Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 52, Number 101, Decatur, Adams County, 29 April 1954 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SERIES OF ARTICLES <C»atlß«e4 From Pit. O«e» being taught by special teachers. Play on the school ground Is adequately supervised. Lack of space prevents, as mentioned before, a room for serving hot lunches. i There seems to be a fairly uniform distribution of elementary pupils throughout the residential area. With only one central school it Is apparent that the younger children living in the outlying bor- ( ders have too long a walk. This | and the unfortunate lack of space 1 are undoubtedly the most serious problems which confront the city. The latter problem will be further |
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aggravated by a gradual increase in enrollment in the next ten years .as will be noted in the next article of this series. CommiMioned Decatur high school is a member of the north central association of and secondary schools and holds a first class commission from the Indiana state department of public instruction. It offers richly varied courses of instruction with six different curricula —academic, general, commercial, vocational agriculture, vocational home economics and industrial arts. Enrollment in the school is . 477. The #ork in home economics,
agriculture, business and industrial arts is well planned. Facilities for home economics and industrial arts are now crowded for the seventh and eighth grade pupils and will soon be overcrowded as the larger elementary school enrollments reach the high school level. No farm shop work in agriculture is offered. The work in science consists of health and general pcience in the seventh and eighth grades, biology. physics and chemistry. The laboratory rooms and equipment are adequate for the excellent work undertaken. Full time teachers of art and music are employed. Art is taught in the seventh and eighth grades and may be elected by high school juniors and seniors. A flourishing art club exists. Vocal music is taught and there are a glee club and a school chorus. Band lessons may be taken and a school band and orchestra are maintained. Physical Education Physical education is provided
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THE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, INDIANA
with special teachers for each sex and separate showers, dressing rooms and toilets for both the boys and the girls. There is no laundering equipment for towels and gymnasium wearing apparel. The quarters for this work in physical education are adequate. The library is well-provided with periodicals and books and has facilities for both group work and individual study. The lighting is only fair. A full-time librarian is employed. The library lacks a separate work room. No hot lunch is provided during the noon hour for the students. For pupils who become ill, use is made of the physical education office and there is a lounge for girls off the downstairs toilet room. No school nurse is employed but the county school nurse serves subject to call at both Decatur schooled Evening School There is an evening school program for the young farmers and a separate one for the adults engaged in agriculture. There is no Parent-Teachers association for the parents of high school pupils but a very active PTA exists at the Lincoln school. Extracurricular activities encouraged and 'supervised by the school include the Future Farmers of America, the Future Homemakers of America, 4-H clubs, school chorus and glee club, band, Art club, commercial club and oratorical and athletic organizations and activities. The survey team found Decatur high school thoroughly modern and excellently conducted. While most-of the facts presented here are generally known, it is necessary to consider them in the light of future needs and possible changes. Tulip Gardens Open Beginning Sunday The Gast tulip gardens at Akron, Ind., will be open for visitors for two weeks, beginning May 2. Two Sundays, May 2 and 9, will see the tulips in full bloom, the growers say. . Akron lies east of Rochester and Lake Manitou and Is located along state road 14. The public is invited to visit the gardens, which contain 20,000 tulips. Democrat Want Ads Bring Results
Honor Students Al Catholic Schools Honor students for the Decatur Catholic high .school and the St. Joseph grade school were announced today by school officials. There are 23 students on the high school roll and 34 on the grade school roll. The complete list follows: High School A B Ann lEhinger 3 3 (Michael Kohne 4 1 Peggy ’McNamara 5 Rita Rumschlag C Vergie Sautbine 2 4 Barbara Kay Borman 6 1 Dolores Braun 5 Joanne Braun »...i 3 2 Ann Durkin 2 4 Leola Ford 5 1 ’Marcella Glllig 5 1 Anna ’Marie Lengerich <1 Nita Osterman 5 Kathleen Pursley 2 3 Judith Parrish 1 4 ■Monica Rumschlag 4 2 David Heiman .;..... 1 5 Ruth Lengerich 6 Nancy Mies 4 2 Elizabeth Miller 2 4 Michael Murphy 1 5 Janice Titus 2 4 David Voglewede 1 5 St Joseph A B Dolores Kohne 9 3 Kathleen Kohne 7 5 Patrick Durkin 5 7 Julia Osterman ............5 7 Gerald Glllig 7 6 Carolyn Kohne— 8 6 Patricia Cook 7 ? David Omlor ......................... 77 Philip Lose 6 8 Kenneth Geimer 5 9 John Kohne 7 5 James Rumschlag 2 10 Patricia Beal 3 9 Bernardine Eiting 4 8 Sharon Hess 6 € Mary Kriegel ... 4 8 Jean Lose — 2 10 Mary Catherine Murphy 7 5 Sharon Sue Gressley 7 5 ’Ruth LaFontaine 7 4 Angela Pursley 6 5 Judith Cook 4 7 I Agnes Terese Hain 4 7
Sarah Sutton . ....... 4 7 ■Elias Caciano 3 8 Sharon (Miller .... 3 8 Mary Schurger 3 8 Alicejean Villagomez Jerome Geltner :...... 2 9 Joyce Geimer X 9 Iris Hebble , 2 9 Mary Lou Lengerich ............ 2 9 Jpyce Vian 2 9 Louise Wilder JL 9 CHARGE EFFORTS (Qatlawed Prom Pm O»e> question is very pertinent to the inquiry,” he said. Jenkins quoted as testifying in secret Oct 14 before the McCarthy subcommittee — during itslnvestigation of Ft. Monmouth — that he had never suspended anyone as a security risk: on his own initiative “except in Che last two weeks” before the hearing. Stevens commented he had issued standing orders to all the field commanders that they should use their own judgment on removing employes as security tisks. Under persistent questioning, Stevens told Jenkins three times that he had “no recollection" of ever hearing about Adams* call to Lawton. Jenkins aaked if Stevens did not regard the incident as of ‘“vital importance” in the inquiry in view of McCarthy’s charge that Stevwns had tried to stop McCarthy’s investigations of communism in the Army. Stevens insisted that an answer would require retracing the entire dispute over the Monmouth investigation and not taking “one incident out of perspective.” As today's session opened, army special counsel Joseph N. Welch told the subcommittee that Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R-Wis.) had strayed “far from the truth’’ Wednesday by Indicating Lawton was
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threatened. wHh reprisal for praising the senator. ■ I .■<».- 1 Decatur Student On Dean's Honor List John S. “Steve" Gass, ion of ■Mr. and Airs. William Gass of thia city has been named to the dean’s honor list for the mid-semester grading period at St. Joseph’s , College. Gass,' a freehmap majoring in business administration, attained V
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THURSDAY, APRIL 29, 1954
,an academic index of 2.65 of a possible 3ji(). He Is a 1953 graduate of DecatuF Catholic high school, where he was a member of the student council, the glee club, and the basketball, baseball, and track squads. How About Royalties? NEW HAVEN, Conn., UP — After spending their spare time in the past eight years writing a 900page book on engineering, four Yale professors dedicated it to “Our Patient Wives.”
