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The Burlington Free Press from Burlington, Vermont • Page 12

Location:
Burlington, Vermont
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TK luHlngtsn frtt Prttt THURSDAf, APRIL II, IN! 12 I 3 -J- 'US' XV 4 Silver Dale Is Observed By Ihe Morins HARDWICK Mr. and Mrs. Nestor Morin of Sumner Street, observed their 25th wdeding anniversary at a party Saturday evening in the Knights of Columbus Hall. About 40 persons attended the event which was arranged by Mrs. Marlene Clark, Mrs.

Shirley Brochu and Mrs. Darlene Brochu. Mrs. Morin was presented with a corsage and her husband a boutonniere. The couple also received many gifts and a purse of money.

Dancing followed. Refreshments included an a i-versary cake made by Mrs. Anselm LeCours. Nestor A. Morin and Marion Preman were married April 14, 1943 in Holyoke, Mass.

They have a son, Michael, a junior at the University of Vermont. p.r- I i V. i Ar k. 1 ifty lii mi' i j- Linraw urn mm j. i MM" -'7' 1 v- VIEWING THE PORTRAIT OF DR.

JEREMIAH K. DURICK in the Durick Library at St. Michael's College are, from left, Mrs. Elizabeth Durick of South Burlington, Dr. Durick's widow; and Mrs.

Joseph mrhein and Mrs. Edward F. Markey of the Faculty Wives Club. College Faculty Wives Plan Card Parly lj ys Four of the six members of the Association presenting a concert at Patrick Gym Sunday night Anyone Con Identify with 'Cherish Digging ihe Association III Betty of the 'Brian, Bill, Betty and Tony' folk rock group from UVM. They write their own songs.

The St. Michael's College Faculty Wives Club will sponsor a dessert card party at 8 p.m. Wednesday at Alliot Hall. Mrs. Joseph Amrhein and Mrs.

Edward F. Markey are chochairmen. Proceeds will be used to defray the cost of a portrait of Dr. Jeremiah K. Durck which is in the new Durick Library.

Dr. Durick was one of St. Michael's most beloved teachers. The public Is invited. A Gamma Chapter To Hear Miss Prunier Speak on Literature Gamma Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, will meet tonight at the home of Miss Colette Bombardier, 248 College St.

To keep a vegetable salad from becoming sodden when it must stand for a few hours, place a saucer upside down on the bottom of the bowl before filling it with the salad. The moisture will run underneath, leaving the salad moist and crisp. Ml a A i Ready for Miss Jean Prunier will present a program on literature. The chapter gave $25 to the Center for Disorders of Communication and $20 worth of arts and crafts materials to the Sara Holbrook Center. By MAGGIE MAURICE The Association, producers of such top 10 hits as "Cherish" and "Windy," played in Patrick Gymnasium Sunday night and the kids packed the place.

Some of them took their shoes off and sat on blankets on the floor; others filled the bleachers. Tickets were $3 apiece. How many people in the crowd? "About 3,100," said Paul Shambo of the University of Vermont Interfraternity Council. If kids care that much to pay that much to hear a group, then those guys have something to say that the rest of us don't They do. "It's funny the way young people come to us for advice.

In a way, we're sort of spokesmen for the younger generation," said Larry Ramos of Hawaii who joined the group a year ago after a stint with the New Christy Minstrels. Other members of the Association which started three years are Russ Giguere, Terry Kirkman, Jim Yester, Ted Bluechel and Brian Cole. The average age is 25 which Larry just happens to be. "We try to talk to all the kids who come back to see us after shows," Larry said. "Some of them want to be rock and roll singers and want to know how to get ahead.

Others are just looking for the answers. "We unfortunately live in a world full of traditions. But I advise the younger generation to- listen before they discard them. Listen, evaluate and think before making any drastic move. "Before you try drugs or do what is considered morally wrong, think about it, reason why and then act from there.

"Drugs is not the answer to finding yourself." The guys in the Association seem to have a lot of fun on the job, though with six different opinions it's sometimes hard to get a commitment. Though they say they're "not particularly a ballad group," one of their biggest requests is for "Cherish." How come? "The record of Cherish is the best I've ever heard I can say that because I'm not on it," said Larry. "It is just a good song. It was instantly picked up by the mass, every person could understand and identify with it. The arrangement was well written." But lest they be criticized for "copping out to the bread" (selling out to commercialism), they are constantly striving for a new artistic sound within the group.

"You have to be creative to sustain a position in the music world," Larry said. They're a good vocal group. They're proficient on their instruments but not virtuosos. When the audience hears them live, they use the organ to fill in the strings and horn gap. One of the guys plays the flugel horn that looks like a bazaar trumpet.

He gets four octaves out of it. They've been on the road constantly and get home (Los Angeles) occasionally. They're planning a vacation the end of June. Larry says he'll probably send his parents to Hawaii with the twin three-year-old girls and his wife's 10-year-old son and "my wife and I are going to look for a home near San Juan Capistrano." Meanwhile, they're playing the riot circuit. They went from Burlington to Baltimore and on to Washington.

That wasn't the way they planned it but that's how it turned out. "We don't expect any problems because we'll be working colleges and college kids have enough sense, they're more aware of their position in the world. But rioting is not altogether foreign to students. "No, but they aren't in on this race stuff. I have faith in America and I think we can pull out of this," Larry said.

And as the Association hit one place after another and it began to look like the same gym, the same hotel, their theme turned into, "No matter where you go, there you are." And they sang "Requiem for the Masses," dedicated to "all the people who died and didn't know why." The kids are still talking about the Association. Before the Association, a folk rock group from UVM sang. They were Brian, Bill, Betty and Tony, who write a lot of their own stuff and produce a strange blend of music with a lead folk guitar, an electric bass and a cello. "They produce some different and pleasing sounds," said one 22-year-old girl student. "They Incorporate baroque and fugue they have a lot to polish but I think they have extremely fine musical arrangements, good voices and imaginative music.

"But the echoes in the gym blurred the words and only the people on the floor got the message." fx .1 fcMiHliiBMS EASTER? See Hill's for a fin selection of chic dresses one or two piece In a wide variety ef styles, sizes, colors! Hats, gloves, hosiery, handbags all at sensible prices! Open Thurt. Prt. Ivm, 1 DEPT. Miss Sisters Susan Sisters, Louis Emilo Jr. To Be Married FERRISBURG Mr.

and Mrs. Paul B. Sisters announce the engagement of their daughter Susan B. to Louis J. Emilo son of Mr.

and Mrs. Louis J. Emilo Sr. of 1 Gorham Lane, Middlebury. Miss Sisters was graduated from Vergennes Union High School in 1964 and Katharine Gibbs Secretarial School in Boston in 1955.

She is employed as a secretary at the Weeks School in Vergennes. Mr. Emilo was graduated from Middlebury Union High School in 1966 and is employed by his father at A. Emilo Building Supply Inc. He is a member of the Vermont Army National Guard.

A summer wedding is being planned. Student Mecf Wives To Meet Tonight With Mrs. Andrews The Student Medical Wives Club of the University of Vermont will meet tonight at 8 at the home of Mrs. Edward C. Andrews Jr.

on Hinesburg Road. Officers will be elected. A social hour will follow. Before rolling up canvas awnings or canvas chairbacks for storing, sprinkle them freely with salt or tobacco and then roll and tie in the usual way. Store in a cold, dry place.

Should there be any moisture, the salt or tobacco will absorb it and prevent mildew. PA5TOR ALBERT RUNGE See an actual demonstration of "CHRIST IN THE PASSOVER SEDER" Everyone Is welcome North Ave. Alliance Church 1200 North Ave. I AllM Shopping Cent fj North Ave, JJ Family Campus Tro Will It Be Moonlight and Roses? DAYTON, Ohio (AP) Cindy Gale is a freshman at 1 1 I SB I I Wright State University Her 11 ft 0 11 fHY 1 1 CI 11 tt 7 i Miss Duprey Linda Duprey, Gary Locker by Plan Nuptials ST. ALBANS Mr.

and Mrs. Ernest Duprey of 51 Hoyt St. announce the engagement of their daughter Linda Arlene to Gary Lawrence Lockerby, son of Mrs. Marion Lockerby of Alburg. Miss Duprey is a student at Bellows Free Academy.

Mr. Lockerby attended BFA and is scheduled to enter the armed forces in June. An August wedding is being planned. Wecome Wagon To Meet in Essex Mrs. Nettie O'Halloran, member of the American Institute of Designers, will speak on interior decorating at a meeting of the Essex Junction Welcome Wagon Club at 8 p.m.

Tuesday at St. James Episcopal Church. A benefit will be held and proceeds will go to the Brandon Training School. mother, Mrs. Helen Elaine Gale, is a junior there.

Her grandmother. Mrs. Ellen Ove-rocker, is a senior. Mrs. Overocker, 58, a 4th grade teacher for the last 10 years, is taking night courses to complete her degree in education.

Mrs. Gale, 38, and mother of four, returned to college as a full-time student recently, also seeking a degree in education. She had dropped out after her freshman year to get married. Cindy, 18, plans to major in sociology. ByDONSEAVER.

DURHAM, N.C. Attention all you loving ladies: A husband may be nice to have around the home, at least sometimes. But did you ever stop to think how it will be when, in those retirement years, he will be kicking around the wifely domain most of the time? Will it be moonlight and roses? Or will it be kind of Call Merrie Bell, 33-44-1 When you think of Gablingerfc: The first beer with no available carbohydrates. complete co-ordination I .11 4 in tasnions tninK or In lh Fly Middli-burjr The people who answered the latest set of questions, some 91 in all, said that time in retirement passes slowly, or as usual, or rapidly. But one man was moved to poetic license by the bliss.

Time passes, he declared, "like a vapor." There was one question on which there was some sort of consensus. A person should be allowed to work as long as he wants to, he needs to and he is able. Many of the elderly experts saw the chief problems of retirement as health, money and ways to occupy their time. "Retirement is was sort of a catchall question and the answers ran the gamut: A change, a happy time, a shift in activity, a change in life, satisfaction, wonderful, freedom from routine, one of the hardest jobs ever, a burden, not fit for me, the beginning of a new and different life, a lot of fun, when you can do things you did not have time to do when working, not good. Retirement is, declared one man of 76, "People a lot older than I am." Encourages Reading LOUISVILLE, Ky.

(AP) -A child's most important habit a love of reading and books is formulated by the time he is two years old, believes Mrs. Lesley Frost Ballantine, daughter of the late poet, Robert Frost. Speaking before a local woman's club, Mrs. Ballantine suggested that parents should read aloud to their children from the time they are tiny tots, and should continue reading sessions as a family activity. The New York City resident recalled that some of her fondest memories as a child are of evenings by the fire in her native New Hampshire, listening as her parents read aloud.

retired because that's not easy for a man," "She should be thoughtful of his activities and do what he wants to do to make him happy," "He helps with the housework we couldn't manage if he didn't do that." And there were such husbandly answers as these: "My wife thinks it's won-ful;" "I think my wife welcomes me and I like to stay there;" "We love it;" "That makes life happier for both;" "A wife should be well taken care of." "When a man retires, he and his wife read answers were varied They should be happy, should have some kind of hobby, become closer, have to reorder their lives, should work together, should be able to rest, may find life dull, have a close relationship, should love each other more. An earlier study of wives and retirement, compiled by Mrs. Dorothy K. Hcyman and Miss Frances C. Jeffers of the Duke Center, indicates that life-long attitudes of wives tend to be accentuated rather than changed by the retirement years.

The wives of 37 retired men were studied to determine if they were glad or sorry about their husband's retirement. Happiness in marriage had been rated high by a majority, but of those who were less enthusiastic about their marriage, 64 per cent were In the sorry their husbands had retired category. Of the men who retired for health reasons, 72 per cent of their wives were sorry while 64 per cent of the wives of mandatory retirees were glad. Ia addition, the glad wives tended to cluster in the upper socio-economic levels and the sorry ones in the lower levels. The glad wives also tended to score higher In medical evaluations and on their own ideas of their relative health.

like the old saw about visiting in-laws: They're like dead fish, after 24 hours they begin to stink? Staffers from the Duke University Center for Study of Aging and Human Development sought some opinions on this from a panel of experts. The experts were elderly and retired people, themselves, both men and women. The questions designed to reflect attitudes on retirement, were in the form of incomplete sentences and some of the answers sounded like a renewal of the battle of the sexes. When a man is home all day, "he's miserable," said one little lady. "It would be aggravating," said "Lots of times he is in his wife's way," said a third.

"One neighbor said she was going to run away from home it would make life easier," another added with some emphasis, while yet another had a solution to the problem: "He must have bis own room or corner to do what he Is Interested in and have his part in the upkeep of his home not just coming home to a woman who runs the whole house." Now the men of the house had something to say about all this, too. "If it's a bad rainy day, it's a mess," said one. "God will help him to stay In line," added another. "With some wives he is a nuisance, with others a pal and a real lover," said a third with just a hint of rapture. A wife, after her husband retires, "becomes too bossy," said one disgruntled male.

"She should change his name to 'Honey-dew'," said another. "Honey do this and honey do that." Not all the experts were disgruntled or unsympathetic as witness these wifely answers: "A wife has to try to help him adjust to being mmsvmsmmwimi raiLi2 A SSk THEY I LAST' The Shop fo go for the brands you know ir ftt'W tfflfr ft Qrnsviiu Cinderella knows that togetherness is in for '68 Yes, "Togetherness" is in for Spring '68 and Cinderella fashions at Andre's are In perfect tun with tli time. See the smart dcmi-belted knit coats with its very own dresj. In 100 orlon acrylic bonded knit this excitingly styled coat and dress ensemble is featured In sizes 4 to 14 See them today all oriced from hvnhufcm rMi dollars. it CVU4, II'.

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Pages Available:
1,398,262
Years Available:
1848-2024