Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 April 1952 — Page 12
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PAGE 12 WEDNESDAY, APR. 30, 1952 |
~ Sorority
THE INDIANAPOLIS ‘TIMES
Girl Scout
y rE i —— tH AE RIE TE OT
of
Plans May
Breakfast i
[NDIANAPOLIS chapters of Pi Omicron Sorority will have a May breakfast at 8 a. m. Sunday in the Hotel Lincoln, A program of music will be given by the Girls’ Ensemble of Washington High\ School. Miss Hazel Peacock, Indianapolis Council president, will be toastmistress. Miss Judith Turpin will give the invocation, . Committee membérs In charge of the event are Mrs. Paul McDaniel, chairman; Mesdames H. Y. Massie, Ruth Neff,
Walter Miller, ¥rank Allen, .
Thomas Selmier, Omar Rybolt, Clayton Emerson, Dale Watson
and® William Goodin, Missds
Florence Wingerter, Rose Mary Tibbetts, Sydney Fritch and Eleanor McCullough. . ” ~ » ALSO ASSISTING are Mesdames Helen Riney, Sherman ‘Wehrung, Bea Veith and Scott Allison, Miss Edna Bottin and Miss Ada Tilson. Among special guests will he Mrs, Luther Swanstrom, Chicago, national president; Mrs. Cdr! Rieh, Crawfordsville, state president, and Miss Bally Jo Cring, senior in Technical High School, PI Omicron scholarship girl this year.
‘New Officers Are Elected
The board of directors of the Indianapolis Speakers Club have elected officers and appointed committees for the coming year. © New officers are Miss Ruth Hurley, president; Richard McWilliams, vice president; Miss Olga Kaiser and Miss Leona Miller, corresponding and recording secretaries, and Mrs, Carrie Rafferty, sergeant-at-armas, Miss Hurley is chairman of the program committee assist. ed by Mrs. Ina Jones. Mr, Me~ Williams is membership and contacting committee chair. man, assisted by Henry Rafferty, Mrs. Martha Hensel and Miss Lila Brady. Mrs. Rafferty and Mrs, Rachael Ward are on the reception committee. Miss Olga Kaiser heads the auditing committee assisted by Mr. McWilliams and Mr. Rafferty. Mrs. Jones is in charge of housing and Mrs, Edna Burns, outside activities. Mrs. Homer Green {8 social committee chairman, assisted by Mrs. Adeline Stuval, Mrs. Rafferty and Miss Mary Leslie,
Psi Psi Psi Unit to Meet
A violet luncheon will be given by Psi Psi Psi Sorority at 12:30 p. m. Friday in the Marott Hotel, Mrs. Norman Kassenbrock, accompanied by Mrs. John Essig, will present a musical moholog. Honored guests will be Mesdames George Davis, Florence A. Harris and Charles Pollitt,
founders, and Mrs. M. O. Ross, |
wite of the Butler University
ident. Pr, Oscar Rahe and Mrs, C.
R. Greene are in charge of the’
event, They will be assisted by Mesdames Frederick Barrows, I. N. Firth, C. E. Parsons, Myron Rinker, O. E. Burts and
Fred Schwartz.
Miss Nordholt To Be Feted
Mrs. Dick Nordholt will give a miscellaneous shower S8Sunday for Her niece, Miss Anna Marie Nordholt. The party
will be in the home of Mrs. |
Nordholt, 1442 N. King Ave. (3uesta will include the bride-
to-be’s grandmother, Mrs, John |
Greenwald; her mother, Mrs,
John Nordholt; Mrs. C. Hugh | Ellis, and Miss Zee Ellis, both |
of Anderson; Mrs. Josephine Trost, Misses Nancy Willett, Maryann Hall, Janet Lahr and Kathy Hafer. Miss Nordholt and James T. Ellis will be married May 10
in" the Butler University
Sweeney Chapel.
Officers Elected By Garden Club
New officers of the Neophyte Garden Club are Mrs. Thomas Ayton, president Mrs. David Sluss, vice president; Mrs. Henry DeBoest, secretary, and Mrs. E. J, Nugent, treasurer, and Mrs. A. Robert Nelson, historian. Comimttee chairmen are Mrs. Robert Mannfeld, program, Mrs. James Jobes, flower show; Mrs,
Eugene Beasley, hospitality; |
Mrs, H. D. Williams, telephone; Mrs. W. Glenmore Clute, horti-
culture; Mrs. Clifford Sadler, | project, and Mrs. J. 8. Batters- |
by, publicity.
Annual May Day Card Party Set
The annual May Day card "party of the Robert E. Ken- | nington unit, American Legion |
Auxiliary, will held at 1:30 p. m. Thursday in Block's Auditorfum. Proceeds will help disabled veterans. 3 The committee includes Mrs, Carl Pflueger and Mrs. Her-
man Belkins, co-chairmen, as-
sisted by Mrs. Le Le
Mrs. as Lenahan, Mrs, Stephen Hughes, candy rs. John Joyce and Mrs. John a % Prizes,
Times photo by William A. Oates Jr
PARTY PRIMING—Even this Democratic rooster, symbol of the Democratic Party, is being dolled
up for tomorrow night's 8 o'clock card party in the Indiana Poof. Mesdames Mary Shackleford, Eva Caylor and Joseph G. Wood (left to right), members of the Women's Division, Marion County Democratic Centrgl Committee, party sponsors, are the beauticians.
League Bows to Masculine Opinion
Times Special
: CINCINNATI, Apr. 30—Husbands seldom are mentioned on the floor of a national convention of the League of
Women Voters. But most of the 900 delegates here are mar-
ried. Masculine opinion finally was brought into the debate as a delegate ‘irged a limited program of league work with the argument: “Our husbands will laugh at us if we try to do everything at once.” Delegates are acknowledging that no one citizen organization can work on all the problems of government, They are here to agree on what problems will
engage the attention of 106,000 LWV members. There are state and local crises to attack, too,
> % &
TWO NATIONAL NEEDS have been proposed as those on which the membership seems most anxious to work. At least two full days of discussion will take place to determine whether the members’ pulses have been read rightly. Proposed for favorable attention next year are: Measures that contribute to world security with emphasis on international economic advancement and maximum use of the United Nations, TWO --Measures that contribute to economy
Heads Hostess Group
MES. 8. PAUL CLAY JR, will head nine hostesses who will welcome persons from over the state Saturday at the opening campaign luncheon of the Indiana Mental
Health Association.
in federal expenditures through improving budgetary procedures of Congress.
o> oo 2
“PEOPLE ARE thinking about federal powers, big government and growing bureaucracy,” reported another group. “Can't the league do a nonpartisan job on this subject?” Some members would like to see a platform enabling the organization to boost closer political co-operation among North Atlantic Treaty Organization countries, sald Mrs. George Ragland, Glencoe, Ill, “Eighty-three cents of every tax dollar now go for defense and international aid,” she said. “With more political unity, we might be able to get more effective defense at lower cost.”
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MRS. MAURICE A. POLLAK, Highland Park, lil, who heads the Illinois league drew applause when she recommended the league take action in the international field only on economic and United Nations problems, “but provide its members with information on other aspects of international security.” Field workers for the national committees of the Democratic and Republican Parties are listening to the debate. Miss Bertha Atkins of the national GOP office said she will report to Republican National Chairman Gabrielson the opinions she notes here for consideration in drawing the party's platform in July.
Early Epicure
A Connecticut farm dinner of mutton, vegetables and cider once thriMed the famous French epicure, Brillat-Savarin (1755-18286).
She is the wife of the Marion County campaign chairman, The 12:15 p. m. event in the Claypool Hotel Riley Room is open to anyone making a luncheon reservation. Federal Judge Luther W. Youngdah!l, Washington, will tell how citizens of Minnesota transformed their state mental hospitals from dingy dens to modern medical centers while
Kahn, Manning Woods and Fred Belser: “Mental health is a great cause,” Mrs, Clay said today.
“Mental illness fills more than | half the state hospital beds. The |
association has a program in which citizen volunteers can do something to improve the situation) This $250,000 statewide campaign will raise the funds
to make that program possible | if enough persons give gener-
ously.”
Camps Set Registration
R EGISTRATION for Girl
¢ Scout camps will be
open beginning May 15, Camp folders containing a registration blank will be distributed to’'neighborhood chair-
men from the 45 Girl Scout.
neighborhoods at their respective district meetings today, tomorrow and Friday.
They in turn will distribute | the folders, which contain com- | . plete information on the sum- |
mer camping program, to designated persons in each neigh-
borhood to distribute to the |
troops.
Chairmen of Girl Scout camps
this year are: Day Camps, Mr. and Mrs, Stanley Swingle; Kriner's Woods, Mr. and Mrs. Rich-
ard Pedlow; East Camp, Mr. |
and Mrs. Max Forrest, and West Camp, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Rebelsky, Delaware Trails, Mr. and Mrs. George Coldren, co-ordi-nating chairmen; Camp Dellwood, Mr. and Mrs, Richard J, Layton; Teen and Trip Camp, Mr. and Mrs, Richard Fox, and
troop camping, Mrs, Chris |
Iverson.
Mrs. Montgomery Lewis and |
Mrs. Charles Brockman are ¢ochairman of all camp co-or-dinating. Mrs. Paul Grubbs is chairman of camperships.
Students to Talk On Far East
An illustrated lecture on the 11 be given at 8 | o'clock tonight by Miss Nguyen | thi Quyt in Marian College, |
Far East
Cold Sprin Rd. , Miss Nguyen
is one of Mar- | fan's four stu- | dents from the | Orient and = | preparing to | teach in a nor- | mal school | when she re- |
turns to her native country.
Miss Nguyen the ancinet walled city of Hue,
Viet-Nam, her home, and life | in the United States is a sharp |
contrast, according to Miss Nguyen.
She will explain the political |
plight of the people there now and give her own recommendations based on her experiences,
ee i
THURSDAY SPECIAL!
ONE DAY ONLY— TO INTRODUCE FABULOUS
he was that state's governor, Assisting Mrs, Clay will be
Mesdames Alex Clark, Robert Efroymson, Clarence Efroym-
son, Fred Bates Johnson, Philip 515 E. 39th St
Reed, Grover Turner, Allan
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Mr. and Mrs. John P. Owens, , have returned from a winter spent in Florida. |
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