Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1952 — Page 11

B. 8, 1952

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Park Honor Roll Listed

HE Park School honor roll for the last grading period has just been an1ounced by Dr. Norman B. Johnson, headmaster, Dennis Myers, Stanley Selig and Robert Sherwood head the third grade honor roll. Those listed on the high honor rolls are Jack Keller and Philip Bredell, fourth grade; John Carpenter and Gaylor Kasle, fifth grade; Richard Kroot, David Chambers, Jock Fortune, Steven Spencer and Richard Wilson, sixth grade. Honor roll names are Evan

Noyes and Stephen Valinet,

fourth grade; Bert McClure and Baxter Rogers, fifth grade; Jack Mead, Harold Bredell, Ted Tether and Henry Whitesell, sixth grade. » » » DON- HINES, Tod Pontius and John Wright are listed on the high honor roll of middle school. Honor roll members of middle school are Thomas Dalglish, Lees Gary, Edward Kahn, Goethe Link, William McPherson and John Stiles.

Upper school high honor roll members are Stephen DeVoe, Richard McCrae and Peter

"Weldon. Honor roll members

are John Allen, John Esterline and Philip Whitesell.

=

“~Karen Chapman does the admiring.

~ “fHE ACROBAT”—Judy Hemmings obeys the sign.

Club Elects Officers

New officers have been elected by the Tally-Ho Euchre Club. They are Mrs. Jeanne Heath, president; Mrs. Heath, treasurer, and Mrs. Virginia Stump, secretary.

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Economics Unit to Meet

Members. .of the Home Economists in Business Club, a department of the American Home Economics Association, will meet at 5:30. p. m. Tuesday for a dinner in the Home Service Division of the Indianapolis Power and Light Co.

Mrs, Harriet West, director of the Power and Light Co. home service department, is hostéss for the evening. Dr. Kenneth G. Kohlstaedt, president of the Indiana Heart Foundation, will speak, o

Mrs. Margaret Sommers, designer of the Heart Kitchen which is on display at the Power and Light Co., will also talk.

Speaker Announced

Mrs. Jeannette M. Winters will speak on “Suds and Decorating” when the Indianapolis Alumnae Chapter of Theta Sigma Phi Sorority ‘Meets at 6:15 p. m. Monday .in the Indianapolis Press Club. Mrs. Winters has a “double-

_ barreled career. She is owner

of the Mid-West Soap Co., vice president and general manager of the Knox-All Corp. and exterior and interior decorator for her husband's qontracting business.

Reservations should be made _

Mrs, Bernice Bur, 8 tonight, ges by

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Art for a Playroom

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Times photos by William A. Oates Jr.

“BOY WITH A DOG"— Ellen Parks is interested in

a child from another world.

“FOX AND THE GRAPES“—Nancy Ellen Cox recalls the Aesop Fable.

By JEAN SPICKLEMIRE Times Homes Editor

OES FINE ART appeal to modern youngsters? Would it have a place on a playroom’s walls?

If Herron Art Museum's

current exhibit is a sample,

the answer's a positive one. Homeward-bound school

children have been attending in droves. They give their undivided interest to the paintings, pottery, porcelain, sculpture, prints, books and objets d'art on display there,

All these pieces are part of a collection to be at Herron through Mar. 9. It's especially geared to the eye of an eight to 10-year-old.

Paintings and graphics are hung at child height. Sculpture, too, is placed oi low stands so it can be easily viewed. Pottery and smaller pieces, like the honey pot in the form of a bear, are situated in pintsize cases. > ” » THERE ARE TWO sets of labels: Brown ones for the older visitor, white ones for the grade schoolers. The brown give the name and date of the artist, the title of the work and the owner of the piece. The white bear comments about the works, from the juvenile point of view. For instance, the acrobat, a brass by Gaston Lachaise, has an adjacent note which. comments, ‘Please touch this acrobat. Doesn't the metal feel good? Can you do this trick?” By the “Bronco Buster,” a bronze by Frederic Remington and contributed by Theodore B. Griffith, is the direction, “This plece of sculpture is in a metal called bronze, but the artist modelled it first in clay. Do you think the design is a balanced one?” A good part’of the articles’ charm {is their subject matter, Each is familiar. In Goya's oll, “Boy With a Dog,” the canine and the strangely dressed boy

claim Ellen's attention. In the

explanation she will receive an early lesson in world friendship.

THE ENGLISH mid-18th Century porcelain is a scene from the Aesop Fable, “The Fox and the Grapes.” It was lent: by Mrs. Herbert R. Duckwall. Of Staffordshire, sethi-por-celain is the honey pot. Tho its roots hike back to the mid19th century, it has a timeless fascination. Sex is no barrfer 80 far as the bronco. buster is concerned. And the acrobat would grace either a- masculine or feminine dresser. 2 The powers that be at Herron have chosen examples of

- great art In most cases; cost

prohibits duplicating this in the, ‘average home. Yet it's possible to buy excellent reproductions. or less expensive ‘similar ob-

rats

hii

Graham,

anna Demaree, . i

jects which will both intrigue and educate. 2 Two galleries are devoted to the show, They're on the first floor, so the smaller fry won't have to climb stairs. Some pieces gome from the permanent collection at Herron; others were lent from museums and private collections. Of interest to veteran Indianapolitans will be the painting, “The Anxious Mother.” It was given | to Herron by the Girls’ Classical School, the Tudor Hall ofy an earlier day. Among lenders to the exhibit | are the Detroit Institute of | Arts: Swarthmore College; Dr. | G. H.-A. Clowes; Miss Eliza- | beth Ball, Muncie; Albright Art | Gallery of Buffalo; Dr. F. R. Hensel: ‘Abbott Laboratories Galleries of Chicago; H. J. Trueblood, Chicago; Art Institute of

Chicago, gnd French and Co. |

New York.

Officers Named

By Club Group

New officers have been named by ' the Florence Nightingale Club. They are Mrs. C. O. Terrell, president; Mrs. O. 8, Srader and Mrs. Norman Brock, first and second vice presidents; Mrs,

Edward Bettcher, secretfry; Mrs. Ralph Linder, treasurer, and Mrs, Herbert Niebergall,

membership secretary. Mrs. chairman of a newly created | hospital committee,

-' ‘of the annual Monument Cir¢le * ‘Easter Sunrise Service, Inc. and

, Pace will be hostesses.

Club Plans

Luncheon

Members and guests of the Woman's Press Club of Indi- | ana will meet for luncheon at ' 12:15 p. m, Tuesday in the Hotel Washington. Mrs. Jeanette Covert Nolan, a member of the club, will speak. Hostesses will he Mrs. John Dyer and Mrs. Lois Fuller, Mrs.

John E. Kleinhenz is in charge of reservations. Guest of honor will be Mrs. James JM. Ogden who has been chosen as woman-of-the-month. She is the founder and director

has contributed greatly to Indianapolis music circles. In 1921 Mrs, Ogden organized the Ogden Junior Chorale. She is a member of the Matinee Musicale, Indiana Federation of Music Clubs, Harmonie Club and a patroness of Mu Phi Epsilon Sorority.

Luncheon to Honor Clubs’ Past Presidents

Past presidents of the Muniei- |

pal Gardens Women's Department Club will be honored at a noon luncheon Monday in the Lafayette Road clubhouse. Mrs. E. C. Rumpler will talk on “I Served on a Jury.” The Grandmothers Club chorus will dance the minuet. Mesdames N. E. Lewis, Charles Manning, Kosta Maxime, Hoyt McCurdy and A. B.

Ernest Millholland 1s |

Assisting her are Mrs. Frank |

cochairman; dames Lloyd George, Roy Gale, Edward Bettcher, W. M. Vaser, Floyd Bell, Della Brandstetter and Harold Spurgeon.

Meeting Sef By Club Alumnae

Members of Phi Mu Sorority |

Alumnae Club will meet at 7:45 p. m. Monday in the home of Mrs. R. 8. Hiatt, 3554 Kenwood Ave. Dr. William King, director of adult hygiene and geriatrics ° of the State Health Board will speak on the subject, “A Bill of Rights for the Aging Person” Assisting Mr8." Hiatt wiil be Mesdames Howard Beeson, CyM. Hollingsworth, J. L. Stan- ° ley and William Wilcox, Miss Jo Ellen Nicholson and Hig Man)

Mes- |

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