lish at Miami University and his Ph. D. in English at Rice University, Houston, Texas.

Mrs. Hunter is the former Caroline Schrack ’54.

Indiana Central Joins Placement Association

Indiana Central College has become a member of the Midwest College Placement Association, it was an- nounced by Paul Pielemeier, place- ment director, who received notice re- cently tha t the college’s membership application has been approved.

More than a thousand colleges and universities belong to the College Placement Council, of which the Mid- west Association is one of eight con- stituent regional groups. This is the f i r s t time that Indiana Central has been a member of any placement or- ganization except those concerned with filling teaching positions.

Affiliation with the Midwest Asso- ciation will assist Indiana Central graduates who are not entering teach- ing to find a greater variety of em- ployment opportunities.

Dr. Koenig Takes New Position

Dr. Robert W. Koenig, who for a number of years was pastor of the College Church in University Heights and in 1962 was elected to the super- intendency of Indiana Conference South, has now been elected executive director of the Church Federation of Greater Indianapolis. He will take his new office July 1.

Mrs. Koenig is the former Kathryn Deal, ’45.

Candidates Named for Alumni Officers

Two Indianapolis men, Otto Al- bright and Paul K. Smith, have been nominated for president of the Indi- ana Central College Alumni Associa- tion. Albright teaches a t Wood High School and is vice president of the In- dianapolis Area Alumni Club. Smith is assistant principal of School 34 and first vice president of the Alumni As- sociation.

Those nominated to represent the Association on the college’s Board of Trustees a re Victor M. Bogle, director and assistant dean of the Kokomo regional campus of Indiana Univer- sity, and Miss Blanche Penrod, dean of girls a t Southport High School. Life members of the association have received mail ballots, and voted for one candidate for trustee a s well as for president. In the case of the as- sociation’s Board of Directors, mem- bers voted for five of the ten candi- dates.

They are Mrs. Mary Rider Bare, Casey, Illinois; Gordon France, An- derson; Arville Funk, Corydon; Sea- born Hillis, Indianapolis; Mrs. Kath- ryn Stine Hinshaw, Shelbyville; Jim Knight, Indianapolis; John Mullen, In- dianapolis, retiring association presi- dent; Richard Reasoner, Indianapolis; Clyde F. Reese, Indianapolis; and Loren D. Thomas, Fo r t Wayne.

150 Pupils Attended ‘Nurses Day’

More than 150 high school pupils attended the “Future Nurses Day” open house held Tuesday, April 5, a t Indiana Central College under the sponsorship of the college and Com- munity Hospital. Following registra- tion from 9 a.m. to 10 a.m., the visi- tors were welcomed by President Esch, and Miss Virginia Sims, director of the nursing department, explained the curriculum.

Indiana Central’s nursing course is the f i r s t fully accredited two-year associate degree program in the s ta te and the fourth in the nation.

Students completing the course a re eligible to take State Board of Nurses’ Registration and Nursing Ex- aminations and become registered nurses.

Following lunch on the campus, the nursing aspirants toured the college and then were taken to Community Hospital for an inspection of its facil- ities.

ICC to Present ‘Atomic’ Course

A one-day course on atomic absorp- tion spectrometry will be held at In- diana Central College April 21, from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Purpose of the course is to present to potential users of this type of in- strument a critical evaluation of i t s theory, uses range, accuracy and limi- tations. The instructor will be Dr. Edward E. Pickett, professor of agri- cultural Chemistry at the University of Missouri. He operates the Spectro- graphic Laboratory at the University, doing analysis on biological and agri- cultural materials, chiefly to ascer- tain their biologically important mineral elements.

The Industrial Relations Center of the college and the Indiana Section, American Chemical Society, a re spon- soring the program.

Public Events at ICC April 26, 1966

April 26-27, Showers Lectures in the Christian Religion, delivered by the Reverend Dr. Harold A. Bosley, senior minister of Christ Church Methodist, New York City.

Lectures at 9:35 a.m. April 26, 4:OO and 7:30 p.m. April 27.

April 30 Dedication of Louis Schwitzer Center, 2 p.m., Ransburg Auditorium.

May 21 May Festival, 8 p.m., Rans- burg Auditorium.

May 25 Pop concert by College Choir, directed by Farrell M. Scott, associate professor of music and cho- ral director, and Indianapolis Civic Orchestra and Symphonic Wind En- semble, both directed by Lowell Bo- roughs, Music Department chairman, 8 p.m., Ransburg Auditorium.

May 29 Senior Candlelighting Service, 8 p.m., Ransburg Auditorium.

June 2-4 Senior Class Play, 8:30 p.m. Ransburg Auditorium.

June 4 Alumni Day.

June 5 Baccalaureate Service, 11 a.m., Ransburg Auditorium. 61st annual Commencement, 6 p.m. (outdoors un- less weather forces i t inside gymna- sium)

CHICAGO AREA The Chicago Area Club of the In-

diana Central College Alumni Asso- ciation will meet on Saturday, April 30, at the home of Mr. & Mrs. Glen (Marilyn Merritt) Walrich in Crystal Lake, Illinois. President George Jacobs has announced a pitch-in Pic- nic f o r the families of ICC alumni in the area. Alumni planning to attend should notify Rev. Jacobs at 802 Hin- man, Aurora, Illinois. Notices of the meeting should be in the hands of alumni by this time, but further in- formation may be received by con- tacting Rev. Jacobs.

NE" ALBANY AREA

The New Albany Area Club has scheduled a dinner meeting on April 23, 1966, at Phrimmer's Chapel. Dr. Robert Brooker, chairman of the sci- ence and mathematics division of t he college will be the speaker. All I.C. alumni and friends living in the New Albany-Jeffersonville-Louisville, Ky., area a re urged to attend. Dorthy Miller Reimold is president of the club.

MUNCIE ANDERSON AREA

A group of twenty alumni and fam- ilies met on Tuesday, February 15, 1966, a t Colonial E.U.B. Church in Anderson to renew alumni activities in the Muncie-Anderson Area Club. A delicious chili supper was served by the women of the church. Rev. John Cheesman and Rev. Homer Achor were selected by the group to provide leadership for fu ture activities.

Following the meeting with Miss Cravens and Dean Ransburg most of the group adjourned to the Anderson College gymnasium f o r the basketball game between I.C. and Anderson, which the Greyhounds won by one point.

Alumni in attendance were: Rev. Cheesman, Rev. and Mrs. Achor, Mr. & Mrs. Calvin Brandenburg, Rev. & Mrs. William Cutshaw, Mr. & Mr. Harold Markle, Rev. C. Edwin Mc- Clarnon, and Mrs. & Mrs. Raymon Swank.

FORT WAYNE AREA CLUB

Thirty-one Indiana Central alumni and their families met on Sunday, January 16, a t Crescent Avenue E.U.B. Church in F o r t Wayne to re- new alumni efforts in the Fort Wayne Area.

Rev. Frank White served the group as master of ceremonies. Refresh- ments and local arrangements were handled by Loren Thomas, Bob New- num. and Emmet Anderson and their

wives. The meeting was informal with Dean Ransburg presenting slides and general information about college and alumni activities.

The group elected a new set of of- ficers for the coming year: Rev. White, president; Mrs. Evelyn Greek Phillips, vice-president; and Mrs. Janis Holloway Thomas, secretary. Future plans for the group will be de- cided at a meeting of the officers in April. The club area includes Allen, Adams, DeKalb, Steuben, Hunting- ton, Wells, Whitley, and Noble coun- ties.

Other alumni in attendance were Imogene Snyder Kaylor, Marshall and Maxine Black Chambers, Joanne Baldwin Lantz, Lynn and Melba Roberson Henry, Jean Miller Barrett, Mary Alice Thomas Delaney, Phile- mon V. Smith, Betty Hawkins White, Lloyd Burden, Juanita Baker Printup, Paul Ankney, and Fanny Varner Boger. Several other alumni indicated interest in future meetings although they were unable to attend the Janu- a ry meeting.

Editors Announced for Newspaper, Yearbook

Barbara Jean Russell of Greenwood and Richard D. Huey of Portland have been chosen editors of the student newspaper and the yearbook, respec- tively, at Indiana Central College for the year ahead.

Miss Russell has been a feature writer on the paper, the Reflector, this year and was a reporter last year, when she was a freshman. A t Green- wood High School, where she gradu- ated in 1964, she was a reporter on the student newspaper two years and editor-in-chief her senior year. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Russell, 23 Crestview, Greenwood, Indiana.

Huey, a junior, who will plan and edit the 1967 Oracle, has been on the staffs of i t and the newspaper both a t Indiana Central. He also had publi- cations experience before graduating from Portland-Wayne Township High School in 1963. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Huey, 630 North Western Avenue, Portland, Indiana.

Both editors a re organizing their staffs, which will assume their new responsibilities upon returning from spring vacation April 12, i t was announced by Leonard E. Pearson, publications advisor.

Terre Haute Alumni Meet The meeting of t he Terre Haute

alumni March 31 proved to be most delightful. A delicious dinner was furnished by First Church, of which the Rev. Philip Stone is pastor. Enter- tainment was furnished by Dr. Donald B. Scheick '38, Chairman of the History Department of Indiana State University. He with his wife had spent a part of his Sabbatical travel- ing and taking pictures in the Holy Land. He showed beautiful pictures of this Land and commented on them in a most whimsical and informative way.

Officers elected f o r the group a re Mrs. Lucille (Chaille) Cummings x46, president, and Willaim Price x59, secretary.

Alumni present were: Rev. C . G. McCrockline '18 and Mrs. McCrocklin, the former Grace Schoonover x15; Rev. Wm. Brett '44 and Shirley (Payne) Brett x45; Rev. Virgil J. '33 and Mrs. Hague; James E. Cummings '48 and Lucille (Chaille) Cummings x46; Francis Wilcoxon '41 and Alene (Koher) Wilcoxon '38; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Price x59; Mr. Erwin E. Brown '65 and Joan (Schisla) Brown '63; Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Lee Mercer x56; Mrs. Winifred Thompson Woodward x41 and husband; Kathryn (Mrs. Robert) Koenig '45; Rev. Philip '42 and Clare (Jacobs) x44 Stone; Dr. and Mrs. Donald Scheick '38; Walter R. Skelton x27; and Donna Stone and Connie McMimmey, who expect t o enter nursing training at ICC next fall.

Textile Exhibit in Art Gallery

A n exhibition of textiles opened in the art gallery of the Leah Ransburg Fine Arts Center at Indiana Central College February 7 and continued through February 25. The pieces were the work of Terry Illes and Budd Stalnaker of Bloomington.

Both caftsmen have national repu- tations as outstanding weavers, hav- ing won awards consistently. In ad- dition to the more conventional and utilitarian approach to their craft, visitors saw weaving, tapestry and other textile techniques displayed as units concerned with the problem of space. This three-dimensional concept ordinarily is not pursued with such interest by most of the nation's weavers. The display was open to the public without charge.

c 13 1

Class of 1921 1921. Reverend and Mrs. L. A.

Huddleston live in University Heights at 1531 Mills Avenue, Indianapolis 46227. Retired from the active min- istry, they busy themselves with local church work, calling on the sick, stamp collecting, and deeds of charity.

Lura Jones Roberts is the wife of Dr. John Roberts, the son of the f i rs t president of Indiana Central. The Roberts’ last active ministry was at New Castle. A t the end of their min- istry there, they moved to 701 Rex Street, Muncie, Indiana.

* * *

* * * Noel A. and Carrie (Moyer) Schull

now live in retirement a t 617 Tanger- ine Drive, New Port Richey, Florida 33552. * * *

Walter L. Myers, deceased May 24, 1932. * * *

Mrs. Delta (Pontius) Cummins lives with her husband Merrill Cum- mins at 4232 Bowman Avenue, Indi- anapolis 46227. Both Mr. and Mrs. Cummins are active in church work and community service. * * *

Blanche C. and Mary E. Rusk are living at Rural Route 1, Hillsboro, Indiana. * * *

John A. Settle, deceased July 24, 1959.

Reverend Leo B. Venatta lives at Ru- ral Route 1, Lerner, Illinois.

* * *

* * * Miss Leora Weimar lives a t 347

Campus Lane, Indianapolis.

Carmony Gives Lectures On State History

Dr. Donald Carmony ’29, head of the history department of Indiana University and chairman of the s ta te committee for celebrating the sesqui- centennial of Indiana’s becoming a state, is giving a series of sketches of Indiana’s history before the high schools of Indianapolis. In the first, a t Emmerich Manual High School, he told what Indiana was like when it became a state, about the convention at Corydon, the f i rs t state capital, and about the moving of the capital to Indianapolis. He reported that in 1925, when Indianapolis became the capital, there were fewer people in Indiana than there are now pupils in the Indianapolis public schools.

Open Second Computer School

Skip Handy ’58 and his partner Walter Nagel, Jr. ( IU) both of Fort Wayne, Indiana, will be opening their

second computer school in June a t 150 Market Street in Indianapolis. This is a fran- chised school with fifty-two sister schools across the United States and Canada. The Elec- tronic Computer Programming In-

stitute will be offering a complete course of study beginning with the basic E A M equipment and con- tinuing through computer program- ming. The Fort Wayne School, which has been in operation since last June, is serving a vital need to northern Indiana, Ohio, and Michigan.

The Indianapolis school will be of- fering day, evening, and Saturday classes. Skip and Walter cordially in- vite you to stop by, renew old acquaintances, make new ones, and tour their facilities. The Handys also invite you to visit their new store which will be opening this fall in the new Glenbrook Shopping Center in Fort Wayne. Their present store, Covington House Interiors, Inc., is lo- cated on U.S. 24 West in the Time Corners Shopping Center. Drop in and visit sometime!

Slaymaker Paintings Exhibit at Indiana Central

Recent paintings by Martha Slay- maker, Indianapolis artist, went on exhibit at Indiana Central College on Sunday, March 27, and remained through April 22. The display was open to the public without charge.

Mrs. Slaymaker has had many one-man shows, participated in nu- merous exhibits, and won countless prizes and awards. She has taught a r t a t the Jewish Community Center and the Herron Art Museum, both in Indianapolis.

She studied a t Ohio State Univer- sity, Edinboro (Pa.) State College, and Youngstown University and Baldwin-Wallace College, both in Ohio.

Indiana Central College’s a r t gal- lery is on the f i rs t floor of the old Administration Building, which houses the Leah Ransburg Fine Ar ts Center.

Faculty Notes Mrs. Dorothy Munger, assistant

professor of music a t Indiana Central and pianist for the Indianapolis Sym- phony Orchestra, participated wi th Eric Rosenblith, violinist and concert master of the orchestra, in a convo- cation which was par t of Anderson College’s artists’ program Thursday, March 10.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Munger took some MENC members to Purdue Uni- versity March 5 to hear concert pian- ist Rudolph Serkin. Those attending were Rebekah Chambers, Verna Ad- ler, Elizabeth Geible and Melanie Manges.

Dr. Roland T. Nelson, Chairman of the Department of History, will be one of twelve paticipants this sum- mer in a field institute in Eas t Africa.

These twelve participants have been selected from colleges from New York to Indana.

It will be specifically a study and observation tour. The participants will be doing intensive study of Afri- can political, social, economic and re- ligious affairs. Dr. Nelson’s project will be the study of African national- ism at work. Most of the time will be spent in Kenya and Uganda in East Africa but with projected visits to other areas.

Grants for the projects have been made by the Department of State and the University of Indiana Non- Western Studies Program.

The group will fly from New York to Dakar June 27 and will spend July and August a t the University of Nairobi and other areas.

“Nick” Quits All-star Coaching

Because of having been elected pres- ident of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics a t Kansas City, Angus Nicoson has had to give up the coaching of the Indiana All- Star team in their Blind Fund Basket- ball battles with Kentucky.

It will be necessary for Nick to be on the road much of the time in June to attend committee meetings a t the time the All-stars are practicing in Indianapolis before the f i rs t game June 18, making it impossible for him to continue the job that has given him so much pleasure for 14 years.

Nick has compiled a 14-11 record with the All-stars since 1952. Seven of the 11 losses were by four points or less.

Plan Launched to Encourage More Negroes To Get College Education Indiana Central College and Attucks

High School will cooperate in a pro- gram designed to encourage more capable Negro high school students to attend a college or university upon graduation.

The six-week series of discussion grew out of conferences between Dr. Robert E. McBride, professor of phil- osophy at Indiana Central, and Dr. Alexander M. Moore, principal of Attucks High School. They were joined in the planning by Earl Don- aldson, vice principal of Attucks; Dr. Joseph Taylor, of the Indiana University regional campus in Indi- anapolis, and other members of the Indiana Central faculty.

“Leaders in public and private higher education have been much concerned in recent years over the fact tha t too few of the capable Negro high school graduates are finding their way into the halls of higher education,” they said in a statement. “While Negroes constitute approximately 13 per cent of the population of Indiana, only about 3 per cent of the total enrollment of the state’s colleges and universities is Negro.

“For those who feel t ha t higher education and professional competence offer one very important road to greater economic and social integra- tion of the Negro in our society, these figures a re not very encouraging. The present program is an experiment designated to attack this problem.”

The purpose of the program was predicated upon three factors:

1. The need to stimulate and en- courage Negro students to think about the personal and social impor- tance of a college education in the rapidly growing and changing Ameri- can society.

2. The need to overcome unrealis- tic fears and misconceptions about college life, i ts character and i ts demands.

3. The need to supply students with factual information and back- ground relative to success in college.

The meetings began Thursday, February 17, and ended Tuesday, April 5. They were held at Attucks and started at 3: 15 p.m. on the days designated, lasting an hour. Most of the students participating were seniors but a few juniors also partook. The group attending the sessions was

I

’Hounds Head for K.C.

Cheerleader Lee Johnson affixes a good luck sign to one of the cars pro- vided by Smart & Perry Ford City for the Greyhounds’ trip to Kansas City. Indiana Central represented District 21 (Indiana) in the N.A.I.A. national tournament, March 7-12. Ford City provided three 1966 Station Wagons for the tr ip through arrangements with Bob Waddell, New Car Sales Manager, and the Alumni Office.

limited to 60 students, with many of the meetings divided into several smaller groups. Some of the topics were “Why Go to College?” “Ingredi- ents of Success in College,” “Facts and Fancies About the Negro in Education,” “The Meaning of Intelli- gence and the Development of Critical Thinking,” “Words, Words, Words- The Importance of Vocabulary,” and “Psychological Principles in Learn- ing.”

Other leaders besides those who planned the program included Pro- fessor Elizabeth Selden, IU Downtown Center; Mrs. Osa Spurlock, Indiana Civil Liberties Commission office; Professor Landrum Schields, IU psychologist; Professor Miriam Lang- Sam, I U history teacher; Dr. Dan Wolfe, assistant director of the IU extension center, and these members of the Indiana Central College fac- ulty :

Dr. Marvin G. Baker, chairman of the Education Department; Professor Marvin Henricks, chairman of the Sociology Department; Dr. Robert Brooker, chairman of the Division of Science and Mathematics; Dr. Blanche Krick, psychology professor; Pro- fessor Martha Waller, English De- partment; Professor Ray E. Warden, Jr., English Department; and Mrs. Florabelle Wilson, Assistant librarian.

c 15 1

New Summer Program A greatly expanded summer pro-

gram is being offered this year a t Indiana Central. The program includes both day and evening classes. A June high school graduate can work during the summer and still get “a taste” of collegiate academic requirements before launching his full program in the fall. This opportunity is available to students even though they do not plan to attend Indiana Central in the fall.

A person who does not meet regular admission requirement may enroll in the summer on a trial basis. He must enroll fo r two courses, English Com- position and the History of Western Civilization. If he demonstrates his ability and determination by passing these courses with a grade of “C” or better, he may then be admitted to the college in September as a regular student. Dormitory facilities are available fo r this session. The cost will be $60 for the eight week period. The tuition fee will be $20 per credit hour.

Any person interested in this sum- mer program should contact:

Indiana Central College Evening Division 4001 Otterbein Avenue Indianapolis 46227

ALUMNI NEWS INDIANA CENTRAL COLLEGE

4001 Otterbein Avenue Indianapolis, Indiana 46227

Second Class Postage

Paid at

Indianapolis, Indiana

ICC Leads All-Sports Race With the end of the basketball and

wrestling season, the 1965-66 Hoosier College Conference All-Sports race finds Indiana Central holding a slim 2% point lead over second-place And- erson.

The Greyhounds successfully defended their 1964-65 title in wrestling under coach Paul Velez. However, Angus Nicoson’s basket- ballers dropped to second place for the f i rs t time in three years, finishing behind Manchester’s Spartans.

A tie for third place in football and sole possession of third place in tennis gives Central 51 points to- ward the All-Sports trophy. Ander- son is a close second with 48% points, followed by Taylor, 44%; Manches- ter, 38; Hanover, 27; Franklin, 25; and Earlham, 7.

Earlham being a new member gained no points in football and basketball. Although IC’s hardwood quintet relinquished the conference crown this season, the Nicoson-led Hounds earned a trip to Kansas City and the national NAIA tourney for the second time in three years.

The Greyhounds gained revenge in the . NAIA district 21 tourney a t Anderson by clubbing Manchester for the second time in three meetings, 98-84, then won the K.C. trip with a

scintillating 100-83 mop-up of host Anderson.

The Hounds nearly pulled the upset of the tourney when they pushed second-seeded Carson-Newman of Tennessee to the wire before bowing,

Coach Velez’ grapplers, winners of the f i r s t annual ICC wrestling meet last year, retained their title in the conference and also grabbed the Little State championship for the third straight time.

Posting an 8-3 dual meet record, the

Hounds were led by senior Tim Giles, one of the most outstanding Indiana Central wrestlers in recent years. Giles lost but three times this year and 12 of his 14 victories were pins, including three straight under two minutes in the HCC meet. Tim, a 145-pounder, was voted the outstand- ing wrestler in both the ICC and Little State meets. He also was voted most valuable wrestler by his teammates and received the trophy for the fastest pin a t 43 seconds.

Other outstanding wrestlers were sophomore Mike Watkins, who won the Little. State 115-pound title; Dale Sidebottom, HCC and Little State champ in the 152-pound class; Dave Graves, 177 champ of HCC and Little State, and Maurice Barnes, who was also the champ in the HCC and Little State 191-pound class.

68-67.

16 1

Golf Preview Head golf coach Paul Velez has

five returning lettermen, including the medalist for the past two seasons, Dave Wise. Valez is still searching for his first HCC golf championship as he has guided the Greyhounds to two seconds and a fourth the past three years. Matches yet t o be played are :

April 19 26

May 5 10 13

Manchester At Taylor

Marian At Anderson Hoosier Conference and NAIA meets a t Marion,

Indiana

True Receives Promotion Clarence True, N35, has received a

promotion to the position of Regional Supervisor of the Columbus, Bloom- ington, Jeffersonville, and Madison field offices of the Indiana Revenue Service.

As Regional Director, Mr. True will oversee the duties of 55 field auditors. For a period of four years, 1941 to 1945, he served with the Auxiliary Military Police, and for a two year period he was a special investigator for the Ordinance Division of the U.S. Army.