Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 January 1952 — Page 15
17, 1953
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©. N. Meridian St.,
THURSDAY, JAN. 17, 1052
NEW OFFICERS—Mrs. Cleo Kinnaman, membership secretary (left), and Mrs. Mabel Ransdell, president, look over the membership files of the Mutual Service Association.
Association: Meeting Scheduled
HE Mutual Service Association wil
hold its annual meeting starting wah a dinner at 6:30 p. m.. Wednesday in the Hotel Lincoln's Travertine Room. Dr. William Dern- will speak on “A Parson Takes a Gander,” in which he will tell what a clergyman sees when he looks at life, Dr. Dern is an Episcopal clérgyman by cation and has served as general missionary and executive secretary of the diocese of Lexington,
Ky., and as minister of a parish as well as lecturer. Officers elected for 1952 at the October hoard
meeting will be installed bv 19351 president,
Miss Helen Brown,
The Mature Parent—
vo-
They include Mrs. Mabel Ransdell, president; Mrz. Helen Ax Brown, vice president; Miss Aline | Laws, secretary; Miss Cleo Kinnaman, membership secretary, and - Miss Mary Arthur, treasurer, »
’ *, '. oo oo IX :
NEW MEMBERS for the board of directors will be elected, and thé association will hear the annual report for 1951.
Miss ‘Ruth Hoover, chairman of hostesses, is |
in charge of arrangements. She will be assisted by members of the 1951 Board. .- The Mutual Service Association is made up of about 900 business and professional women whose to raise money. tn. _axsist temporarily or perhaps to care for themselves,
purpnse it is women who Yocom unable
busines finally
There's No Protecting
Child From Experience
By MURIEL LAWRENCE OE’S big brother Steve is very fond of him. But since he ‘entered the first grade, Steve's manner has become noticeably patronizing.
One rainy day, to Joe's horror, Steve does not come home from gchool to play down in the cellar on their broken crate project. Instead he demands permission to go off with a schoolmate to play in his house. Joe is not invited. His mother notes the look on Joe's face as he watches Steve and his friend run down ie porch steps. She pulls her wooden darning egg from the gnck she is mending and says to Joe: “Look, the marks of your teeth are still on this old darning egg of mine! You loved it so much when vou were little that Daddy and 1 decided one day have a’ colored egg of your own. We all went to the store with you. It was the first time you'd ever been in one and when .,.” Joe's mother is filling a little boy's story about his unremembered past. There are times in Joe's life when he needs comfort as well as entertainment, when he needs stories a little different from those about kindly trains that carry letters or enterprising farm tractors that go off on adventures.
Mrs.
Lawrence
you should
need for a
These are tales that Joe enjoys when he feels interested in the world around him. When he is just interested in himself and has a suspicion that a four-and-a-half-year-old person has no secure place in the scheme of things, he likes
Blackwood on Bridge—
stories that convince him hiz place = 30 secure
that it can be historically establizhed NO MATTER HOW hard we try, we cannot protect children against. experiences that make them feel suddenly lost and disconnected from their familiar pattern of acceptance. The story of Joe's first visit to a toy shop does far more than merely distract or entertain him. It reweaves the broken thread of his dignity back into a sense of himself as an important family personality. He plays the star role in the story that suggests that hig every experience, every has been of such interest to, his mother that she has stored memories of them carefully away. While we do not want to limit our reazsurance of Joe to tales of his heroic past, the account of his toy shop exploits serves a good emergency purpose, oe o & TOMORROW, HIS mother should take steps to rearrange her younger child's social life so he is not so dependent on hig big brother's companionship. But today we can use his past to reassure his present, After we use such a story to comfort him, however, we should also explain how big brothers often like to play with big boys. And we should make a mental note to invite that little redheaded boy in Joe's nursery school for lunch. Comforting though they are, tales of Joe's past should net be used as substitutes for dealing realistically with his present problem of companionship.
response |
We want Joe to find satisfaction in his present
as well as in his past.. That little friend from nursery schonl should certainly he around on the next rafmy day if we want to prove to Joe that today can be just as triumphant as yesterday.
Shade High Card Needs, Open Bidding First
IY A SITUATION where South RR
the opponents have an
advanced part score I have E-W 60 partial
Neither side vulnerable
After Mr. Muezy’'s doubtful raise, Mrs. Keen doubled and Mr. Dale left it in. Miss Brash won three spade tricks, a heart
Ti NORTH recommended shading the «Mir, Muzsy and a diamond—down 500 usually high card requirements S—J 10 5 points. .- oa a nen the bidding ahead Heks $4 NOTE PARTICULARLY Mr, | By acting so Ci 4 2 Dale's decision "to leavé the L) vou have an WEST ? FAST double in for penalties. He knew ™ immediate pay- Mr Dale Mrs. Keen his partner to be a sound bidchological ad- g_k Q 3 6 <3 : der and she must have a fine vantage plus py _ a 9 HA J 30 8 hand to force him to bid at the-opportunity pg 5 D—A Q J 10 the three level. of probing for ¢__ a 108354 C—K J 9 2 He was certain that his side
a possible gacrifica spot
SOUTH Miss Brash
eould easily fill out, their game, either at a contrfct of three . clubs or at two no trump or
at the very 9 lowest bidding SAP1T42 even at three-odd in one of the : H—Q 78 ; : y ) level. c red suits if Mrs. Keen saw fit D—K R 3 : But, as is the C—3 8 to bid one of them. case in every The PAAE: Rut the old master figured ft Mrs. Keen i -. : * ay. He was sure he could bidding situa- grpry WEST NORTH FAST Svs vay DE a Ne to tion vou can carry a good thing ” eat two spades. : 1S Pam 28 DPB. pp gidn't know, but that wasn't too far. Remember, I recom- All Pass ) ;
mended “shading” the high card requirements, not going berserk and bidding on practically noth-
Ing. you
Put it this way: have in high cards, should have
too important.
the less you the more in distribu-
” ~ ~ HE WOULD GET whatever penalty was available and after
” ” ” THE HOLDING of two pretty good five card suits gives your . hand playability and helps to justify lowering the usual standards a little. Or a.fair six card sult with good Intermediates adds reason to your opening.
PTA Prexy
To Entertain
Mrs. Willlam Parrish, president ‘of the Parent Teacher Association of School 39, will ba hostess Sunday afternoon at
the Children’s Museum Family.
Hour. At that time she will welcome patrons, pupils and teachers of the school.
Assisting her #ill be Lloyd N. Blue, principal, teachers of the school, and Mesdames Bernard Swalils, John Bucy, Gene Jackson, Edward Plummer, Frank Masarachia, George Johnson, George Ireland, Eza ‘Fletfher, John Beeson and Ernest MacKinnon. The Museum, located at 2010. is open. from ~3to 5 p.m. on Sunday.and from 9 am to 5 p.m. Tuasday i ttough Sattttey,
Ward Sexson,
tional values and suit solidity. Because her opponents had a 60 partial, Miss Brash opened the South hand with one spade. A bad decision. She was not only short in high cards, but short in playing tricks.
Biko
A GIRL has a car but/her date for a dance does mot and she wonders if it would be all right to mention that they might use her car. WRONG: She decides that it would not he proper. to offer ¢he use of her car, even ‘though she knows the young man well. RIGHT: If she wishes, she mentions casually that they can use her car if he thinks it ‘would be a good idea. 2 » 3 # A COUPLE tells Ti they are soon going to be grandparents. . - WRONG: Kid them ahout getting old. RIGHT: . Never, even. ‘fun, point out the phn : de: Bigflaney ne news,
“
be playing against Miss Brash, a rank overbidder, and Mr. Muzzy who is just rank. ‘period.
Why not prolong a rubber like,
this as long ax possible? Why not, indeed?
Something For the Tots
“Chick and Chubby Time" from 10 a, m, to 1 p. m. Saturday at Phyllis Wheatley YWCA Branch, is devoted to children between the ages of 8 through 14 years of age. Any child .between these ages may belong
"to the group. Registration will
continue through: Saturday. The weekly program opens at 10 a. m. with song, play or
* dancing. © Girls swim at 10:30
o'clock while boys go on the ‘gym floor, At 11:15 o'clock the boys swim while the girls are on the gym floor. p. m. everyone comes together: for ‘a special skating party, candy ‘making, square dancing of simple arts and crafts, All activitier are supervisad by capable staff add volunteers.
the hand he would still have a | - good partner and he would still |
At 12:10 |
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