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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 12

Location:
Louisville, Kentucky
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SOCl KTY T11H GOl'HIKR-JOliKNXU I.0U1SVII.LK, SAIL HI) AY Al'KIL 19, 1 ,12 THE SOCIAL SIDE U.S. Whistle Role of Protester Suits Gloria Today Bv 1IKLKX IlliltMiTT Summon wants foods, tovs, fashion unadulterated (reels Girls From Soviet tHMfim? WV Mm 't -I 4 it TJV I 'v. 1 II. Mildred i.oiirii-r-Jnurnid jroinn'j l.tliior t. The alumni and former students of David Lipscomb College, Nashville, will have a dinner-meeting next Saturday at o'clock at Pryor's Restaurant.

Mr. Willard Collins, iec-prcM-dent of the college, will speak. Friends and prospective students are invited. For further information or reservations call Mrs. Taylor Clark, TWinbrook 5 -1181, through Monday.

7 lir tiilril Vtru YORK. April 18 Four SLEEK and wholesome as any food TEW i faddist hopes to look, Gloria Swanson Russian folk dancers, in the United States for the the businesswoman produces drama, Club of its annual evening at Oak Room well Hotel. The Centre Louisville will hold dinner on Tuesday (i o'clock in Jie of the Sheraton Seel! fir-t tune, act more interested in the opposite sex than in Split ink-. The young women, graduates of the Bolshoi Ballet School in Moscow, are members of the Moiseyev Dance Company which made its American debut at the Metropolitan Opera House this week. The group, sponsored by Sol Hiirok, is the first major Soviet dance company to visit the S.

sinee World War II Forty six women are in the group, which numbers about 100, including dancer-, and stage The Rev John Cavanaugh of Son: Bend, Ind, pa-t president, of I he t'niver-ity of Noire Dame, will come from New Orleans to lie the weekend house guest of Mr. and Mrs, Walter C. Wagner, He will speak to members of the Node Dame (Tub this evening at the Provincial House Father Cavanaugh is the head of the foundation piogiain at the university. I of Student To Annul Duke Dances Sally Kitchen and Donna students at the University of Kentucky, are spend ing tins weekend at Duke University. Both are members of Kappa Delta sorority.

Miss Kitchen, daughter of Mr. and Mis. C. Harold Kitchen of Vei -allies, will attend the Pi Kappa Phi dance Mr Law-oil, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Donald II. I.awon, will attend the Sigma Phi 1 oin ocat ion Rail, for hich he has been cho-en as sponsor lor the Duke chapter. T.t Coin, and Mis.kC. F. Day announce the birth of a son, Joseph Edward, at the United States Naval Base, Guantanamo, Cuba.

Mrs. II. Hitcr Harris, and twins, Mary Lawrence and Elizabeth Robinson, will arrive tomorrow from Roanoke, Va to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Truchcarl.

Mrs. Harris is the former Miss Elizabeth Trucheart. Mrs. Norris Trainer Jones will return today to her home in Old Lyme. Conn after spending several days with her son, Mr.

S. Faul Jones, 111, and Mrs. Junes. Mrs. James Guthrie Wheeler has returned to her home in Taducah after a short visit to her daughter.

Mrs. llenning Milliard, and, her family en route from a us'it at Hot Springs, Va. Mr. and Mrs T.ouis W. Cloud of Anchorage will entertain Mlh a rnckt.nl party this evening at their home in honor of the ho, il of directors of the Owl Cieck Country Club.

Mr and Mis Frank Hower, Jr. and Mr and Mrs. Cyrus Rad-forri. Jr. will return today fiom a two week at Dclray Beach.

Mr. and Mrs. Archibald V. Cochran will rrHiirn today from a trip to Spain, Majorca, and France. Miss Sherri Anne McAfee, who has been attending Colegio President Thomas A Spragcns will address the meeting.

Ill il. il I iinelienn To Honor Mi I llmaim Mi- Sara Elizabeth Fuller ill entertain at a luncheon to iler home in Honor bib Ann Fl fm.m n. whose a Mi'-s .1 ma: i i. personnel. I The girls are pre'ly, petite, M.r 11., i .1 t.ike place ml 1': nut Inn h.

0 Mr wi! lloiv too. in a personal appearance. In Louisville yesterday where she modeled fitted in a shop and wore a black sack by Givenchy along Walnut Street, Miss Swanson had a brief reunion with an ex-chauffeur of hers, groaned over ancient movie stills of her that he keeps as souvenirs, warmed up to for her luncheon companions. She picked at the sparse, special items of food on her plate and spoke her mind on food adulteration, an old foe to her. The ex-chauffeur is Democratic State Senator C.

W. A. McCann of Louisville. "Oh, are you the one who was really a millionaire? That, one confessed after six months that he became my chauffeur because he just wanted to be near me." McCann said, no, he wasn't that one. "Which car did you drive?" As McCann reeled off the names of two limousines of the long, long ago.

Miss Swanson stopped him. "I'm sure I only had three" "If you're a Senator, why don't you do something about the Delaney bill stop all this tampering with what wc eat?" she demanded. "And why doesn't someone stop this giving of lethal weapons to children for toys? I wouldn't let my French grandchild accept the holster and guns someone wanted to give him." Later upstairs at the Pcndonnis Club Miss Swanson put down her red satchel and allowed her previous poker face a hit of animation. She enacted her experience at playing Aggnppina in the Italian movie she made in 1 9.15. "Son of Nero." From the satchel she produced a jar of honey and "stuff to make my own -p! ig une 11 this Mis Coales Wavue flew Courier-Journl Photo Mock horror is rcgitered Iiv (iloria Swanson over old pictures of tier that State Senator C.

A. McCann lias from his chauffeur days in Hollywood. pline of writing. She wrote a column twira week to Vol City to spend several weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Robert C.

Magee, and Mr. Magee at their home in Man-hasset, Long Island Mr. and Mrs. Wayne have moved into an apartment in For-e-t Court after spending the pa-t year with Mr. Wayne's aunt, Mrs, Day is the daughter of i Mrs.

Kathenne W. Wilson. I Mi-s Bet Borries has re- turned to Lexington after a visit to her cousin, Mr. J. Kent Boi- i ie-, and Mrs.

Bon ics. and v. ell dre-sed. They talked about everything from ballet to boi-(lit during a luncheon of Russian chicken and French fries. The girls were polite about things American, and cagey about things Russian.

Before answering each question, they flicked their eyes to a Soviet official from the United Nations. But mention men, and four pans of dark eves would light up. They talked about marriage versus careers, dressing to please men, and dating. I ilio Mioie SOii's They giggled over movie stars, favored Burt Lancaster, decided they could go for Bing Crosby, and do without. Elvis Presley.

Have American men whistled at the dancers on the "Yes, yes," blonde, shapely Valenlina Dobnna, forgetful Stirring the dehydrated soup into a cup of hot water, Miss Swanson matched experiences with Roy Rudolph at shows five years ago by Balcnciaga where the chemise began. "Eve been wearing sacks for three years. They're marvelous so comfortable," she said. "If the American designers would just ropy the originals, leave them alone they must taper and not put a belt here under the bosom and down here in back Over her avocado an a baked potato the same, and a glass of bottled water MKs Swanson talked of the disci- on Mis, Josephine 1'. Mile: Tvler 1'ai way.

a week from Europe for an American press service at the time she made the "Nero" film. "Wc are so inclined to gush, and you just can't. Eight hundred words to produce and you think, 'Oh. Then you try to say something in 800 words. I've spent eight hours on it." With a quick wind-up of one more movie-days story Miss Swanson picked up the banana that was her only other menu item, stuffed it into her purse, and arose from lunch.

a--; yK Slain A.A.U.W. Will Kiilcrlain I'liclrv Polilkks' lor liiiiil C5 I I Kmional I) ciriratrs of the Iron Curtain. The fit hers lookei man He Irowned. UN lalifornia candidalcV wife campaigns with nviprs "Wet," diey said. "That's ACI'AMENTO, (W.N.s.) April 13 Armed with "I told them I would send ihem one or two." Soon the demand was so great that she began having them printed and stacked in wholesale own poems the Cover- copies of her recipes from and lly I Moff.it eyed brunette, hasn't had much time to turn out verse.

She has made her husband's career the pivot point of her life, and accompanies him everywhere, though it may mean four public appearances and two changes of clothing a day. As Californians became acquainted with their pretty new considered a compliment." The Soviet official relaxed. "Well, yes, we have been whistled at," said the dancers. They added that when a Russian man sees a pretty girl, he quotes poetry to her two or three lines of a well known poem -or tells her, "you're beautiful." Two women agreed that dancing does not interfere with marriage. "My husband and I understand each other," said Mrs.

Dobnna, mirnavista in Havana, i una, tor 1 ho past year, ha icturned to Louisville and is with her parents, Mr. and Mrs U. I). McAfee. Mr, and Mr.

Picbaid Dawson will lelurn this weekend after a vacation at Tort Lauderdale, I inn llCOII 1(1 HlllKir Mi jail Icl.um in Mrs, John llulf and Ms Margaret llulf will have a luncheon and shower today at then- home in honor of Miss Jan LeLaunn. whose marriage to Mr. Michael Eliot Coriansky of Andover, Mass will take plarc next Saturday. Mr. and Mis.

Her.shel G. Weinberg announce the birth of a daughter, Judi Lyn, at Kentucky Baptist Hospital. Mrs. Weinberg and daughter are now at their home on Stanton Boulevard. Mrs.

John Husloii Stuart, who lias been visiting her granddaughter, Mrs. Thomas Mc-Whortcr, in Houston, is now- the fuost of Mrs. Virginia Crittenden Brown at her apartment on Cherokee Road. Mrs. IMclvin (olImnn I At Anchorage Home Mrs.

Melvin Goldman of Los Angeles is at. her Anchorage home, "The Forest," where she will give her annual Kentucky Colonel Barbecue on Sunday afternoon alter the Derby. Mr. Goldman will arrive today to remain here throughout the Derby festiv llics. Mrs.

Ellen Weaver is spending some tune at Kentucky Baptist Hospital where she is recovering from a dislocated elbow received in a fall. Mollior llolprr Bv llcimnnn nnd 1'rarMin nor Mansion. Mrs. Goodwin J. Knight is waging a unique political campaign lo help her husband, now Governor of California, into the United States Senate.

The switch in California Republican circles finds Governor Knight, vying for the place of Senator William F. Knovvland, who, in turn, is running for Governor of California. It's all very confusing, but Virginia Knight is having no trouble with her part of the campaign. As long as the stacks of poetry and recipes hold out, who is married io a rauio and TV "Most of us have servants or mothers," Luhov Khruliova, 28. ho has a school-teacher husband and a 5-year-old son.

Elsa Ivlava, 23, said her fiance, who studies history al Moscow The Kentucky division of tha American Association of University Women will give a reception after the Friday-evening banquet for members attending the 18th biennial conference of the southeast-central region, A.A.U.W. Registration for the conference at the Brown Hotel will open at 7 p.m. Thursday. The opening session will begin at noon Friday. Meetings will continue through Saturday afternoon.

Members of national committees who will participate aro Mrs. Fra.er Banks, Birmingham, fellowship funds; Dr. Maycie Southall, Nashville, education; Miss Nina Miglionico, Birmingham, social and economic issues; Mrs. Walter M. Bennett, Tuscaloosa, international relations; Dr.

Mary Burton, Louisville, standards and recognition of colleges; Mrs. Dale de Laitsch, Lafayette, arts, and Dr. Kathcrine Vickery, Montevallo, nominating. State presidents will preside al discussion groups on Friday afternoon. They are Miss Sybil Stonccipher, Bowling Green; Mrs.

William Van Gclder, Birmingham; Miss Ivoy Gravette, Pmeville, Dr. Dorothy Dick-ms, State College, and MLss Marie White, Cookevillc, Tenn. COU rir-Journf Photo there will eveninc at llie Arts After a dinner llns -ftp and oilier setilnture. iewelrv University, wants her to give up ileiiK donated arc the an auction liat, ni nt in jirl'u lr made liy the nieiuliers. the forest preen organdy lint id and pottery designed by Mrs.

1 Sandford, left, Among Mrs. V. leorge lladley, rigid. lots in her office. One of her poems, "My Morn- ing Prayer," has been set to I music and was recently sung at a Republican banquet honoring the Governor.

As for the recipes, they demonstrate that the Knights are fond of simple, down-to-earth food. There's one for "Frika-deller," or Danish meatballs, which was handed down to Mrs. Knight by her grandmother. To make 36 to 40 meatballs, she mixes well the following: 2 lbs. ground 3 tsp.

salt pork tender- A cup cracker loin crumbs 12 lb. ground 12 cup chopped round steak onion 14 lb. 2 eggs sausage 12 cup light 11 tsp. mound cream cloves Rolled into l'i-inch balls, the ingredients are browned lightly, and baked 30 minutes in a 325-degree oven. One of Governor Knight's favorite desserts is "Pineapple Flip," made with: A lb.

niarshmal- A cup crushed lows pineapple 1 2 cup milk A cup i p-A tsp. vanilla ping cream Melt marshmallows with milk on top of double boiler. Add pineapple and cool. Add a teaspoon vanilla and whipped cream. Cover bottom of.

dish with crushed graham crackers. I'our mixture over graham-cracker crumbs, sprinkle crumbs on top, and chill before serving. Dr. and Mrs. and Mr.

and Mr John L. ('lines II Kiesler, dancing, and teach art instead. "But I don't want to give up dancing. 1 will change his mind," she said. Having a home and family is important, but a career in the theater nets them a better life, said the dancers.

In the United States they are paid in American dollars according to union wage scales. Pay begins at $f)fl. They also receive hotel and food allowances and are the most traveled entertainers in Russia. The Louisville Boat Club will give a cocktail dance tomorrow from until o'clock honor of the new members. Mr.

Charles llibbitt Blake is cocktail the home in honor will entertain at parly this evening at of Dr. and Mis. Clini of Miss Mr. John marriage Saturday liosanne Tavlor and Allen whose will take place next in St. Boniface Church.

spending the month of April in i Puerto Ivico where he is staging; the dance productions for the I 'asals Fest iv al. she's doing fine. Printed on gold-lettered Executive Mansion stationery, Mrs. Knight's offerings are being autographed and mailed upon request. Si'itdi I'ociiih She usually send a poem entitled "Life is What.

You Make It," which has as its two final stanzas: "Do not act so bored, So restless, so blase, Eagerly look forward To the dawn of each new day. "Life is wrjat you make if, Abundant and complete How deep the victory in yourself! How shallow the defeat." Most of Mrs. Knight's poems are deeply sentimental or religious and were written before her marriage in August, 1954. Since becoming the First Lady of the nation's second largest slate, Virginia Knight, a blue- Mlllt lll(V Mll. Tlir Volunteers Ilureati Some Child mi ouiiii Mrs.

(ioodwin kniglil hopes that her poetry will help her husband gain oles for the I nited Slates Senate. first lady, who at 39 is 22 years younger than her husband, they learned that she likes to write poems and that she serves her husband dishes he dotes on. Naturally, these activities soon became conversation pieces. "When people asked me about my poems," Mrs. Knight said, More Helpers The Volunteers' Bureau here needs 50 lo 65 adult men and women to train as volunteer Frirndlv Visitors who share Members To Speak Representatives of Y.M.C.A.

and Y.W.C.A. clubs at Western Junior High School will speak Tuesday to the school on activities. The meeting will be at 9:30 a.m. at the school. officers will be installed.

Greet Warm Days In A New Shcalh May Need Training in The Art of Chewing their time and interests with persons who are ill, handicapped, or lonely. lis Itrllp I ll red When an infant takes nourish- see a doctor or a dentist about Paris Kestaurateur Decrees Hals for (iuesls Si lew Helps Marriage Last I hose visited usually liv alone, in a boarding home, nursing home, or hospital. The annual training course for volunteers will be held on Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Community Chest headquarters, 424 W.

Jefferson. Those interested in becoming Friendly Visitors may call the Volunteers' liureau, JUniper 4- this? 1 am upset and hope you'll answer this as soon as you can." Try to show the baby how you chew food. Open your mouth so he sees your teeth and show him how you grind and grind at the entrance, and each week a different modiste will present hats which may be borrowed or bought. Paris women are in favor of the projects; they say it is one way to force their husbands lo buy them a new hat. New York, April 18 (W.N.S Claude Terrail, owner of Paris' most elegant restaurant, La Tour d'Argent, has decreed that beginning next month all women visiting the restaurant on Wednesdays must wear hats.

A bonnet boutique will be set up 4631 I Special lo 7 lie Courier-Journal Sherman Oaks, Cat April 18. If you differ with your mate strongly over something, there's an easy way to solve the problem: postpone all discussion for 43 hours. So says Mildred Gordon who collaborates with her husband, Gordon Gordon, in the writing of suspense novels and movie and television scripts. "By then you usually discover you really didn't care too much at all," she said. "It's funny how Plane Decor Can Cue Furnishings For The Small-Apartment Dw eller TirY-MlM)Kl) little gills may refuse to wear skiits and Mouses if the hIoue tails keep coming out.

A strip of velvet, lining the fkirt hand, vwll act a a brake to stop this nuisance. Helps keep sweaters in place, as well. Copyright, mi mcnt into his mouth, the only demand made upon him is that lie swallow it. This is followed by a period when he eats finely strained foods, so soupy that these, too, need only to' he allowe.l. Rut.

when he is introduced to coarser foods with large particles of food in them, it is quite another matter. Sometimes these particles distress and choke him. a child how to chew may bo a real task i He'll get some of his inspiration from watching the way his parents act at the table, though it is just as possible that he may not notice how they chew unless they make this a rather dramatic act Mrs. s. S.

writes, "1 have a lfi-I month-old hoy who is average in all ways. But he ill not chew 1 his food or even try to. Every -thing he eats has to lip mashed up fine or he gags and often ends tip vomiting. He gladly opens his mouth for i food, but he then holds it in his mouth until there is a big lump and gags when he tries to swal-I low it. i "Also, his front teeth are green around the edges.

Do 1 Ilv Mary I'riinc, EW YORK, April 18 Women who live the food until it is reduced to Say to him, "Then 1 it." i I noon rage II mi Rut a spoon in his hand and encourage him to use it by i ing him how to dig in and lift up the contents. Guide his hand. Between the bites he takes, give him some food from the spoon you hold. Self-feeding i is one way to help a child learn to eat and chew more successfully, Give him finger foods, too. A few peas to pick up and cat, half a banana, some sections of oranges, tiny cubes of meal or soft crackers will help him learn to feed himself.

He'll eat better when you are not looking at him and you can leave him alone with these finger foods. Let the dentist clean off this accumulation of tartar. Then brush the teeth well to prevent its return small homes or apartments can take Ni in lesson in space saving from a decorator VU End Council Mi. (iruiiudc South Elecl unimportant things become by two days later." She and her husband, who write under the name of The Gordons, turn to such marriage problems in a nonfiction book, "With This Ring," which they wrote ui collaboration with Judge Louis H. Rurke.

Judge Burke effected 43 per cent of reconciliations in divorce cases when he headed Los Angeles' famed conciliation court. The versatile Gordons vvrotp "With This Ring" following publication of a suspense novel. "Captive," wnirh will be filmed soon. Mrs. Jack W.

Granade, 415 W. Kingston, yesterday was elected president of the South End Council on Moral and Spiritual Values. Other new officers are Charles Hargan, principal of Southern Junior High School, vice-president, and Mrs. Robert L. Mc-Geachin.

recording secretary. Rock Rollers Dzii Grand Opera 'nited 7'rrm Tf titer prefer, then fits the hues into a scheme she believes is most soothing to air passengers. If a client likes bright colors, she uses them only as accents, because harsh shades tend to make persons nervous in the air, she said. She also works in many tones and patterns because a variety gives the mind something to do and helps lessen tension. "I won't decorate homes because they're too easy.

I want a challenge," said the designer, who also scorns any job she considers a "lacepanty-and-kitchen" subject. "All I care ahout is flying and decorating planes. I'm not a tea-drinking, bridge playing tvpe. My children (she has three, ranging from 12 to UD are old enough to let mc do what 1 want to do," she said. Mrs.

Snyder chose the executive-plane field because she believes the use of this type of aircraft will increase tremendously in the next 10 years. Opportunities will be unlimited for persons who combine a knowledge of flying, design, and executives' needs in the air, she said. The designer believes she is well-qualified because her husband, -ard chairman of United States Industries, uses a plane in his work. She remodeled the plane, "but having my husband as a client was awful." she said. "It would have been better if we could have held meetings over a desk.

Rut this way they never ended. He could argue with me any time. "1 had told my husband he couldn't have a tape recorder because it was too heavy, hut he woke me up at 3 am. and said, don't care what you say. I want that tape recorder "See what I mean? The fussiest woman would be easy to please after him." itatrd Vrr If titer is ISy William who docs the interiors of airplanes.

Space is at such a premium in small aircraft that it takes about a year to redo a plane, Mrs. Elfrida Snyder says. She believes she is the only woman in the country who decorates ships for executives. Her latest redecorating job was on an executive type plane. It cost about $30,000 to remodel.

All fabrics used were also available for home decorating and she did not use automobile or commercial aircraft materials. Even scat belts were made of fabrics to match chairs' upholstery. "1 use my imagination and piagiarie every idea 1 can." said Mrs. Snyder, who studied at the New York School of Design Many pieces of furniture double for other Uses because she had to keep down the craft's weight, vet give the executives a feeling of luxury. Her innovations have included a tape recorder hidden in an ottoman, a bar in a table, a desk that folds up into a suitcase stand, glass holders and ash trays that slide from under a conference table, anil a wash basin high enough to let a person splash water on his face without bending over.

oond Spccinl "One thing I'm proud of is my cup-and-saucer idea. 1 wanted ones that would not slide or tip. so I hunted until 1 found cups which fit over raised centers of saucers. "Any woman can get items like this It just takes'" tune and thought," said Mrs. Snyder, who prides herself en her ceramic work.

She hopes to fit her homemade lamps into every plane she decorates Mrs. Snyder learns what colors her clients Come summer, you'll thank your lucky stars for this cool, sun-loving casual. It has sheath lines, side buttoning, a hip pocket. The Printed Pattern eludes a year-round version with collar, sleeves. Printed Pattern No is cut in Sizes 12.

14. 16. 18, and 20. Oilier In "If one of us feels strongly about a point, then the other gives in," Mrs. Gordon says.

"If we both feel strongly, then we put off talking about it for a couple of days and by then we've got a perspective on it, and find it isn't nearly as world-shattering as we had thought." The Gordons have been collaborating for 10 years, and during that time their books have sold more than 4,000,000 copies, including reprints. "Writing has been called the most lonesome work of all," Mrs. Gordon says, "but we've taken some of the loneliness out of it by collaborating. We find it fun working together." a career lift. Two members of the Met company, Soprano Re-gina Resnik and Rasso Norman Scott saw their first opera performance at one of the student sessions.

The project, always sure of a sellout for the 3.000 seals, has grown from a single experimental performance 22 years ago to its present pace of seven performances a year. Further expansion is chiefly limited by the difficulties of integrating more performances into the cumbersnmely vast complex that is an opera company. TEW YORK. April 18 The IV rock-'n'-roil generation digs J- grand opera, too. As a result, a strange long-run experiment in cultural education is celebrating a notable milestone: a hundred juvenile matinees at the Metropolitan Opera.

It's been a lively "century" of shows. "Teen-age audiences are some of the best informed and most appreciative of all," says one official of the sponsoring Metropolitan Opera Guild. Altogether, 300,000 youngsters from 450 public, parochial, and private schools in Connecticut, New Jersey, and New Y'ork have participated. For most of them the visit to the Met is a first formal brush with Bizet, Verdi, and Wagner. ItcsiilOi Sometimes the results have been surprising.

There was, for example, the case of the nervous teacher. The mentor dreaded ocorting an especially troublesome trio of lads to one of the matinees. He feared the worst but at tne end of "La Boheme" discovered the three unashamedly wiping tears from their eyes. Other youngsters have received 3 12 yards of Si.e If? requires 35 inch fabric. To ob'om Printed Pat'ern No.

4631 5nd 35 centt lo TK Courer-Journol Pnt'em Burau, ndo( irj your rami, oddresi, ond the number and of i pattern deved..

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