Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 June 1951 — Page 36
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SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 1951
- The Teen of the Week—
ARBARA SMITH is The Times’ Teen of the Week. A recent graduate of Shortridge High School, Barbara plans to study pre-med at Goucher college in
the fall.
She is president of the Who Subdeb Club, chairman of the Woodstock juniors, publicity chairman of the Subdeb Club and a member of the 21 Club, the Cab, Arro and Gal Subdeb Clubs, At Shortridge she received the outstanding senior girl award. She was president of the Girls’ League, a Senior Council member, a Dally Echo columnist, and a co-chairman of the Shortridge-Broad Ripple sectionals charity luncheon for the
Red Cross.
She is a member of the Junior Whiteman Cup tennis team
and won the city doubles table tennis cup this year.
She was
runner-up in the state women’s novice table tennis singles. She also holds the Woodstock tennis round-robin cup in
both junior and mixed doubles for last year.
With John DeVoe
she was runner-up in the senior mixed doubles at Woodstock
last year.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearson Smith, 8195 N. Pennsylvania St.
are her parents,
Each Sunday The Times will announce the Teen of the Week.
Fill out the coupon below and send it to Joan Schoemaker, The |
Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis 9, for your nomination of the Teen of the Week before midnight Tuesday.
J DOMINALY cecscscnsesscenstsssecsncsncsassassossssssnssnnnsns
LE EE EE EE EY
(Name) ¥
Of covorsnsessnssssrnnsansvases
(School)
EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EE EY)
(and City)
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FANNIN BANIIRINIENIRRNI RRR ERSY
(Home Address)
for Teen of the Week, My reasons for the selection are given on a separate sheet of paper attached to this coupon.
My NAMES 3000000000 tttottsretssssssrssesssastssssessssssssnasse
Address SERENE RARER NRARENeTIaIIIRT SY
Teen Clubs—
Local Teens Plan Outings
Plans for outings and new of- meeting of the TOZ-IES Club. |
ficers are listed by local subdebs Five senior members graduated |
this week.
A picnic will be held today at Lucy Smith, Jo Ann Williams, |
Turkey Run State Park by the SMILES Club.
| New officers are Joann Henry, |
vice and and
president; Betty Grissom, president; Diana Wilkens Barbara Ceast, recording corresponding secretaries, Ann Sterns, treasurer,
and
from Tech this year. They are |
Emogene Gezzis, Wilma Sweeney | and Margaret Blackwell.-
Emogene was hostess for hel
last meeting in the home of her parents, 2403 Fernway. Friday night the club held a hayride.
| A movie followed by dinner and a slumber party were held by |
Seven girls were formally In- the HI-BROW Club the last day
ftiated into the DOT Club recently, They are Ronda Beaver, Nancy Blaisdell, Norine
bara McNamara and Kathy Neff, Following the ceremony. senior
members were treated to dinner Margaret Darrough. Graduating
in the Hawthorne Room, Favors were flowers to the seniors.
Gloria Farabee, 439 N. Walcott £t., will be hostess for tomorrow's
Goode, | Susan Lobraico, Susan Max, Bar- initiated
|alyn Blocher,
'of school at Warren Central.
Three new members have been into the DATE-A-
{GAMMA Club. They are Vonda
Duffy, Sharon O'Connell and members are Cherie Enyart, RosHelen Bless and
Dixie Allred. Dixie received the
| Tech Cannon Alumni Association {scholarship and the French medal.
Blackwood on Bridge—
Outcome Doubtful When Bridge Hand Is on Paper
LOOKING at a bridge hand on paper, you can’t tell much about how the play will come out. In today’s deal, for example, it looks as if South has no chance at all to bring in nine tricks. However, in actual play, many a hand is made where declarer has “no play for it.” This is due not only to defensive errors but also te defensiveplays which can not rightly be np Blackwood classed as mistakes. Take West's problem in this deal. He opened the four of hearts, dummy’'s ace won, East played the five and South false-carded with the six spot. Kast missed the deuce and thought his partner might be starting a signal with an original holding of Q 5 2. South saw that he had eight top tricks. There was a chance that one more trick could be won with either a long spade or a long diamond ~~ if either of those suits broke.
Didn't Break
AT THE second trick he led a, diamond and ducked it, West winning with the eight. West had no reason to shift and continued hearts, dummy’s king winning. Now South led another diamond and ducked a second time, West taking the trick with the queen.
.
At this point West was su-
spicious of the heart situation and led back a club. Declarer won with the king and laid
‘down the ace of diamonds and”
Today’ s Hand .
South ys Both sides vulnerable NORTH S10 76 3 HA K D106 5 4 C—Q J 10 WEST S—~K Q HJ 984138 D-—-Q 8 C—-9 653
EAST SF 98 4 H-7 5 D—K J 083 C8 7 2 SOUTH S—A 52 H—-Q 10 6 2 D—A 78 A K 4 The bidding: SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST 1C Pass 1D Pass ZNT Pass was sorry to see that the suit did not break. However, West had to make a discard on this trick and he
chose a small club. Declarer |
then cashed two more club tricks, suit,
Down to Hearts
NEXT came the ace and an-
other spade and again West was | on lead. This time he had noth-
ing left but hearts and was forced to lead..into South's queen-10, thus conceding the
game-going trick. West could have defeated the contract if he had made the tough play of discarding the queen or king of spades on the ace of diamonds. 4 South could still have made the hand by double-dummy play +but if he tried laying down the ace and another spade, Fast would have won the second spade and the contract would have been down ons,
<
S$ NT All Pass |
stripping West of the |
Hlerels Guide To Glamour
"BETTY CORNELL'S GLAM.
‘OUR GUIDE FOR TEENS."
New York, Prentice-Hall, $2.95. A. Model speaks to all those would-be's . . . that's Betty
- Cornell. A New York model who
started in her high school days, carried. on through a year of
college and abandoned text. books for the fashion PFunway, Betty covers complete teen beauty routines in her book. She starts with figure problems and works her way up and down to elaborate on everything ‘from hair and makeup to pedicuring. Three premises she stresses in all her tips are cleanliness, eating properly and never giving yourself up as a lost cause. If you want to improve yourself, then patiently follow suggestions. (By Joan Schoemaker).
By JOAN SCHOEMAKER CERTAIN school experiences do leave impressions on students’ minds. Three Techites relate the things that stand out most for them. Paula Vandivier, Judy Wickemeyer and Kelly Reed all had different impressions this past school year, but classes led in experiences that will most affect them later in life. “My journal ‘ ism class and Judy being an exchange editor on the Tech Cannon will affect me most later on,” says Paula, “because. I want to go into journalism. One thing that swayed me a bit was hearing
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES 'School Experiences Do Leave a Mark’
Kelly Pauls both Ed Sovola and Lowell Nussbaum talk here at school. They: helped me make up my mind.” “Since I want to do office work, I think that my typing ¢| will do me the most later on” says Judy. “One thing I can't forget about this year is when the Tech students were killed in that
horrible accident. We don’t drive around as recklessly
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THE | MAJOR problema. of * Lack of popularity, parents denying them dates, parents refusing to let them drive a car, going steady and "how to meet. cheating at school. The list comes from a panel of teen-agers who conduct a weekly radio forum on young folks’ problems. We've considered most of these problems in this column. And the aforementioned forum agree with our opinions, SYA “First, lasting popularity Is gained by thinking of others, ‘not by brooding over yourself. Second and third, you have to
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