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The Charlotte News du lieu suivant : Charlotte, North Carolina • 11

Lieu:
Charlotte, North Carolina
Date de parution:
Page:
11
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

Nursery Affor Play Aplent rT1' Youngsters Happy While Mom Works I I '4 ''''A1 I 4 1 1 41 4 ''i v- 11-tikte I 1111 1 i 0 11 4: 1 I i tOo P41 iff 4 0 talitr -I 4'''- 4 'WI i --i ht 4cle I P-: tw A- 44:::: 4 tor: 4 st- -1 1 -oIN It'J: figt 04 -1 ks '1 1 7i0-70 '''1k4 r' I $41- 'e: 4N :44 I I 4 :4 103' oe 0-0' 5 i 1 0 a i tos40 t4t -'''-z or ti 4 i40 '1- rt tt A Play-Actor Catches For The 11 1 4 i alubLi I 11 4r- i i 4 iti: rk e- 1tt rof i 4 9 1 1 'qkj fr 't 114140A0 tsj: "'N vosVP(ft VN ty 1:: 'N 1 ik: r-) 7d6 21 iv II ivi i is 4sa i 41 4L 4 i l' illAskenN 916111 004 ySkg t1114 NJ Lit1: 4 -0 op 1ko'4 Z11' Oli 'i41'4' os 11' 1:: a 4k Ir t's'''AitAiv tisk' 0 I 0 6-i Mit 1's 15---uado''') 4 4 -4'' Av ''st 4 14- Ar-41 ''s K14 1 ''''N 1-- ort I 7 A0 4 -446-' 4 4" 1 4:414:2 4'77t: 4 i S'ke i 1( 704 4 4: ri 4'0 tZtt ri 4 1 4St cAli: 1-- it 4s -bf t''" e4 ft 40 14k i okzo 0 rr 4-- '0-7 1 'I lyRe et TWA 11 6 kt4t IN' 4 Ot 71 ns4 '44 43 4 43 4' t01 RAAVIP ZAVidteetYr44446144PINIMINIMIPSIMIMPIPIIMOP 4 017Ad fie- --e47141) e' 4117: 044 lomo 19 30 A A 4 A4: 77-- 4: 1-- 1 ft 'Not 'ftWWooVee 4g rW0o By ELLEN WINSLOW The children at the Charlotte Day Nursery are not camera shy They were playing in the back yard The brisk November wind was whistling through the tall pecan trees and the children were as frisky as the squirrels that ran through the limbs above Cowboy hats faded blue-jeans and tweed coats were in one mass of motion "The photographer is here to take your picture" announced the director Miss Margaret Simril The photographer was eyeing the steel bars of the climb-around as the spot for a good action shot As quickly as a swarm of ants the children were thronged on the climb-around hanging to the bars and saying "Take my picture I want my picture taken" Charlie Kelley had been asked to take a picture of two or three children at play Twenty-four voices were asking him to put them in the limelight It was diffictit to explain to 24 children why only a few could be photographed "You have to be moving and playing before I take your picture" Charlie said Slowly he walked around the climb-around One pixy of a boy named Davie replete in a red cowboy hat had the smile and the gimmick for getting his picture taken He slipped himself down into the bars bent and contorted through the slits of steel with a look on his face as nonchalant as royalty in a parade ALL-DAY CARE The nursery is In a house at 321 10th St where it has been located for 27 years The Little Boys Put Everything They've Got Into See-Sawing On WOMEN children are brought there by parents who must work As the nursery opens at 6:30 am the children come in for breakfast They put their small belongings in locker boxes in the long hall that runs through the house In one box is a blank scrap of paper crumpled and folded It is the child's contact with home One boy brings his fishing pole every day Before he will go into the nursery he catches something on the string It might be a leaf or another child but he insists on tying something on it each morning The children eat at small tables four places at each in the dining room adjacent to the big kitchen Across the hall is a television room where the big favorite is Captain Kangaroo In the washroom each child has a washcloth Twenty-four cloths hang in a row on hooks and over each child's cloth is his or her name and a picture The child selects and cuts out the picture such as a fat yellow duck or a smiling teddy bear a calf a hairbrush or even a picture of a bar of soap In the nursery room is a long flower box filled with green plants and ferns Beside it are little jars of greenery the children have planted The room is overflowing with toys dolls little stoves topped with miniature pots and pans and doll houses On the walls are finger paintings DAILY ROUTINE From breakfast until the last child leaves at 6 pm a day's schedule is worked out for the children After breakfast they play If the weather is warm enough they divide into their Throughout the year Mrs Soldati on the United Appeal Special Projects Commit tee works with the nursery when called upon for community solicitation or surveys Mrs Parks serves as chairman of the scrapbook committee She keeps records of all nursery activities Once a year an annual board meeting is held at which time reports of the year's work are heard and the election of officers for the coming year is held Mrs Henry Harrelson is chairman of the committee 4 1 MARIE MeKINLEY ADAMS Woman's Editor Women's News Reporters: Sally Watkins Smith Ellen Winslow and Lee Major i The Chatter Box Completes Unique Coat-Of-Arms Rug Oldest Day Nursery Wants A New Building I 11 1 Icr'S'' -IF I 0 12'0 '14t i to li Jr- 1 I 101 0 i 1 1' 4A i tott" i :4 tIt' or 4 "6 Atal --4 ----k1 5 rtrr 11 Fp' $: i' AltIO 4 4 0 if: il 4 4--- 6 4' I IptaL i 'i 3 1I'' mm i l'q 1 ---4" 1 tio 1 4): l' 4 Apgi P41 0'4 4--'' il '1 kiii A 4 1-7jri i ii 161 'P i4 4" A 44 1 t'it'f' lz 4 1 4A'A' 1- 511' ktAt 1 '7)' 7' rS A 'It 0 140' 1 110- -ito4L'" '''r '-ot ri 0 exoo 4- A3 s''''''4-440 rt 4 ''44 4 t' -d 41 1 aot 111 4 lonreti-- r'" tslor -40---- $1 as different age group and go out into the back yard Play may he either free or directed They have at their disposal a slide swings chinning bars a jungle gym auto steering wheels blocks a seesaw and a climb around By mid-morning there are nursery and kindergarten activities Two teachers Airs George Carter and Mrs Vilma Jerman lead the children in singing games or in a rhythm band The children can listen to phonograph records model with clay do finger painting or crayon and cutout work After a busy morning they are ready for a rest before lunch which is a meal with a meat 77 course or a meat substitute The children set their own tables It and clear them after the meal The fold away cots are brought out for an afternoon nap When they wake up the best part of the day is beginning They are rested and ready for play Soon their parents be coming to take them home again Around six o'clock the number of children have dwindled Those remaining sit enchanted before the antics of 1 Popeye on the television set They bunch together on a low bench bending forward quite still A parent comes to the door and another child is taken away I I 1 v4r4'N1 The Playground -essa'r Li '0' Staff Photos by Tom Its Pledges Gamma Delta: Joanne Brown Jeanie Cates Judy Furry and Judy Holt Atlanta Mary Ann Mahon Decatur Chi Omega: Rae Ellen Beebe Atlanta Kap pa Delta: Bobbie Cranford and Dianne Harsh Moultrie Sarah Ann Jennette Dalton Martha Middlebrooks Macon Phi Mu Clare Chambers Alice Maxwell and Pat Sims Atlanta: Mary Hopkins Waynesboro Alacia Lee Quitman FLORIDA: Alpha Gamma Delta: Virginia Bopp Miami Spring Marcia Brinkley Brooksville Betty Butler Ha vana Carol Brownett and Judy Prestridge Jacksonville Alpha Delta Pi: Carol Cochran Jack sonville Chi Omega: 'Nancis Brook and Gaye Gardner Win terhaven Kappa Delta: Susan Ott Winterhaven VIRGINIA: Alpha Gamma Delta: Mary Louise Coiner Staunton Sara Swann McLaugh lin Waynesboro Mary Virginia Osborne Grundy Chi Omega: Dottie Lyne and Jane Tallman Richmond Jane Paden Arling ton Becky Shaffer Princeton Kappa Delta: Polly McClure Spottswood Ruth Scholten rion Carole Smyer Fairfield 142 ki Wit By MARIE ADAMS Working six hours a day for more than five months Pat (Mrs John) Rockwood of 329 Brandywine Ave has finally finished her Christmas gift for Mr Rockwood's parents in San Francisco The gift a hooked rug designed in the family coatof-arms was done in wool yarn on a warp cloth of closer weave than the usual burlap hook backing Mrs Rockwood designed the rug pattern from a small painting of the arms and has hooked it on a black field in its true colors which are of course are the figures on the escutcheon Especially interesting is the way the Rockwood family acquired the armorial bearing which in olden times were granted by the kings in reward for some noble deed for which the monarch deemed the recipient worthy of knghthood (News A Cowboy Rides High Through The Brisk Autumn Air Miss Jones Bride Of Mr Coon Queens College Council 0 Photographer's Eye olmr Staff Photo by Tom AND THE RUG on 2-B) ::4 1 iN A 1kn 4 1: 1: 1:: 'A'5' sVf) 7 ::::::444 it --f :7: 4 4t lit IL -A 1 I 1- 1 rittio 4t414) 4 beetifir 0 rt 0 e7 --'k- 7 IF- 741N 'f4-2s: ::4:::::::::::: 'If 'i i 4: 'j 4 1 A 1 i ::41 The Charlotte Day Nursery is supported by the fees the parents pay and subsidized by the United Community Ser vices from money collected through the United Appeal Drive The maximum fee parents pay is $10 They come for an interview and the fee they pay is then worked out with Mrs Bobo Langston chairman of the admission and fees committee The goal of the Charlotte Day Nursery is to have a new building They are now equipped to take care of 25 children and 24 are enrolled in the school Their staff includes the director the two teachers a cook a maid and a part time janitor It is the oldest day nursery in North Car ol in a The doors opened in January of 1929 with five children enrolled Now the nursery takes care of children whose mothers must work or are The children are from three to five years old IS LICENSED The nursery is licensed by the State Board of Public Welfare President of the nursery board of directors is Mrs Jackson Henderson The nursery committee is headed by Mrs Henry Parker as chairman with Mrs Henry Harrelson as co-chairman They take care of the needs of the building inside and of the children They plan parties and outings Mrs Swinson is chair man of the finance committee and has charge of the budget needs When emergencies come up Mrs Nance takes over as chairman of the telephone committee by keeping all of the members informed Mrs Linn Garibaldi is chairman of memberships and Mrs John Newitt heads the building committee Dance Class Entertained Seventh grade members of the Henderson School of Dance were entertained at the new Cotswold branch of the school on Greenwich Rd Friday night The ballroom students were entertained with games and prize were given to the winners The games and dancing were under the direction of Mrs Howser assisted by Mrs John Wood Hal Propst Miss Joyce Taylor Miss Libby Jane Hinson and Mrs John Johnson A punch course was served and the hall was decorated in the red and yellow colors of Thanksgiving There are three ways of knowing whether a cake is well baked The top surface should spring back without leaving a dent' after being touched lightly The cake should pull slightly away from the sides of the pan A cake tester inserted in inc center should come out clean (News MRS ROCKWOOD In a formal ceremony last evening at 8 o'clock at Christ Episcopal Church Miss Mary Catherine Jones of Charlotte and James Wallace Coon of Bessemer City and Charlotte took their wedding vows before the Rev Thomas Blair rector of the church and the Rev David Hoke Coon brother of the bridegroom The bride is the daughter of Mr and Mrs Clarkson Jones of 2118 Norton Rd and the bride groom is the son of Mr and Mrs David Hoke Coon of Bessemer City THE CEREMONY The bridegroom's father was his best man and Mrs John Dabbs HI of Charlotte was matron of honor Music was presented by Richard Van Sciver organist and Mrs William Britton Jr soloist Bridesmaids were Mrs Clarkson Jones Jr Miss Eleanor McNinch and Miss Leslie Crutchfield of Charlotte Miss Brenda Coon sister of the bridegroom of Bessemer City Miss NIIrgie Shuford of Hickory and Miss Betty Bond of Jacksonville Fla Ushers were Clarkson Jones Jr the bride's brother John Dabbs III Stebbins Ingram William Frain HI and John IV Huffaker Jr all of Charlotte and Robert Coon brother of the bridegroom of Washington BRIDE'S GOWN The bride given in marriage by her father wore a gown of Charlottean Entertained Mrs George Habersetzer Jr was given a party Thursday night by her bridge club Mrs Habersetzer is leaving Charlotte to make her home in Washington She was cntertained at the Hearthstone Restaurant and was presented an honor gift by members of her club An arrangement of fall flowers centered the table Those attending were Mrs Jack Reid Ward Mickel-son Mrs Ray Godwin Mrs Jack Ogburn Mrs Barnes Mrs Robert Deerman and Mrs William Carlisle Announces The Panhellenic Council of Queens College Charlotte has announced the names of students who recently have been pledged to the six social sororities on the campus They are listed as follows: Charlotte: Cleone Blair Alpha CM Omega: Judy Shope Alpha Delta PI Donnell Keenan Chi Omega Harriet Houston Kappa Delta Ann Fischer and Nan Hemphill Phi Ma and Nancy Moore of Matthews Phi Mu NORTH CAROLINA: Alpha Chi Omega: Janet Carter Carthage Ramona 0 a Raleigh Alpha Gamma Delta: Anne Annas Greensboro Judy Black and Madeline Hahn Concord Sara Craig Wilmington Marilee Guigou Valdese Barbara West Fayetteville Mary Bruce Grimsley Fairmont Alpha Delta Pi: Melinda Goodman Salisbury Susanna Coley and Peggy Simmons Raleigh Chi Omega: Jane Dudley Asheville Patsy Guyer Elkin Ida Johnson Goldsboro Jane Sanders Laurinburg Kappa Delta: Patsy Arscott Troy Elizabeth Green Cherry Tarboro Beryl Harris Shelby Betty Hogan Hamlet Miriam Smith High Point Phi Betsy Badger Henderson Linda Cashwell Greensboro Car olyn Cromartie Fayetteville Sarah Love Clarkton SOUTH CAROLINA: Alpha Gamma Delta: Jeanne Ashley Walterhoro Diana Brannon Greer Mary Sue Cumbus Greenville Joanne Jones Easley Alpha Delta Pi: Jane Bowen Lake City Mary Stott Derrick Johnston Flora McNair Hartsville Mary Moore Manning Virginia Rose Florence Frances and Harriet Barrow Spartanburg Genie Stallworth and Martha Woods Chester Chi Omega Brenda Harmon Spartanburg Sue Sneddin Mr' tie Beach Rosallen Spencer Columbia Kappa Delta: Marie Clyburn Bishopville Linda Ten-fling Charleston Jo Anne Ellerbe and Barbara Kelly Columbia Phi Mu Agnes Ballenger Senec a Nancy Gray Spartanburg GEORGIA: Alpha Chi Omega: Barbara Riddle Rome Alpha (Photo by Rob Welsh Studio) MRS JAMES 1VALLACE COON As the story goes one of the Rockwoods who was a relative of Anne Boleyn during the time when she was the favoried queen of Henry VIII was a member of the royal palace staff King Henry who prided himself on skill at chess often challenged friends and residents of the palace to games and in fear of the high-tempered king his opponents invariably allowed him to win Rockwood played a pretty good game himself and when ordered to oppose the king at the chess board he forthwith whipped the king The salty old monarch was so pleased that someone was bold enough to stand up to him he granted Rockwood the coat-of-arms which bears six little chessmen on the shield and a trippant lion on the crest Mrs Rockwood has been hooking on the 3 4 foot rug since June 1 and as a real work of art we feel sure It will be the showpiece among the Rockwood's Christmas gifts candlelight satin designed with a moulded bodice embroidered with seed pearls and a bouffant skirt into a cathedral train 'kr formal-length vail of silk illusion fell from a French forward bonnet and she carried a cascade bouquet of white orchids and valley lilies Her attendants all wore dresses of topaz satin fashioned along Empire lines accented in the back with pouff bows and hem-length streamers Their Empire bonnets were haloed in seed pearls and they carried bouquets of orange delight roses and amber to gold chrysanthemums If macaroons are too soft to crush (when you want to crumble them to use in such a dessert as Biscuit Tortoni) toast them in a hot oven then cool and you'll be able to crumb them After a wedding trip to The Cloister in Sea Island Ga the couple will live at 348 Sharon Amity Rd RECEPTION GIVEN A reception followed the wedding ceremony given by the bride's parents at the Charlotte Country Club Assisting were the bridegroom's parents The bride is a graduate of Myers Park High School and St Mary's Junior College made her debut in Charlotte in 1955 and she traveled through Europe in 1957 The bridegroom is employed with the Charlotte branch of the Maryland Casualty Co He attended Davidson College and is a graduate of the University of North Carolina He was with the Army Counter-Intelligence Corps stationed in Stuttgart Germany for two years He is a member of the Kappa Sigma social fraternity TENNESSEE: Chi Omega: Preston Pratt Knoxville Kappa Delta: Marilyn Martin Memphis: Mary Stowers Harriman: Becky Thompson Kingsport Genie Vance Bristol Phi Mu: Margaret Blevins and Adrienne Shumaker Bristol WEST VIRCINJA: Alpha Cld Omega: Pat O'Brien Keystone Alpha Gamma Delta: Sandra Cannon Huntington Alpha Delta Pi: Phyllis Whitenack Bluefield Chi Omega: Suzann Mori 1: ton Slab Fork Kappa Delta: Judy Johnson Berkeley Springs I OTHER STATES: Alpha Chi Omega: Margo Boyer Basking Ridge Barbara Campbell Belleville June Horner Blytheville Ark Alpha Gamma I Delta: Margaret White Louis-vine Ky Chi Omega: Ann Bloodworth Gadsden Ala Pen- nie Jenkins Bethesda Md Phi Mu: Penny Wright Greenvill' Bet Charlotteans On The Go AIRS Fizer and son I Ross Fizer Jr of Beverly 1'1 Dr returned home Thursday after a short visit to the Rev and Mrs Herbert Jamieson in Bailey Mrs Jamieson is the former Della Lee Fizer The Jamiesons have just moved into the new parsonage of the church of which he is pastor They have two children Ilerbie Jr and Susan (Continued I i i r1V.

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À propos de la collection The Charlotte News

Pages disponibles:
626 907
Années disponibles:
1928-1985