Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 February 1952 — Page 15
or with a sauce for six.
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per; good buy, Some varieties
little cheaper;
air in supply
, 8earce. shell varieties
YES—High. {ttle higher. scarce. .Ample supply.
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THURSDAY, FEB, 21,
1952 .
Times photo by John R, Bpicklemire
Thm
BUSINESSMEN CHEFS—YVictor R. Jose Jr., Fred S. Smith and Bud Nelson (left to right) pre- | parg a sample dish to be served at the North Unitarian Church dinner tonight in the church. The | Men's Club will cook and serve the meal. Members and friends of the church may attend. The
dinner will begin at 6:30 p. m.
OUR new spring bonnet, if predictions made last night hold true, will be #nything from a food basket to a
cleaning closet.
“
In an attempt to fill their bridge club coffers, a group
of Marcy Laners staged a hat fashion show during last night's meeting. Each member raided her ice box and home for decorations
for the chapeaux.
After all the hats had been modeled, they were auctioned off to the highest bidder, the bidders being husbands. Outstanding in the collection was a creation designed from a floor mop presented by Mrs. Nellie Floyd. Since it was her husband who made this investment, the other members are wondering if he'll make her wear it to get his money's worth. n ” ” IT WAS THE “luck of the Irish” and not a stacked deck that gave Mrs. John R. Kelley, 3680 Watson Rd.,, a 12-spade bridge hand at the recent Women's Contract Club party held in’ the Indianapolis “Athletic Club. The first table to participate in this historic event included Mrs. Carl J. Rusie, partner of the seven-spade opening bidder; and the opposing team, Mrs. Wallace Simpson and Mrs. Bruce E. Dolch. Hands like this could put bridge advisers out of business. 8 2 n “A PAUL JONES is a deviation of the old game of musical chairs, only, instead of sitting on what you are in front of, vou dance with it,” were the instructions Miss Patsy Parker gave guests in her Ben Davis home last night. If you've ever wo’ “red how it feels to dance with an end
Plan Dance
At YWCA
The Washington Whirl, dance for young people 25 yedrs and ‘above, will be held from 8 to 11 p. m. tomormew in the Central Branch, Young Women's Christian Association. There will be mixers, record dancing and a special quiz show. Employed girls in the community, 18 years and above, are invited to the Business Girls’ Club which meets the second and fourth Thursday evenings of every month. +The program includes informal recreation, lectures; supper meetings and parties. Miss Pat Showalter is president. On each Tuesday night fellows and girls between the ages of 17 and 25 gather at the Central “Y” for informal recreation including cards, table tennis, social dancing and billiards. Time is from 3 to 10 p. m. 2 oY
x
Miss Mamie Davis, national board member of the YWCA, will visit the local association... next week. Highlight of her
week with the local YWCA - ~ will be an orientation course
for all administrative committee members to be at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday in the Central Branch.
tahle, ask Larry Moore. The hostess did say “i . 4 8. 8 = BEFORE TAKING A motor trip down through “them thar” hills in Kentucky, invest in an automobile mechanics book and get acquainted with your car. This suggestion comes from Dorothy and Margaret Shirley who recently returned from the Blue Grass state, While driving through a mountainous area, the Shirley sisters heard a strange rattle in their car. Not mechanically inclined themselves, they sought assistance at a nearby house. After an hour of unscrewing and removing parts from under the car, they finally found what was causing the disturbance— a twig.on the axle, It was rather costly to bring a mechanic 35 miles to get the car back in shape. ” ” ” IN COMPLETE DEFIANCE of fashion’s nape-length tresses, Blanche Thebom will come to Indianapolis again Saturday and Sunday to take part in Wagner's “Lohengrin” in the Murat Theater.
The Metropolitan star is cov-
ered from head to toe with her locks when they are allowed to flow. As special guests for the Saturday evening performance, Mrs. Fabien Sevitzky will have Mr. and Mrs. Harold Book, Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Benedict, Ft. Wayne. The program is a feature in the Indianapolis Symphony subscription series.
My Day—
Outlines Schooling In Germany
MERICAN schools in Germany indirectly are having a limited effect on the German education system, C. Emmet Eiler told the -May Wright diana Council of Women, this afternoon.
Sewall, In-_
Speaking at the council's mid- | winter conference in the Hotel |
Lincoln, Mr. Eller, assistant state superintendent of public instruction, reviewed his experiences as American school superintendent in Wiesbaden, Germany. “At . least T7000 American children are in schools in Germany run by the U, S. military for families of the occupation and defense organization. Within Berlin alone-—100 miles inside the Russian Zone—there are several hundred American students.
= = = TEACHERS ARE recruited from the U. 8. with German |
assistants on the staff. There is visitation of Germans in the American schools, as much as
Heavy galvanized ash basket that will stand up to heavy wear and tear. Corrugated bottom, re-
inforced, convenient
handles.
possible without upsetting the |
educition program of thé youthful American. “Every one of the seven high schools,” he reported, “are accredited under the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools.” This
simplifies the process~of chil- |
dren re-entering school when they return to America. . ” = Ld MRS. WYNNE ARNHOLTER, Central State Hospital psychologist, urged the women's audience to adopt three mental hygiene principals to meet the
« complexities of everyday living.
Also speaking on today's program was Judge Saul I. Rabb who talked on “Change -of Judge Venue.”
Israel's Spirit Is Like That Which Built America
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT
TIBERIYA, Israel, Feb. 21—My first day in Israel was begun by seeing a really startling industrial enter-
prise.
It was the Sabbath, but the Yankee foreman had
no objection to meeting us and showing us the remarkable
66+«inch pipes that he was constructing for the irrigation that is gradually bringing the Negev under cultiva- : tion, NEw This redhead- # ed young man has a some-" ‘what varied ° working crew, made up of something like 17 different nationalities, We saw the line where the two pipes running morth and south and east and west meet. It was explained that as each section was finished those immigrants who were going to work that ground move in. Almost immediately the land begins to bear fruit.
What astounds one in Isreal is that the spirit 1s like the American spirit. There is imagination “to accomplish great projects and no fear of undertaking them. ” ” ~ I THINK BEERSHEVA, which is the city farthest to the south that we visited, was the most interesting experience of the day. Here there was a Latvian man, a builder of houses who also if mayor of the town. It was quite evident his
whole heart was in the building of the town’s new quarters. He took us first to see where the new immigrants were received - and lived in little tin shelters. _ Sometimes they live in tents, shut the isanitary arrangements
are made carefully and showers
are “provided. After six months
4 Or 80 they have been taught and -
rare capable of building a tworoom house with which they get a small garden plot.. Here they live for.some time while they continue building the next ae A a
» artisans can run
step which is a two-story apartment house unit housing 1000 famiiles, » » ~ THE LAST STEP AFTER this is to be“one of the builders
on a project of three-story
apartment houses. As the fam- |
ilies move in, they landscape and develop new, small garden plots so that when the apart-
ments are all completed the land all around will be landscaped and planted. This is an industrial area so .they do not go in for largescéile farms, but there is in the neighborhood a glass factory and a ceramics factory. A unit also is ‘being constructed for small shops. where individual their own small businesses.
The Hadassah hospital that
serves this neighborhood is well run and in nice quarters. There is a nurses’ training school and in "it are some of the young women from the neighboring settlements who have come in and learned to be nurses.
ADAI Re-elects Mrs. Fern Caswell
Mrs. Fern Caswell, Philadelphia, Ind., was re-elected president of the Antique Dealers Association “of Indiana at the group’s meeting last night in the Hawthorn Room. Other officers chosen were William H. Boyd, vice president, and John Secrist, treasurer. Mrs. Marge Neal will continue to serve as secretary. p= pointed on the - membership
committee . were Jack Hults,
chairman; Mrs, -Ada Myers, Plainfield, and: Axsdl Henriksen.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
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