The Mail-Journal, Volume 3, Number 43, Milford, Kosciusko County, 3 December 1964 — Page 17
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Governor's ; Commission On Status Os Women Chairman Eunice C. Roberts of the Governor’s Commission on the Status of Women said Governor Matthew E. Welsh and Mrs. Mary Keyserling, director of the Women’s Bureau, U. S. Department of Labor, will be principal speakers at the second annual Governors’ conference on the Status of Women. The conference will be held December 5 in Indianapolis at Emmerich Manual high school from 9a. m. to 4p. m. EST. More than 700 men and women attended the
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first conference last year. , Four subcommittees were formed after the 19® conference and the results of their surveys and studies will be discussed by the men and women attending the conference next Saturday, the sth. These groups and their recommendations include: Labor Legislation—a majority report recommended legislation setting hours of work and minimum wages for occuaptions not covered by federal legislation. The report was adopted by the foil commission with a minority dissent. Co-chairmen of the subcommittee are two members of the 19® legislature. Mrs. Elsie Earning, D-Evansvilte, and Mrs. Martha Burnett, R-Indianapolis. The report states that while miniminn wage and maximum hour legislation
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| concerns both men and women, it often is the women who are in jobs with “wages insufficient to provide adequate maintenance for themselves and their families”. The proposed bill calls for minimums ranging from $1 to $1.25 an hour. Political and Civil Rights—This subcommittee, headed by Mrs. Osma Spurlock, Indianapolis, recommended development of a “program to stimulate and educate women to participate more fully in political life”. Hie group found that although the Indiana constitution apparently discriminates against women in that apportionment is based on number of male inhabitants, “that actually, because of the distribution of the sexes in the population, no discrimination takes place”. However, the subcommittee urged, and the full com- • mission adopted, a resolution calling for a constitutional amendment basing apportionment “on the number of citizens of voting age, male and female”. Education—This subcommittee, for which Dr. Evelyn Perloff, West Lafayette, is chairman, recommended that counseling and guidance services be provided at all grade levels with the accepted standard to be one full time counselor for every 250-300 students. The group backed a proposed appropriation by the 1965 legislature to finance surveys to determine the needs of, and available opportunities for, educating girls and women. Home and Community—Co-chair-!men Mrs. Walter Lichtenstein and Mrs. William McKinzie, Indianapolis. offered 15 recommendations. Among them were the strengthening of supervised homemaker and child care sendees and extension on a
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t ; statewide basis. This group also 5 urged that the public school system ' be encouraged to establish kinderI gartens, endorsed building of low- , cost public housing projects subsidiz’ed through federal housing funds, . and proposed that efforts be made ’ “to elevate household help to semi--1 profesisonal status” and to discourage the public from using the words J “domestic and servant”. [ The December 5 conference is open i to the public. Both men and women • are invited. Reservations may be : made by writing to Dean Eunice C. ! Roberts, Kirkwood Hall 101, Indiana . university, Bloomington. Syracuse Locals r Mr. and Mrs. . Thomas Holmes • and children of Syracuse, spent [ Thanksgiving day in Napoleon, 0., i with relatives. ’! Mrs. Claude Mason, r 1 Syra- ’ ' cuse. has returned to her winter home at Pompano Beach, Fla. ; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wittinger of i Chicago and Tony Majewski of In- • diarapolis. spent Friday in Syra- ■ cuse calling on friends. ’ I Miss Ruth Edgar of Warsaw > spent Friday, Nov. 27, at the home I of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gilbert, Syracuse. Sam Bushong Jr., of Syracuse I was a guest recently in the Howard . ■ I Groves home at Pleasant Ridge. j:, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nicolai of I Syracuse called on Mr. and Mrs. i Ray Butt in Benton recently. CWWXWMWW^****^** 5
Thursday, December 3, 1964
When Christinas Groups Gather, It's Game Time
Everyone’s a child at Christmas time, and that’s why there’s nothing as much fun when family and friends gather as game-playing. Since Christmas groups usually include both children and adults, games that both can enjoy are best. The foilowing games can be played with no special equipment, other than that on hand. CHARADE-S Christmas charades is a lively game that the whole family will enjoy. Divide the group into two teams. Individual members of teams are then called upon to act out a word, character, phrase, scene or situation — and since it’s Christmas, all the characters should have Christmas overtones. Subjects are supplied on a slip of paper by the opposing team and then passed on to the “actor.” From here on, it’s his job to see how quickly he can get his team- | mates to guess what he is acting out. “The Night Before Christinas,”' “Jingle. Bells,” “A Partridge, in a I a Pear Tree”, and Filling the Christmas Stocking” are just some of the many, many subjects that can be used. WORD PLAY A popular pencil-and-paper game is called “word play.” The object of the game is to see how many words can be made from a phrase such .as “Merry Christmas to All". A time limit is set, and the ride is
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that no letter can be used in any word more often than it appears in the phrase. In other words, words made from “Merry Christmas to All” can include' no more than one “e”, “i” or “o”, while they could contain as many as two “m’s”, or three “r’s”. Since word play involves competition among its players, it’s advisable to allow the children to compete against one another, while the adults battle it out among themselves. - SANTA’S SLEIGH “Santa’s Packing His Sleigh” is a quiet Christmas game that provides fun and hearty laughter. It starts simply enough with one member of the group saying, “Santa’s packing his sleigh, and he’s bringing a toy dog.” Then each person repeats the sentence, adding another gift to Santa’s sleigh. The object of the game is to repeat correctly, in order, the complete list of gifts in Santa’s sleigh—and it’s harder than it sounds. As the list gets longer and longer, more and more players just can’t seem to remember the whole list and its order, so consequently they drop out, until only one is left. FINDING THE BEAN “Twelfth Cake” was a highlight of 16th century celebrations of Epiphany, January 6. From the finding of a bean and a pea baked into the cake, a king and queen of the day were chosen.
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