Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 May 1951 — Page 6

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4

Taming ¢ of the Shrew’ Goes on Tomorrow

Will Be Staged At Civic Theater By JOAN sSCHOEMAKER : "ROM OEF STAGE to “on stage is a big=jump, but once a year the Teenage Workshop of the Booth Tarkington Civic Theater gets its chance. Tomorrow and Saturday nights the teens will produce “The Taming of the Shrew,” under the directioni of Miss Jn» Bans, Ever since the day they began planning the show, probJems have fallen like rain. When the workshop voted on a play. it was a draw between “Om Town” and “The Taming

oi the Shrew.” A compromise was the answer They are using

the ‘Our Town": technique of no front curtain scenery changing In the dark . . . and a

miriinum of stage hands, all in crtume, Sondra Crouch who plays ¥ ‘herine, had a problem all r » own. b.own hair. and the play der nied Katherine be a redhe. Sondra dad her tresses, “Mother helped me.” she said “Anything and everything for the ake of the play.”

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A FEW problems solved themrf 'ves without too much troube to the cast. Getting the ral mood of the comedy wasn't as d.flicult when the cast did some clowning of its own at rehearsals. A trip on the step, a push-and a pull of a chair from under someone became part of the script, according to Bill] Bishop. leading man. M<als and homework have been part of the problem victure too Jackie Reynolds, student technical director of the production, reports the cast brought sandwiches from home part time and dashed to the nearest grocery for other internal reinforcements. Costumes always cause great concern, but left-overs from the

She was born vith

met Sr

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recent Junior Civic play, “The Twelve Dancing Princesses,” aided the crew in assembling many outfits. When Katherine needed a dirty wedding dress to wear in one scene, the tumers thought that would be

easy. Getting it dirty enough proved to be a task.

Paint on Dirt

SHE WORE IT one entire rehearsal with the stage crew splattering hér with paint each time she passed. This was once they could really play and not have to pay for it in the end. After rubbing the dress in ashes and dusting furniture with it, the head of the costume

COS-

RIDER UP—Bill Bishap (right as: Petrucchio helps Sondra Crouch, Katherine, into the saddle for the 1951 Teen-.\ge ~Werkshopeproduction RicRards (left)’ studeAt tech. ‘nical director; pins an ear on the, mare.” "Legs" .are. left "to right) Nancy Payne, Edr.c Adler and Charlene Curry.

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crew gave up and painted dirt spots on it in desperation. A papier-mache horse became the beast of burden in the show. When two pairs of legs weren't strong enough to hold it up, another pair were added. Four red legs and two green ones help a heavy mare dance through one scene. Whether the teens are painting sets, flying scenery, bracing flats or taking curtain bows, they show the same spirit . let's have fun. Each would-be actor . . . and actress . . . looks forward to the once-a-year

show as much as he looks forward to his name in lights later in life.

Jacknis

cosmetics incustry,

TNF INDTAN APOLIS TIMES

~ Women Can New Membership of Boys Club Ausiliary

Hit Big Pay Scale

2 Plans Offered

"For Career 2 By GAY PAULEY United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, May 24— Women can hit the big in-

come brackets but it's not

easy W. Gail amp, job replaceme nt expert suggested tv methods for those yearning for a career with. anjannual pay-off of $10,000 or above. One, get an idea that'll make a company money and go in and ‘merchandise” it and yourself, Or two, start at the bottom and "get your hands dirty.” learning the

field you're in and patiently work’

your way to the top. Mr. Camp, president of Executive Services and specialist in placement of men and women in top-salaried jobs, said neither route to big money was easy but it was encouraging to see more and more women moving into top

+s management jobs

Mr Camp said many a success story began when a woman saw a need in 2 firm and went in and sold an idea and herself. creating her own new position Many others, he said, began “with a low salary . and worked up from there.” He declared the “glamour” field is “loaded” with opportunity for career women. Those include the promotion and publicity, advertising, retailing and fashion. The h2ad of his placement division, Mrs, Alice McCarthy, listed another—all phases

of home economics.

“I just now placed a home economist in a $15,000 per vear tele-

vision job,” she said. ‘There are tar more jobs paying high salaries, maybe not that high,

than there are qualified women to fill them.” Mrs. McCarthy said to woman hunting a better she: would advise: “Get a job in a woman's field

any salary,

instead of trying to buck male competition.” She admitted that when she

handed out that advice to jobseekers she often heard the plaintive reply, “but I won't meet any interesting men that way.” “My. answer,” said Mrs. MeCarthy, “is that in that case they are not really job- hunting. They are husband shopping.”

professional

: : . olia Av., announce. Fifth and Sixth grades —10.a. mM. ar anathy is the son of Mr _ ball throwing contest; 10:20 a. mM. 504. Mys. Joseph—Apathye-Miami,

Sorority Vs "the Wormer...

Elects Mrs. Everhart Heads Tau Phi Lambda

Mrs. Helen Everhart was elected state president of Tau Phi Lambda Sorority at the recent

| Working Wife Has Right To Help From Husband

By RUTH MILL ET A “VERY resentful” housewife asks me why I don't write a piece for the husbands of working wives.

As she points out there are two categories of wives— the stay-at-home wife and the working-out wife.

PTA Adopts Platform

Declare Teaching Essential—Delegates

By United Press MIAMI BEACH, Fla., May 24 Some 3000 parents and teachers

There are. in streamed back to their homes to-

stat ony ; ® convention mm Evansville consequence, two classes of husbands, the husband of the day to carry out the pro-television, She is a member of Beta Iota i v at-home little woman and the husband of the working-out Ant: scomie book platform adopted Chapter. homemurer. Be National PTA Congress Miss Mary Curtiss. Theta Rho She thinks the latter should be told 3 ; ae : 233 The PTA gave TV high mark their situations are entirely different. H R igh marks Chapter, was named state secre- They are, of course. If Mama says [oF its children’s programs but tary-treasurer. : ‘Okay. I'll help earn the living” and shoul- flunked out” comic books. It Theta Rho Chapter also re- ders the responsibility of an outside job, Called for improvements in all ceived the achievement award forms of entertainment media for

presented to the state chapter! doing the most outstanding job in welfare and civic work. In addition the chapter received recognition for ritualistic!

the

If she

work and interest in and living nalve up to the motto, “Training for if they can Leadership.” Ruth ‘Millett story. The organization's 1951 project 8 #8 #4

is “Safety Campaigning.”

then Papa can no longer regard himself in light of THE breadwinner and expect his wife to handle the job of homemaking without his help. helps earn the money, shouldn't even have to be told that he should the housework with her. afford a maid

BUT where the work is there to be done when Mama drags

youngsters. Delegates to the three-day session here also urged that schools get priorities for building materials and that teaching be declared an essential occupation during the national emergency.

Diplomatic West Point

Rep. Walter H. Judd (R. Minn.) at the closing meeting vesterday,

then he

Of course, it's a different

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- in from the office or factory after a hard day's work it becomes aid there should be a “West . to a mutual responsibility. ¥ ; : cin as v oint” for diplomats ak Med um Breakfasts This is, of course, an rmportant matter today. where there (pam «ug Dei in oy Maite During a recent breakfast are more married women than single women employed, and struggles as are Stor QTpomatl study. 10 normal young men ates where a lot of marriages couldn't take place unless the wife is Scores of Amer.

carefully planned also, they took scientific tests which measured, among other things, their work output. In 75

breakfasts; agreed to continue working.

So the husband of a

wife's full responsibility.

working wife should get out of his head all those old-fashioned notions of the house being the

cans in military struggles.” “More than 11,000 lives already have been sacrificed in the present war in Korea because at Tehran and Yalta and Potsdam

per cent of the cases, the young Not for him the easy chair and the evening paper while and in the § men were able to turn out more - Mama cooks the dinner, does the dishes, and slicks up the have had tate Department we work after eating medium break- house Stare men in charge of our fasts, such as the basic cereal For him housework has got to be teamwork. He is accept- ate affairs who were amateurs

breakfast of fruit, bread and butter, heavier meal.

cereal, milk, than after a she has every right

comes to homecoming.

ing teamwork on his wife's part, to expect teamwork from him when it

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in the fields of foreign relations as compared to the trained specialists which other countries had representing them,” he said.

Mothers Club How To Vacuum :

T> eliminate tell-tale wheel mari.s and wheelprints that sometimes mar the spic-and-span affect of a reg Ty alk School ‘will bene shly-vacuumed rug, make 4 print of beginning your va-

mothers at the 8 ni tomorrow in the cuurnirg at the corner of th

if she holds down a job and

The Mothers Club of Our Lady of Lourdes eighth g p.m

rade

meeting e rug

school: hall, It will be the final that’s farthest from the door and event of the season then back your way toward th: Hostesses will be first grade “Xi mothers with Mrs. Fred Haunss — : Apd Mrs. Patrick Sullivan, chair- Study Group Meets nen \ children’s variety program is The Jenny Jang hSpoer Inte Widnes with Be mers em : national Travel Study “Inb, met Jan Y ; ab N ANA yesterday ir the home of Mrs Karen Fidler, elocutionists, and Earl G. Corson. 3815 FF 38 St. Mark Edwards, pianist he Thornburg stn 3

Mrs. John Thornburgh was guest

New officers will he speaker,

elected

The Mature Parent—

| father-son teams potato race, and

>

CHOSEN—New members of the 8cys Clut Auxiliary admitted yesterday at a luncheon meeting are left to right) Mesdamas Harry A Harlan, Karl C. Kohlstaedt, Harry D. Tousley and Henry

W. Gossard. Luncheon hostess was Mrs

Park School to Observe Annual Field Day Saturday

PaPk8thool for Boys will celebrate its annual field day Saturday at the school. Mr. and Mrs. J. Perry Meek are general chairmen. The event serves as a family get-together as well as a homecoming for graduates. Among the special guests will be Park family friends interested in the schoal, Highlighting the program — — — p. m. against the Cincinnati will be the final varsity base-

Country Day School. At 3 p. m. ball games and a picnic lunch. the Park varsity tennis team will School Dads have been in

play Cincinnatl, charge of the program and : — Mothers, the picnic. Heading the

Wedding Set

Dads’ athletic program committee are Thomas McCrea, A. C. Pollock Jr. and Coach Seward Wil- For June 30 shere, Mrs McCrae Mothers’ Association president, is hostess Apathy-Lauxterman chairman, and Mrs. W. H. Fein- V Pl d stone, picnic chairman. ows rianne The morning program will be iio joan Lauxterman will beSeventh and eighth grades—10 come the bride of Joseph Apathy, a. m, ball throwing contest; South Bend, in a June 30 service 10:20 a. m. father-son teams

her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Law-

three-legged race, and 10:45 a. m., baseball game.

Fla. . The 11 a: m. in the Christ Church.

10:45 a. m. baseball game.

Other Events Third and fourth grades 10

ceremony

the King Catholic

a. m. mother-son teams ball Shower Set throwing contest; 10:20 a. m. Entertaining in honor of the father-son teams potato race, prige-to-be, Mrs. C. E. Kett, 6225

and 10:45 a. m. mother-father versus son games.

A special prize will be awarded

Kingsley Drive, will have a Kitchen shower and bridge party in her home at 8 p. m. tomorrow.

for the noon father-son teams (Guests will include Mesdames _ egg-throwing contest. Charles: Harris, Mary Melton, I. Following the 12:15 p. m. picnic gp alph Cain, Charles Blaesi. Hu-

will be baseball

there varsity

a double-header game at 1:30

ol 2 4

YOU are smoking HI sit- E ting waiting for a clerk to

bert Scott and Lauxterman.

Events—

. New York, hostess. Program

E on “Alaska and Hawaii, Our wait on you in a shore store. New States: Statehood if WRONG: If there is no ash Granted.” 'Mesdames Charles tray near you. flick your cig- Cherdron, M. C. Moore, George

aret ashes on the floor. H. Healey and Beatrice Clarke

RIGHT: Dever Smoke 5 Butler “100” Chap., ITSC—1 p. m. any building ] Tap a 0 Mrs. Homer Mellett, 542 E. 42d, flick ashes on the 1loor. hostess. Dessert luncheon.

Tr & =n Speaker, Mrs. Basil Fischer. YOU meet a friend you Quiney—12:30 p. m.. Mrs. Préston haven't seen in a long time Stambaugh, 1531 N. Ewing, =

hostess, Covered-dish luncheon. Woman's Round Table—1 p. m. Mrs. Kenneth E. Lancet, 6970 Washington Blvd, hostess Spring luncheon party. Book review, Mrs. Paul M. Kilby. PTA UNITS School 3—1:15 p. m, Style show by Mrs. Irene Price; art display Miss Marian Hill; shop display. C. E. Simpson. Installation of officers and tea. 34-5 p. m. County Fair, Variety show, fish pond, “white elephant” booth and pony

and notice that she has gained quite a bit of weight. WRONG: Comment on the fact. RIGHT: Don't mantion it.

Parliamentarians

To Convene Here The annual convention of the Indiana State Association of Par'llamentarians will be in the Hotel Washington. The business session will begin at 10 a. m. and ‘luncheon will be at noon. There will nha tion of officers Presiding will Rumpler.

|Grandmothers Club

To Meet Tomorrow The Indianapolis Grandmothers Club will meet at Brookside Park,

Elizabeth Hillyer is a word that is the ‘name of a type of turniture

Cabrioie

leg. It is shaped in a double curve, swelling out above, then swinging in toward the foc! which again swells outward. A pie crust .table has a raise edge that is carved or molded

Se “41 a2 t - in a scallop. A ladder back Soetion 11. at W50 a tomer chair has horizontal slats... or There will be a covited 1ish rails which resemble a iadder. - luncheon and outdoor meeting

To Mother, Every Bay Has Been ‘Good’

By MURIEL LAWRENCE HE WAS the chaplain of a big penitentiary and was

talking to a group of child guidance workers.

“The mothers of my men suffer from a remarkable aversion to facts,” he said. “No grief, no shame can alter it, No ‘ase record can change it. Doggedly, against ‘all the evidence of Ws compiled histories of bad, itresponsible acts, the mothers say, ‘My ‘boy has been a good boy all nia life’ Nobody in his audience seemed startled Nobody seemed surprised that parents’ ‘defensa mechanisms” work in penitentiaries just as they work in children’s courts and guidance clinics Parents who insist on calling bad “good” were an old story to the chaplain’s audience. But his remarks may startle us. It may come as a shock to Mrs. Prown to learn that in her aversion to calling I'reddie's disobediance by its proper name she bears a rosemblance to ‘the defense mechanism of the lawbreaker’'s mother. Both bury unpleasant facts out of sight. Both smooth out the burial place neatiy so you wouldn't suspect that all isn’t comfortable and as it should be. But your mental hygienist will tell you that the upkeep of" ‘the defense mechanism is very costly.

They wal tell: You that the price of “burying our fear of chal

LH

Mrs. Lawrence

oa

lenging our children is constant anxiety and tension, so that we become the kind of parents whom children delight to torment Yes, delight is the word I used. And it's a bad kind of delight to give anyone, including those we love. Let's sell the defense mechanism for scrap, dig up the fear and talk to it.

a n " » » a

WE MIGHT say, “Look here, you keep me upset all the time and voure losing me my children.” The fear might reply, “My work is separating people. But you're too much of a coward to fight for your children. You will never speak up because Freddie might do something terrible if- you did.”

Now is the real test. Now is the time to looks he fear straight in the eye and say, “Don’t threaten me with ¢ equences, Love without truth is a fake. As I love, I'll speakst e truth and trust love to take care of the consequences.” ”

It will help immeasurably if you can see that both truth and love are God's and no evil can be a consequence of trust in God. I don’t know how this defense mechanism ever got to running parents whose homes contain a Bible that specifically says, ‘Speak every. man truth to his heighbor, for we are nfembers ‘one of another.” . : 1 can't figure It out—unless it's one of these Machine Age gadgets that crowd our homes so that there isn’t room any more for a Bible on a motiers. bedside table, '

shall we? Let's

>

s

Otto Feucht, 3939 ‘Washington Blvd.

rence S. Lauxterman, 5621 Indian- =

will be

TOMORROW 5 Friday Afternoon Reading—1:30 : p. m. Mrs. A. F, Henley, 5808

rides. =

romorrow =

an elec- :

be Mrs. BE. C..B

THURSDAY, MAY" 04, 1951 Speedway Ball Plans Set by IAC

Pace-Setting Event Tuesday

A pace-setting social event preceding the 500-Mile Rave Decoration ‘Day will be the traditional Indianapolis Athletic Club Speedway Ball. It will be at 9: 30: p.

Tuesday, ; SFE ites arly res-

Among those making ervations are Mr. and Mrs. George E. Davis Jr. who have made it a custom to celebrate Mr. Davis’ birthday at the ball. Their guests, here for the race, will be Mr. and Mrs. Philip Larmon, Detroit. A cocktail party in the Davis home, 4915 Central Ave., before the dance will honor the Larmons.

i,

Reservations Others with reservations include John D. Sparks, Herbert Walz, T. H. Townsend. Lee Des-

Blackburn, ‘'F. L, Mesdames Homer Wood, Newby Jr. and Kathryn Smith, Miss Maryvbelle Wolfred

and Miss Dorothy Beebe. L. B. Warstler, John E.

sauer, M. A. — Carter, If Reducing, ‘ Make Diet Safe

A reducing diet that contain? enriched breads along with meat;

Robert

Deacon,

vegetables, fruit, milk and eggs, Sam V. Johnson, Lyle H. Brothis likely to be a safe diet. One ers, J. T. Emerson, A. C. Holt, slice of bread or a plain roll Alfred L. Clark, R. P. Salzman, vields only about 75 calories — George. Hilgemeier, William E. the same as a medium-sized apple, Hensel. Fred J. Hauck and Wil- . Bread at each meal will not liam H. Keller also are planning cause weight gain when the total parties.

Attending with guests will be James F. Barton, Keith Jurgens, T. R. William, Paul Swiggett, G. L. Rindslish, R..W. Riggs, R. H,

calorie value of the entire diet is suited to the particular needs of the individual. Elimination of bread when you're cutting calories is unnecessary and results in Mussman, C. A. Rieman, Edward added cost. E. Clark and Jehn W. O'Day.

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