Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 May 1948 — Page 17
llation of officers pad by Mesdames Still. and R. IL, Margaret Ufford nusical progrdm,,
Alumnae Club, Theta Sorority, lecture by Mrs, jevitt at 8 p. m, ney Chapel, But: {er topi¢ will be onference.” vho has just vee Pan-American ogota, Colombia, d by Mrs: Phillip: committee chair« mes Agnes Os ) ‘Davis, Kenneth nn N. Summers, r. and Spurgeon
of . - Indianapolis eta Tau Alpha installed at the tomorrow in the , Merchants Na. ostesses will be es L. Allen, DonJohn G. Leech, ennox, Kenneth
Mrs. H E. )
ding and correries; Miss Elaine
. OF COMMERCE ROLD KELLER, Commissioner
MERGE
oid. A8p
COZY HOUR—Martha Wilson [pouring] and Anne: Rust pre-
pare the soft drinks and cookias that make their after-school! social hour even cozier, This is just one phase of the extensive Broad Ripple High School activity-program,
Let's Eat— Sauce Recipe Comes From New Orleans
By ‘META GIVEN ° ON A RECENT visit to New| Orleans I ran across a remoulade| sauce that is soon to be given] wide distribution. It is being manufactured by a well-known French restaurant in that city where shrimp remoulade has been made so famous. | The name suggests that its only | use might be in making shrimp! remoulade. But it also serves as a welcome alternate for Frenéh dressing in tossed green salads or for thousand island on plain, wedges of lettuce. It produces a tempting tuna or salad, .a fine topper for broiled brains and sweetbreads and gives ham salad mixtures for sandwiches or the —— ‘meat platter a tantalizing touch. | The recipe for -homemade re-| moulade sauce follows; it's a fine | substitute until the commercial type reaches the market. And| perhaps you can devise your own
+ | {
~ » ~ By JEAN MANEY BROAD RIPPLE High School students can’t complain about lack of things to do — their school activity program
covers every field of teen-age
“The development - of the ideals and purposes of democracy is the keynote of our activities program,” K. V. Ammerman, principal, states. “We believe in the modern
high school as a social organi-
zation which seeks to widen the experiences of individuals and groups as training for citizenship.
“Membership is dependent on common interests and common responsibilities. In a period of -history' when there is. much em-phasis-on- ‘joining,’ no one. is left out, unless he chooses not to participate. The teen-ager can find an outlet and skillful direction for his undeveloped talent and tremendous energy,” Mr. -Ammerman says. - - .
THERE are 22 clubs at Broad Ripple with approximately 1100 participants from a “student body of 1350. These Zroups range from Orange Aid, a service group to which all students belong, to special interest clubs
Photos by Henry E Glesing Jr,
PHOTOGRAPHERS AT WORK-—The Photography Club members do double They are (left to right] Dick DeBoest, John
duty as models and as cameramen,
Cooper, Bill Cale, Bob Hansen, ~Carolyn Dessauer, Bill Frazer, Sallie Hathaway and Art Plumley. *
INTERVIEWING THE STARS—Marcia Walls, news editor of the Riparian; interviews Patricia Miller and Edgar Goss, #he
leads in Broad Ripple's senior_play. Susanna Bowers. (standing), editor-in-chief, checks up on her star reporter.
such as the Radio Workshop ing teams and the ooys are and the dramatic organizations, eligible for football, baseball, Draclu and Thespians. . track, boxing, golf and tennis. Six hundred teeners partici- Cozy Hour, for girls, is dipate in the Ripple sports pro- rected by Orahge Aid. The gram. The girls have _ormed group meets every: day - or basketball, baseball and bowl- school to learn more it
secret seasoning that will stamp | the sauce as individual. . ® = = ! REMOULADE SAUCE turday Dinner) Yolk of 1 1 hard-cooked egg 3 spring onions, small size, very finely chopped 1 tsp. capers, very finely chopped 2 small sour pickles, very finely chopped
1 ¢. of your own basic French
dressing 2 tsps. brown or creole mustard 1 tsp. lemon juice
Put the egg yolk,
heavy bowl or mortar and mash them as fine as possible. Then add the dressing slowly and beat hard. Last: beat in the mustard and lemon juice. At the finish the consistency should be of thin mayonnaise, ’ :
Makes about one and a fourth SS
eups.
» ” » EGG YOLK SPONGE CAKE For Sunday Dinner) 1% ec cake flour: % tsp. salt 134 tsps. baking powder. 9'egy yolks : 6 tbsps. water
1 tsp. lemon extract : 1 c. plus 2 tbaps. sugar Sift the flour, measure and resift three times with salt and baking powder. Turn the egg yolks (warmed to room temperature) into a three-quart mixing ‘bowl or nA the large bowl" an electric. beater, re the water and beat’ until the yolks are light, thick and lemon-colored. Now add the fla-
voring and-sift-in-thé sugar-grad-.
ually. Continue beating until the yolks are thick .and light. Sift the flour into the yolks gradually) and continue cutting and folding| in thoroughly until all the flour inixture is added. Turn very carefully into an ungreased 10-inch tube pan. Bake in a moderate oven (350 degrees F.)| for about 50 minutes or until the cake, when touched lightly with the fingertips, springs back. Remove the cake from the oven and immediately invert it until, cool. When thoroughly cooled, carefully loosen from the sides | and remove the cake. Spread ‘with confectioners’ icing made by ‘adding one and a half tablespoons of boiling water which has been mixed with one teaspoon of butter and one-half teaspoon of vanilla to one and a half cups of sifted XXXX sugar firmly packed. Beat until poi. ri Add more water if necessary, fo Produce a smooth spreading conBistency,
Joint Meeting Set
chopped § onion, capers and pickle into a
By Four Groups
A joint nfeeting of the Deborah WCTU, the Second Church Missionary Society, Evangelical Brethren Chure the Ladies of the Builders po the Rock will be Beg 2} at ao: 45 a. m,; Tuesday In the Secon Friends Church.
Meeting will be Mesdames Wood,
la Stroud, - Eyre, R. R. Sour Blumfield Fnatug O,
Taking part in the all- day) Prankin,
Pearl {Barbara Seiney, Jane Bettle, Joan rant. Collins, | for Indianapolis Ca
Junior Date
By SUE BURNETT
A-simple
eye-catching detafl on the bodice. It's not difficult for the teen-ager sewef to put together. Pattern 8322 comes in sizes 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 and 18. Size | 12, 45 yards of 39-inch. Don't miss the spring and summer -Fashion—better than ever with special features, | smart styles — free pattern printed in book. To order pattern or the Fashion Book, use the coupon | below.
SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis 9. No. 8322 Price 25¢ Size Fashior Book Price 25¢
NAMS sovescnnvsnncnne thats Street SABRENT ANNI RARAN ERT RRA
City SRNR RRRRA RE Btate...i..
. the Society Initiates
The Butler University Chapter, the great variety of constructions lof Phi Chi Nu, freshman wom-'and finishes to which nylon lends len's scholastic honor society, re-ljtself, no all-inclusive rules can first-year pe laid down for its behavior) Miss Patricia © Rowe, when exposed to flame, ! i, present. initiated Miss
Mus Doughnut Day
jeantly initiated 11
Isa Doris Basset k sShemyvilie
y on current song hits. Lots of
| leaf clover,” she's maybe think-
; tune, he’s remembering his cute
| “flappers.” | And many good people wrurg
see the
s~unassuming - date. | frock for juniors with lots of |
Teen Problems—
By JEAN COME SUNDAY, it's Motho's Day. Now, there's no need to go all mushy about Mom. But it's a chance to check up on your attitude toward her— and toward Pop, too. Do you understand them? Parents are people! And if you want proof that they once were young people, quiz them
Mom may BE Tunnang of FIRST DAME AND wow SUE | PANICKED TVE: STAG Ling
today's top tunes are revivals, you know -— dating back to Mom's and Pop's salad days. . . . Mother goes all “looking over a four-
WHEN dreamy,
ing of her first dance and how she panicked the stag line. And when Dad grins and taps his foot in time to the
——
Slenderizing
drag (date, to you) at the Junjor Prom in 1920. } "5 THERE really” isn’t much difference between generations. gals . ‘were . .derisively called. Jazz was deplored by purists just as jive is today. their hands youth! i ... Looking back. Pop and Mom hi. mistakes they mad the problems they faced. They want you. to be better-adjusted, more #8 ssful, happier than | they were. You can't blame them for it! And Mother's Day. | is a good time to start meeting |. them halfway.
Know Your Stuff— Inflammable
Fabrics
ALTHOUGH nylon which pur-~ ports to be noninflammable lives up to that dramatic claim, it is {not wise to take this flame-resist-{ance for granted. | According to the makers of |these textile fibers, each new fin- ; ished material made with nylon | must be tested for its own burning characteristics. Makers point out that undyed, finish-free, all-nylon - fabric, for example, will melt when e to flame, although it is self-extin-{guishing when the flame is Te-| moved.
over careless |
By MRS. ANNE CABOT
Sweetly styled in the hard-to-find sizes, the nightgown {llustrated is as pretty as a houseown! Capped sleeves, sash ties and scalloped neckline are easy-sew-ing and comfortable wearing. Dainty in cool flowered cotton and luxurious in sleek satin! To order complete pattern and finishing instructions for {| Pattern 5046 (sizes 42, 44 and 46 included) use the coupon below. m
NYLON Labi "with special finishes may also burn, although lit is claimed that the rate of| burning is usually below that considered dangerous by com-| mercial testing laboratories. | | Slow-burning reactions for, many mixed fabrics contiffiing [substantial percentages of mew are also claimed. But because of
|We, the Women—
Remember, Sunday's Mom's Day ‘Housekeeping
} 1
| much to” the
| wonders why she is frustrated | and bored
1
| {
Times Staff Photograypha
fashions, making. Sidney Esten, biology teacher, directs the Photography Club. Most of the members have their own equipment and are free to ust the school's cameras and
makeup and home-
workshop. + The Riparian, the ~&cHsoI newspaper, has been revital-
ized by Mrs. Ruth Marie Griggs. Fifty staff members work with Editor-in-Chief "Susanna Bowers to put out a commercially printed weekly edition.
» - ¥ SENIORS are working on their play, “The Lafe Christopher Bean,” to be presented
May 14 in the hool auditorium. The drama clubs sponsor several productions
throughout the school year. The Newcomers Clyb helps students who {transfer from other high schools feel at home al Broad Ripple. Some of the special studies groups are the Latin, Spanish, Biology, Chemistry, Clef and Math Clubs, Business and- Lettermen. Broad Ripple has several honorary clubs. These include Honor Society, Quill and Scroll and Historical Society. Future Johnny Long's can join - the school dance band and sports enthusiasts are eligible for cheerleaders’ positions.
Requires ~ Training’
By RUTH MILLETT NEA Staff Writer
abl juries.
IN AN “etfort > et the POR federal and state programs. -{lem, many agencies and individ-{The average annual wage of this
|accidents,’ permanently disabled. That is the civilian side of the is much happier than a useless in-| picture. About 19,000 amputations valid, were performed among military also that effort to help others |personnel during World War II. is ‘useful in other ways. + tApproximately 1500 -more were 1944, for example, nearly. 44.000 blinded while in military service, persons underwent rehabilitation. and 265,000 were permanently dis- That is, they were fitted for jobs as a result of combat in-| which they could perform satis-
|poit, there are persons {handicapped to some degree ,by (accidents, disease or War, In 1946 alone, {million - persons suffered serious Almost 370,000 were!
in the
“The Dostor re Ce it gy “|Dibled Persons. Xe T ined for Jobs _ a rans’ Administration has an ex- completed was $1768 as AE ACCORDING to a recent “ve: tensive ‘program- of assisting in-ito only §148 before, about 23 million jured persons to use what théy| The program of helping the disU. 8. who are have left to best advantage. This abled is being aided by many pri:
work includes methods of fitting | vate and governmental agencie them into occupations in which /as well as by individuals through-
, | By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M. D.
more than 10 they can make a real, SOB the oountry, A man or woman who can be
‘helped and taught to learn a job
By E. P. JORDAN, M.
But it must be realized
During done for it? ANSWER: This like an allergy, a sensi
|factorily. This work was done under the)
DR. ANSWERS—
QUESTION: What causes A red, itchy rash when I eat a lot of such foods as starch« es and milk, and what can be
sounds
ness to certain foods. Perhaps it is sensitiveness to milk. Probably skin tests would ‘reveal the cause of the rash, and then other fat-producing foods could be eaten instead.
tives
A NEW YORK job counselor says the girl who is hunting for the right career should first write down the things she likes to do best, those that give her a real feeling pf achievement, and then find out what - they mean in relation to the job she thinks she wants. That's sound advice, of course.. And. it applies as
Ruth Millett job of housekeeping as to any other job-open- to Women. = x The trouble is girls are much
..JDOre. ed to consider what
they do well and what they sn" |"
joy doing when they are choosing a-business career than when they are contemplating taking on the job of housewife, - - > MANY a girl who has no “training and no- 4nclination. ward homemaking gets married ind settles down to-a full-time homemaking career—and then
LO due
If §he Taced te tact before
| marriage that she hated house- |
keeping and that having that as her main job in life would
| bore her to death, she might
work out a living and working arrangement. She might, for instance, plan to combine marriage and a career. Or she might discover that she doesn’t really hate housework, but only dreads it because she has not heen prop-
" erly trained for ft.
The housewife, as well as the
| career woman, will not be suc-
cessful or happy If she takes on a job that involves work she dislikes or isn’t trained to do.
Crawfordsville Man Is Awarded Prize
Elmer Schweitzer, Crawfordsville, won first place in the hair-
styling contest of the Indianap-
olis Hairdressers and Cosmetolo-|
gists Association. The organization met Sunday and Monday in the Hotel Lincoln, Mrs. Sophie Pfister, Roekford, 0., was awarded second place, and third place was won Delores Luchen, Cincinna prizes were
that closed the meeting.
ANNE CABOT - The Indianapolis Times 530 8. Wells St. Chicago 7, IL No. 5048 Price 16¢
‘Name CeRNERanaass Rian
‘Street Sssaaisasasinrsareranis
Saturday will be Doughnut Day, Fire Girls. at *
VENI 2 . ¥ : OI 12ss nannpasasn; B18. 20 ven: |
YOUR MANNERS— SITUATION: You are entertaining friends .in your own home. WRONG WAY: Bit back in . your easy chair and let your - wife see to the guests’. coli. | fort, . RIGHT WAY; Share with
. your -wife the job of making ortable,
bY Mu Mead i
‘awarded hi night at a dange and style show
uals are co-operating. The Vet-igroup after the program had been
| Special
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Pri ————
i
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and Sale!
BOYS SLEEVELESS SWEATERS “Regularly 3.98 Special 2.98
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WASSON'SBOYS' STORE, FIFTH FLOOR
DAILY: Store Hours 9:30. A. M. to 5:00 P. M.
for Little Tots 2 to 8
‘A. Girls’ Tightwight
B. Girls’ double-crotch ——— panties
C.Boys' button-on pants, fly-front,
E. Boys’ fly-front shorts; elastic oll around
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. WASSON'S INFANTS’ STORE. FIFTH FLOOR
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; A (Girls) 59¢ Each | | |
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White. cotton knit undies of xcollont quality’ . » . soft and comfortable for little tots. Cor- : oy re easy to.
i ' | ' i ' ' ' ' ' I | | | ' ' | ' ' I -
