Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 April 1951 — Page 30

set as state 1a Xi Delta rs. Clyde M. airman. Alumnae ess for the n the Butler ‘enter, Colnbers from Universities mnae from

be given by

O. Parks is

ts chairman, lude a founice, chapter the scholaslet award to ent in each apters. The Indianapolis

] able will be Indianapolis Mrs. C. K. x vice presi- , state mem-

Miss Ruth.

ersity chaponquil Kinty president,

opportunity ious philanhe national year coned primarily t of a wellCounty. y with plans r, Ralph L,

Thornberry, :

‘Hubert 8S. 's, James B. rks. uman, Mary orning and

up aker Talk y

will talk on lan” at the nks Chapter, erican Revoday.

p. m. in the

ing year will ness session. for the tea 5, William B.

e Mesdames Dean Caus- , John M. White, Miss )1 and Miss

ed

‘heon will be 8t. Francis he hespital, eted for the nce and the

" the couple will live at 406 S. Web- iecap————— i

CARNIVAL COLLECTION—Members of the Auxiliary to the Boys' Club Association are making certain there'll be no shortage of white elephant and fish pond items for the spring carnival of the English Avenue Boys Service Club group. Twé auxiliary members, Mrs. Ralph D. Morris (center, right] and Mrs. George Yverberg (right), have their hands full helping load the material. Roy Nunn (left) and Robert Weaver, Service Club boys, lend an assist. The carnival will be May 18.

|

"We, the Women— : : | Here're Rules for Wives |

Who Hold Down Jobs

By RUTH MILLETT SO YOU'RE goirig to keep your job—at least for a while—after marriage. Good for you—if . ..

... You don't expect your husband to think you're wonderful for helping earn the living. They never do, you

know. I get many letters from women who are hurt and angry . because their Bushangys show no appreciation for the fact that e wife helps earn the family income.’ a letter from a wife who said her husband was deeply grateful for the fact that she carried part of the financial load. . You never start thinking in terms of “my money.” If you are going to work what you earn should be regarded as “our money”, —Just as your husband’s pay check is 1zbeled | “ours.’

|

. You don't tryMo hold on to : a job that is too hard for you or, because of ambia tion, accept a promotion that means your Ruth Millett job must always come first. With a woman, | marriage has to come first or in time all she will have is a career. = #” = s Ld ” YOU ARE sure. your husand is-not the kind of man who | will feel cheated by having a working wife. If you think your | working will be hard on his ego, don't work. You can never make it. up to him, no matter how tactful you try to be. + .. You are physically strong enough and emotionally calm enough to be able to handle two jobs without becoming hard to live with. You won't be easy to live with, if you are pushing yourself beyond your strength. . You realize from the start that even though you work as long hours as your husband at your outside job, the house is | your responsibility. This is true regardless of how willing your. | husband is to “help” with the housework. > . .. You never forget that it is all right for a man to have a “hard day at the office” but not for a woman. A woman who starts taiking about her tough day at the office loses a lot of her femininity. Nor can she bring home worries from the office. All she can bring home is some amusing highlight of the day and the impression that her job is a breeze.

Miss Dorothy Jean Pruden Wed to Robert H. Riley

Times State Service

LAPORTE. Mar. 31—Miss Dorothy Jean Pruden and Robert H. Riley exchanged wedding vows today in St. Joseph's Catholic Church. The Rev. Fr. August Van Rie performed the 10 "a. m:

ceremony.

| ma, “and limit ourselves to

‘way to solve the problem of

| odox sugges-

4% Mr. Barrington heads a staff

| U Tin Maung and U- Knin

Is Wed

'by the Rev. Fr. John Wells.

estal Sr., 2710 E. North St. Mr. land Mrs. John A. Cain, 5845 Hav-|

{2710 E. North St., the couple left!

{this afternoon by Theta Theta

/{in the home of Mrs. E. L, Hollis, | 1639 Beeler St. |

Hutchinson, J. H. Waltman and J. W..Sexson.

Mesdames J. R. Houghland, Don {Moschenross and T. M. Benzjnger.

Capital Conor

Burma a Urges Limitation On ‘Washington Parties

1 University 6f Rangoon-—and

~WASEF _921..| speaks Burmese without, he WASHINGTON;-Mar.-31-- says, a British accent. Te He is a slim, intelligent, reticent gentleman of middle height with bright brown eyes, sensitive hands, and British <manners, His speech is heavily interlarded with “mark you,” “these chaps” and other British-

By ELISE MORROW

—“The diplomatic corps should organize a trade union of ambassadors,’ said the ambassador from Bur-

a certain number of parties a week. It would be the only

‘Washington social life.” The unorth-

tion was made by James Barrington, the first AngloAsian, mixedparentage ambassador to serve in the capital. Mr. Barrington is the product of

Miss Morrow a Kipingesque romance be-

tween a British government | service officer, who went to Burma in 1907, and a Burmese

girl. which includes such names as Maung Gale. He speaks a beautiful, elegant Oxford English—

he studied at Oxford two years after being graduated from the

Miss Forestal

Becomes Bride

of J. F. Kain

Miss Margaretann ¥orestal and John F. Cain were married in a 10 a. m. service yesterday in the

St. Philip Neri Catholic Church. { The couple repeated vows read

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. For-

erford Ave. are parents of the

bridegroom.

Miss Alice Marie Harvey, {dressed in yellow lace and net,

But never yet have I had |Wwas maid of honor. The other at|tendants, all in light green, were | Mrs. James W, Cain, Misses Mary

| Cain, Mary Deardoz and Mary Sarva:

List of Ushers

Mr. Cain was best man. Ush-!| ers were ~James Pfau, Richard/

|F. Forestal*Jr.” John. Pat Moran’ iand J.-C. Kenney.

In a gown of white lace.and satin the bride carried a bouquet

of white roses centered with an

orchid. Her fingertip veil fell from a lace Juliet cap. After the wedding reception at

|for Chicago.

Initiation Set By Sorority

An Initiation tea will be given

Chapter, Phi Beta Psi Sorority,

Initiates will be Mesdames F. L.|

Assisting the hostess will be

Mrs. Wilbur Jones, president,

land Mrs. Benzinger will pour.

Guild Meetings Set

The following units of the White Cross Guild of the Methodist Hospital will meet this week at the service center: Monday—~Cen-'

Parents of ‘the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Richard -Pruden of I! AvenueiPsychic Science, First

| Baptist, Do ati and Blue and

this city and Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Riley, 3448 E. 26th St./Gold: Tuesd hy—Capitol Avenue,|

Indianapolis.

Pruden, in forest green ¢hiffon;!

was. maid of honor. Mrs. Alice| W a da McIntosh .and- Mrs.. Elwood per & nes ay sey of La Porte were bridesmalds Their frocks were fuchsia and Three circles of the Broadway wine ‘chiffon. The flower girl, / Methodist Church, Brides’, Morn-| Judy Levandoski of Rantoul, IIL, Ing and Suzannah, will sponsor a wore a dress of royal blue ac- style show Wednesday. It wifl be cented with lace. at 2 p. m, in the church. Dresses and styles for older Other Attendants women . will be includéd in the John Riley served as his broth- Style show by. Wasson’s, er's best man.

Tea table hostesses will be Ushers included pesqames Richard C. Raines, | Bernard McIntosh, James Pruden, Robert Pierce, Carl Shafer and | John Pruden and Joseph Hettle. [riorhert Asperger. : : s._Robert- Ridpath is general The bride wore a gown of] ivory brdtaded: satin fashioned chairman. Her assistants are 2 : Mesdames Wayne Wallace, James with a sweetheart neckline, long ! 3 McDonald, Dee Brubaker, Ernest| sleeves, full skirt and train. Heriy oo "povert Schwell and Robe t| veil fell from a tiara of waxed, ' ir orange blossoms. Proceeds.. will be used for a Following a short wedding trip, church project.

ster Ave., Indianapolis. The bride ‘Wrist ‘Duster’ attended Pugdue University. When a dusty streak encircles! your wrist’each night, it’s time to

Wedding Planned SEE n Cincinnari

plastic, rub it with a cloth wrung out of warm soapsuds; rinse and Times Special CINCINNATI, Mar. 31—

dry. Metal bands can be dipped in warm suds and scrubbed with Mr, and Mrs. Edwin C. Mayer of this city announce the ap-

| University Park and West Michi-| The bride's sister, Miss sues Style Show {Ean ho ay—Children’s| | Cheer, es |Marks; Thursd | Ripple and Self Third™and Friday

ashington and St.| usic, Broad

—Sun. Roe and Cheerful.

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ARLINGTON at TENTH

a soft brush. proaching marriage of their daughter, Shirley Helene, to Robert H. Jaeger. The prospective bridegroom {s the ‘son of Dr. and Mrs. Alfred 8S. Jaeger, 2935 Washington Blvd., Indianapolis. He attended Butler University. An Apr. 29 wedding is planned.

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isms.

The Barrington household comprises a miniature United Nations all its own a pretty, dark-eyed, dark-haired young woman, is Anglo-Irish-Burmese. Her maiden name was Eileen Finney. Their 9-year-old daughter, to fix the final seal of delightful confusion, was named Marika, ° a Greek name both the Ambassador and Mrs. liked. The Ambassador is also Burma's delegate to the United Nations; so he divides his time between Washington: ‘and New , York. He likes Washington. better because it is more peaceful and less rushed.

rington,

THE IN DIANAPOLIS. TIMES

“She has a

in the street.

Mrs. Bar- | t00.”

ten holiday. Barrington

the pagodas.

goon.”

Daughtér Marika, ‘who goes to a Catholic school here, | likes Washington also, but she is homesick at times for Rangoon; tlie Burmese capital, strong artistic

sense,” the Ambassador says. “She often speaks of missing the bright splashes of sunset and the laughter of. the people When she dees, it makes me more homesick,

He looked out the window of the embassy at the unusually clear Washington day. the day of the religious festival of the full moon of Tabaung, a sort of Buddhist Len-.|

“I miss my country especially on days like this, when I can hear the noises and recall the excitement of the crowds around But I am quickly comforted,” he added, returning to the British crispness in his . heritage, ‘comforted because by now it is terribly hot in Ran-

It was

ton's

“The ambassador solves his own social

first

problem. ‘by attempting to IImit himself “19 |", four parties a week. always successful,” “but I aim at that, and achieve it some of the time, come a very phony, funny life here, with the excessive social activity and no time to oneself. One works very hard, and one must be alone at times, to think or read a book.” This revolutionary attitude is perhaps the mark of a comparatively new and inexperienced diplomat 'who has not yet been corrupted by his environment. Washington is Mr. Barring- | diplomatic. post, | though, he served secretary in Burma for threeyears, and before that was a captain in the British Army, and ‘in the Indian Civil Service when Burma was still a part of India. '

Involves British

HIS SOCIAL life in Washington revolves largely around

“I am not he ° says,

It can be-

as foreign

the Asiatic and Middle Eastern

missions—stretching from § Siam and India to Egypt and SaudiArabia. It ajso involves the British, Until the war Burma was a part of the Empire and there still are close, affectionate ties —although' there has been considerable anti- British feeling. “No one who really knows the British, or who has lived at Oxford, can help being fond of them, no matter what,” Mr. Barrington ' says. Mr. Barrington’s principal problem in the United States is the problem all Asiatic representatives mention sooner or later — the vast ignorance of Asia in the West. Americans are likely to think Burma is Borneo, or that it is the “old name for Thailand” (that's Siam) or the new name . for Afghanistan, or’ something out of cloud-cuckoo land. It is a problem hard to solve. ; " “More like ourselves,” said the ambassador, ‘should travel through other countries, not as

diplomats, but as people, just

people, just hon p yh

THERE was fish and fowl and good red-herring at the

7 Iranian” New Year celebration

at that embassy this week.” The fish, one of the seven Iranian ' symbols, were swimming in a bowl along with the other symbols of Iranian life; the fowl, cold turkey on the buffet; and the red herring, thesSoviet Ambassador, Alexander Panyushkin, among the guests.

Mr, Panyushkin, who has a friendly face and wears hornrimmed glasses, rarely lends his presence to Washington 80cial functions,

Other guests ran the usual official reception gamut from the Secretary of State and

‘Mrs. Dean Acheson and the

Secretary of Agriculture and.

-Mrs. Charles F. Brannan to ‘Gen. J. Lawton Collins, the

Army Chief of Staff, in dress uniform, and Madame Pandit,

- the ambassador from India.

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