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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • 8

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Tit 8 THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS Saturday. November, 30, 1961 Don't Plan To Sleep In Timbuktu, Moll Lamms Say Their Vows Miss Jean Ann McAnulty and Michael C. K. Lamm were wed today in the Second Presbyterian Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. William E. McAnulty, 320 Blue Ridge Road. She is a graduate of Butler University and a member of 1 i i i Tower Phot Mrs. Frank Lee II V- J.

yssnsa Jit cits Frank John Lees II Take Wedding Trip To Cincinnati Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority and Theta Sigma Phi professional fraternity for women in journalism. Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lamm, 5611 Primrose. He attended Indiana and Butler Universities and Tri-State College, Angola.

The bride wore a satin gown with scooped neckline and empire bodice. Honor attendants were Mrs. Edward J. Collins, Silver Springs, Miss Patricia Ann McAnulty, sister of the bride, and David Lamm, brother of the bridegroom. Bridesmaids were Miss Karen Lamm, sister of the bridegroom; Mrs.

Albert Myers Mrs. William Evans, Mrs. Thomas Butters and Mrs. Russell Thomas, West Lafayette. Ush Li BretimaR-Kondas Phot Mrs.

Michael Lamm ers were Willard Lamm HI, William McAnulty brother of the bride, Thomas Butters, W. Wade Hogg, Barry O'Brien and David Mannweiler. Feldhake-Dreyer Vows Read Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Anthony Feldhake are traveling Pa i plililliiililBlliilll i Awbrey Phot Mrs.

David Bostrom Brading Photo Mrs. Donald Schoch Miss Charlotte Clark. Miss Charlotte Ashby, Blooming-ton, was junior bridesmaid. Wilson Photo Mrs. Hugh Warnecke Ni.s.

two American girls are with the Peace Corps in Tunisia. But the moment Miss Raspolid was waiting for never arrived. There was no. rock, no roll, no soul dancing. Couples moved around the floor in a tight little fox trot, holding each other stiffly.

WEST AFRICA'S DISCONCERTING West full of such disconcerting moments. The dancers there were about 80 of then? did not speak to, or even appear to notice, them. "Sometimes, in Africa, it is as though white people were invisible," one of the visitors remarked. The girls at the dance looked under 20 years of age. No one would say whether they were Tuareg or Soughai, a tribal difference of some significance.

The Tuareg men, often described as the original nomadic Libyans, who were the caravan drivers of the Sahara, marry only once. The a people who once ruled an empire and have long lived in Timbuktu, marry several itimes. 1 Most of the young women came to the dance carrying the big basing full of food that West African women never seem to put down for long. They did not drink. Except for the solemn mo- ments when they they giggled and talked to each other.

i Even the little 1 port of Kabara, about four and a Jialf, miles from Timbuktu'v has a Saturday night The; dance there brings women and men in from the island of Janglya, about nine miles away. They arrive boats, clapping and singing as they come across the water. tp (I Dauglrerty Photo Mrs. Stephen Feldhake hake, brothers of the bridegroom, and Dennis and Daniel Dreyer, brothers of the bride. Richard Feldhake, brother of the bridegroom, was ring bearer.

R. A. Lape Weds Miss Parish I The men come first, at to talk to each other. Most of them ignore the stiff rows of chairs edging the platform and escape the mosquitoes lured by the bare electric lights strung up on wires and stay in the hotel's small bar, drinking beer, It's neither surprising nor rare to find their, conversa tion turning to women. GIRLS HAVE LONG NECKS The girls in Timbuktu have astonishingly long, slender necks and pretty shoulders.

They never seem to slouch. Very often their hair is hidden by high wrap turbans that would bring pleasure to a New York milliner. At the Saturday night dance, the contrast in appearance between the men and women can be somewhat startling. All the men wear Western clothes trousers and open shirts and sandals. The women prefer long print skirts and blouses with tiny, loose shoulder straps or no straps at all.

The women of modern Mali are considered among the most attractive in West Africa, and the girls who turn out for the Saturday night dances look like silhouettes from Harper's Bazaar The young women also have yery firm defenders among the males. i For instance, there is Issa a young Maliari working in Timbuktu as a hydraulic technician who said he had studied in Minsk in the Soviet Union and had visited Moscow and Leningrad. RUSSIANS HAVE NOTHING Comparing Russian women. with a 1 i a Doucoure averred: 'The girls in the Soviet Union well, they are nice. But they have nothing.

No lipstick. No nail polish. No clothes. Nothing." Touri Larabi, who works at the hotel and has visited the United States, has a similar view about American women. "No good," he insisted.

"They say, 'Hey, Blackie, do this, But the gifls in Europe, if they fall in love with me, it doesn't make a difference what color I am. "The, French have more culture, more class, than the Americans," Larabi concluded faithfully. Mali was a French colony until 1960. At the dance, the women sit on one side of the platform talking among themselves while the men keep their distance until 10 p.m. Then the men dart over to ask for a dance, but when the music stops, the girls return to their seats alone.

There is not much switching of partners. "Oh, I am 'so "glad that we are going to see the dance now," Miss Elizabeth Ras'polic of Phoenix, She was visiting Timbuktu with Miss Betty Meyer. The i By GLORIA EMERSON CO Now York Tim Newt Sonic Timbuktu, Mali There is no sleep for tired tourists in Timbuktu on Saturday night The same spirit that shakes the young and the restless on Saturday night in Brooklyn or Beverly Hills also stirs them here. Outside the Campement, the town's only hotel, there is a concrete platform where guests eat al fresco during the day and frogs leap at night But on Saturday night, the platform becomes a dance floor and tired travelers toss in their beds until 2 a.m. listening to a saxophone, an electric guitar and a drum drag out the old song "Sibo-ney." The tourists don't have too much to offer in the way of a defense.

The Timburtu band is a local amateur group with a beat that is both relentless and wrong and is played loudly into amplifiers. Timbuktu, a place of uncertain population that may be as much as 7,000, is not really a town. It is the name of the ancient center, of the caravan trade across the Sahara where slaves and salt were once sold. There are no shops, no stores, no hairdressers, no jukeboxes. There are "more camels than there are doctors, more goats than sinks and the mud huts are many.

But on Saturday night the place swings. Matthew's Photo Walter Buchanan Mrs. Miss Marianne Vlock, Miss Dory Kozak, Lynne Zimmerman and Miss Dianne Getscher. McCoy-Meyer Miss Monica Ann Meyer and Lawrence J. McCoy were wed a in the Little Flower Catholic Church.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond S. Meyer, 1329 N. Drexel.

She is a graduate of Holy Cross School of Nursing. Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dan McCoy, 4017 N. Sheridan.

He attended Bellarmine College, Louisville, and Indiana University, Indianapolis campus. The bride wore a velvet gown that she designed and made with pearl applique. Honor attendants were Miss Norma D. Mings and C. Frederick Mangin.

Bridesmaids were Miss Karen Meyer, sister of the bride, and Miss Patricia A. McCoy, sister of the bridegroom. PONYTAIL "Every time I send 'Babysitter brutality'!" 111 I Kia FMturM Ball State Alumni Exchange Vows Miss Carol Irene Kramer and Hugh Joseph Warnecke exchanged wedding vows today in St. Barnabas Catholic Church. Thomas Photo Mrs.

Alvin Niese Thomas Photo Mrs. Joel Zagel Bostrom-Wier Miss Anita Kay Wier became the bride of Ens. David Otto Bostrom today in Hope United Presbyterian Church, Plainfield. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Robert E. Wier, Plainfield. She attended Ball State University. Her husband is the son of the Rev. and Mrs.

Luther Bostrom, Plainfield. The bridegroom is stationed at Damneck, Va. He is a graduate of Wooster College, Wooster, Ohio. Honor attendants were Miss Janet 1 a 1 1 and Bahram Yusef sadeh, Wooster. Zagel-Baker Miss Connie Lee Baker and Joel Carl Zagel were wed today in the St.

Pius Catholic Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David W. Baker, 5935 Central.

Her husband is the son of the Rev. and Mrs. Herman M. Zagel, 3105 Kessler North Drive. He attended Indiana Central College.

The bride wore a floor length gown of satin and Alencon lace. Honor attendants were Mrs. Steven Hammond, Bour-bonnais, Mrs. David W. Baker III, and Bruce M.

Zagel, Troy, Mich. Paul Pear-sey was usher. Schoch-King Miss Rose Kathleen King and Donald James Schoch were wed today in St. Mary's Catholic Church. The bride is the daughter of Mrs.

Christina King, 130 E. St. Joseph. Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Melbourne Schoch, Marshall, 111. The bride wore a satin gown trimmed in lace with a scalloped neckline. Honor attendants were Mrs. Derald Cooper and Ken Carll. Bridesmaids were Miss Margaret Brading, Mrs.

Ralph Dobbins and Miss Judi Summerville. Anita Spencer was flower girl. Ushers were Joseph William King Carter Gossett, New White-land, and James Maher, John Brading and Michael King. Patrick King was ring bearer. James-Hollenkamp Mr.

and Mrs. David Michael James are traveling to New Orleans following their wedding today in St. Joan of Arc -Catholic Church. The bride is the former Miss Laurie Louise Hollen-kamp, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Wilfred B. Hollenkamp, 4156 Carrollton. She is a graduate of Barat College of Sacred Heart, Lake Forest, 111. Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph L. James, 4020 N. College. He is a graduate of Marian College. The bride wore a satin gown trimmed with Alencon lace.

Honor attendants were Mrs. Richard Huebler, Chicago, sister of the bride, and Laurence James, brother of the bridegroom. Bridesmaids were Mrs. James McGinley, Palo Alto, sister of the bride; Mrs. Jo Ann Schuster, sister of the bridegroom; Miss Theresa Murray and 1 1 If IKfllilaiiil ,1 Mr.

and Mrs. Frank John Lee II are traveling to Cincinnati following their wed-. ding today in Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church. The bride is the former Miss Sherry Brent McCain, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs.

Lawrence McCain and sister of Mrs. Gerald E. Metzger, 7920 Hawthorne Court. She is a graduate of Indiana Central College and is working on a master's degree at Butler University. Her husband is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. Frank B. Lee, 3861 N. Delaware. He is a graduate of Ball State University and also is working on his master's degree at Butler.

The bride wore a satin gown with Chantilly lace and chapel train. Honor attendants were Mrs. John Heylmann and Harry R. Lee, brother of the bridegroom. Bridesmaids were Mrs.

Jack Couse II, and Mrs. Mark L. Shaw. Ushers were Stephen Peterson, Downers Grove, 111., and James Senefeld, Brook-ville. Niese-Pierce Miss Ellen Teresa Pierce and Alvin Joseph Niese were wed today in Little Flower Catholic Church.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Pierce, St. Louis, formerly of Indianapolis. Her husband is the son of and Mrs.

Lawrence Niese, Batesville. The bride wore a nylon lace gown with empire bodice. Honor attendants were Mrs. Vernon Wallingford, sister of the bride, and Rus-sel Niese, brother of the bridegroom. Bride smaids were Miss Donna Walters and Miss Jeanne Roberge.

Ushers were Kenneth and Harold Niese, brothers of the bridegroom. Zipper Shift On Right Track You're on the right track to 1969 flattery! Zip up part way for crisp revers, all the way for a bright, roll neckline. Sew this easy shift now! Printed Pattern 9340: NEW Half Sizes 12y2, 14i2, 16'2, W2, 20'2, 22i2. Size 142 (bust 37) takes 2 yards. 45-inch.

SIXTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for each pattern add 15 cents for. each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Marian Martin in care of The Indianapolis News, Pattern 232 West 18th New York, N.Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER.

WW 9340 Ball Photo Mrs. Roger Lape to Cincinnati following their wedding today in St Jude Catholic Church, The bride, the former Miss Diana Irene Dreyer, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dreyer, 3219 E. Tulip Drive.

She is attending Indiana Central College. Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Feldhake, 1220 W. Edgewood.

The bride wore a gown of peau de soie with empire bodice. Honor attendants were Miss Donna Dreyer, sister of the bride, and Mark Storey. Bridesmaids were Miss Jane Koors, Miss Nancy Gibbons, Miss Barbara Feldhake, sister of the bridegroom, and Misses Darlene and Denise Dreyer, sisters of the bride. Vicky Cook was flower girl. Ushers were Jerome and Robert Feld Miss Glenda Sue Parish and Roger Allen Lape were wed today in the Lawrence Baptist Church.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Parish, 8215 Harrison Drive. Her husband is the son of Mr.

and Mrs. Ivan Lape, Williamsport Honor attendants were Mrs. Barbara Evans and Larry Bowers. Miss Marsha Lape, sister of the bridegroom, was bridesmaid. Seating guests were David and James Parish, brothers of the bride.

Miss Margot Hayer Gibson became the bride of Ronald B. Christensen today in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral Catholic Church. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Robert A.

Gibson, Jasonville. She atended Indiana University, Indianapolis campus. Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred B.

Christensen, 5440 Brendon Park Drive. He attended the University of Maryland in Baltimore and is a graduate of I.U. Honor attendants were Miss Susan Wright, Mrs. Kathy Fruth and Harry D. Christensen.

The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Bruncy, 1503 N. Eaton.

She is a graduate of Indiana University and a member of Delta Gamma Sorority. Her fiance is the son of Mrs. Frances Glassburn and Kenneth Glassburn, both of Franklin. He is a graduate of I.U. and is a member of Phi Delta Theta Fraternity.

The hride-to-be will wear a floor length gown of satin peau. Honor attendants will be Mrs. William Harvey, West Lafayette; Miss Judith Forney and Larry Mann, Franklin. Bridesmaids will be Mrs. Leon Bazzoni, Fort Wayne, and TanTa TJamUfnn nlnfftnn Ushers will be R.

Michael Christensen-Gibson Vows Read We have our own dance here tQQ sM market woman in the girls love them." port. "The Daughterly'! Photo Mrs. Kenneth Corey Pnrex Fletrhor V-Ul CX ICIUiC, a VOWS Are KeCId i i. M'ss Nadine Jo Fletcher "'and nneth Corey were wed today in the Churchfof Holy Spirit. bride 'js the daughter 01 Mr- and Mrs.

Max B. Fletcher, 7314 E. 13th. She attends Purdue University. Her husband is the son of Mrs.

William R. Corey, 3034 W. Michigan. He is a graduate of DePauw University and Purdue. He is a member of Lamba Chi Alpha Fraternity.

The bride wore a velvet gown with lace sleeves. nonor auenaants were I iia. joihci mtvuy ana Kon-. ert Corey, "Gaston, Ala. brother of the bridegroom, Barbara Smith and Miss Andrea Glover were bridesmaids.

Ushers were James Roseman and Donald Cripin, Detroit Garden Club To Meet Thursday Members of the Meridian Hills Garden Club will meet to complete their Christmas project of converting old table legs into candlestick holders Thursday at 10 a.m. in the home of Mrs. Richard W. DvltP 549. VJ SltrA Members will also bring gifts to put on their fragrance tree urhirh tha -Ink annually to the Indiana State School for the Blind.

i ii The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Kramer 1918 Pemington Place. She is a graduate of Ball State University and a member of Pi Gamma Mu Honorary.

Her husband is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Warnecke, 4352 E. 39th.

He is a graduate of Ball State. Honor attendants were Mrs. Jerry Fogleman, Center-ton, sister of the bride, and Jon S. Smith, Muncie. Buchanan-Tharp Miss Margaret Fillis Tharp and Walter Stephen Buchanan were wed today in the All Souls Unitarian Church.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin C. Tharp, 5229 Nob Lane. She is a graduate of Ball State University.

Her husband is the son of Mrs. Gene Green, 3550 Murray, and Richard Buchanan, 3157 Buren. He is a graduate of Indiana University and a member of Phi Kappa Tau Fraternity. The bride wore a street-length white knit dress. Honor attendants were Mrs.

Terry Warnick and Thomas Haggerty. Werner-Johnson LINCOLN, Neb. Miss Kay Lynn Johnson and James Werner will wed at 6 o'clock tonight in the Sacred Heart Church. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Harold W. Johnson, 3046 She attended St. Mary-of-the-Woods, Terre Haute, and the University of Nebraska. Her fiance is the son of Mrs. James L.

Werner, 5415 Camden, 'Indianapolis. He attended Rose Polytechnical Institute, Terre Haute. The bride-to-be will wear a velvet princess style gown with bell sleeves. Honor attendants will be Miss Eloyce Johnson, sister of the bride-elect, and James Kiefer, Indianapolis. Bridesmaids will be Miss Linda Freeh, Highland Park, Wilson Pholo Mrs.

Ronald Christensen cy noney I.U. Graduates To Wed Miss Susan Kay Bruney and Stephen Jeffery Glassburn will wed at 7:30 tonight in the Old Bethel United Methodist rhiirrh. wwpp ''qjpp 1 i i I 1 111 4 I i It I 4 SniJIon. Inc. I96S.

World rlitiU rwrrad. MIMr-BiMT more i b- cnhan r.iacchnm To Be Mrs. Stephen Glassburn him up to bed he yells elect; Donald Sweeney, Franklin, and Roger Lantz, New Palestine. '1 T3.

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