Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 85, Number 31, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 1 February 1962 — Page 11

Open House for Bremen High Yhis Sunday Gary Thomas Young "NEW" BREMEN HIGH SCHOOL COMPLETED jo-Success comes only to those who 3 Seek it and are willing to work £ kard to achieve it. That statement is not new or But it is true, joi And it can be particularly applied to the community of Bremen gp? its effort to give to the students Bremen a “new” Bremen high School. Plans for the “new” 1 million dollar Bremen high school were Approved by the Bremen board of education and the Bremen school building corporation about one sjrear ago. . Now, the drawings, sketches, ijand dreams have become a realizaL ,4ipn. The “new” Bremen high , school has been completed and is ready to be put into operation. The building, constructed on a site just south of the present J dchool building facing Grant "Street, has been built to house 500 students in grades 9-12. Its instructional areas include 24 teach'fhg stations which are situated Belong double loaded corridors. The library is situated in the heart of the academic area and contains a visual aid room and conference rooms. 1 One of the unique features of the “new” school is a language with electronic sound zamd recording equipment where £ie students may hear the foreign *"|pnguages which they are studying •£■> The cafeteria, overlooking an laipen court area, can seat 200 Persians. The kitchen is equiped with -yll the latest and most modern Equipment. Everyone in the surrounding rsirea is invited to view the interior £sf the “new” Bremen high school jgn Sunday, February 4, 1962 be2Eween the hours of 2 and 4 o’clock.

filial System For ftlappanee Is Approved The Public Service Commission Silas authorized Nappanee Telephone Company to convert to dial ■ Operation for its 2,368 subscribers. SS? The utility wks authorized to the conversion by issuing "255 shares of common stock worth * $50,076.90 and borrowing $300,000 from Lincoln National Life InTSUrance Company. SS The PSC also authorized elimini"Stion of long distance tolls beNappanee and the Wakairusa exchange of General Telephone Cos. and between Nappanee Sfcid the New Paris Telephone Cos. favor of extended area service. Hqrrect pump £san end problem Two out of 10 families are building beyond city water mains -;3nd require private water supplies. With a properly drilled well and SDie right pump, a private autoSSJiatic water system can give as isftbundant a supply of water as a SXhunieipal system can. *3* A good rule to follow is to jjEjjgure the amount of water that SJvill be used daily and to select pump that will supply this of water in two hours or Sfrss. *- iZ Proper installation and avail-1 SSbility of prompt service are im- 4 ■tTortant features in the selection -of a dealer to handle the installation. It is for this reason that the ttlhoice of a dealer is very imporSfent, says Mel Hahn. PAST MATRONS CLUB Past Matrons Club of the Order , pf Eastern Star, will meet Tuesday. ~jf , ebruary 6, at 7:30 with Mrs. IDouglas Price. Roll Call is “My -Most Treasured Possession.” Will.

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Open House for the new Bremen High School will be Sunday Feb. 4 from 2 pm until 4 pm. The new high school will be ready for occupancy next week.

Close Up Os Press Association Error Bv Frank A. White A friend, who is a high grade professional man, pointed to an erronious dispatch by one of our tw’o major press associations that Jackqueline Kennedy, wife of the president, danced the “twist” ir. a Florida night club. He expressed the view that our news is often

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“erroneous” if not “slanted.” Jack Parr, who MCs a late, late television show, made much of a dispatch from the other press association. It erroneously reported the Secretary General of the United Nations landing safely in Africa, when in fact he was killed in a nearby plane crash. How objective and accurate are the press association dispatches that give Americans practically all the coverage of world, national and state news that we get in our

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newspapers? What occurs w T hen a mistake is made? Being a former press association staffer myself, and an editor on the receiving end, I am qualified to discuss the subject. Iron Curtain communist countries get a strange outpouring of news and raw propaganda from Pravda. Britain depends upon Reuters and our American press associations report, for world news. Our world wide news gathering networks are the Associated Press, cooperatively

owned by the papers it serves, while the United Press International, is privately owned by stockholders. Each of these press associations provides an exchange of news or coverage of new ; s with each and every paper

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served. Giving us “hot" news, rather than “history” daily, with speed, becomes an enormous operation, involving thousands and thousands of the world’s top newsmen. WHAT HAPPENS WHEN A MISTAKE TAKES PLACE Tne Jackie Kennedy mistake by the Associated Press arose in this fashion. “John Phelan, a reliable person, phoned the Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. News, that Jackie Kennedy was dancing the twist on the floor of the Golden Falcon night club, he owns. Dick Hoekstra, a News staffer, wrote a story. His managing Editor Milton Kelly, phoned Associated Press in Miami, to check whether Jackie Kennedy was in the city. Hokestra was put on the phone by Kelly and read the News story to the AP man, who took it routinely as a story from a member paper source. He pul a seven paragraph story on the AP wire that Jackie was dancing the twist. Editor Kelly said he only wanted AP to check when he called but 23 year old AP staffer Ben Funk had another version. It was that the News gave him the story clear for exchange. The AP checked with Pierre Salinger, presidential secretary, as the event progressed, and learned the report to be false. Immediately, the New 7 York office of the Associated Press, with customary' vigil ance it exercises, put out a “kill twist story erroneous.” The twister was the niece, Stephanie, of New York Senator Jacob Javits, who

THURS. FEB. 1, 1962

for the first, and probably last time was dancing it in public. She repeatedly has been mistaken for Jackie Kennedy and wired her apologies to Mrs. Kennedy. Benjamin McKelw'ay, editor of the Washington Star and President of Associated Press, wired Mrs. Kennedy, via her husband, apologies of AP for the error. The very rarity of a major press association making such a goof, contributed to it being so widely noted. ACCURACY DEMANDED OF ALL THE STAFFERS The AP full report going to some 8,000 American newspapers and radio, will run from a quarter to a half million words daily. The full report of the United Press International exceeds the wordage of a thick book, daily. Robert Johnson is the head man

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NAPPANEE ADVANCE-NEWS

of the Associated Press in Indiana. Boyd Gill is the top man of United Press International for Indiana Only one of the highest proses sional ability, after a long career in the association, can attain such responsible posts as to head a stab bureau. No place else in the world do people enjoy a free press and uncensored news that we do in America. The operation is enormous and errors creep in. Each staffer makes accuracy No. 1 to hold his job on a press association. Americans thank God for the overall magnificient job our press associa tions do in bringing us world news. Jefferson tried for 40 years to grow cork oak on his Virginia estate, and failed. 1 %

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