Banner Graphic, Volume 15, Number 198, Greencastle, Putnam County, 19 April 1985 — Page 12
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The Putnam County Banner-Graphic, April 19,1985
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GREENCASTLE April 22-26 Monday-Cheeseburger, French fries, glazed carrots, chocolate pudding, milk. Tuesday-Meatloaf, baked beans, cinnamon rolls, com, pears, milk. Wednesday-Tenderloin sandwich, tater tots, mixed vegetables, jello, milk. Thursday-Fried chicken, mashed potatoes, green beans, bread and butter, peach cobbler, milk. Friday-Fish, macaroni and cheese, confetti slaw, cornbread and butter, applesauce, milk. SOUTHPUTNAM Monday-Sloppy Joe, French fries, com, Reese squares, milk. Tuesday-Turkey salad sandwich, pork and beans, potato chips, apple half, milk. Wednesday-Country-fried steak, mashed potatoes, mixed vegetables, hot roll, jello, milk. Thursday-Chicken and homemade noodles, mashed potatoes, peas, bread and butter, cake, milk. Friday-Cheeseburger, French fries, pineapple salad, cookie, milk. CLOVERDALE Monday-Cheeseburger, French fries, applesauce, milk. Tuesday-Fish square, macaroni and cheese, buttered corn, peaches and jello, milk. Wednesday-Lasagna, tossed salad, hot roll and butter, carrot sticks, chocolate pie, milk. Thursday-Ham and cheese sandwich, tater rounds, green beans, cookie, milk. Friday-Chili and crackers, peanut butter sandwich, pickle spears, apple cobbler, milk. NORTH PUTNAM Monday-Pizza, French fries, buttered corn, monster cookies, milk. Tuesday-Spaghetti casserole, green beans, garlic bread, peach pie, milk. Wednesday-Grilled cheese sandwich, tater tots, peas, cake, milk. Thursday-Turkey manhatten, mashed potatoes, mixed vegetables, applesauce, juice, milk. Friday-Hot ham sandwich, potato boat, tomatoes, fruit, milk.
DPU Security-
doing what they’re doing, and if they don’t listen, we call it in.” “Grover puts a lot of trust and responsibility in us,” Wrona said. Sometimes, the student officers find themselves in what junior John Robbins called “a double bind.” Robbins said other students who know him as a security officer often watch him to make sure that he himself follows the rules. The students agreed that their jobs gave them a different perspective on the university. “YOU GET TO LOCK UP buildings, and find out which professors stay late,” junior Bill Jennings said. “Working on Campus Security, I’m not subject to all the illusions about DePauw that other students are,” Robbins added. Wrona agreed, adding, “We know news before other people do, just by talking to Ron and Crawford. We get an idea of what’s going on that other people don’t get, I’m sure.” Currently, all 36 of the student officers are male, but this is not a prerequisite for the job, Vaughan said. “We have used some women in the past, but one of the problems we’ve run into is that part of the shifts are night shifts and parents didn’t want them working all night.” THE MAIN JOB OF student security officers, however, is to make sure the university buildings are locked after midnight. Most of the time, the students will find a few doors open, which they will lock, and report in their log. Gardner said he usually turns on the lights, rather than rely on his flashlight, when he enters a building, to warn anyone else who might be in there of his presence. “The last thing you want to do is surprise someone with a gun,” he added. DePauw hosts many camps and conferences during the summer, and four students are hired to work full time, often working alone. Because most of the people on campus for the programs are not university students, the student officers are given uniforms identical to the regular officers, to make it easier to identify them as security officers, Vaughan said. ROBBINS, WHO WORKED as a summer security officer, added that the change was more than just hours and uniforms. The large number of women on campus for cheerleader camps drew men to the campus from several of the small towns and schools in a wide radius, and there were more outsiders on the grounds, he added. “To anyone who doesn’t belong to the university, they look at you, and you are the police. It doesn’t matter that you are a student security officer; to them, you are the police,” Robbins noted. One night, shortly after he checked the Administration Building, it was broken into, and Robbins wonders what would have happened if, unarmed, he had surprised an intruder with a gun. No student security officer has ever been seriously hurt in the line of duty, Vaughan said. In fact, the most common complaint, according to Vaughan, is probably petty theft, after parking and noise-level violations, although the department has
One of the moet-populer activities at the Putnam County Public Library is Story Hour, led by Children's Librarian Brenda Pierson (second from left). Mrs. Pierson does more than read to the three-, four- and five-year-olds. With the help of Suzanne Bates this week, she and
Green Acres sets open house Saturday
Jerry and Beverly Monnett, superintendents of Green Acres county home, invite the public to an open house 1-5 p.m. Saturday. Along with the open house, the 150th anniversary of Green Acres will be observed. Built in 1835, it has been in use ever since. Refreshments will be served. Green Acres residents recently participated in an Easter egg hunt. Taking part were Mary Seller, Herb Jent, Helen Tucker, Mary Proctor, Herman Walker, Ruby Martin, Jerry Steinbough and George Dudley. Egg-hunting children were Chris Wasnidge, Nicholas Weddell, Joseph Payton and Jeremy King.
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had to deal with everything from missing students to arson and attempted rape, and has worked with the Federal Bureau of Investigation several times on theft and forgery cases that have gone outside the state. “ON A CAMPUS LIKE this, we generally are opposed to the keeping of firearms or weapons, and that extends into the security force,” Dean of Students Joan Claarsaid. She defined the role of Campus Security as a “peace-keeping force,” and added that the decision to have security officers go unarmed had “more to do with the philosophy of Campus Security than with the rate of crime.” Vaughan, although he accepts the university’s decision, disagrees. The potential danger is not from students and faculty members, he said, but from outsiders. “The university is telling us, ‘We expect you to do a police job and be a police officer,’ which means if a student is having a crime committed against his person, and we are called to take action, we are expected to do just that,” Vaughan said. HE ADDED THAT HE would not want to wait for assistance from the city police if a student or faculty member’s life were in danger from an armed assailant, but there would be little else he could do. “There’s no ego trip to carrying a gun,” McGuire said, “but we feel that if we are a police department, we’d like to have the tools of the trade, of a police department.” “We’d like to be thought of as professional enough to make that decision when deemed necessary. I think we’re all trained enough in procedures. I don’t think we’d ever have to pull a gun on a student,” McGuire added. There are some situations where the officers prefer to approach unarmed, McGuire said. He recalled one time when Campus Security received an anonymous tip that there were burglars in one of the sorority houses. When they arrived on the scene, they found that the city police had also responded to the call, and were approaching the situation as a burglary-in-progress, with weapons drawn. The intruders turned out to be a couple of fraternity members, trying to steal a composite (photograph). According to Jim Hendrich, Greencastle chief of police, Campus Security fills a “vital role” in checking the buildings, something the city police have neither the time nor the manpower to do. Having the student officers do the checks allows the regular officers to be more mobile, he added, which acts as a deterrent to crime by providing a more visible patrol force. Hendrich said his department and Campus Security often assist each other in investigations. “We treat them as police officers. If we ask for assistance, they always provide it. It’s a role we’ve always assumed,” Hendrich said. “The students that I know over there are dedicated and do a good job,” he said, adding, “I don’t know how they’re thought of by the other students, but we feel like they’re important.”
the youngsters planted marigold seeds. The children are (from left) Ryan Bates, Sarah French, Tessa Wildman, Ashley Wildman, Heidi Ross and Amanda Patterson. (Banner-Graphic photo by Bob Frazier).
Library
“They feel it is an anchor. “There does exist,” Dory continued, “a feeling from some of the merchants on Indiana Street that they would like to see the (former Ward’s) building filled. They have suffered a great loss,” he said, referring to reduced people traffic when the store relocated. “When the library was mentioned as possibly going in there, the feeling was fairly favorable.” LIBRARY DIRECTOR Ellen Sedlack said comments to her from the public pointed to the former Ward’s building as the best location. “I think that is because of the fact that moving there wouldn’t interrupt our work here. “Parking is also a big item,” she added. “A lot of people did not realize that the parking lot behind the building is part of the package.” Two letters were presented to the board Thursday evening from individuals who support the move to the former Ward’s building. One was from Norman Knights, president of Greencastle Savings Bank, the other from Ralph and Sally Gray,chairman of the DPU Department of Economics and Management and County Court judge, respectively. ONE POINT STRESSED Thursday evening was that, if the library expanded to the east along Walnut Street, the older two-story home next door would be sold and moved. When discussion of the former Ward’s building continued, board member Haymaker said his concern is toward the library’s present facility. “What’s going to happen here?” he questioned. “I don’t want to leave this building to decay.” But general feelings were that abandonment would not occur. “This building could have a number of interesting uses,” Rosser said. “It could be used for city offices. One of the problems I see is when people go to the mayor’s office.” The DPU president referred to City Hall, which has a history of being unaccessible to the handicapped and a decor of concrete grayness. “It isn’t befitting to city government to have what we have,” Rosser simply stated. WITH THAT COMMENT, Dory offered to put together sketches that would serve to generate uses and ideas for new use of the library’s present structure. “The Library Board can make an effort to make sure we have an attractive tenant to this building,” Wilson assurred. “The problem you face, DePauw University has found, that if you have a major merchandiser, they, unfortunately, feel thay must go (locate) outside of town,” Rosser pointed out. “What you will have in the (former) Ward’s building is a great amount of marvelous space. I couldn’t think of a better
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use for that building than what you have. You can set the trend with this building and its architecture, rather than building a new building.” AS FAR AS COST projections are concerned, Parke Randall, the Indianapolis architect hired by the Library Board to conduct a feasibility and cost projection study, moving to the old Ward’s building and remodeling would cost approximately $l.B million. Staying at the present building and adding on will cost approximately $1.6 million. However, Rosser and board president Wilson said those costs projections regarding the former Ward’s building were probably a little high. “The figures you have been given for renovation are higher than what we had, when we were thinking about the minimall renovation,” Rosser said, referring to the old Ward’s building. “What you need to do is check with an architect who specializes in restoration. “MOST ARCHITECTS LIKE to build new buildings,” Rosser remarked. “They don’t like to renovate older ones.” Wilson, who submitted some of the previous cost projects for renovating the former Ward’s building to other architects, said his sources also believe the estimates were high. If deciding to relocate to the former Ward’s building was the board’s desire, Haymaker suggested landscaping be completed to make the facility attractive. “I think we need to put some trees up there somewhere in the back,” he said. “The starkness of that building is just hideous to me. I know that can be changed.” But reference ilbrarian Marjo Cavanaugh said transforming an older building into a functional, serviceable library can be done. “I have seen it done in Ohio,” she commented. “I was there visiting at one city and saw this older, beautiful building. I went up and looked in the windows and it was a library.” COMMENTS ASIDE, THE Library Board voted unanimously to relocate to the former Ward’s building and secure the parking lot behind that facility. In that motion, members also vowed to ensure the existing library be utilized in a productive, contributing manner to the downtown area, once the library moves to its new location. In addition, members agreed to solicit new design and cost estimate projections from architectural firms. Attending Thursday’s session were Library Board members Wilson, Haymaker, Nees, Landes and Dobson. In addition to Director Sedlack, staff members present were Cavanaugh, Karen Schanke, Brenda Pierson and Eileen Burkett.
“THE BREAKFAST CLUB’ IS DEFINITELY THE BEST IN ITS CLASS.” —Joel Siegel, ABC-TV, GOOD MORNING AMERICA T H E BREAKFAST CL U B (BT) r— \pssstx%z~, R. A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
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Obituaries Kathy leen Skelton Kathyleen Skelton, 69, Route 1, Fillmore, died Thursday morning at Heritage House Convalescent Center, Greencastle. Born April 17,1916 in Putnam County, she was the daughter of Ernie and Cordia (Tincher) Butler. She married Floyd M. Skelton on Oct. 2, 1937, and he preceded her in death on Jan. 24,1975. A school teacher for 30 years in Putnam County, Mrs. Skelton was a member of the Fillmore OES. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs. Rpn (Marjorie) Meek, Route 1, Fillmore; a son, Roger Skelton, Plainfield; a brother, Eugene Butler, Coatesville; a sister, Mrs. Edith Skinner, Route 1, Fillmore; three grandsons, Matthew Skelton and Brett and Brian Meek, and several nieces and nephews. She was also preceded in death by a sister, Alta Coffman in 1975. Services will be held at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Bittles and Hurt Funeral Home, Greencastle. Rev. Paul Bowen will officiate. Interment will be in Stilesville Cemetery. Friends may call 5-9 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. JuaniteM. McNulty Juanite M. McNulty, 81, Route 2, Ladoga, died Thursday evening. Born May 26, 1903 in Ladoga, she was the daughter Andrew Bruce and Nancy Jane (Zimmerman) Cross. She married John Wesley McNulty on Dec. 20,1920 in Crawfordsville, and he preceded her in death on Feb. 13, 1965. Mrs. McNulty was a charter member of the Nazarene Church, Ladoga. Survivors include four sons, Kenneth, Crawfordsville, John Paul, Lafayette, James Andrew, Ladoga, and William Russell, Charlotte, N.C.; three daughters, Mary Jane Anderson, Ethel F. Knox and Martha Ann Staggs, all of Crawfordsville; 17 grandchildren and 20 greatgrandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at the Nazarene Church, Ladoga. Rev. Wendell Raney will officiate. Interment will be in Stoner Cemetery. Friends may call 2-6 p.m. Sunday at Servies-Morgan Funeral Home, Ladoga.
SKELTON-SKINNER will be CLOSED SATURDAY due to death in the family
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Cloverdale Police Dept. Russell F. Kennedy Jr., 41, Cloverdale, was arrested for public intoxication and disorderly conduct at 6:20 p.m. Thursday by Cloverdale Police Chief Bill Myers and Sgt. Daryl Jones. City Police Johnson Thomas, 525 Ash St., Winnetka, 111., was issued a citation for disregarding a stop sign on Northwood Boulevard at 12:01 a.m. Friday by Officer Terry Kendall. Putnam Circuit Court Chemicals-Fertilizer Services Inc. vs. Max N. Call and Mary Call, complaint on open account. Sharon L. Ratts vs. Michael L. Ratts, dissolution of marriage. Jerri R. Carter vs. Willis D. Troxell, reciprocal support. Mary Colwell vs. William S. Colwell, dissolution of marriage.
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