Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 June 1947 — Page 15
sttuce : peel”and chop onion half the onion over d slice potatoes and f onion on them. Add yer and celery and
. Cover closely and gerator. When ready ham, cut into thin ips, and cheese, cut pes. Last, add lettuce. before serving. . ~ ROT RING nesday lmnghaon) h carrots ‘ated
ed butter h stale bread cubes ped celery . chopped anion pped parsley
until tender (either | or cut crosswise), ninutes. Drain, mash; | to milk, beat and d carrots. Add redients and fold in ten egg whites. ell-oiled six-cup ring ) of waxed paper put of the mold will aid he 'ring.) Place diack of moderate oven ) and bake one hour,
U. President gn
June 2 (U. P).— ole announced today as world president of Christian Tempert the organisation's nal. convention in 10 opens. Thursday ' in N. J. vho is 88, has been a officer for half a orld president for 18
load required to indent metal in was properly heat-treated. By PATRICIA CLARY
Press Staff Corr 108 ANGELES, June 2. — One
¢ of the nation’s top metallurgists says
that no man will admit the woman next to him is an equal, even if she's twice as good. Metallurgist R. H.' Smith knows from presonal experience. She's a
for 16 years,” she said, “and I've concluded that any talk ‘about equality of the sexes is just a lot of idle chatter—an awful waste of
face a new hurdle each time I meet a man in the laboratory or in business. He instantly and suspielously wants to know: “What's that woman doing here?”
powerful engine. Developing many thousands of horsepower and revolving at speeds’ Bundreds of times that of an automobile engine, the turbodyne reQuires daily pioneering in new
WOMAN METALLURGIST—No man will admit a woman is equal to him even if she is twice as good, Metallurgist R. H. Smith declared recently in Los Angeles. She is pictured measuring the
metals and new applications.
order to determine if the metal
Mrs. Smith and her two assistants (male) are constantly looking for metal which will stand just a little more heat, just a little more stress.
The pert, attractive brunet can tell by watching the giant engine's Jet exhaust, the pattern of flame flashing through blades spinning with the speed of sound, what's happening to her metals. But she still has to convince every man she | encounters that a woman can know what she’s doing. .
‘Women Work Harder “Even then he stays distrustful, often for quite a while,” she said. “I have to work harder, every day, than a man would, because a woman never gets more than half credit.” One of 10 children of a Memphis, Tenn, industrialist, Mrs. Smith has encountered trouble ever since she was graduated from Vanderbilt 16 years ago and went to work in a Birmingham, Ala., pipe factory. She tenaciously built up a top professional reputation and wrote a book on metallurgy but, she said,
Homemaking—
the freezing compartment of a refrigerator and are excellent “emerstandbys.
» .
P.-T. A. Jubilee
!
Is Opened in Chicago
CHICAGO, June 2 (U. P).—A
serise, and sald that, with a little help, they may find a way to reduce the cost of having families. Joseph K. Folsom, Vassar professor of sociology, said that several United States communities have been conducting family life education programs. He d that “no. longer do we look tofthe expert for some mys-
' terious “scientic conclusion, some
precise formula of psychology to solve problems. We realize more and more that parents already possess much wisdom and common
~ sense which must be relied upon in
dealing with individual cases.”
'Co-Operation Needed’ “These programs,” he said, “by their very nature, are not activities which can, be assigned to any one group or profession, Many agencies and professions have something to contribute. And the problem is to
| keep them in close touch with one
| another and to get co-operative ac- , tion in planning programs and de- , veloping leaders.”
Folsom said that in America, people have been more concerned
! with the quality of family life than
with the number of children. “Enough people want children,”
he said, “and have them, but not
enough people want enough children to overcome the high cost of raising a family, “If we meet the qualitative probwell, we may possibly solve at {it sume time the quantitative prob-
'U. 8. Lagging’ He spoke at the golden jubilee | ‘convention of the National Congress of Parents and Teachers, which opened here today.
i . Newest Thing Wm Frozen Food Line 1s Whole Meal, All Ready to Heat.
A WHOLE MEAL in the refrigerator, just waiting to be heated, sounds like the answer $0 a busy homemaker's prayer. Not only can she pop her vegetables into a pan and onto the stove in & matter of minutes, now she can select her meat dish in the frozen food have i ready at a moment's notice.
Miss Viola Receives Collegiate Honor
Miss Christine Viola, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, George Viola, 3526 N. Capitol ave. has been voted the best-dressed girl at Whitworth Junior college, Brookhaven, Miss. Afreshman, Miss Viola is a liberal arts’ major, secretary of the Student council, member of the Glee club and dramatic workshop and feature editor of the campus paper. She will appear in the “Miss Whitworth court” in June.
Convention
Miss Viola
Mrs. L. W. Hughes, Arlington, Tenn., congress president, told the convention that children must have education to “train their hands and their heads and also their hearts.” ‘Cost Is Cheap’ “Of course such an education is expensive,” she said. “Yet if looked upon in terms of human values and human happiness, the cost is cheap enough. Other countries think so. “Up to now we have given less than 2 per cent of our national! income to education, whereas impoverished Britain is about to launch -an ambitious educational program that will cost 6 to 7 per of her precious income. “And Russia plans to spend 17 to 20 per cent of hers on education for many years to come,”
Groups Hear Talk By Dr. Westcott
Dr. Regina Westcott, psychologist and author, spoke this afternoon on “Character Education in 1947” at a Joint meeting of the Indianapolis Council of Parent-Teacher Associations and the Indianapolis Council of Church Women. The talk was a part of the parent education conference ‘sponsored by both groups today in Block's auditorium,
Auxiliary Tea | Mrs. Donald A. Morrison, Wynn.’ dale, will be hostess at a tea tomorrow’ for the new ‘members of the Junior auxiliary to the Indian apolis Day nursery. They are Mesdames J. Neill Garber, Willlam R.
Ehrich, Joseph A. Miner Jr., A. M.
McVie, - Jack . Evans, Charles E. Brown, Kenheth Kinnear, J. Wil liam Wright Jr. and William J. Millikan and Miss Nancy Wohigemuth,
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