Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 March 1952 — Page 32
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The Teen of the
Times phote by John R. Spickirmire
Week— ¥
ILL DAVIS, The Times’ Teen of the Week, is treasurer
of Broad Ripple High School's senior class and hopes
to study journalism in college come fall of "52. : ‘He recently returned from Valley Forge where he
-accepted the Freedom Founda-
tion Award for the school's weekly newspaper, the Riparian, of which he is managing editor. President of Quill and Scroll, he is a member of the Student Council and was cochalirman of the district convention of the Indiana High School Press As-
sociation ‘recently held at the school, He ran track In both his sophomore and junior years and played American I.egion Juntor baseball for the Broad Ripple Post both last summer and the previous summer. Mr. and Mrs, Lester KE, Davis, 1141 Ivy Lane, are his parents.
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Each Sunday The Times will annourice 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 befors midnight Tuesday.
-
(Name)
Sess nsranssahesr enna Of sovvenensvivasnsinions sess
BENIN sas N es aa rss ss aaesssstessssnsansneestsssensensissssssss
(8chool)
(and City)
GANNON RINIOIROIRERRRIIE IIIT
Sess s ANNI NER RII ISRERINRIIIRIEIIRILTS
{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 DAIS c.iveeersosssssssnesssvssinssstsvinasnssissssitssins
My address SeseeaNeteNataNtEriatatetab Et reset atiastantanseas
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‘Mrs. Herbert Gaskill To Address Alliance
Mrs, Herbert Gaskill will address members of the Jessy Wallin Heywood Alliance of All Souls Unitarian Church at a covered-dish luncheon at noon Thursday in the church.
Mrs. Gaskill was formerly
with the Marriage Counsel of Philadelphia. She will speak on “How to Prepare Qur Children for Marriage.” :
now you can
decorate with
assured success!
“«¥
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Teen Clubs— % ".
Subdebs List Pledges
‘And Officers &
PLEDGES, parties and.
new officers are announced by four local teen clubs.
Joan Crow was elected presi-
dent of the SATANS Clab rewas hostess this week-end for a .slumber party following the sectional basket-
She
cently,
ball games, Other new officers are DoTracy, vice president; Margaret Steele, secretary, and Barbara J.ockhart, tréasurer,
"lores
New pledges of the CHETS Club are Judy Willlams, Pat Star, Judy Lesily, Darlene Cory and Charlolte Creekman,
Ronnie and Russell Jackson are new pledges of the ZARS Club,
4
By VIVIAN BLAINE O matter how busy I ** ¥ may be, I always take time out for my morning and- evening one-hundred-
stroke hair brushings. I hope you. do, too, because brushing is an~{nvaluable ald in helping to preserve the health and beauty of your hal. What's more, unless you give your hair dally care while you are dieting, it will lose Its smooth, gleaming quality. Hold the brush firmly in your hand, and briskly sweep your hair up and away from the head. This increases circulation, and promotes growth, It you—Hke, supplement the brushing with a finger massage. Place the fingers of both hands against the scalp, and slowly rotate them so that you can feel the scalp moving. "= » WHEN YOU are particularly tired, brush your hair in a head-down position. A strongbristled brush is best for thorough cleansing and stimulation, It's a wise idea to have another brush with softer bristles. Use this one for brushing the hair.to a polish. Once you learn to wield your brush properly, you may find it
does a better job of arranging
your hair than a comb. I even
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322.50
Wh. We ily,
Two-Star Diet—
Health, Beauty of Hair
Here's the last of the sevenday diet series in which Vivian Blaine, star of the Broadway hit “Guys and :Dolls” teams with Ann Williams-Heller, noted authority on reducing, to show you how to get in trim for spring in medically-ap-proved fashion.
carry a miniature brush in my purse for mid-day grooming.
» = KEEP YOUR comb. amd brush immaculitely.- clean. I wash mine "at least three times a week. I don't set aside any special day for shampooing my hair, either. Some weeks its gets washed every single day. The only determining factor is the need. As far as I'm concerned, the shower is the ideal place for
shampooing. The "pressure of
the water removes every last remaining bit of shampoo foam, and leaves my hair “spanking” clean,
» ~ ” By ANN WILLIAMS-HELLER SEVENTH DAY'S DIET Before Breakfast Juice of 13 lemon in small glass of hot water. Breakfast Broiled Grapefruit (12 medium) One Poached Egg with Crisp Bacon strip (3 inches long) Two Melba Toast
2 THY INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Teen-Agers Are Keen on Sna
DAGWOOD'S COUSIN—Hearty ham-potato salad sandwich.
Hynes & Co. FRanklin
HOME IN INDIANA FOR 80,YEARS 1872-1952
§ § ’ vs 7 sae) ri
{313x1%2x '4 inches) “Skim Milk (1 cup)
Dinner Watercress (13 bunch) . Two Celery Stalks Five Red Radishes One Graham Cracker (215x23% x4 inches) with 1 tablespoon cottage cheese or
Roast Chicken (13 breast) Roast Leg of Lamb (1 lean slice, 313x4% x14 inches) Steamed Broccoli (1 cup) Buttermilk Peach Sherbet Demi-Tasse Coffee
Supper Vegetable Soup (1 cup) Mixed Green Salad Bowl (with 2 tablespoons Mock Sour Cream Dressing) Broiled Mushrooms (10 buttons, on White (enriched) Toast 1 slice (4x33, x14 inches) or One Boiled or Broiled Lobster Boned (lean) Chicken (3 tablespoons) Three Pineapple Slices (33-inch thick) Coffee or Tea Skim Milk (1 cup)
Sometime During Day
1 Teaspoon cod-liver oil (or capsule equivalent) with one. (212x1% inches) Whols Wheat Cracker. *
A
44n
cks
_binations in the
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By JOAN SCHOEMAKER AGWOOD gets sand‘wich competition from
teen-agers at ‘least once
every day. With the current popularity
of slumber parties during the -
basketball season, Dagwood is
. lagging far pehind with subdebs
and squires leading the "race by more than a nose. : A’ recent national survey shows ‘that teens eat all the time with 90 percent having snacks after school and 89.6 percent having evening snacks. Seventy-five percent have their snacks at home and at least five percent have snackk both
-at snack, counters and at home.
No matter where you fit into the percentages, you'll still be game for a ham-potato salad
‘sandwich. You can be a good
sport and have fun at it in the play after the game. Many comrefrigerator make. excellent fare for ‘you and the guests who eat, talk, eat, sit and eat some more til it's dawn. » » »
TO BEGIN. WITH heap potato salad on a slice of enriched bread, white, whole wheat or rye, Top with a slice of cold ham, boiled or pressed ham and lettuce or watercress. Add another slice of bread, and for that extra touch sometimes desired, garnish with a slice of tomato.
In case you like baked beaws ,
try adding salami snipped int small pieces and tomato sauce. A dash each of chili sduce, prepared mustard and minced ‘onion make for gourmet fare on a lower step. Mash the beans and mix ingredients thoroughly before spreading either on hot dog or hamburger bums or white bread. If desired, a thin slice of cheese could be placed atop each baked-bean-salami Sandwich and the whole product broiled until the cheese Is melted and bubbly.
TO RIVAL DAGWOOD try the pyramid sandwich. It's so big it must be eaten layer by layer on a plate. Start with rounds of bread for each sandwich in sizes one, one and onehalf, two, three and four inches. Spread with butter. Mix together chopped hardcooked egg, mayonnaise and ripe olive for the four -inch round of bread. Spread threeinch round with peanut butter mixed with catsup. A slice of drained canned pineapple and a slice of jellled cranberry sauce fit the two-inch round. Curry cream cheese covers the one-inch round and a radish rose males the peak of the pyramid® Se For “live alone” teeners or a
i good excuse.not to have to be
with people, make an onion sandwich with sliced, peeled, mild onions, plus salt, pepper and two slices of buttered rye bread. (This will automatically make you a cry-baby, whether vou like it or not)
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ne
Any Time
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__ SUNDAY, MAR.2,1953|
Panel Discussion =
To Highlight PTA
Activity for Week
A PANEL discussion at Wednesday's meeting of the Manual PTA highlights PTA. activity next week.
Dr. Spencer Myers will act as moderator of the dis-.
cussion on “Meeting Youth: Needs Through Vocational
Training.” The group. will meet at 7:30 p. m. in the school library. Panel members include Rowland Allen, Roscoe Clark and Foster Stanley. > The nominating committee of the Marion County Council dists nominees for office previous to the Mar. 26 meeting. They are Mrs. Charles Lavengood, president; Mrs. Floyd Lively, and Mrs. Kenneth Gorellie, first and second vicepresident; Mrs. Edgar Johnson and Mrs. Norman S. Brenton, ‘recording and corresponding secretaries; Mrs. Thomas Riggle, treasurer, and Mrs. Charles J. McDowall and Mrs. Orval Barnett, executive board. Unit meetings follow. MONDAY Garden City Study Group—7:30 p. m. Mrs. Joseph Granna, 32 .8. Iris, hostess. TUESDAY School 85 Study Group—George Farkas, “Recreation.” WEDNESDAY School 76—1:15 p. m. “Flower Arrangements,” ‘Mrs. Robért
Legion News—
. S8peedway-—8 p. m.
Mannfeld; “Anpual Promo tions,” Virgil Stinebaugh.
School 49—2:45 p. m. Panel
from Washington High School, “Education of Youth for Freedom.”
School 51—7:45 p. m. Program -.:
by junior high department. Glenns Valley Study Group— Noon. Covered dish lunche eon; Mrs. George Vogel, hostess; “Character That Clicks With Youth,” Mrs, Earl Evans. Flackville—9:30 a. m. Mental hygiene study course; Whymoth Frogelburg, speaker, THURSDAY School 78—9:30 p. m. Red Cross Mome Nursing Class.
School 21—1:15 p. m. Home
Nursing Class. : FRIDAY School 33—5:30 p. m. Family night. School 86—8:30 a, m. to 3:18 p.- m. Third annual M Market. Square dance in High School gym; Jack Marks, caller,"
Community Service Them To Be Stressed in March
ARCH is dedicated to community service on the
activities calendar of the American Legion Auxiliary, To keep the auxiliary alert-to community work that must be done, Miss Mary Weadrick, Marion County Tuber-
culosis Association child health division director, will address the 11th District Auxiliary Council ‘at its monthly session. The meeting will be at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in the World War Memorial. Mrs. Melvin K. Goode will preside. Mrs. C. H. Baker, com-
munity service chairman, is in
charge of the program.
» » » MRS. JOHN GREIST, 4343 Washington Blvd., will be host-
e383 Mar. 14 for the Paul Coble
Unit Auxiliary meeting.
» = = MARION COUNTY SALON, 8 & 40, will celebrate its 23d birthday at 6:30 p. m. dinner Tuesday in the Madden-Not-tingham Post Home, 1130 W, J0th St. - Special guests will include Mrs. Eva Brown, Bloomington, Indiana Department president; Mrs. Lois Prewitt, La Chapeau, and Mrs. Ada Thedore, La Secretaire Departments, 8 & 40, Jespectively. Mrs. Martin Collins, - social
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Pictures and Ceramics . . . accents that make your
orating plans complete and perfect! 3.95 to 70.00. Ayres’ Gifts and Decorative Accessories, Fifth Floor
chairman, will be in charge of the dinner and entertainment,
» ~ - ROBISON-RAGSDALE AUX. ILIARY, post and affiliated groups will celebrate the 33d
anniversary .of the American Legion's founding with a joint birthday dinner at 6:30 p. m, tomorrow in Central Christian Church.
Program highlight will be a sound technicolor film of the 33d national convention held in Miami last October. Auxiliary members will bake the birthday cake and act as dining room hostesses under Mrs. W. H. Long. Mrs. Stewart Maxwell will handle decorations. At the business session Mrs, John Hickey and Mrs. Florence Plump will initiate Mesdames Esther Young, George Gheen, George Plump, Alta White, Lynn Adams, Helen Rooker, James Shera, Richard Hickey and Marvin Kalb.
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