Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 5 Mar 1942, p. 2

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.ml cylinder press, and other 4 equipment will be installed in a campus building for use by these students. hc'm-wllbemht by members of the journalism y. Medill is now offering an evening course in the principles and practice of hand composition for beginning printers of the Chicago area. The popularity of this course has led to the establishment of the new Newsâ€" paper Production institute, according to Dean Olson. High School CGrads to Learn Journalism at N. U. Appeals from the National Editorial association and the Cook County Suburban Publishers association for trained apprentices to replace men drafted or attracted to other jobs led the Medifi school to offer the proâ€" gram, Dean Olson said. In September about 30 boys and girls will attend three terms of three months each, being assured jobs with rural newsâ€" papers upon the successful completion of the work. They will be taught become advanced apprentices in small print shops and to serve as editorial assistants for weekly or small daily To meet the need for trained perâ€" souncl by smallâ€"town newspapers, the Medili School of Journalism of Northwestern university will inaugurâ€" ate a special program of training in printing and journalism for high school graduates, Dean Kenneth E. Olson announced today Thursday. With these famous Schubert melâ€" odies "Ave Maria" "Impatience," "Serenade" â€""Unfinished _ Symâ€" phony." . :> *.:<:â€"._. s THURS., FRL, SAT, Mar. 12â€"14 March of Timeâ€""What to Do in An Air Raid." "Don‘t Get Personal" Disney Cartoon. GLENCOE During the summer a battery of 16type machines, several platen Mary Astor, Humphrey Bogart FRI. & SAT. t Chester Morris, Harriet Hilliard Ts‘ 258 id T Bettseys . 1100 ts 2100 TELEPHONE H. P. 2400 HIGHLAND PARK, ILL Ilona Massey, Alan Curtis in THURsDAY SUN, MON., TUES., WED. Mar. 8â€"9â€"10â€"11 "Maltese Falcon" Hugh Herbert, Anne Gwynne "Moon Over Her Shoulder" Lynn Bari, John Sutton "Confessions of Boston Blackie" "NEW WINE" A LCY O N â€" "@;.nmmn "TRAGEDY AT MIDNIGHT®" A radie mystery full of suspense and thrills! ERIC _ LINDENâ€"CBCNIA l.'m "SWEETHEART OF THE NAYVY" "NIGHT OF JANUARY 16th" ;‘.m-b.u“dh.! JAMES E1L1SONâ€" ROBERT PRESTONâ€"ELLEN DREW aa ME EFERINE Post Sroay "23V» HOURS LEAVE" _ ere‘s to fun and plenty of itâ€"SEE IT! w mmeof L U Sm RAY MILLANDâ€"VERONICA LAKE "I WANTED WINGS" ADDED: SELECT SHORT SUBJECTs "THE BODY DISAPPEARS A gale of laughs, JEFFREY LYNNâ€"JANE WYMAN , MOVIES AND AMUSEMENTS LINDSAYâ€"JOHN HOWARD thrills and music! Special music by the Sunday Evenâ€" ing Club choir and the Lawrence Colâ€" lege A.. Cappella Choir from Appleton, Wisconsin, now on its annual midwestâ€" ern tour, will be features of the meet ing. The Club‘s choir will sing at eight, assisted by Mark Love, Charles Sears and Louise Hoe. The visiting group will appear at the seven o‘clock meeting, when Dr. Charles T. Holman, University of Chicago Divinity School, will also continue his Lenten series of informal talks. Admission is free. Dr. Luther W eigle To Address The Sunday Evening Club Dr. Luther A. Weigle, world leaâ€" der in religious education, dean of Yale Divinity School, president of the Fedâ€" eral Council of Churches, will be next Sunday‘s speaker at the Sunday Evenâ€" ing Club in Orchestra Hall. He will speak at eight on "Jonah Today". Edâ€" ward Hall Taylor and Hermon D. Smith, trustees of the Club will take part in the meeting. Members of the Immaculate Con ception ‘parish unit in Highland Park who will attend the meeting are: the president and associates of the society. Rev. J. D. O‘Neill, D. D., 200 Green a o new ‘Wigen this number is reached the number of men in the Holy Name soâ€" ciety of the Chicago diocese will be Bay rd., is sent membership is 175,000. Executive Members of Immaculate Conception ToCounty Meeting Executive members of the Immacur late Conception parish Holy Name soâ€" ciety will gather at St. Anastasia parâ€" ish hall, in Waukegan, near 624 Dougâ€" las ave., for the first Lake county Disâ€" trict meeting of the new year, under the direction of Rev. Joseph Garrity, mof St. Anastasia‘s church, on arch 10 at 8:15 p.m. Rev. Garrity, pastor of the Waukeâ€" chairmen of the 25 Holy Name units in the Lake County Holy Name disâ€" trict, who are meeting for the purpose of discussing plans for the annual Holy Name membership campaign to "We make your wardrobe live a EXCLUSIVE Exclusive Tailors & Cleaners 1545 3. St. Johns Ave. C Cleaning with Charecter BOND DAY M AK E EVERY [ 3 PAMDAY MARCH ¢â€"14% of the church 10â€"11â€"12 The Ladies Aid society of Zion Luâ€" theran church will meet in the church social rooms at 2 o‘clock Friday, March 6. Mrs. Elizabeth Engwick and Mrs. Ben Lundgren will have charge of the meeting. Rock Island Lines current carloadâ€" ing figures released today by E. M. Durham, Jr., Chief Executive Officer, are as follows: cago, as well as 500 Chicago Elks, are expected to attend. Judge McClelland, as guest speaker, will deliver an auâ€" thoritative message on the part that all Elks must play in the present national emergency. The general character of that part may be gathered from the record of the work and achievements of the Order during the First World Rock Island Car Loading February Figures The event will be sponsored by Chiâ€" cago Lodge No. 4, B.P.O.E., and sup ported by the Elks Lodges in the Northâ€"East District of Illinois, Goâ€" vernor Green will extend to the Grand Exalted Ruler the official welcome of the State of Illinois, and Mayor (Kelly will offer a like welcoming courtesy on behalf of the City of Chiâ€" cago. Judge Joseph Burke of the Apâ€" pellate Court, who is Exalited Ruler of the Chicago Logdge, will welcome Judge McClelland on behalf of the lodge. General Chairman Frank J. Ja cobson will preside at the banquet. In spirit of fraternal benevolence, Governor Dwight H. Green and Mayor Edward J. Kelly, both wearers of the Elks Emblem, will join in welcoming Judge John S. McClelland of Atlanta, Ga., Grand Exalted Ruler of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, to the Orders Victory Roundup Banquet in the Grand Terrace Room of the Morrison Hotel on the evening of March 9. 4 Several hundred members of the 17 lodges of the district outside of Chiâ€" Greenâ€"Kelly To Attend Elks Bangquet motoer almb prosidant. Rainy Days." This poster sirth in the "Teach Your Â¥r series of the 194142 school Week ending Feb. 21, 1942. . . 27,406 Cortesponding week last year 23,560 Previous week this year.... 27756 [‘I‘HE POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDCE %: NIONI B _ & e/ ‘: :‘ 2 1]'& T l‘, is P h 7 The coâ€"stars in "New Wine" are supâ€" ported by a group of players who turn in unfailingly stirring portrayals. Among these are Billy Gilbert as a Viâ€" ennese coachman, Albert Basserman as the great Beethoven, Binnie Barnes as the fashionable Countess Esterhazy, Sterling Holloway in the role of a bookâ€"keeper at the farm. "New Wine" was directed with sprightly tempo and tells its story without any waste moâ€" tionâ€"it entertains from its first shot to its final fadeout. MUSICAL SEQUENCES Woven into the love story of "New Wine" are many of Schubert‘s imâ€" mortal melodies, with many of them vocalized brilliantly by Ilona Massey, who first rose to fame as a singer in Vienna. Miss Massey sings superbly such famous melodies as "Serenade," "Ave Maria" and "Impatience." One of the outstanding attractions of the film is the singing of the St. Luke‘s Chor isters who render such memorable muâ€" sic as "Marche Militaire" and accomâ€" pany Miss Massey when she sings the "Ave Maria." A motion picture overflowing with all. the ingredients of delightful and zestful entertainment is William Seâ€" kely‘s "New ‘Wine,"the romantic draâ€" ma, which corstars lovely Ilona Massey and handsome Alan Curtis at the Glenâ€" coe Theatre March 8, 9, 10, and 11. Directed by Reinhold Schunzel, "New Wine" tells a sparkling story of Franz Schubert‘s early Vicnnese daysâ€"when that onceâ€"glorious city rang with song and music and romance. Schubert was forced to flee from Vienna to escape being conscripted for a foreign army and he landed on a huge Hungarian estate where he meets a giddy countess and her manageress. The latter, a beautiful young girl, 1ealizes his great genius and falls in love with him, to boot. How her efâ€" forts to help him fail and bring them back to Vienna provides the picture with many amusing and lightâ€"hearted incidents. Back in Vienna, the lovers once again live through many exciting and dramatic experiences and the story ends with a smashing, unexpected cliâ€" ‘Now Wine‘ Wins Top Honors As Lively Musical Romance * SUPERB PORTRAYALS UX VWaniLiA Comes reom Bob Strong and his NBC dance bandâ€"featuring Mary Ann Mercer‘s singingâ€"will <be the attraction this evening, March 5, at Fort Sheridan‘s weekly dance in the Post Service Club. The troupe will include Strong‘s comâ€" plete band of 16 pieces, "The Wrecking COMMUNITY CENTER CALENDAR Bob Strong To Plag For Dance At Post Tonight and vocalists Ray Mcintosh and Miss Mickey Lips, 836 Centerfield Court, is a patient at the Highland Park hosâ€" pital. He recently underwent an apâ€" more than a year until the bombing of the city closed the theatres. The American production was an immediate bit. The play closed recently on Broadâ€" way after winning the Drama Critics Circle Prize for the best play of the year and establishing a new record for a Broadway engagement for Miss Barrymore by virtue of its lengthy enâ€" gagement (475 performances. w ere marked up before the final curtain rang down on the New York run of some sixty weeks). A 25,000 mile, twoâ€"season, transconâ€" tinental tour has been arranged for Miss Barrymore and her supporting cast, which is headed by Edmond Breon, Richard Waring, Theima Schnee, Marcel Dill, Esther Mitchell and Eva Leonardâ€"Bovne. Thursday, March 5 9:30 a.m. First Aid class 1:30 p.m. First Aid class 4:30 p. m. Seventh Grade class 7:00 p.m. Chess Club 7:45 p.m. First Aid class Friday, March 6 7:00 p. m. Boys‘ Club 8:00 p.m. Music Group, Sandor Saturday, March 7 9:00 a Monday, 8:00 p. T uesday, skeptical of of the stage. the Heraldâ€"A Ethel Barrymore Extends Engagement To March 14 Few productions in recent seasons from Chicago‘s dramatic critics as kas "The Corn Is Green." Cecil Smith of the Chicago Tribune rated it "the best play of the season" and said that Miss Barrymore is "the queen of the American stage." Lioyd Lewis of the Daily News said that "it becomes a great pleasure to sit at her feet for three hours and watch her fill a mlâ€"nmw'a.m‘ Cassidy of the Sun declared that "there are times when the theatre is a wonâ€" derful place and last night at the Harris was one of them, Robert Polâ€" lak of the Times said that "with the coming of ‘The Corn Is Green‘ to the reason for its being with trumpets and banners. It will compel the most Because of the enthusiastic reception playgoers in Chicago and surrounding communities have given Ethel Barryâ€" more in "The Corn Is Green," Herman S}-l-. producer of the prizeâ€"winâ€" nq_idpmybymah lbeClnupw lr“ r Satâ€" urday, March 14. oweh 7:30 p. m. 8:00 p. m. ‘ednesday, 9:30 a. m. 8:00 p. m. 9:00 a. m. Arts & Crafts Club [onday, March 9 1:30 p.m. First Aid class + 8:00 p.m. Table Tennis Club uesday, March 10 9:30 a.m. First Aid class 4:00 p.m. Junior Airplane Club 4:30 p.m. Center‘s Executive Comâ€" mittee 7:30 p.m. North Shore Philatelic Society 7:30 p.m. First Aid, Dist 3 OCD g:otdinat' Council ‘arch II"' Music Club Chorus Camera Club . s to yield to the ma And Ashton Stevens erican, said that "ne lamp that will out ras first preâ€" : it ran for the bombing Stevens of hat "never straighter. with Joan Bennett. He has a rousâ€" ing fight with a pair of Gestape men, benches. Result so farâ€"one sprained When movie folks say ‘"See Eddie about it," they refer to Edward Arâ€" nold, the busiest actor in Hollywood. guild, chairman of the Hollywood Permanent Charities committee, | head of the U.S.0. for the screen inâ€" { dm.wumd&ol‘flw! al Defense committee, active in Red ; Cross and Community Chest drives | â€"he still finds time to do fine work in pictures. g 30 phay in "The Forest Hangary » * athletic for the first time in ‘‘Highly Ryser‘s lost his T ommy Jones, who has :d.l.-, en ol C 4 he dentist who discovered ansestherie ; Ee-'-“ 2 kok e Gladys Swarthout‘s radio and conâ€" eert engagements for the next six months have been insured for $2,000 American insurance company which Family Hour Broadcasts can‘tinsure its own starâ€"American companies aren‘t allowed to assume this type of risk. Not that it‘s such a risk â€"Miss Swarthout has missed only one radio engagement in 10 years legally dead in 1917. He packed up and started Rast, fnally got to New Bowes intreduced Walter Williams, §4â€"yearâ€"oid singer of Irish folk tunee, en the air. In a lonely cabin in Alasks, Arthur Williams heard his in the Annual Advertising awards That popular air show, ‘"Dufty‘s Tavern," will celebrate St. Patrick‘s dsy by moving to the Tuesday eveâ€" ning spot that‘s been occupied by shows, has been named the outâ€" has been held in recent years by Jack Benay, Information Please and Fibber McGee and Moliy,. A jury of "I Married a Witch,"in which he appears opposite Veronica Lake. But for the main role he needs practicalâ€" men decides upon the awards. 4 picture and radio stars are doing everything they can to help in this time of national erisis. Dorothy Lamour sold more bonds om that recent trip of hers than anyone else in the country has so far; men like Bob Hope and Bing Crosâ€" by are giving much of their free time to playing benefits. Conâ€" stance Moore was all set for a tour of army camps, singing songs from her various films, when an impacted wisdom tooth kept her home. Reâ€" covering from that, she acquired an in the service who‘s in or near New York pass this news along to him. Twice a month Fred gives a party at the club rooms which he mainâ€" tains for the men in his band. He marines in turn. Wives of the fiends take pictures, pretty girls are on hand as dancing partners. donned five different sets of makeup to make tests for five different roles which he plays in the brief prologue WY all motion picture and radio stars are way. _ _____ By VIEGINIA VALE (Released by Westery Newspaper Union.) . . Regis Toomey‘s strean carser began Fred Waring has succeeded in JOEL McCREA to the major. it if you‘ve a man

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