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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1955)
6 f?c 3 Statesman, Salem, Hrf, Crali and Skills Varied Program Offered at YW This Fall, Classes Soon to Begin Arte, crafts, and skills, health-education, 'home-makers' holiday, a course or a group to accommodate girls and women of all ages and to appeal to every interest, such is the varied program being offered by the YWCA this fill Classes begin the week of Sep- icmoer iff iuu uiust ui mtiu tuuuuuc avi twcifc irccu, uiuugu a few last only five or six weeks. ' In the health-education de partment slymnastics will be of fered on Monday and Thursday morning and evening. The Joan' Ross Charm and Modeling coarse will be offered on Monday and Friday at three different times, 1:30-3:00 p.m 6-7:30 p.m., and 8-9:30 p. m. Another course is scheduled on Tuesday and Thurs day evenings . from 6-7:30. These courses last eight weeks:. A self- improvement class, instructed oy Joan Ross is available to groups of at least twenty women. Modern Dance, for Adults is scheduled for Monday evenings, 8-9:30; for children on Saturday mornings, 9-10 and 10-11; and a junior workshop on Wednesday evenings, 7-9 p.m. Ballroom . dancing, featuring the Latin American dances, is slated for Wednesday evening, 9-10 p.m. Advanced Judo is scheduled for Tuesday and Thursday, 7-9 p.m. A beginning golf class may be taken between 10-11 on either Thursday or Saturday, or from 6:30-7:30 on . Tuesday evening. Saving Grace, a posture, poise and exercise class for teen-age girls, is scheduled for Monday afternoons, 4-5 p.m. - On Tuesday evenings from 7-9 p.m. business girls, may, have a . free play gym period which will include volley ball, table tennis, badminton, archery, and shuffle board. Y-Teens may use the gym " for free .play with available equipment on Saturdays from 3 5 pan. The class in dog obedi- ence wui meet on oaiuruays, 3 p.m. A coed, play period in badminton is scheduled, -for Thursday evening, 9-10 pjn.. Arts, Crafts and Skills In the Arts, Crafts, and Skills department such familiar favor ites as onage, ou pamuug, icairu to drive and millinery classes will again be offered, though many new courses are being added this year. Mrs. Charles McElhinny will instruct a begin ning bridge class on Tuesday evening, 7:30-9:30 p.m. On Thurs day mornings. 9:30-11:30, and on Thursday afternoons, 1-3 p.m-, Mrs. Bjarne Ericksen will teach beginning bridge. Mrs. W. R. Newmyers wffl teach intermedi ate bridge on Tuesday mornings, 9:30-11:30, and on Thursday eve nings, 7:30-9:30. Oil painting will be taught by Carl Hall on Monday evenings, 7:30-9:30, and on-Thursday mora ines. 10 a.m. -nooo.Mr. Hall will also teach a children's painting class on Saturday mornings? lu ll: 30 p. m. A choice of tooling articles either in leather or cop per may be had in the" copper and leather craft class, taught by L. E. Showers on Monday eve nings, 730-9:30. A Millinery Class On Thursday mornings, 9:30- 11:30, Mrs. Edwin Sahnow will instruct a millinery class. Two learn to drive classes, instructed by Monroe Cheek, will be of fered one on Mondays, 4-6 p.m., and the other on Thursday morn ings, 9:30-11:30. On-- Thursday evenings, 730-930, Mrs. Lloyd Hockett will teach the English class for Foreign-born. ' ! Club-clinic, a class designed to give basic help in parliamentary procedure for club members, as well as suggestions on program building and on publicity, will be offered Tuesday mornings, 930-11:30. This course will last only eight weeks. Mrs. Charles Weeber will teach two courses in social and platform poise, one on Tuesday evenings, 7:30-9:30, and one on Thursday afternoons, 1-3. Creative writing, instructed by Miss Edna Mingus, will meet on Thursday evenings, 730-9:30. On Friday afternoons Mrs. Hazel Bartlett will instruct a class in flower arranging from "1-3 p.m. Choral Reading of Poetry One of the new courses' being offered this fall is choral read ing of poetry, taught by Miss Mildred Glover. One section for children in grades 4, 3, and 6 will meet on Saturday mornings, 10-11; the other for grades 7, 8, and 9 from 10-11 on the same morning. A do-it-yourself class win be offered on Thursday afternoons, 1-3. The content of this course will include demonstrations by various leaders, and practice in such crafts as copper enameling, rug braiding, gimp- work, lino leum" block printing, etc China painting, taught by Mrs. Louis Anderson on Monday evenings. 7:30-9:30, will provide women an j opportunity to. decorate their own porcelain. Those who enjoy the reading aloud of drama, poetry, or. fic tion will be interested in the course set up for that purpose, as well as for conversation about the literary selections. This . course is scheduled for Tuesday evening, 730-9:30. Rug craft, a course which will include instruction in braid weav ing, turkish knot, and rug hook ing, will be taught by Miss Eve lyn Bengston on Monday 1 eve nings, 7:30-930. Following rug craft, which will last only five weeks. Miss Bengston will teach' a course in furniture refimsb ine, also on Monday evenings, 730-9:30. Greeting Card Workshop. A greeting car workshop, led by Robert Miller, will meet on Tuesday evenings, 7:30-9:30. This class will last five weeks, after which Mr. Miller will instruct a class in wood carving, also on Tuesday evenings,. 7:30-8:30. " On Wednesday evenings, 7:30 9:30. . Mrs. Chloe Branch will teach a course in knitting,, cro cheting, and buck weaving. On Monday afternoons, 4-5, Mrs. Charles Weeber will teach a class in creative dramatics for boys and girls in grades 7, 8, and 9. . Further details about the vari ous courses may be obtained by calling the YWCA. Those who plan to enter courses this fall are urged to register early, since Or., Sunday, Sept. 11, T953 n rT TLi fzn o o : i By CARL HALL : The moon was high, clear and quiet as ice. Crickets dampened the air with sound as the valley drank in the drafts of evening on the shadows of the moon. In the cooling hush where the day's heat arose from : the earth we were thankful for the release from the bright energy intent on pushing us into the ground in search of shade. i Darkness deepens . the vat el earth: the intimate details are lost la the darkness until illu minated by the. moon. Bat the moon verlooks those . same de tails; its Insisting glow transfig ures with minus reflection; each object reflects so much, not enough to stand identified,' but enough to be recognized. Environment patterns "become simple, primitive in their funda mental forms with an austere, ascetic dignity.. Darkness gives the moon -powers of ghostliness, a mysticism -that is completely maul ess and earthless, and yet has no exclusions of life. This moon, . this scarred, and pocked traveler of space, rides the har ness of the earth with familiarity and in the meeting - the earth loses its earthliness. Before Sleep .Earth, surrendering to the moon, pushes man skyward. He Vacates his earthly existence to inhabit its radiance, the 'illumi nation of a dead world- that taunts him like the ball the child. Decamping as he does, in his relishment. of the coolness,' he amasses as much as possible be fore sleep. All the heaviness, all the heated intimacy that rode under the burden of the hot sun is syphoned into space and. endless time. Reason lies fallow and stilL The moon intercedes between the. earth and the moment, an enigmatical force . of brightness with a confusing . profundity, teeming with bursting but un answerable .questions. It is an intercession that hides so much that, what is left becomes a cos-; mic synopsis of the earth. The earth, and man mnsinr In the darkness, ponder on this ! simplified version of both, in viting the absent minded reflec tions that soon make the earth nonattended, seemingly unin habited, Illuminating the organic struc ture of the earth, the moon pene trates it like an Xray whose plate becomes private property to all who have the sight to see by the moon. Into this there is the in effable state of happiness whose bliss is completely private yet open to every influence, capable of every human condition. The moon makes us acquiescent both with ourselves-and our state of life. ..There is a twinge of nos-i talgia for the past and a curious i acceptance oi me iuiure. Emotions Are Spent ' In acknowledging a. s in 7 'ft- I d ''17 v v . ; '-::':r - I ' I jCili jl - Chateau ; j . - J I . . . n in n n w i - ! : ' ' '. ' ! ' -: -i t . Mr. and Mrsj iTerry D. wedding was an eent of September 2 at the First Presby- terian Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. James R. Vaughn jand her husband is the son of Mr. .and Mrs. Robert A. Gfeen. (Jesten-Miller Studio). we assent to ourselves and in the process our days turn in their covers of spent 'emotions and physical - abuses. We i confess to the darkness, without bitterness nor hate, without greed or hun ger. .. ! i ' ' Sleep comes in on the tides of evening where the moon is trans figured without our human cares and woes, yet absorbing all life that - we ' measure her: by. She draws as into the universe of space where all is weightless and formless. Like seeds! of autumn, we follow every draft of cool ness, abandoning every move ment that draws ns earthward away from the face and the race of the moon. j A to have grown an entirely 4 y i- i Such a nn different make-up! Not only veils-over lines, shadows, and those tiny imperfections you detest but makes you appear to have grown a new and flawless skin. Helps end skin-drynesa. through its content of Iwutouir Plus Liquid. 5 shades. CAPITAL DRUG STORE 405 Srato St.fi ! Corner of liborty We Give : me moon i - - 1 11 - y ' 1 - . M ore fashion's middle name, this faH ' f0S000'i ' ( and no ont has mastered the art of the' '.'! i 'Jt ' medium hl like th makers of our famous ' j i , Red Coat Shoos. Choose from our beautiful ' O?Sv0 il ... , I s . ' r Green (Opal Vaughn) whose Parliamentarians Meet Chemeketa Unit of the National Association . of . Parliamentarians will meet Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Winifred Petty john. 145 N. 14th St.. at 2 o'clock. Mrs. Harry Sappenfield will con duct the class on Blue Prints for Your Meetings." A parliamentary drill will follow. The Lanrel Guild of the Knight Memorial Church will be enter tained Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. W. C. Drakeley. 1475 N. 16th St., at 8 o'clock. Assisting hostesses are Mrs. Irving Brooks and Mrs. J. W. West Liquid Make-Up In 20 seconds you appten new and flawless skin Green Stamps j ' f $ . . -v & - r ML ' )6Qo w lavofm laiiaoio 'fl ' (SluficrfoT. Ttiday . v Tucrcer, Thomas Week's Better By MAXINE BUREN -Statesman Woman's Editor Fall's better music on the air year's schedules, but the few remaining programs devoted to bet ter music should be enjoyed. - I - . From Red Rocks theater near Festivals program for today. " The soloist Richard Tucker," and di rector Saul Caston are the same as we heard in July at Red Rocks, the beautiful outdoor theater.' : NBC offers, but one network program, the Telephone wour, but ; KG W fill in with a local program of good records on Sun day night. Monday's Firestone concer. will be on ABC again this year at 8:30. , 10:30 on ' CBS World Music Festivals from Red Rocks, Colo rado. Denver Symphony Orches tra conducted by Saul Caston. Richard Tucker, tenor, and Jorge Bolet, pianist, soloists. Prelude to "Die Meistersinger" : Wagner O tu, che in sogno agli angeli, from "La Forza del Destino" .... Verdi Improviso from "Andrea Chenier" Giordano Pami veder from "Rigoletto.- ' ..-... Verdi Rachel, quand du Seignour. from "La Juive" Halevy. Concerto for Piano' and Orehes- '' tra in B flat minor! i : . ....Tchaikovsky , Monday's programs are: ' - : 8:00 on NBC The Telephone Hour, with the' Bell Symphonic Orchestra and chorus conducted by Donald . Vorhees. Grant Jo hannessen, pianist. Entrance of the Emperor and his court from "Harry .Janos , Suite" Kodaly Orchestra ... j "Kocturne in C Sharp "Minor Chopin Spinning Song Mendelssohn . Grant Johannessen. ( Saltarello from Symphony id vou know tKat Holly. 2 f'pHj nir ii ti t.i d ILJ I I I II ond a piece of coal are clnjemcally identical? There are many intriguing fejets about dia monds thqj you may not khow but the important thing to know ii the reputation of the jeweler from whom you make this impor i tant purchase. Our business is founded on. V honesty, quality and valuel Onl diamonds of the 7 pend value Soloists for Programs issomewhat depleted from last Denter comes CBS World music Gierryj Court to Meet First fall meeting of Cherry Court, Oder of the Amaranth will he held Wednesday night at the Scottish Rite Temple at 8 p.m. The ! occasion will celebrate the court's sixth anniversary and honof guests will be charter members.! The hostess committee includes Mr. and Mrs. William Howe, . Mr. j and . Mrs. Kenneth Dodge, Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Grub and Mrs.! Lillian Monson. No. 4! -i Mendelssohn Orchestra ! Concerto No. 3 in u Majoi - Finale i ; Prokofieff I Grant Johannessen j and Orchestra j 8f30 oh ABC Voice of Fire stone, with Thomas-L. Thomas and the iorchestia under the di rection of. Howard Barlow. : Cdme to the Fair-V.-lMarton : j j Chorus and Orchestra September S,ongiiJ'.l"-Weill Deh vieni alia f mestra, - , "Don! Giovanni" ..."..Mozart Thomas L. Thomas . Horse and Buggy. Anderson Dance Of the Hours from ' "La Gioc-nda" Ponchielli i I i Orchestra. Our American Heritage Steele Falling! in Love with j Love X Rogers Thomas and Chorus a diamond tirest;quality are per- mjuea tr our stock, ue- on us always for ull and satisfaction Jackson Jewelers 25 North Liberty D res c r fa r T-t r X"- Julias Neex Wednesday The following Guilds of the Women's Association of the First! Presbyterian Church are meet ing on Wednesday, . September 14. Adah Guild is planning a pic nic. Details will be given to mem bers by Ihe telephone committee. Deborah Guild win meet at the home of Mrs. George Brown, 895 Mission Street, for a 1:13 dessert luncheon. - Esther Guild will meet at 1 p.m. in the club room of the church, with Mrs. William F. Herald as hostess. . . Leah, Lydia, and Sarah Guilds will meet together for a 9:30 ajn. coffee in the Condit Room of the church,' with Mrs. Robert Byrum, Mrs. B. M. Bennett, Mrs. A N. Copenhaver, Mrs.- H. J. Elliott, and Mrs. Russell E. Pratt as hostesses. Martha' Guild plans to meet at the. home of Mrs. George La- Borde, 1010 E. Hoyt, for a 1:15 dessert luncheon. Ruth Guild will meet in the Y-Teen Room of the YWCA for a 1:15 dessert luncheon with Mrs. W. D. Gilchrist as hostess. Westminster Guild will meet at 1 p.m. in the Condit Room of the church. Judge Joseph B. Felton will speak. Mrs. Steven Benson is chairman of the tea committee. A nursery ' wjll be provided for small children. ' ! CaDitol Drucf Stores I I 405 State St.. 1 We I Dacfr - ro - I 1 1 1 1 j 1 1 v?9 : " . ' FREE TRD AL ! Electro- " Polished Hi P'n I f If you are not completer satisfied after using the Parker "21" for 10 days just return the pen to tu for credit or refund. 4i t ' i hooded point. StaiU$$ At top. 4 cUr Choice pou .Matching Mechanical Pencil Regularly $3.75 Special at $1.2 5 mall this coupon today! I mi dMinf S Mtitfi with Ik tarksr "21 10 eoy te yea d ratsWa A4dn City- ( Mvai . !nli fiaai Q Otk or Sigma Kappa rMtasSs6 First fall meeting of the Salem Sigma Kappa alumnae ' will be held Thursday night-at the home of Mrs. Joseph Franko, 850 Sagi naw St, at 8 o'clock.. All alum nae in the city and surrounding area are invited to attend. Mrs. . E. Beckman is serving as president of the club for the en suing year. ' Salem Memorial Hospital Aux iliary will hold its first fall meet ing Monday morning at the hos pital at 10 a.m. Mrs. Charles Heltzel, president, . will preside and plans will be outlined for the High Fever Follies to be pre sented by . the auxiliary in No vember. .-.-- from mC WB. TAX Solem't Kodak Dealer 315 Court St. Ph.2-4716 Girt frtf Green Stamps I Scftool t 1 I I I I I Parker's new point Is finished by an exclusive new electro-chemical process to nurror smoothness, lit tht tasiest-writing point you touched to papet. i fax" .p!P inr ' f 1 1 1 fit t il w U m II N. I 1.7 It 17 . .t at r 1 ' M oriMr -21" Spvtlat sMw . for Mch . H I M Mrty Social, I wB raters Hta sa Mii a credit rtf. Wki rWi Q Ka'inii Q azira-fiita. M.O. Ckctft. some courses have limited en rollment Registrations can be taken any time at the YWCA. ... . . ....... .. :.. . j . ... . . ..- : it : ' ' : . - - - - - ',! - -, j l ;