Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1952 — Page 6
Irvington Little Theater Sponsored
By Union
of Clubs
HE Irvington Little Theater of school children will make its debut this fall sponsored by the Irvington Union of Clubs, according to Mrs. Milton Lofton, presi-
Mayor Clark — 4
dent. Children wishing to may purchase season gept. 11 and 12 from 3 to 4 p. m. from Mrs. James Rollings, ticket chairman, in the Union
Federal Saving¥ and Irvington office, These tickets will entitle children to one workshop lesson a week and tryouts for the plays which will be put on throughout the vear. The tick ets will admit them to one performance of each play. The time and meeting places will be
announced later .” n ~
COMMITTEE members will be Mrs. Wilson Patterson, general chairman; Mrs. Seward Baker, cochairman; Darrell Gooch, advisor; Mrs. Robert McBurnie and Marian Plum: mer, planning committee; Mrs. ‘Reid Cotton, costume chairman: Mrs. George Richardson, makeup chairman, assisted by John Simpson; Mr. and Mrs. James Rollings, business directors: Mrs. Harold Jackson, secretary, and Mrs. F. §. Hildreth, publicity. Others assisting! will he Mes dames Clifford Wagoner, James Loomis and A. Lgon Boulgocha, Misses Barbara Schulmeyer, Martha Bolte and Sarah Spradling. The idea for the Irvington Little Theater developed when school children attending Mrs Wilton Patterson's playschool dramatized a Christmas story with dancing classes of Miss Susie Smith of the Butler University Jordan Music College dancing -staff. ”
belong tickets
Loans
n » THIS PROJECT was such a success Mrs. Patterson and Mrs. Katherine Holman started weekly classes in dramatics enrolling about 20 children. Mrs. Holman wrote the script for “The Sleeping Beauty” and it was presented in May in the Irvington = Methodist Church, at two Irvington grade schools and at the last meeting of the Irvington Union of Clubs, It was then the idea was accepted that the Union of Clubs sponsor the Little Theater.
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To Address ‘Neighbors’
AYOR CLARK will be guest speaker at the fourth anniversary luncheon of the New Neighbors [League at noon tomorrow in the Antlers Hotel A gocial hour will precede the luncheon with the presentation of a musical program by Mrs Harold Dollinger guests to he present are leroy J. Badollet, James Dogg, Miss Betty Fleetwood and Misa Emogene Tezzis, Mrs, Jerry Stevens, club president, will be mistress of ceremonies, n » "
A BIRTHDAY cake as well as the tables will he decorated with pastel colored asters and pink candles.
Honor
A special event will be the distribution of the magazine “Fun and Friendship” which contains the news of the various New Neighbors l.eague clubs throughout the country. Mrs. Abram K. Nissley, hostess, will he assisted by Mesdames William Manning, Irvin Rauer, Correll Jullan, William Donnelly, M. FE. Glaser and tobert Braund.
Pre-School Roundup
A pre-school roundup and social hour will be given by the Indianapolis Parent - Teacher Association Council at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in School 69. Mrs. Charles Elliott, president, will open the discussion and Mrs. Gladys Friesnes, principal, will give full informatidn for parents of pre-school and kindergarten children.
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The Mature Parent—
Children Respect Reasoning When Grownups Are Patient |
By MURIEL LAWRENCE
FOR her ninth birthday, Clare got a new dress of pale green organdy. | It boasted a crinoline petticoat and a sash of green velvet, When Clara opened {ts box, she forgot her ice cream and cake, She rushed into the living ¢ room, tearing off her old plaid gingham as she went. When she had tied the sash of her new dress, she looked At herself in the mirror over the mantel thought that she had never could look so airy ful. She gave a happy pirouette to make the full skirt swirl and dashed back to the dining room. “Can I wear it to school tomorrow?" she asked her mother. “No.” she was told. “It lis a ‘hest’ dress.” But Clare could not this denial. The next aiternoon, she began to agitate again for permission to wear the new dress to school. She expressed herself pretty forcibly on the “meanness” of the mother who had given a dress and then denied its owner the right to wear it as she pleased. n LJ ~ CLARE'S mother was cutting up grapefruit for salad. She did not protest the attack made upor her personal character or stigmatize her child's violence as “ingratitude.”
and Mrs. Lawrence
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accept
Bon Voyage Event Listed
Mrs. R. W. Cook and her daughter, Marlane Rae. 6115 E. Raymond St, will entertain tonight with a “bon voyage" party in honor of Miss Judith Ann Morrow, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Morrow.
Miss Morrow will sail Sept. 8 for London where she will af® tend Redding University for a year. yuests will include Mrs. Morrow, Misses Ann Applegate, Alice Hatcher, Kathleeen Craig, Jeanette Ross, Jeanne Prange, | Beverly Hendrickson, Ann | Harding. Mary Ann Baker and Ann l.ee Howe.
'‘Buttercups' Make A Tasty Snack
Bring Buttercups to your table in the form of a mighty pretty, vet simple, sandwich. Trim crusts from slices of fresh enriched bread. Brush lightly with melted butter or mar- | garine. { Press into muffin cups and | toast lightly 10 to 15 minutes in a moderately hot oven. Fill “Buttercups" with creamed chipped beef and peas or a chicken a la king. Complete the meal with tall glasses of iced tea or coffee and dishes of fresh blueberries.
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She just =aid, “You cannot wear vour :new dress to school becatise I do not think wearing it would make you happy. None of the other girls will be wearing their ‘best’ dresses tomorrow. They would know that vou had worn yours to ‘show off.” So instead of getting admiration from them, you would probably get cold looks and envy. By the time you came home tomorrow afternoon, vou would have lost your pleasure in your dress and be wondering if it was really so pretty as you thought.” She paused. “So you see I am saying ‘no’ not because I want to be mean but because I do not want you to make meanness between yourself and your friends.” When her mother finished, Clare: sighed, “Gosh, mother, o. k.. and went off to do her homework. Reason, the dictionary says, is the ‘systematic relating of ideas.” As children have more
We, the Women—
Expert Calls for Care
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THEY CHECK THE ENTRIES— | Two neighbors from New Al- | bany arrange art exhibits at the Indiana State Fair. Miss Margaret Gohmann, art student in the University of Louisville, assists John Cooley, 5-year scholarship winner in Herron Art Institute. Mr. Cooley is first assistant to Mrs. Karolyn Holloway, who has charge of the art show. The three are getting ready for some 150,000 visitors during the Centennial Fair tomorrow through Sept. 6.
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WEDNESDAY, AUG. 27, 1652
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Open all day Saturday
Times photo by Dean Timmerman
experience
relating for them, just as we
prepare their dinners and sew
on their buttons. LJ » ” BY USING reason to solve her problem with Clare, her
mother has shown her that she |
is not personally the obstacle to the wearing of the dress. Clare has seen that the limitation her
mother has had to impose is |
not due to her mother’s nature, but to the nature of the world she lives in.
tions of anger at her mother
subside and she stops regarding |
her as a personal antagonist. We will note that Clare's mother was not ready with rea-
song to bulwark her decision at
the time it was made. It often
takes us a little while to collect |
our reasons for denying a privilege. We should take it, consciously and deliberately. If we are sincere, not just
stalling, children will grant our
request for patience.
In Selection of Friends
By RUTH MILLETT SHE S a dangerous woman if:
She always with your lot in life.
leaves you feeling vaguely dissatisfied
She subtly undermines your confidence in yourself
and in your own dec isions with such doubting phrases as: “I hope vou haven't made a misfake, but . .. 2 and ‘I Know it's none of my business, but if I were you...” She encourages you to air your grievsances against vour husband, for it is her firm conviction that men ae ‘heir Ruth Millett own way and women have to work overtime in order to outsmart them. She brings you all the latest gossip about mutual friends, thg kind they wouldn't appreciate having spread around. She is always encouraging you to want, and try to get,
things that are beyond means. a menace if you shop together. - » » SHE IS FOND of telling her - friends things for “their own good,” which are invariably things they would just as soon not know. She is quick to find the flaw in anything you do or have. You discover that the things you tell her in confidence have a way of getting around. » n ~ SHE IS always complaining about something. 1f any of these descriptions fit her, she is a dangerous woman for a friend. For she gets her pleasure out of tearing people down, instead of building them up. And, éven though she calls herself your friend, she is really dangerous.
a
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