Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 August 1951 — Page 32

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Rings on Their Fingers

Mrs. Robert David White

August Wedding Dates Set

ISS SONDRA ‘ANN WOODMANSEE and Charles Benjathm 1nomipson have set 7:30 p. m. Saturday for their wedding in the Pleasant Run Evangelical and Reformed Church. The future bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs, Harlan Woodmansee, 5821 Julian Ave., anid Mr. Thompson fis the son of Mr. and Mrs. Berle

Thompson, Augusta, Miss Carol Woodmanses will be maid of honor for her sister, and bridesmaids will include Miss Betty Plitz, Barington, TI, Miss Peggy Whitehead and Miss Jo Edwards. Jackie Thompson and Shirley Jean Thompson will be flowergirls and Joseph Wayne Thompson will be ringbearer. : The prospective bridegroom has chosen his brother, Kenneth Thompson, as best man and Harlan Woodmansee Jr. Jack Belcher and Donald Holstein as ushers, Miss Woodmansee and Mr, Thompson ares students at Indiana University, He is a member of Sigma Pi Frater-

nity. The bride-to-be will be hanor guest Tuesday night at a kitchen. shower with Mra, Thomas Myers, 2220 Villa Ave, ag hostess On Friday, Mrs. Robert Caudall 425 N, Emerson Ave.. will entertain the bridal

group with a dinner party. Miss Woodmansee was recently honored at a miscellaneous shower given by Miss Ninabelle Kirby, #33 Northeastern Ave. Mrs Fred Coss, 3069 Carrollton Ave. entertained with a personal shower,

Stewart-Moore R. AND MRS. Lawrence V. Stewart will live at 1635 Lexington Ave. following their wedding trip to California, The bride, the former Miss Enid E. Moore, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Moore, Acton. Mr. Stewart is the son of A. IL. Stewart. Columbus; Ind. Vows uniting the couple were read at 7:30 o'clock Friday night in the bride's home by the Rev. Archer Bhirley, pastor of Pleasant View Baptist Church, “The bride wore a white Chinese brocaded silk *dress and a fingertip veil and car- ¢ ried red roses. Mrs. Virginia Thompson Was the bride's only attendwearing an aqua dress Carrying yellow roses. Thompson

Miss Woodmansee

Morris-Morgan

Noble Bretzman photo

Miss Morris

MS S- CAROL MOR RIS

and Pfe. L. Eugene Morgan will he married Aug 26 In tha Tuxedo Park Bap tist Church Miss Morris is the faughter of Mr.-and Mrs Howard 1. Morris, 802 N Ritter Ave, Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Lewia M Morgan, 5124 Pleasant Run Blvd.

JN

Martin photo.

Miss Meyer,

Dr. O'Neal To Be Wed

Miss Patricia Joan Meyer will wear a white imported organdy and Chan-

tilly lace gown. for her 2:30 o'clock wedding this afternoon to Dr. Robert

I.loyd O'Neal. The double-ring rite will be

performed by the Rev A. Glen O'Dell in the Brookside Ev angelical IU'nited Rrethren Church

Fashioned with a fitted bodice and a lace yoke, the bridal gown {is highlighted with a lace collar and a bertha cffect of lace Her hooped bouffant skirt with a deep Inset of lace at the hemline will fall into a

cathedral train and a half-hat

appliqued with lace will hold her two-tiered, fingertip iifusion veil.

Attendants Listed The ‘bride's cousin, ‘Miss Barbara Meyer, will be maid of honor; Miss: Patricia Garigan, bridesmaid, and Miss Karen Sue Belles, junior bridesmaid They will wear

lavender, nile green and vel lw embroidered organdy ire Dr.” Robert Eugene Huffer will come from Frankfort to

a Best man, Ushers will in

de Dr. Lawrence Lucarelll

I'erre Haute; Paul Dotson L'rbana 11 and {chard Parker, Tuscola, Il Fhe reception, immediately

following the ceremony, will

be in the Delta Sigma Delta

Fraternity House at Butler University For her trip to Wisconsin the bride will wear a pink linen suit with white acces sories. The couple will live In

Champaign, Il. The bride {s attending In

diana University I'raining School for Nurses, and Dr O'Neal attended the Uni

versity of Illinois and is « graduate of Indiana Uni versity School of Dentistry. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Payl Stanley Seavey, 1505 N. Kealing Ave, and Mr.- and Mrs. Perry Joseph O'Neal, Urbana, II.

Ceremony Is Read

In Boston

Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Mavnard Singer are ving in In. dianapolis following thei marriage, June 24 in the or tel Kenmore, Boston. Mrs. Singer was Miss Ruth Bromberg Mr. and Mrs. Bertram L. Bromberg, Brookline and Arlington, Mass., are the bride's parents, Mr. Singer is the son of Mrs. Samuel Bliss, Gary, and the late Sydney Singer, Chicago. > The bride and bridegroom were graduated from Indiana University, Ts

-

Mabley officiated at the single-ring cereqony. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Horace Charles Fisbeck, Terre Haute, chose white satin and Chantilly lace for her 3:30 o'clock wedding. Her gown was fashfoned with a fitted bodice, long pointed sleeves and a full skirt falling into a cathedral train. A Chantilly lace cap caught her fingertip veil of illusion and she carried a white prayerbook trimmed with a cascade arrangement of canahamia orchids and stephanotis. Mrs. W. C. Cunningham came from Evansville to be matron of honor. She wore a

cape with her gold satin gown, » » " BRIDESMAIDS, wear-

ing blue satin dresses matching the matron of honor's, were Miss Jo Ann Ihlstrom, Richmond; Miss Joyce Hendricks, New Castle, and Miss Ellen Brant, and Miss Joanne Hutchins,” Diana White was flowergirl. Mr. White chose Lt. Robert D. McFry, New Albany, as best man, and William Peet, Indianapolis; Lt. Ted Olson, Rochester; Donald Clodfelter, Lafayette, and James Shields, Bloomington, as ushers. ou ” ” AFTER A reception in the Mayflower Room of the Terre

Haute House, the couple left

- on a wedding trip to New

BRIDE— Miss Patricia Jean Lees and Eugene W. Strack were married Wednesday in St. Paul's Catholic Church, Marion. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Lees, Marion, Mr. Strack is the son of Mrs. Clara Strack, 929 Bradbury Ave.

Capital Capers—

Guests 'Pay’ With Their Blood for a Party:

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES a

= White-Fisbeck Rite

Is Followed by Trip fo Bermuda

Times State Servies

TERRE HAUTE, Aug. 4—Escorted down the aisle by her father, Miss Marianne Fisbeck this afternoon became the bride of Robert David White at the altar of S. Stephen's Episcopal Church.

The Rev. Thomas

York and Bermuda. They will make their home in Martinsville. He is affiliated with Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity. - ~ »

Hummel-Byers Miss Elizabeth Lee Byers became the bride of Robert D. Hummel Jast nigh tin a double -ring ceremony in Grace Methodist Church. The Rev. Francis Johnson officiated at the 7 o'clock ceremony. The bride, daughter of Mrs. Evelyn C. Byers, 3838 Spanp Ave. chose a gown of imported Swiss organdy over satin styled with a fitted bodice and portrait neckiine. The full embroidered skirt was highlighted with a wide ruffie ending in a chapel train.

» » ”

ATTENDANTS in green and yellow organdy frocks were Miss Dolores Cooney, maid of honor, and Miss Nancy Crossley and Miss Marcella Haver, bridesmaids. Ted McLaughlin was his brother's best man and ushers included Bill Hummel and Marvin Beisel. Raymond Dale Stzwart was ringhearer, Mr. Hummel, son of Mrs, Thelma McLaughlin, 338 N, Colorado Ave. attended Purdue University before entering the U. S. Navy.

Haislev-Pletcher photo

By ELISE MORROW

WASHINGTON, Aug. 4 — The most revolutionary development in Washington social life since the lamented invention of the cocktail party occurred this week as the Peruvian Embassy asked all guests invited to an Embassy reception to donate blood to the American Red Cross on the day of the party. This astounding circumstance led to infinite speculation on the possible results if this custom were to become popular here, If the guests donated blood be- mee oo i Rarer fore the party, they Li» lightand giddy If they waited until after the reception,

night be

their blood might be. slightly giddy. However, if the

practice could be enforced with any efficiency, Washing-

ton would more than meet (ts blood quota, which

it has emphatically not been doing recently (though how much would be usable is another Elise: Morrow

question) and social life would be stabilized. “A pint for a pint,” could be the hattle ery. The process started on a small scale. Unlike last year, the Peruvians had a very small gathering this summer, to celebrate their 131st independence anniversary. Only Embassy staff members and local nationals were Invited. About 40 guests followed the invitation request and stampeded the Red Cross in the morning with arms bared for a pint of heart's blood. “I've never seen a handsomer bunch of men,’ sald one Ked Uross lady. “If yvou,like Latin Americans, that is--and I do. I was just wishing I was 30 years younger.” : The list included men and women. and evervone on the Embassy staff except the Ambassador and Senora de Berckemeyer, who are out. of town. They all appeared later in the day at the party, none visibly the worse for wear, with patches of adhesive tape on their arms, : ; eB > ONE OF THE SUMMER'S most nauseating spectacles occurred in the beautiful green drawing room of the Embassy of the Taniiieas

: Repuplie where Military Aide to the

Gen. Harry H. Vaughan, and “Gen.

“yr

Auliffe were decorated with the Order of Moa Pablo Du: the Dominican Ambassador, Dr. Luis Thomen

arte by

The Embassy of this barbaric dictatorship enjovs great social prestige in the Capital largely because princi nean hing y most Washington gue , who go anywhere for 32 free meal and a qr nk. That the Dominican government is a ruthless tvranny has been fully documented o quote Time magazine of

Tulv 30: “The Dominican Re rrobably has more policemen and stool pigeons than the Soviet Union. There is no record of the num ber of Dominicans Trujilla's bullvhoys have shot and beaten to death, but exiles charg that the toll runs into thousands. Politica prisoners who-come back alive tell of Gestapo-

model cells go constructed that the inmate can neither stand up nor lie down, of heatir with gteel wire whips.” It is easy to see why the slap-happy, deco ration-happy Vaughan accepted the bloody dubious ribbon of the Dominican nation, but less discernible why an authentic general, of MecAuliffe’s stature, had to endure this burlesque. The audience at the drawing room ceremony included almost all the rankTng Latin. American diplomats not away on vacations, in addition to the following outstanding representatives of democracy: Labor Secretary Maurice Tobin, Raymond Muir, the State Department's deputy chief of protocol; Mrs, Leslle Biffle, wife of the small and powerful Secretary of the Senate: Mrs, John Steelman, wife of the presidential assistant, and Sen. Denni Chavez of New Mexico. ¢ © 2

BECAUSE OF THE DEATH of Adm. Forrest Sherman, Gen. and Mrs, Omar Bradley postponed their scheduled reception in Bonor of the Chief of Staff of Brazil, Gen. Pedr Aurelio de Goes Monteiro, who is spending a month here in the Capital: Naval personnel canceled anv social life during the week in mourning for the Admiral. Gen, Monteiro, setting a precedent for visiting firemen, has rented a hpuse in sub urban Bethesda for his visit. This was sound tactics because his entourage includes a wife, a daughter and son-in-law, and four grandchildren. Gen. Bradley is setting a later date for his reception for the Brazilian chief. Meantime, Gen, Monteiro Was honor guest at a stag-.luncheon given by Lt. Gen. Charles L. Bolte, chairman of the Inter-American Defense Board, at the Mayflower, Gentlemen at the party included high ranking United States officers ax well as members of Gen, Monteiro's staff,’ and Brazilian ‘Ambassator Mauricio Nabuea:,

Mrs. Robert D. Hummel

Miner-Baker photo

WED—Mrs, Walter Lewis Whyland Jr. was Miss Mary Ann Miner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Miner, 1449 Brunswick Ave., before her marriage Thursda groom are Mr. and Mrs. Whyland, 731

Parents of the bride- . Norfolk St.

Bloomington

Rite Today

Times State Kervice PATRICKSBURG, Aug. 4 White and green will

the color scheme

form

tomorrow

.at the wedding of Miss Caron Esther Schmalz and (Charles KE. Schoppenhorst in

tha First

Methodist Bloomington.

Church Chapel,

Parents of the couple are

My and Mrs. Clifton hmalz, Patrickshurg., and Mr, and Mrs. William 8. ‘choppenhaorst 637 Middle Drive, Woodruff Place, In-

dianapolis,

Attendants’ Frocks The Rev. Merrill McFall will officiate at the 3 p. m. dauble-ring ceremony

The bride has chosen a white nylon organza and Chantilly lace gown over

satin and will wear an illusion veil. She will carry a crescent-shaped bouquet of white roses with ivy streamers, Attendants in white and green will be Mrs. Dorothy Kirk, Bloomington, matron of

honor; ‘and Mrs. Mildred Lackey and Miss Shirley Graesch, Indianapolis, bridesmaids,

Church Reception

Donald Schoppenhorst will be his brother's best man and David Schmalz und David Richards, Patricksburg, will be ushers.

The couple will leave orf a wedding trip through the South after a church: .recep-

, tion, . They will make. their

home at 1214 Groff Ave. Indianapolis. The bride is a graduate of Indiana University and Mr. Schoppénhorst was graduated Rom Purdue "University, :

°

Miner-Baker photo.

Couple on Hip do.

Canada

Nuptial vows for Butler University students, Miss Cleo Lorraine Besterman and Jack FE. Ellis, were read yesterday afternoon In the Meridian Heights Presbyterian Church by the Rev, Robert Moore

twa

head. The bride isi the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John W,

Besterman, 4054 Central Ave ’ and the bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Ellis, Kokomo.

Lavender and pink nylon

marquiset gowns styled with ballerina-length skirts were worn by Miss Jo Ann John son, Evanston, Ill., maid of honor, and Misses Mary Jane Hendrickson, Mary Lou Leaf, Donna Thorne and Marilyn Wright, bridesmaids. Barbara Ellis, Kokome was flowergirl,

Bride Wears White

Robert Fllis was his hrother's best man

and ushers wera

Donald Huston, Crawfordse ville; Robert Mossberg, Harte ford City; Robert Wilson, Kokomo, and Waller O'Brien, The bride chose a white 33lin gown for the 3:30 o'clock double-ring rite. Fashloned with a lace yoke, petite collar and cathedral train, the dress was h zhlighted with a cape effe« over the shoulders A lace half-hat held her fingertip veil of il]usion, Trip North The couple left for north ern . Michigan and Canada after the reception he Phi Delta Theta House Rutler

University, The bride traveled in a yellow linen sheath dreas and sheer yellow plaid duster with yellow linen accessories, When they return, they will live at 3470 N, Meridian St, Both the bride and bridegroom attended Butler University where she was affiliated with Alpha Chi Omega Sorority and -he was a member of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity.

Miss Hand Is Bride

Marriage vows uniting Miss Gertrude Joan . Hand and Robert E. . Bernhardt were read at 10:30 o'clock yesterday morning in St. Catherine of Sienna Catholic Church. The Rev. Fr. David Seneféld officiated at the double-ring rite. Miss Dolores Weimer, in a blue net frock with pink velvet accessories, . was the bride's only attendant. The bride's brother, Charles L. Hand, was best man and Keith Henselmeier and Gene Simpson were ushers, The bride chose a balleringe length gown. of white Chan. tilly. lace over satin and net fashioned with a sheer bodice and tiered skirt. A tiara of orange blossoms held her two-tiered fingertip veil. She carried white roses. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe T. Hand, 2640 Allen Ave, she is a studeng nurse at General Hospital, Mr. Bernhardt is the son off Mr, and Mrs. Ralph E. A. t, 22 E. Regent St.

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