Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 November 1949 — Page 15
Teen Talk— Pupils Plan Yule Dance Dec. 19
Lawrence Central Unit To Sponsor Even
Lawrence High School Guest Column SOME DO and some don't. The! Lawrence Central Bears are not the kind to hibernate when the , days get short and the air turns cold / It would be difficult to find a More active group than the students at Lawrence Central High School where the: program affords a varied schedule. . There are times. for work and times for, play, There are opportunities for leadership and activities for followers, The traditione] Christmas dance, to be held Dec, 19 at the Rivera Club, is one of the preholiday- social affairs which now is creating much speculation and many whispers about who Is inviting whom, The girls’ glee club sponsors this annual Yuletide festive affair. Tommy Lambert, Ruth Griswold and Donna Draga are members of a committee to complete] plans for a dance to be sponsored by the Future Business Leaders! Association at the school Dec. 16 Joyce Dillman, senior, will pregide at an Indiana Day program Dec. 9. Jim Reynolds, Betty: King, and Shirley Lyle will give short talks based upon their experiences at Boys’ State and Girls’ State last summer, Members of the speech class will give appropriate readings, and Miss Leora Crumrine will direct group. singing of “Back Home Again in Indiana” and “On the Banks of the Wabash.” The FBLA will present the school with a state flag.
Pep Session
At a pep session preceding the basketball game with Broad Rip-
ple Wednesday, the journalism class surprised the students with 3 a special blue-streak basektball of
edition of the school paper, “The Cub Reporter.” Mrs. Margaret Butz, school librarian, has chosen five assistants to attend the State Llibrarian Assistants’ Conference at Indiana University Dec. 3 and 4. Besides Mrs. Butz, those attending™ from Lawrence Central will be Earlene Wright, Kay Arens, Phyllis Perrin, Bonnie Shaw and Nancy Bell. i Janice Curtis, sophomore 4-H Club member who recently won a scholarship awarded by the In-| dianapolis Power and Light Co. and a $200 cash award from the Westinghouse Electric Company,
V..0AY, NOV. 23, 199 :
Misty Angora, Bunny Fur
By LOUISE FLETCHER, Times Woman's Editor “SOFT AS A KITTEN'S EAR” describes brandnew headgear designed for ¢apping the youthful noggin. The new hats make use of such materials as misty angora and velvety bunny fur to give them the soft touch . . . literally and figuratively. (They touch lightly on the budget,
too.)
By MARGUERITE SMITH Q--I have a boxwood I was advised to move to a protected place (I had set it originally where it got too much wind and sun). So I have transplanted it to the northeast corner of the
house where it does not get) much wind. Does it need any special winter protection? | North Winfield Ave.
will be in Chicago from tomorrow A—Muich the ground thickly
through Dec. 2. There she will be one of the 12 4-H members competing for national honors. After a busy day with five periods of academic work from 8 a. m. to 1:25 p. m. and three periods determined by individual interests, the youthful Centralites are ready for the pause that refreshes. When the dismissal bell rings at 3:45, they gather around the “coke” machine in the gym. The eonversation may not be as brilliant as that of Sam Johnson in England's 18th century coffee houses, but it certainly doesn't drag. There is much to be said before 3:55 when the busses pull away from. the suburban day school at 56th St. and Shadeland.
By MRS. ANNE CABOT Here are pretty and practical gifts for Mother and Baby. Easy to crochet bedjacket and baby sacque are made in one . piece trimmed with a contrast. ing colored ribbon, Patterns DHRR1 and 5746 in¢lude complete crocheting instructions, stitch illustrations and material requirements, To order, use the coupon.
ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 530 S. Wells St. | Chicago 7, IL No. 5746 Price 20c | No. 5881 Price 20¢
| Fashion Book, use the coupon.
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with leaves or straw. Then if it is where it will get much hot sunshine in early spring (as reflected from a white house) it may do better with the traditional boxwood winter overovercoat—a frame of burlap! on light sticks to prevent the sun shining on and drying out leaves in early spring. Be sure the ground is well watered around it from either rain or hose hefore ground-freezing weather. Too dry soil and too much winter sun cause a large part of winter injury to broad leaved evergreens. ent 1 Send questions on gardening to Mrs. Smith, The Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis 9.
By SUE BURNETT The younger girls of the fam-. | ily will be warm as toast all winter in either of the two styles of nightwear illustrated. Pattern 8465 is a sew-rite per- | forated pattern for sizes 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 years. Size 6, long | sleeve, 3's yards of 36 or 39inch. i Pattern 8407 comes in sizes 1, | 2, 3 4, 5 and 6 years. Size 2, | 2% yards of 35-inch. | To order pattern or our
SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis 9, Ind. No. 8407 Price 25¢ No. 8465 Price 25¢
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Hats 'Tops' for Youths
Pretty enough to wear to a party is the hand-crocheted
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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angora cap (left) which comes in the palest of baby pastels. In addition to having silver-metallic thread twining through its crocheted body, the cap wears a border of pearl and sequin “flowers” nestling in the airy angora. It is $5.85 at Block's. Inspiration for the bunny set (right) may have come straight from old St. Nick's costume. In one combination, the
* pigskin top of the calot and the palms of the mittens are Santa
Claus red. (In other sets the pigskin ¢omes in green, brown, white, etc.) The fur in each instance is snowy white. Mittens, scarf and hat are each $3 at Ayres’.
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Eat Well for Less—
Dessert For The Holidays
Banana Carribean Is Spectacular
By GAYNOR MADDOX BANANA CARIBBEAN is =a spectacular affair, despite its ease of preparation, James Beard, author of “The Fireside Cook Book,” recommends it to this columnist. Here's his recipe, ” - vy BANANA CARIBBEAN Use large, perfect bananas one to a person. Split skin length-
wise with sharp knife, Carefully
pull it away from thé banana so that the skin remains in one plece. Roll banana in grated coconut. Arrange skins on plates, Now fill the skins with a layer of wvanilla ice cream > Cut bananas in thick *"'ces and arrange them on the ice créam, sticking each slice. upright into the cream Sprinkle vith additional coconut and serve
Sunday's Menu
BREAKFAST: Frozen orange juice. country sausage, buckwheat griddle cakes, butter or margarine, syrup. coffee, milk. PARTY DINNER: Black bean soup with lemon slices, roast chicken, herb stuffing, giblet gravy, souffle potatoes, broccoli with black butter, crusty bread, butter or margarine, tossed green salad, Bananas Caribbean, coifee, milk ; SUPPER: Cold sliced
-» Chicken, white bean salad
with French dressing. heated French bread, butter or margarire, pears and apples, | cheese tray, tea, milk.
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A. Polka dot, button front, plunging neckline; navy. black, grey. Sasi S00
‘We, the Women— re Hail ‘Special Party Art of Doing Something =~ P ; 7 On Own Fast Disappearing
soon-bogged down with tele. phoning lists of na work-
| woman wants
By RUTH MILLETT NEA Staff Writer . SOMETIMES 1 wonder If Aniérican women aren't fast losing the ability to do anything on their owh. : Every time A modern
to do or learn something, she thinks she has to join a club to accomplish it.
She gets married and wants to be a help to her husband. So she joins an Ruth Millett auxiliary to any professional or fraternal group he's interested in. She decides she is interested in flowers, so she joins a garden club, tod She wants to improve her mind, so she joins a boo view club, She has the secret notion that she can write, so she joins a writers’ group. fhe has a baby, and right away she gets into a child study club, And so it goes. Her first thought when she decides she is interested in any subject is to look around for a club where members are supposed to be interested in the same thing. » " ~ AND THEN what happens? Well, she wastes the time she might be spending writing a novel or short story, or getting acquainted with Junior, or working in a flower bed, or reading a book, in club meetings and all the in-between-jobs that go with any kind of club membership. Instead of doing or creating or improving her mind, she is
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wiv mond
ing en committees and makinr fancy sandwiches to nourish
and sustain her fellow club
members, | i And before she knows it she has substituted talk about writing for writing, theories on how to bring up children for staying home and bringing
them up. She has more note
books on flowers and flower arrangements than flowers growing in her yard. And worst of all she knows just as much, but no more, abut the subject that interests her as do all tne other women in ‘he group.
She started out to do some-
thing to enrich and develop her own personality. She has ended up being just another member of another group.
County Council
“ Of PTA to Meet
The Marion County Council of PTA will have a study course at 10 a. m. Monday in the Claypool
Hotel, Mrs. Walter Thoms will lead the discussion and Mrs.
Eldridge Nichols is chairman.
The Crooked Creek PTA study group will meet at 11:30 a. m, Thursday In the home of Mrs. Charles Stuart, 1103 Kessler
Blvd., W. Drive,
Mrs. Wayne Kendall will intro duce the speaker, Ray Smith of the Indiana Medical Association.
Plan Dinner Meeting
The Woman's Rotary Club will . have a dinner meeting at 6:30 p. m. Monday in the Propylaeum. Wilbur D. Peat will present a program on the life and art of William M. Chase in the Herron
Art Museum.
Martha Manning
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