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Image provided by: Chappaqua Library
PATENT TRADER Saturday, Dec. 2,1972 ^ 15 ; Information meeting set on Lewisboro LEWJSBORO - The fourth public information meeting on the Lewisboro Town Plan will be held on Thursday, December 14, at 8 p.m. in the John Jay Senior High School auditorium. Meeting purpose will be two* fold: to present three alter* native sketch plans prepared by the town's consultants showing different possible patterns for the future development; and to give all residents an op portunity to express their views on what course future town development should follow before preparation of the final town plan. Every citizen who wishes to be involved in the town's planning effort and make his, views known is, urged to attend thiB meeting. Copies of reports and maps completed in the previous two years of the planning program are on file in the Town House and the, South Salem Library. Fabric exhibition to open at Hudson River Museum \The Fabric of open at The W|LSON V. BINGER of Chappaqua, partner in Tip- tfetts-Abbett-McCarthy- Stratton, world-wide engi neering, architectural and consulting firm with bead- quarters in New York, has been elected presidept of the American Institute of Consulting Engineers. YONKERS the State\ will Hudson River Museum Sunday. This exhibition will explore New York handweaving and needlework from the 18th century to the present. It will include quilts, various clothB and homespun, functional and decorative fabrics, costumes and accessories, coverlets, rugs, samplers, crewel work and other embroideries, mourning pictures, theorems and stencil work. The exhibition will also include paintings, drawings and illustrations, and a group of rare New York quilts. Specific items on display will include a Mary Varick Sam pler, circa 1792; an embroidery hanging, \History of America,\ by Martha Swale Smith, circa 1925; an appliqued quilt from the Stokes family depicting commerce and shipping, Cooperstown, N.Y., circa 1835; a group of Shaker fabrics and rugs; a 17th century loom from the Albany area; and a linsey woolsey farmer's smock, made Barbara Tuchman talk scheduled in Greenwich GREENWICH - Barbara Werthelm Tuchman, Pulitzer Prize winning historian and au thor, will lecture on \A View of the New China\ on Friday at 8:15 p.m. at Dickerman Hollis- ter Auditorium of Greenwich High School on Hillside Road. Mrs. Tuchman, a resident of Cos Cob and an alumna of Rad- cliffe College, will give her lecture for the benefit of the scholarship fund of the Rad- cliffe Club of lowere Fairfield County. \A View of the New China\ will be based on Mrs. Tuch man 's experiences during her recent journey to mainland China, where she and her daughter Alma visited eleven cities from the Yellow River or Hwang Ho Klang to the Blue River or Yantse Kiang. These experiences are also the subject of her second book on China, \Notes from China,\ to be published in December by Collier Macmillan, and of the series of articles on China she published in the New York Times this fall. Mrs. Tuchman, the first American to ride a steamboat down the Yantse Kiang since the re-opening of diplomacy relations with China, will share with her audience her impressions of China under Mao and her understanding of the problems of its people. The lecture will be accompanied by slides, and questions from the floor will be welcomed. Barbara Tuchman has Beven books and many articles to her credit. In addition to her widely known popular contributions she writes for such journals as \Foreign Affairs,\ a publication of the Council on Foreign Relations. She has received the Pulitzer Prize twice: in 1983 for \The Guns of August,\ which relates the events that culminated in World War I, and in 1972 for \Stilwell and the American Experience in China, 1911-1945,\ which appeared during the thaw in relations between China and the United States. Following the lectures Mrs. G. Harrison Houston, president of the Scholarship Fund, will hold a reception for all sponsors of the lecture at her home in Watermill, Long Island, circa 1820, On the opening day of \The Fabric of the State\ Mrs. Micki McCabe will demonstrate spinning, weaving, and quilting from 1 to 3 p.m. Her demon strations will also be given on December 6 and 7 from 10 a.m. to noon; December 10 from 1 to 3 p.m.; and on December 13 and 14 from 10 a.m. to noon. Macrame demonstrations will be given by Mrs. Sue Preston on Sunday, December 17 from l to 3 p.m. and on Buckley to speak DANBURY, Conn. - William F. Buckley, Jr., lecturer, author and columnist, will come to Western Connecticut State College on Thursday to lecture in Ives Concert Hall at 7:30 p.m. His topic will be \Reflections on the Current Disorders,\ Mr. Buckley was contacted this summer by the Office of Public Affairs in an effort to have him appear on campus before the national elections in November, but the earliest open date on his schedule was December 7. A former member of the faculty of Yale University, Mr. Buckley has a long list of credits. He was associate editor and owner of the old American Mercury magazine and is founder and editor of National Review. He writes a syndicated column, \On the Right\; and hosts the weekly television show \Firing Line\. 526 N. Bedford Rd., Bedford Hills 241-1666 WHIM YOU BUT YOUR WALLCOVMINOt IS IMPORTANT come in and discover our wonderful ideas for Christmas giving! BOOKS FICTION and NON-FICTION ART BOOKS bout every kind of Christ* 05 to say PLUS all kinds of enchanting little ideas UNUSUAL TABLE MATS & COASTERS • BELLS • BALLS • PUZZLES • MUSIC BOXES • FUN GIFTS • and GAY STOCKING STUFFERS Let us help make your shopping ever so much easier! Gl ft VYrapP» n » of course December 19 and 20 from 10 a.m. to noon. Needlepoint demonstrations will be given December 26,27, and 28 from 10 a.m. to noon by Mrs. Marjorie Davidson, and Mrs Irene Miller will demonstrate stitchery on January 2, 3 and 4 from 10 a.m. to noon. Teen and adult workshops in quilting, macrame, needlepoint and Btitchery will be given by the artists on the days of their demonstrations. In addition to the adult workshops, classes will be offered for children of various ages during Christmas week. A nominal fee is being charged for all workshops. All materials are included in the fee. Those interested In the workshops are requested to make their reservations a week in advance of the workshop of their choice. Information on dates'and fees may be had by calling The Hudson River Museum's Education Department. EDWARD W. SHERMAN of Armonk, vice president of Sherman Pressure Casting Corporation, North White Plains, Wednesday received the Austin T. Lillegren Award of the American Die Casting Institute. The award is made for service to the billion dollar die casting Industry. Armonk businessmen ask public water and sewers treatment plant to be used by the Inn and other developments on the 47 acre parcel. Businessmen .feel expansion of this sewage system would make providing a village system less expensive, Mr! Ahneman said. Last February discussions centered on building a system from scratch.' Mr. Ahneman said well water in the area was generally good, but \if you keep pouring septic waste into the soil it's got tc start polluting.\ He also noted that many Armonk - retailers had parking lots on their septic fields which was \detrimental\, to their function. Businessmen are also con cerned with lowered fire in surance rates that would result from a public water system with hydrants ARMONK - Armonk businessmen plan to petition the town board to consider providing public water and sewer systems for the down town business area. The board of directors of the Armonk Businessmen's Association met several times on the problem of water and- sewers for the village beginning last February, according to Town Engineer Ed Ahneman. Mr. Ahneman said the board Monday decided to shoot for presentation of a petition to the town by January. Action was spurred by plans for a Ramada Inn on property owned by Edward Lashins which was formerly the Armonk Airport. 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