Banner Graphic, Volume 16, Number 125, Greencastle, Putnam County, 9 January 1986 — Page 4

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The Putnam County Banner Graphic, January 9,1986

Calendar of events Notices for publication in the calendar of events cannot be taken over the telephone. Calendar items must be submitted in writing at least 10 days in advance of the events to which they refer. The earlier the submission, the better. Also, each notice should include a telephone number for use by the newspaper in case further information or clarification is needed prior to publication. Notices may be delivered to the Banner-Graphic office at 100 N. Jackson St. or mailed to the newspaper at P.O. Box 509, Greencastle, IN 46135. Friday Greencastle Chapter No. 255 Order of the Eastern Star will hold a called meeting at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 10, at the Masonic Temple for initiation. All members are welcome. Applegate Lodge No. 155, F. & A M., will have officers’ installation at 6:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 10. The meeting is open to the public. Sunday The Greencastle Branch of the NAACP will meet at 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 12, at Mt. Zion Baptist Church. Please note change in time. The Branch is asking members to support its effort to raise funds for the Greencastle aerial ladder fire truck campaign. Monday Cloverdale Lodge No. 132, F. & A.M., will hold a called meeting at 7 p.m. on Monday, Jan. 13. Work will be in the E.A. degree. Refreshments will be served and visiting brethren are welcome. The National Association of Retired Federal Employees will meet at 12:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 13, at the Double Decker Restaurant. A business session will follow lunch. The Fatima Rosary group of St. Paul-the-Apostle Church in Greencastle will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 13, at the home of Thelma Staub. TOPS No. 573 will meet at 7 p.m. Monday, Jan. 13, in the basement of the Greencastle Presbyterian Church. Everyone is welcome. United Way of Putnam County will have its annual meeting at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Jan. 20, at Greencastle Federal Savings Bank. The meeting is open to all members (contributors). Tuesday The Happier Homes Extension Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 14, at the home of Nila Greenlee. The Four-Leaf Clover Extension Club will meet at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 14, at the home of Mary Smith. The lesson on osteoporosis will be presented by Betty Sendmeyer. Chapter No. 554 0.E.5., Stilesville, will hold a stated meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 14. Initiatory work will follow. All visiting members are welcome. The Better Homes Extension Homemakers Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 14, at the home of Elaine Sims. “How to use and improve your memory” will be the lesson. Members are asked to bring an item for the food pantry and cancelled stamps for the Senior Center. Dr. Howard Brooks will discuss Halley’s Comet 6:30-8 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 14, at the Putnam County Library. The program is free to anyone in fourth grade through adults. Register by calling the library at 653-6216. Wednesday All area women are invited to the “Home Sweet Home” luncheon of the Greencastle Christian Women’s Club noon to 2 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 15, in the ballroom of the DePauw Student Union. Jeanne Albright will demonstrate the making of yeast bread, Phyllis Legan will provide music and Peggy Uhey of Terre Haute will be featured speaker. Reservations are essential by calling Shirley at 653-8552, Mildred at 795-4543 or Sandy at 6538835. A free nursery, for which reservations also are necessary, will be provided at Greencastle Chrisian Church.

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MR. AND MRS. BRUCE F. TALBOTT

Hall-Talbott vows exchanged at Mays

Denise Ann Hall and Bruce F. Talbott were united in marriage Dec. 21 at the Center Christian Church, Mays, Ind. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon R. Hall, Route 3, Rushville, Ind. The groom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Billy F. Talbott, Route 6, Greencastle. REV. RONALD SIMS officiated the 1:30 p.m. double-ring ceremony. Music was provided by Norma Lee Gray, pianist; Vivian Wilson, organist, and Annette Niehoff, vocalist, all of Rushville. The bride wore a traditional floor-length gown of bridal satin in an A-line silhouette. Schiffli embroidered English net fashioned a regal high crown collar, which topped the drop-shoulder English net yoke accented with rich silken Venise lace, and encrusted the fitted bodice accented with reembroidered Alencon lace highlighted with shimmering pearls, created the elegant Victorian sleeves. The back of the bodice featured miniature satin buttons forming a romantic closure with a chapellength train. Wearing a hat trimmed with lace and net, the bride carried a bouquet of holly, baby’s breath and red roses. She wore a pearl necklace, a gift from the groom, and pearl earrings of her mother, which came from Hawaii.

Banner Graphic (USPS 142-020) Consolidation of The Daily Banner Established 1850 The Herald The Daily Graphic Established 1883 Telephone 65V51 51 Published daily except Sunday and Holidays and twice on Tuesdays by Banner Graphic. Inc. at 100 North Jackson St., Greencastle, IN 46135. Secondclass postage paid at Greencastle. IN. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Banner Graphic. P.O. Box 509, Greencastle, IN 46135 Subscription Rates Per Week, by carrier *l.lO Per Month, by motor route *4.95 Mail Subscription Rates R.R. in Rest ot Rest ot Putnam County Indiana U S.A 3 Months *17.40 ‘17.70 *19.00 6 Months *32.25 *32.80 *38.70 1 Year *63.00 *64.00 *72.70 Mail subscriptions payable in advance . . . not accepted in town and where motor route service is available. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is entitled exclusively to the use lor republication of all the local news printed in this newspaper.

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THE BRIDE WAS GIVEN in marriage by her parents. Anita Carfield, sister of the bride, was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Mary Beth Kinman, Houston Tex., and E. Anne Kitchen, Francesville, Ind., friends of the bride. All attendants wore Christmas red tea-length taffeta dresses and carried white muffs. John Vermillion of Greencastle, brother of the groom, was best man. Groomsmen were Kent Carfield, Rushville, brother-in-law of the bride, and Doug Hall, Rushville, brother of the bride. Ushers were Mark Cain and BriarrConner, both of Rushville. THE GROOM AND HIS attendants wore black tuxedos with red bow ties and cummerbunds. Jamie Kitchen, Francesville, was flower girl and Lee Dora, Rushville, was ring bearer. The bride’s paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hall, Knightstown, Ind., attended. Unable to attend were the bride’s maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Oden Thompson, Tarares, Fla., and the groom’s maternal grandmother, Mrs. Grace Plikerd, Martinsville, 111. A RECEPTION in the church basement followed the ceremony. Assistants were Denise Dora, Rushville; Lisa Wilkinson, Route 1, Falmouth, and Debbie Masters, Route 1, Carthage, friends of the bride and groom. me groom’s parents were hosts at a Dec. 20 rehearsal dinner at the Kopper Kettle in Morristown, Ind. The bride is a 1977 graduate of Rushville Consolidated High School and a 1981 graduate of Purdue University, where she majored in elementary education. She is employed by the Rushville Community Schools Corp. as a second grade teacher at Milroy. THE GROOM, a 1975 graduate of Greencastle High School, is a 1979 graduate of Purdue University, where he majored in animal science. He is employed as a crops and Pro-Gro sales specialist at the Rush County Farm Bureau Co-op. Following a wedding cruise to Nassau, Mr. and Mrs. Talbott are residing at 436 W. 3rd, Rushville, Ind. 46173.

lifestyle

Echo of Baby Boom fills nursery school, kindergarten rooms

WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation’s kindergartens and nursery schools are hearing the echo of the post-World War II Baby Boom, as the children of that generation begin entering school. The slump in enrollment that occurred with the Baby Bust, which followed the boom, continues to plague elementary and secondary schools, but the Census Bureau reports that enrollment is up among the youngest Americans. Private nursery school operators are reaping the biggest share of children in that category, the bureau said Wednesday, but when the tots move on to kindergarten, most switch to public schools. The Bureau reported the number of children in nursery school and kindergarten climbed by about a half-million between 1980 and 1984, the most recent complete figures available. Nursery school enrollment grew from 2.03 million in 1980 to 2.35 million in 1984, while during the same period the number of children in kindergarten increased from 3.27 million to 3.48 million. While the so-called Baby Boom generation continues to bear children at rates lower than their parents, the large number of people in the age group has produced an increase in total births, which population experts have termed an “echo” of the boom. In addition to this surge, the Census Crowder and Everman to wed June 7 The engagement of Yvette Dawn Crowder to Ronald Wayne Everman has been announced by the bride-to-be’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Max Crowder, Route 2, Crawfordsville. Everman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip L. Everman, Roachdale. Miss Crowder, a 1985 graduate of Southmont High School, is employed at Target. Everman, a 1983 graduate of North Putnam High School, is employed by Hook Drugs. The couple will exchange vows June 7 at the First Christian Church in Crawfordsville.

Paul-Sheldon vows Jan. 18

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Paul* have announced the approaching wedding of their daughter, Melissa K., to Stephen C. Sheldon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Sheldon.

Area host families needed for exchange students

Youth for Understanding is seeking families in the North Putnam, South Putnam, Cascade and Danville school districts who are willing to be hosts for foreign exchange students in the upcoming school year. The organization currently is sponsoring Marcos Lima of Brazil, who is attending North Putnam High School. He is residing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Melling at Heritage Lake. Three other exchange students are attending school at Danville and one other is at Cascade this year. Students stay with host families for

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Bureau observed that nursery school enrollment has been rising steadily since the 1960 s because of the greater proportion of parents enrolling their children in these schools. This has paralleled an increase in the number of mothers seeking to continue their education and careers. Enrollment in elementary schools peaked in 1970 and has since declined by 21 percent; falling 31 percent in private schools. There were 13.8 million students enrolled in high school in 1984,1.2 million fewer than in 1980. College enrollment was 12.3 million, up about 616,000 since 1980. However, the number is not significantly more than the 1981 enrollment, the report noted. Women continue to constitute 51 percent of college students, as they have since 1980. Graduate school enrollment rose 21 percent between 1974 and 1984, to 1.8 million. Other findings of the new study include: —Between 1970 and 1984, the number of white college students rose by 37 percent, to 9.3 million, while the number of blacks doubled to 1.1 million. —ln 1984 the percentage of Hispanics who were high school graduates was 60 percent, up from 52 percent in 1972, the first year for which figures were available. About 30 percent of the high school graduates attended college in each year.

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YVETTE DAWN CROWDER RONALD WAYNE EVERMAN

The couple will be married at 2 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 18, at the Hanna Street Baptist Church in Greencastle. All family and friends are invited. A reception will follow at the church.

periods ranging from six months to a year. Most students are at the 12thgrade level and above average academically. A host family’s only obligations are to provide a bed, meals and family love. Each student provides his or her own expenses beyond room and board. Interested families may contact Youth for Understanding area representatives, Mr. and Mrs. John Bailey, at 745-4723 in Danville or the organization’s office at 247-7331 in Indianapolis.